Ritual purity does not exactly correspond to moral purity--you can be nice and be impure from having touched a dead body, for instance.
Yet when a seraphim took a hot coal and touched it to his lips, rather than the uncleanliness being transferred to the coal, as you would expect to happen in this cosmic game of "Tag", the purity of the coal entered Isaiah and he became pure.
One and only one other time do we see this in the scriptures, and that's when Christ touched someone who was a leper or dead and they lived again. Their impurity did not transfer to him but the other way around.
Acting upon the presumption that Aslan is Jesus (and I do), the impurity of the spell from the wand could not transfer to Aslan, but rather Aslan's purity to it.
And besides, if you remember, Edmund risked his life to cut the wand with his sword which made the final contest a moot point.Statistics: Posted by EveningStar — Thu Feb 21, 2019 3:17 am
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