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  1. All depends on what the contract says. No reason why it wouldn't. But to be honest, by what you said her soul should already be under the Devil's grasp. If she failed her contract and died, her soul should have gone to the Devil and would be unavaible to be ressurrected.

  2. The person making the pact sometimes tries to outwit the devil, but loses in the end (e.g., man sells his soul for eternal life because he will never die to pay his end of the bargain. Immune to the death penalty , he commits murder, but is sentenced to life in prison).

  3. The man begs for death, and the devil grants his wish. The devil rarely reneges on the contract, Setear said. In fact, the mortal in the story is much more likely to violate the deal. In some versions of Faust, for example, Faust renounces the devil and escapes the contract at the end of the story. "The devil keeps his word," Setear said.

  4. Only the following two defenses against condemnation are considered valid: The mortal was coerced or magically compelled into signing a Faustian pact. The devil offering a Pact Certain did not provide the promised benefits. This is from the 3rd edition book on devils and the nine hells.

  5. When a devil killed, they will simply reborn in hell or earth.. so they are not permanently die. I believe the contract still works even after their death. I mean Denji still has blood power from Power after her death, right?

  6. Aug 5, 2024 · Indeed, long before Jesus arrived on the scene, the Book of Job had depicted God flippantly agreeing to a deal with Satan, in order to test Job’s righteousness, as if God and the Devil were two...

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  8. Sep 1, 2023 · The Bible does depict the devil as a deal-maker, however. It’s just that he is shown attempting to make deals with God Himself as opposed to mere mortals. In the book of Job, for instance, Satan proposes a kind of wager with God.

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