Satan's fall / spiritual warfare
Referenced to frame the previous day's confrontation as spiritual warfare rather than merely physical conflict.
Used by the caller as the base text for the Nephilim/watcher reading; the host pushed back that Genesis itself speaks of 'men' and does not contain the later Enochic mythology b...
Used to argue that angels are not robots because a heavenly being rebelled and fell, implying angelic will and moral agency.
Used by the caller to connect the scapegoat language to Azazel and defend using Enochic literature as interpretive background.
A superchat cited this passage ('I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven') to argue that a mere prophet could not speak this way about Satan's fall.
Quoted to argue that Satan literally fell from heaven; the response reinterpreted it as symbolic of earthly political judgment rather than a primordial angelic fall.