A lot going on in this article and it's highly debatable. Don't want to attack numerous points with an expository essay, but I'll focus on the excerpt that stood out most to me: let's have a little fun looking at it critically to see if it can hold water.
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I do not see how allowing children to play with games that encourage fighting, reading of minds, use of poison, mimicry, taunting, teleportation, hypnosis, and evolution can be a good thing. This is not training a child to righteousness. It is accepting the occult and secular evolution. Is this what we, as Christians, want our children to meditate on? Of course not."
Before issuing outright blanking condemnation let's measure out some Biblical responses:
1. Fighting: the Bible is filled with fighting: Ecclesiastes 3:8, Isaiah 9:2
2. Reading minds: God can read minds: matthew 9:4, Matthew 12:25
3. Poison: Bible contains examples of poisonous things: Exodus 15:23, Mark 16:18
"They shall take up serpents; and
if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.
4. Mimicry: Bible tells people to mimic Christ: Ephesians 5:1
5. Taunting: Bible contains taunting: Habakkuk 2:6
6. Teleportation: Matthew 4:5, John 6:21 "immediately the boat reaches the shore."
7. Hypnosis: there's some possible verses but not doing to post them.
So I think this article is a little over zealous with how much it condemns especially calling things "occultic" that God does like reading minds or teleporting.
Some of those those it listed are non-starters. For example the Bible says to intimate Christ yet the article said mimicry is occultic.
The Bible says people can drink poison and not be harmed. Should we test God? No never, but the passage exists.
Teleportation. Did you know it's a fact Jesus walked on water, stepped into the boat, then instantly brought it to shore? Read the verse I showed you above.