What Does the Bible Say About Djinn and Familiar Spirits?
Djinn: Why Christians Should Not Get Involved With Spirit Practices
Djinn, also spelled jinn or sometimes called “genies” in English, are spirit beings found in ancient Arabian belief, Islamic tradition, and folklore. In Islamic teaching, jinn are described as unseen beings created from smokeless fire, capable of choosing good or evil. Britannica notes that belief in jinn was common in pre-Islamic Arabia, where they were thought to inspire poets and soothsayers, and that their existence was later affirmed in the Qur’an.
For Christians, the concern is not simply learning what another religion believes. The danger comes when a person begins calling on, appealing to, fearing, honoring, bargaining with, seeking protection from, or trying to control spirits. In biblical language, this moves into familiar spirits, divination, sorcery, enchantment, and forbidden spiritual consultation.
Where Did the Belief in Djinn Come From?
The belief in djinn comes from ancient Arabian culture before Islam and later became part of Islamic teaching and folklore. Britannica describes jinn as unseen spirits believed to inhabit the earth, capable of appearing in different forms and exercising extraordinary powers. They are prominent in North African, Egyptian, Syrian, Persian, Turkish, Indian, and Indonesian folklore, and appear in stories such as The Thousand and One Nights.
So, djinn belief did not begin with one modern occult teacher. It came through ancient spiritual beliefs, folklore, and religious tradition.
Who Is the Founder?
There is no single human founder of djinn belief. The idea predates Islam in Arabian culture and was later developed in Islamic religious teaching and popular folklore. In Islam, jinn are not usually described as “invented” by a founder, but as beings created by God.
From a Christian perspective, however, the question is not whether Islam recognizes jinn. The question is: Should a follower of Jesus consult, fear, honor, command, bargain with, or seek help from spirit beings? God’s Word says no.
What Are Djinn Practices Used For?
Some people may try to use djinn-related practices for:
Protection
Power
Love spells
Revenge
Money or success
Healing
Fortune-telling
Spirit communication
Removing curses
Casting curses
Sorcery
Finding hidden knowledge
Binding or controlling people
Influencing dreams
Spiritual cleansing
Amulets, talismans, or charms
Fear-based rituals to appease spirits
Not every Muslim practices these things, and many Muslims reject appeals to jinn or sorcery. Pew Research found that many Muslims believe jinn exist, but relatively few say making offerings or appeals to jinn is acceptable in Islamic tradition; Pew also reported that across surveyed countries there is near universal agreement that sorcery is not permissible within Islam.
Do Muslims Still Practice This?
This needs to be said carefully: Most Muslims do not practice sorcery or appeal to jinn, and many consider those practices forbidden. However, in some regions and families, there are folk practices involving fear of jinn, evil eye objects, talismans, protective charms, spiritual healers, rituals, or attempts to remove spirit affliction.
Pew reported that belief in jinn is widespread in many Muslim-majority countries, but actual appeal to jinn is generally viewed as outside Islamic tradition by most Muslims surveyed. Pew also found that most Muslims surveyed do not wear talismans, though use of talismans or objects to ward off evil varies by country.
So the answer is: some people in Muslim cultures may still be involved in jinn-related folk practices, talismans, charms, or spirit appeasement, but it is not accurate or fair to say all Muslims practice this.
Why Is It Against God’s Word?
God’s Word forbids His people from consulting spirits, using divination, practicing sorcery, or seeking supernatural help outside of Him.
Deuteronomy 18:10–12 KJV says:
“There shall not be found among you any one that maketh his son or his daughter to pass through the fire, or that useth divination… or an enchanter, or a witch, or a charmer, or a consulter with familiar spirits… For all that do these things are an abomination unto the LORD.”
Any practice that calls on spirits, seeks hidden knowledge from spirits, uses charms, or attempts to gain supernatural power through spirits falls under what God forbids.
Leviticus 19:31 KJV says:
“Regard not them that have familiar spirits, neither seek after wizards, to be defiled by them…”
The Bible warns that seeking spirits brings defilement.
Isaiah 8:19 KJV says:
“Should not a people seek unto their God?”
