does isaiah 14 16 refer to satan in the bottomless pit bein seen by people?
for those who believe isaiah 14 refers to lucifer.
for those who believe isaiah 14 refers to lucifer.
Anonymous
Isaiah chapter 14 first 12 does indeed refer specifically to Lucifer it tells you that pretty much word for word you oh bright and Shining one have fallen from heaven you have now fallen you were the one that said unto men come let us go on up into the heavens where we shall make our homes with the Gods where I shall become like the most high! All the nations will now say to you is this the man that we feared? Yes this Bible scripture refers specifically to Lucifer and it is also the Bible scripture from where we get the false Doctrine of men going to live with God in the heavens this scripture refers specifically to that false Doctrine and how Lucifer was cast out of heaven because he tried to get men to go with him up into the heavens to make their homes with the gods and become like the most high!
This false Doctrine is still to this very day being taught it's called The Rapture by the church! But it is the false doctrine of Lucifer.
Otto
Yes it refers to Satan.
Today Satan tries to trick people into worshiping him. (2 Corinthians 11:3,14)
One way he misleads people is through false religion. If a religion teaches lies about God, it really serves the purpose of Satan. (John 8:44)
People who are members of false religions may sincerly believe that they are worshiping the true God. Butthey are really serving Satan. He is 'the god of this world.' -
Read 2 Corinthians 4:4.
Uncle Thesis
Was it not written in reference to the king of Babylon? Verse 4.
If one wishes to transfer the application to Satan, fine, but then it's not literal, just illustrative.
Annsan_In_Him
It referred, in prophecy, to the sudden demise of the king of Babylon at the hands of Cyrus the Great in October 539 B.C.
It wasn't until the Hebrew scriptures were translated into the Latin Vulgate that the term Lucifer (morning star) first appeared, long after Christ's era. In Christian tradition, this has become a name for Satan but the Hebrew text makes no apparent reference here to Satan.
?
You can't see a spirit so no.