The biblical perspective on necromancy, or speaking with deceased spirits, is predominantly destructive. Previous Testomony regulation explicitly forbids consulting mediums and spiritists, classifying such practices as an abomination (Deuteronomy 18:10-12). This prohibition stems from the idea that trying to contact the useless opens pathways to demonic affect and undermines the unique relationship between God and humanity. The instance of King Saul’s session with the Witch of Endor (1 Samuel 28) illustrates the hazard and destructive penalties related to in search of steerage from the deceased.
The importance of those prohibitions lies within the institution of God as the only real supply of reality, steerage, and revelation. Looking for solutions from different sources, together with the spirits of the useless, is seen as a rejection of divine authority. Moreover, the biblical narrative means that the useless are in a state of relaxation or judgment awaiting the ultimate resurrection; trying to disturb their relaxation is taken into account disrespectful and doubtlessly dangerous. Traditionally, these practices had been frequent in historic Close to Japanese cultures, and the biblical prohibitions served to distinguish Israelite worship from these pagan religions.