Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Unseen Realm: A Question & Answer Companion

Rate this book
In The Unseen Realm , Dr. Michael S. Heiser unpacked 15 years of research while exploring what the Bible really says about the supernatural world. Now, Douglas Van Dorn helps you further explore The Unseen Realm with a fresh perspective and an easy-to-follow format. Van Dorn summarizes key concepts and themes and includes questions aimed at helping you gain a deeper understanding of the biblical author's supernatural worldview. Use your copy of The Unseen A Question & Answer Companion for personal study or for leading discussion with a small group.

160 pages, Paperback

Published March 16, 2016

8 people are currently reading
44 people want to read

About the author

Douglas Van Dorn

20 books43 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
36 (78%)
4 stars
4 (8%)
3 stars
6 (13%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Jacob Aitken.
1,682 reviews413 followers
September 14, 2018
The book is written in a catechetical Q & A format, at some places very closely resembling the Westminster Shorter Catechism. There is a question, a somewhat detailed answer, and a list of prooftexts. There is no way in this one review to analytically deal with all of the material, but I will focus on those areas relating to the divine council.

* God reveals himself through His Name and His Word. We are used to saying God reveals himself through his Word, but the Name is an important element of OT theology. The Name of God is God (Dorn 11; Ex. 23:20).

* Van Dorn covers the taxonomy of Elohim that would be familiar to Divine Council readers. All elohim are spirits “whose domain is the spiritual world” (16). However, not all elohim are Yahweh or in the same class as Yahweh. There are other spirit-beings than God, and sometimes the Bible designates these entities as “gods,” but there is no God like Yahweh.

Aside from Yahweh, elohim are demons (Dt 32:17; 1 Cor 10:21), ghosts (1 Sam. 28:13-14), and the sons of God. They can’t simply be “idols,” since idols don’t float around in the sky and judge the nations.

* We can’t make a simple equation between angels and elohim. A malak is a messenger, who may or may not be a son of God. “Sons of God’ is a term of high rank in God’s spiritual hierarchy,” territorial rulership (31).

Seraphim: they are “shining divine beings who guard the throne of God” (34). Their appearance can be either serpentine (Num. 21:6-7) and humanoid with wings (Isa. 6).

Cherubim: shining divine beings who guard the throne and have both animal and human-like features (Ezek. 1:4-8; 13-14; 22, 26).

Man, Sin, and the Image of God

Man is God’s image as he images God in his prophetic, priestly, and kingly role (61).

* The sons of God sinned around three different times (in the garden, around the time of the flood, and when Christ was born (Rev. 12:4-5, 7).

* There is a very thorough section on who tempted Eve in the garden. Dorn gives a linguistic analysis of the term “nachash,” where it can mean serpent, one who dispenses divine knowledge, and shining (65).

Rebellion Before the Flood

Standard Nephilim material from Heiser. Dorn does make the insight that angels in heaven wouldn’t need food or reproduction. But when mal’akim come to earth, they do eat. Whether they need to or not, the text doesn’t say. But they do physically interact with the material world. This would be impossible on the view that angels are just disembodied minds or spirits. (75ff).

Archeology of the Nephilim

They are the descendants of the intermarriage between sons of God and human women.
Those who survived the flood are divided into clans.
Rephaim (Dt 2:20-21; 2 Sam. 12:22)
Zamzummim. (Dt 2:20-21)
Emim. (Dt. 2:10-11)
Anakim (Dt. 1:28).
When the Nephilim died, more specifically the Rephaim, their spirits were shades in the underworld. As Dorn notes, “This description creates a biblical link between the spirits of dead Nephilim (Rephaim) and demons who inhabit the same underworld realm of the dead” (81 n.9).

Proof: Isaiah 14.9. 26:14. Sheol contains the spirits of mighty kings who are specifically called Rephaim.

Not all disobedient sons of God are the same. Those who sinned in Genesis 6 are locked in Tartarus. Therefore, they cannot be the demons mentioned in the NT. The corrupt sons of God mentioned in Pss 82 and 89 are not locked away in Tartarus. The Bible has another name for them: Shedim (93ff). It is a term of geographical guardianship, coming from the Akkadian shadu.

A note on angels. Angel is a term of function, not ontological status. Elohim can be angels, but not every angel is an elohim (simply because some angels are human).

Conclusion.

This is an outstanding companion to Dr Heiser’s work. One of the difficulties with Heiser’s work is that the reader is overwhelmed with so many new ideas. As time passes, it’s not always clear where these ideas were found. Van Dorn’s book remedies that, giving the reader a handy “cheat sheet.”
Profile Image for Joshua Tan.
17 reviews2 followers
April 5, 2017
As the title of the book clearly indicates, this book is a companion to The Unseen Realm; the author presents his material in a Q&A format. Each of the ninety-five questions are tackled in the same way - a short comment (usually no more than a paragraph), followed by a list of Bible verses that serve to buttress the author's point. These verses, taken from many parts of the Bible, can at times appear disjointed for lack of context - although the footnotes go some way to addressing this issue.

Since the questions are not presented in the same sequence in which they are covered in the main book (they are instead thematically categorised), the reader is advised to first read The Unseen Realm in its entirety.
Profile Image for Alex.
393 reviews20 followers
July 8, 2020
Really good questions asked with a brief summary, then multiple & direct Bible references. Even if Unseen Realm has not first been read, this Q & A book would be useful.

A couple of random questions for flavor:

#62 Why did the LORD destroy the earth in the flood? (with 4 Bible verse references)

#81 Could not Satan...have refused to kill the messiah, thereby thwarting God's plan? (with 3 references)

#90 What is the Kingdom of Christ yet to come? (with 7 Bible references)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.