God’s people are not called to seek djinn, angels, ancestors, spirits, saints, psychics, or spiritual intermediaries. We are called to seek the Lord.
1 Corinthians 10:20–21 KJV says:
“I would not that ye should have fellowship with devils. Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils…”
Christians cannot mix fellowship with Jesus Christ and fellowship with spirits.
Colossians 2:8 KJV warns:
“Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit… and not after Christ.”
Why Would Someone Get Involved With Djinn Practices?
People may get involved because they are afraid, desperate, curious, sick, oppressed, or searching for power and protection. Others may inherit these beliefs through family traditions, culture, charms, amulets, rituals, or spiritual healers.
Common reasons include:
Fear of curses
Fear of evil eye
Fear of spirit attack
Need for protection
Seeking healing
Wanting power
Seeking revenge
Wanting love or control
Cultural tradition
Family involvement
Curiosity about spirits
Dreams or night torment
Oppression they do not understand
Desire for hidden knowledge
Going to a spiritual healer instead of seeking Jesus Christ
The enemy often uses fear to bring people into bondage. A person may begin with “protection” and end up spiritually tied to the very spirits they feared.
How Does It Hurt a Christian Who Dabbles With It?
A Christian who dabbles with djinn practices opens the door to spiritual mixture. Whether the practice is called folk healing, protection, amulet use, spirit appeasement, curse removal, or spiritual cleansing, the issue is the same: the person is seeking help from a spirit source outside Jesus Christ.
This can hurt a Christian by:
Opening doors to familiar spirits
Bringing fear and torment
Creating spiritual confusion
Weakening discernment
Bringing bondage to charms or protective objects
Creating fear of curses or evil eye
Opening doors to witchcraft and sorcery
Replacing prayer with rituals
Replacing trust in Jesus with fear of spirits
Bringing nightmares, oppression, or heaviness
Creating double-mindedness
Bringing generational bondage through family practices
A believer does not need djinn protection. A believer needs Jesus Christ, the blood of Jesus, the Word of God, and the power of the Holy Spirit.
What Curses Can Come on a Christian Through Djinn Practices?
From a deliverance perspective, involvement with djinn-related rituals or spirit consultation may open the door to curses and bondage. These may include:
A curse of familiar spirits — spirits that imitate guidance, protection, healing, dreams, or warnings.
A curse of divination — seeking hidden knowledge through forbidden spiritual means.
A curse of sorcery — using rituals, charms, or spiritual power to influence outcomes.
A curse of fear and torment — fear of spirits, evil eye, curses, dreams, or night attacks.
A curse of bondage to charms — feeling unsafe without amulets, talismans, symbols, or protective objects.
A curse of idolatry — trusting spiritual objects or rituals instead of Jesus Christ.
A curse of confusion — difficulty discerning the voice of God from counterfeit voices.
A curse of spiritual blindness — accepting spirit deception as truth.
A curse of generational occultism — inherited family involvement with spirit practices, talismans, curses, or sorcery.
A curse of nightmares and night torment — sleep paralysis, fear, oppression, or spiritual harassment.
A curse of double-mindedness — trying to follow Christ while fearing or honoring spirits.
A curse of rebellion — refusing God’s way and seeking forbidden spiritual help.
The good news is that Jesus Christ breaks curses.
Galatians 3:13 KJV says:
“Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us…”
Why Former Muslims May Need Deliverance
A person who leaves Islam and comes to Jesus Christ may still need deliverance if they personally practiced, feared, honored, appealed to, or relied on djinn-related spiritual systems. They may also need deliverance if their family line used talismans, charms, curses, evil-eye objects, spirit healers, sorcery, or rituals connected to jinn.
This does not mean every former Muslim has demons. It means that when there has been personal or generational agreement with spirit practices, there may be spiritual doors to close.
Deliverance may be needed when there are signs such as:
Night torment
Fear of jinn
Fear of curses
Fear of evil eye
Sleep paralysis
Recurring nightmares
Mental torment
Physical oppression
Voices, visions, or spiritual harassment
Strong fear after removing charms or amulets
Feeling pulled back into old religious or occult practices
Oppression when praying in the name of Jesus Christ
Jesus Christ is greater than every spirit.
