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Total Members Voted: 48
Voting closed: February 01, 2018, 04:25:47 PM
"When you write a special ability it will need to be no longer than this block of text. If you use things like Enhancement or opponents, they can cause text to cut off a row early which shortens the SA."
To help people monitor the length of the SA I've written the following which uses the maximum space we have available in the text box.
Quote from: tripleplayNa1 on January 28, 2018, 11:00:45 PMIf people knew Rapha wasn't going to have the Philistine identifier they might want to vote for another candidate.I understand where the idea comes from that he might be Philistine, or even Canaanite, but Travis shared his findings long before the vote took place. I'm sorry if someone still presumed that he would be Philistine and that greatly influenced their vote. I hadn't seen a large push to add that identifier prior to now or I would have pointed it out sooner.Quote from: TheHobbit on January 28, 2018, 11:20:54 PMYeah, just make him philistine. I don't think anyone really cares.We attempt to make this game as accurate as possible given what we know. To add an identifier because "we want it" is simply not that way we do things. We cannot set that kind of precedent. Part of the process of allowing the community to make a card is to take you all through the same (sometimes painful) processes that we have to go through to get a card in it's final form. This is a great opportunity for everyone to see what that looks like.
If people knew Rapha wasn't going to have the Philistine identifier they might want to vote for another candidate.
Yeah, just make him philistine. I don't think anyone really cares.
(even though it’s strange to say “Giant, father of giants,” which is the translation)
Quote(even though it’s strange to say “Giant, father of giants,” which is the translation)You've never met anyone named Eric Ericson or John Johnson?
In the Bible (NASB and many other literal-leaning translations), "The Giant" ("Rapha") is clearly stated to be the father of 5 Philistine Giant brothers: 1) Ishbibenob - 2 Samuel 21:16, 222) Saph - 2 Samuel 21:18, 223) Goliath - 2 Samuel 21:19, 224) "The Twelve-Fingered Giant" - 2 Samuel 21:20, 222 Samuel 21:22 states, "These four were born to the giant in Gath, and they fell by the hand of David and by the hand of his servants."5) Lahmi - 1 Chronicles 20:5, 8So while it is true that we don't know if Rapha himself was descended from Philistines, would him being the father of 5 Philistines be enough for him to be considered a Philistine? I don't know how the rules for identifiers work...is being the parent of an individual of a civilization enough to make you part of that civilization? Additionally, using the Bible as our primary source, there is no mention in the text (the only places he is mentioned are 2 Samuel 21 and 1 Chronicles 20) that this particular father was the father of anyone else. Commentaries can greatly vary in terms of interpretation, but it seems clear to me that from what is clearly stated in the Bible, this particular individual is best considered a Philistine because all we really know about him is that he was the father of 5 Philistine brothers who were giants, and was a giant himself. Additional evidence that he is a Philistine is that he was from Gath (2 Samuel 21:22, 1 Chronicles 20:8 ) which was clearly one of the 5 Philistine cities.And he must have been infamous in the region, as he was simply referred to by the nickname "The Giant" instead of a regular name. Similar to his son, "The Twelve-Fingered Giant". Which hopefully will make for a really awesome and fun card!I just feel like this can be a really fun character and it would be a shame if he wasn't a Philistine to work cohesively with his sons. And moreover it seems clear to me from the Bible itself that this is what he was.Just my
Quote from: jesse on January 29, 2018, 02:26:56 PMIn the Bible (NASB and many other literal-leaning translations), "The Giant" ("Rapha") is clearly stated to be the father of 5 Philistine Giant brothers: 1) Ishbibenob - 2 Samuel 21:16, 222) Saph - 2 Samuel 21:18, 223) Goliath - 2 Samuel 21:19, 224) "The Twelve-Fingered Giant" - 2 Samuel 21:20, 222 Samuel 21:22 states, "These four were born to the giant in Gath, and they fell by the hand of David and by the hand of his servants."5) Lahmi - 1 Chronicles 20:5, 8So while it is true that we don't know if Rapha himself was descended from Philistines, would him being the father of 5 Philistines be enough for him to be considered a Philistine? I don't know how the rules for identifiers work...is being the parent of an individual of a civilization enough to make you part of that civilization? Additionally, using the Bible as our primary source, there is no mention in the text (the only places he is mentioned are 2 Samuel 21 and 1 Chronicles 20) that this particular father was the father of anyone else. Commentaries can greatly vary in terms of interpretation, but it seems clear to me that from what is clearly stated in the Bible, this particular individual is best considered a Philistine because all we really know about him is that he was the father of 5 Philistine brothers who were giants, and was a giant himself. Additional evidence that he is a Philistine is that he was from Gath (2 Samuel 21:22, 1 Chronicles 20:8 ) which was clearly one of the 5 Philistine cities.And he must have been infamous in the region, as he was simply referred to by the nickname "The Giant" instead of a regular name. Similar to his son, "The Twelve-Fingered Giant". Which hopefully will make for a really awesome and fun card!I just feel like this can be a really fun character and it would be a shame if he wasn't a Philistine to work cohesively with his sons. And moreover it seems clear to me from the Bible itself that this is what he was.Just my Jesse makes a very good point. Did we not basically say that the fore-father of these nations would be given that identifier. Esau is the father of the Edomites despite being born of a Hebrew father and mother. Thus he was given the Edomite identifier.
