1 Samuel 28:3-21: Saul and the Witch of Eyn-dor

REVIEW THESE IT WAS NOT SAMUEL ARGUMENTS 3/12/2015 If it seems that G-d is silent in our suffering, it is because He sees a better outcome for us in His stillness than we’re able to see in our turmoil. An examination of 1 Samuel 28:3-21. Introduction:This has been a passage of Scripture that has confused and mislead many. In English it appears to give foundation to the idea of the disquieted, disembodied spirits of human beings returning to earth. In fact the English text (with the exception of the KJV, NKJV and selected literal translations) is sometimes guilty of hiding specific contextual indicators, like the Hebrew, “elohim” and through the theologically selective use of the Hebrew, “yada”, found in the text in the form, “vayda”. Much is presumed by the English reader through no fault of his or her own, however this balloon of presumption is easily deflated by the pin prick of Hebrew simplicity. There are of course Hebrew rabbis and scholars who have made similar errors in understanding this text, therefore we must navigate it carefully and succinctly.The English translations of this text usually leave the reader with some of the following questions: Do ghosts (disembodied human spirits) roam the earth? Is fortune telling based on a genuine spiritual ability to tell the future? Was Saul actually speaking with the disembodied spirit of Samuel?[...x]