Witchcraft as the bible is concerned is the worship of Pagan Gods in the wiccan religion.
Not even close. It's concerned with the ideal or notion that
anything other than the Spirit of God can supply our needs, or more specifically, that we can make use of the power of God
on our own. That is the essence of witchcraft.
Go back and refresh your memory of Saul (1 Samuel 28), when he consulted with the witch (or more correctly necromancer, today rendered "psychic") of Endor. She
never consulted a pagan god - one is never even mentioned - but instead she consulted
God's holy prophet Samuel; and you might notice that the word used for "wizard" here means only "wise, crafy, or cunning one," not "sorcery" or even "divination." The crime was not in a pagan god (Saul believed in the Lord!), not in being wise or even in causing harm (not all that is good is right), but the crime was committed only in
how things were done. This narrative completely exemplifies the point of what witchcraft is: Saul tried to ask help from the Lord, the Lord refused to answer Saul, so Saul tries to do things on his own, making use of what is properly the Lord's.
Again, turn to the book of Acts and read about Simon the Sorcerer (Acts 8). Simon was a follower of Christ (at least as far as he knew), and was even baptized. "Simon himself
believed and was baptized." The focus though, is on what? The Holy Spirit:
"Now when the apostles...heard that Samaria had recieved the word of God, they sent unto them Peter and John, who...prayed for them, that they might received the Holy Ghost...then laid they their hands on them, and they recieved the Holy Ghost.
"And when Simon saw that through laying on of the apostles' hands the Holy Ghost was given, he offered them money, saying, 'Give me also this power, that on whomsoever I lay hands, he may received the Holy Ghost.' But Peter said unto him, 'Thy money perish with thee, because thou hast thought that the gift of God may be purchased with money."
All that Simon essentially said was, "wow, that's cool. I wish I could do that. Is there any way that I could do that on my own?" I am well aware that this verse is traditionally interpreted as a slight on money, but any time man tries to glorify himself apart from God, the same response is given. Remember that it's not money that's evil, it's the love of money - the love of being able to control things apart from God. The full meaning of "mammon" completely explains this. Fallen man has what is translated as "greed" or "coveteousness", the desire to hoard a wealth of both material and spiritual possessions. Study these words. Study what mammon means. That is what money stands for to Simon.
All supernatural power belongs to the Lord. It may not be understood in our present-day culture, but Biblically, it is
well-understood that the dead, the spiritual world, and all things "magical" belong to Him (or at least to the gods,
never to us!). Adam was
never given any of these. Through Christ
we were (and again, here comes a division of theology as to whether those gifts are still present in the church), but it has never been assumed Biblically that man is able to control the non-physical world, and it has
always been assumed that the attempt to do so is at odds with the Lord. Demonstrate a Biblical answer where this is not the case! So you have two options here: are the powers taken from a supernatural being
other than the Lord (in which case you have commmitted idolotry), or are the supernatural powers taken
from the Lord Himself (in which case you have committed Saul's sin of trying to force the Lord's counsel).
He will give us what He wants us to have, and that
always to glorify Himself, never man.
As much respect as I have for you Luther, I don't know which I'm more saddened to see: your statement that "Wiccans" were around in what I assumed you mean as "the time during the unified and/or divided kingdoms", or the implication that Latin is somehow a magical language and that no one who is in anyway connected with Rome takes action against Christ.
I disagree also with the premise that you use that thinking about the sin is a sin. It depends on HOW one is thinking about it. Lust is the active desire to sin, and yes that is a sin.
I mean that lusting after a sin is a sin. And you're absolutely right here: watching Harry Potter
amelodically is no sin, for "to the pure, all things are pure." But how many people do you really think watch the movies that way? They watch Harry Potter because it's "cool" to be a wizard and have magical powers. But brother, all that's doing is glorifying man apart from God...which is greed and coveteousness, which is why witchcraft is a sin to begin with.
However if you watch a movie a couple has pre-marital sex. That is going to make you think about pre-marital sex, but it does not mean you are activily desiring to engage in pre-marital sex. It just means that you have seen it in a story.
...and then you counter the point. Because, on the other hand, watching could be construed as our "weaker brethren" as supporting. (Wow, Paul's discussion on food sacrificed to idols really seems relevant here, huh?) I can't be opposed to the portrayal of witchcraft
always then, on the grounds that watching it supports it, no more than I could be opposed to eating Baalburgers as supporting the guys that offered it to Baal then fed a Christian with it.
And we said that reading Harry Potter is a sin because there is sin in it, then the same standard would apply to any story in which there is sin. Which would make the bible a sin to read since there is sin in the bible.
Watching others sin (and knowing what they do as evil) and gaining entertainment from watching a sinful act are two different things. I hope you don't glorify in on-screen murder, rape, or robbery. Why would you identify with witchcraft then?