Philippians 2:10–11 KJV says:
“That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow… and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord…”
Prayer of Renunciation
Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for any involvement with djinn, jinn, familiar spirits, sorcery, charms, talismans, amulets, evil-eye objects, spirit healers, curses, divination, occult protection, or spiritual rituals outside of Jesus Christ.
I renounce every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with djinn, familiar spirits, fear, sorcery, divination, spirit appeasement, false protection, false healing, and generational occultism.
I break every curse connected to djinn practices, charms, talismans, evil-eye objects, spirit consultation, sorcery, witchcraft, familiar spirits, fear, torment, confusion, nightmares, and generational bondage.
I command every spirit attached to djinn practices, family rituals, charms, curses, fear, torment, false protection, divination, and sorcery to leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ.
I declare that Jesus Christ is my Lord, my Savior, my Deliverer, my Healer, and my Protector. I belong to Him alone. Holy Spirit, cleanse me, restore my discernment, close every spiritual door, and fill every place where the enemy had access. In Jesus’ name, amen.
Final Word
Djinn practices are not harmless. They involve fear, spirits, charms, sorcery, and forbidden spiritual dependence. Christians must not seek help from spirits. We must seek Jesus Christ.
You do not need protection from djinn through charms, rituals, talismans, or spirit healers. You need the Lord Jesus Christ.
A comprehensive occult list: https://www.touchofgod.org/post/occult-checklist
For more teaching on biblical curses, read:
https://www.touchofgod.org/post/the-seven-biblical-curses-listed-in-the-bible
Teresa Morin
President and founder of Touch of God Int’l Ministries of Healing and Deliverance and more.
🌐 https://www.touchofgod.org -
Of Healing and Deliverance, Ordained Minister, Public Speaker
📣 Featured in Who's Who Press Release
35-Second Video Script With Hook
Hook:
Have you ever been afraid of djinn, curses, evil eye, or spirit attacks?
Djinn practices are not harmless. They involve spirits, fear, charms, talismans, and sometimes sorcery.
God’s Word warns us in Deuteronomy 18 not to consult familiar spirits, practice divination, or use occult power.
If you have called on spirits, used charms for protection, gone to spirit healers, or come from a family line involved in djinn practices, spiritual doors may need to be closed.
Jesus Christ is greater than every spirit.
You do not need fear. You need deliverance and freedom through Jesus Christ.
Read the full article at the link below.
YouTube Description
Djinn, also spelled jinn, are spirit beings found in ancient Arabian belief, Islamic tradition, and folklore. While many Muslims believe jinn exist, not all Muslims practice sorcery or appeal to jinn. However, some folk practices involving charms, talismans, evil eye objects, spirit healers, or fear of jinn may open spiritual doors.
In this teaching, learn what the Bible says about familiar spirits, divination, sorcery, charms, and seeking spiritual help outside of Jesus Christ. If you are a former Muslim or come from a family line involved in djinn practices, you may need deliverance to renounce fear, charms, spirit consultation, and generational bondage.
Read the full article here:
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More teaching on biblical curses:
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Scriptures: Deuteronomy 18:10–12, Leviticus 19:31, Isaiah 8:19, 1 Corinthians 10:20–21, Colossians 2:8, Galatians 3:13, Philippians 2:10–11
TikTok Description
Have you been afraid of djinn, evil eye, curses, charms, or spirit attacks? God’s Word warns against familiar spirits, divination, and sorcery. Jesus Christ is greater than every spirit, and He can set you free.
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Short Facebook Blurb
Have you ever been afraid of djinn, evil eye, curses, charms, or spirit attacks? Djinn practices are not harmless when they involve spirit consultation, talismans, sorcery, fear, or occult protection.
God’s Word warns us not to seek familiar spirits or hidden spiritual power. If you came out of Islam or your family line practiced djinn-related rituals, charms, evil-eye protection, or spirit healing, you may need deliverance to close those doors through Jesus Christ.
Read the full article here:
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