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For the use of random selection as a way to make a fair form of selection, see Sortition.
Cleromancy is a form of divination using sortition, casting of lots, or casting bones, in which an outcome is determined by means that normally would be considered random, such as the rolling of dice, but that are believed to reveal the will of God or other supernatural entities.
In classical civilizationIn ancient Rome fortunes were told through the casting of lots or sortes. In Judeo-Christian cultureCasting of lots occurs relatively frequently in the Bible. In the Hebrew Bible, there are at least four cases where casting lots was invoked as a means of determining God's mind:
Other places in the Hebrew Bible relevant to divination:
Note that there are two distinct Hebrew concepts which are confused if both are translated by casting of lots. The Hebrew word translated as sorcery, nachash, is the same word as serpent and means literally to hiss when used as a verb. The idea of divination, or fortune-telling, is conveyed through association with the breath [fig. spirit] of a serpent [fig. deceiver] and implicitly declares diviners as con artists. In contrast, the Hebrew word for lot-casting, gowral, merely means to assign portions, or allotments, in the interests of fairness. The most notable examples in the New Testament occur in John 19:24, where the soldiers cast lots for Jesus' clothes as he was dying on the cross; and in the Acts of the Apostles 1:23-26 where the eleven remaining apostles draw lots to determine whether Matthias or Barsabbas (surnamed Justus) would be chosen to replace Judas. In the Book of Mormon, the sons of Lehi cast lots in the First Book of Nephi to determine who will obtain the plates of brass, a record containing the Israelite scriptures, from the merchant Laban. Laman is selected to represent the brothers by this method, but he fails to do so and barely escapes with his life (the brothers successfully retrieve the plates through other means, however). [1][2] In Eastern cultureIn China, and especially in Chinese Taoism, various means of divination through random means are employed, such as use of the I Ching. In Japan, omikuji is one form of drawing lots. See alsoExternal links
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