That discussion started with Meg's idea that dark overcomes light. When the origins start with a premise opposite from the bible, it doesn't matter if the discussion is civil. Even kind. It's like discussing how many angels do fit on the head of a pin, and discussing it as a godly topic.
I don't blame demons on many things, but I do notice something dark happens when we get anywhere near talking or meditating about God. Our minds go straight from him to kind-of-talking-God -- I should be doing chores, what did she say to him (or vice versa), gap theory, grace v. works, does he/she follow God in that outfit because it's immodest, which day of the week is the Sabbath, are you righteous (because I sure am), what's God's opinion on angels, are their celestial portals, when is God returning, and basically anything and all things except God himself.
We are like Luke Skywalker -- "All his life has he looked away... to the future, to the horizon. Never his mind on where he was." Always thinking around God but not meditating on God himself.
This is what I mean by heading for the Light. Instead we keep taking off for the darkness. Because without God there is nothing but darkness. And, isn't it time we not-babes-in-Christ start there? If we don't get that, how will the babes ever get it?
And it's hard. Downright impossible without God's light working. But first we have to see there is a problem, before we deal with it. And from what I'm seeing, everyone is busy trying to convince everyone else they aren't the problem. They're the solution. Wrongo! We are the problem. God is the solution.
He's a light in darkness. The only light in the darkness. Can't miss him, unless we stay determined to miss him! And that determination to head for the light requires constant communication with God because... "Ooo, look! Pretty thing over there" is about where our minds naturally always go. We need God to tell us, "No, honey. We're going this way. And stop playing in the poison ivy."