Jesse's entire argument dismisses the fact that in the original text it could not have been referencing an individual's name the way it was written. "The Giant" was not the name of a man who sired 5 Philistines. And we're not talking about the father of the Philistines. We're talking about the guy from which all the giants descended. He's referred to much earlier in scripture in relation to other giants as well. They were all called the Rephaim after this individual from whom they descended.We've said King Herod is an Edomite, yet his sons are not although that isn't really relevant here.
Spoiler (hover to show)Quote from: Crashfach2002 on January 29, 2018, 03:19:35 PMQuote from: jesse on January 29, 2018, 02:26:56 PMIn the Bible (NASB and many other literal-leaning translations), "The Giant" ("Rapha") is clearly stated to be the father of 5 Philistine Giant brothers: 1) Ishbibenob - 2 Samuel 21:16, 222) Saph - 2 Samuel 21:18, 223) Goliath - 2 Samuel 21:19, 224) "The Twelve-Fingered Giant" - 2 Samuel 21:20, 222 Samuel 21:22 states, "These four were born to the giant in Gath, and they fell by the hand of David and by the hand of his servants."5) Lahmi - 1 Chronicles 20:5, 8So while it is true that we don't know if Rapha himself was descended from Philistines, would him being the father of 5 Philistines be enough for him to be considered a Philistine? I don't know how the rules for identifiers work...is being the parent of an individual of a civilization enough to make you part of that civilization? Additionally, using the Bible as our primary source, there is no mention in the text (the only places he is mentioned are 2 Samuel 21 and 1 Chronicles 20) that this particular father was the father of anyone else. Commentaries can greatly vary in terms of interpretation, but it seems clear to me that from what is clearly stated in the Bible, this particular individual is best considered a Philistine because all we really know about him is that he was the father of 5 Philistine brothers who were giants, and was a giant himself. Additional evidence that he is a Philistine is that he was from Gath (2 Samuel 21:22, 1 Chronicles 20:8 ) which was clearly one of the 5 Philistine cities.And he must have been infamous in the region, as he was simply referred to by the nickname "The Giant" instead of a regular name. Similar to his son, "The Twelve-Fingered Giant". Which hopefully will make for a really awesome and fun card!I just feel like this can be a really fun character and it would be a shame if he wasn't a Philistine to work cohesively with his sons. And moreover it seems clear to me from the Bible itself that this is what he was.Just my Jesse makes a very good point. Did we not basically say that the fore-father of these nations would be given that identifier. Esau is the father of the Edomites despite being born of a Hebrew father and mother. Thus he was given the Edomite identifier.Jesse's entire argument dismisses the fact that in the original text it could not have been referencing an individual's name the way it was written. "The Giant" was not the name of a man who sired 5 Philistines. And we're not talking about the father of the Philistines. We're talking about the guy from which all the giants descended. He's referred to much earlier in scripture in relation to other giants as well. They were all called the Rephaim after this individual from whom they descended.We've said King Herod is an Edomite, yet his sons are not although that isn't really relevant here.
The KJV and NASB does refer to the 4 giants as the sons of the Giant of Gath. The NIV says they are descendants of Rapha or the Raphaites - an ancient people of large stature. If the name Rapha was changed to the Giant of Gath, then he would be a Philistine.
Maybe I missed something, but I don't understand how the reasoning for Rapha being a Philistine/Caananite is any different then Nimrod being a Babylonian and an Assyrian. Please enlighten me.
Quote from: VJ on January 29, 2018, 04:46:04 PMThe KJV and NASB does refer to the 4 giants as the sons of the Giant of Gath. The NIV says they are descendants of Rapha or the Raphaites - an ancient people of large stature. If the name Rapha was changed to the Giant of Gath, then he would be a Philistine.Yes I like that - "The Giant of Gath"! Would that work?