Unless the card/ability specifically says that it effects anything attached to the creature, like the rules for phasing, it ignores them. In this case it means that any auras that were attached to the creature exiled by the banisher priest remain on the battlefield not attached to anything.
What happens to enchantments when creature is exiled?
In short, the exiled permanent becomes a non-permanent card that is a new object, causing all statuses, counters, equipment, enchantments, etc to detach. Enchantments will go to the graveyard. When the permanent return, it enters the battlefield as an entirely new instance of that permanent.
What makes a creature an enchantment in Magic The Gathering?
This means that when you cast it you have the option to pay its Bestow cost and when you do that you cast just like an Aura picking a Creature for it to Enchant. When it is an Aura the Creature it is attached to is the “Enchanted Creature”, it is never an “Enchanted Creature” if it is not attached to anything and is just an Enchantment Creature.
Can a creature you control be countered by an enchantment?
Creature and enchantment spells you control can’t be countered. : Target land you control becomes an X/X Elemental creature with trample and haste until end of turn, where X is the number of enchantments you control. It’s still a land.
What happens to an aura enchantment in Magic The Gathering?
If the permanent it is attached to leaves play at any time, becomes a type that the Aura cannot enchant, or gains protection against any of the Aura’s characteristics, the Aura becomes unattached and will go to the graveyard. Curses are Aura enchantments that possess the rules text “Enchant player”.
What does enchant player mean in Magic The Gathering?
Curses are Aura enchantments that possess the rules text “Enchant player”. Curses were introduced in and featured in the Innistrad block and . Although all Curses enchant players, not all enchantments with “Enchant player” are Curses. In fact, the ability has been featured on cards from previous expansion sets, such as from .