Showing posts with label Leviticus 19 familiar spirits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leviticus 19 familiar spirits. Show all posts

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Apotropaic Charms, Evil Eye Symbols, and False Protection

 

Apotropaic Charms, Evil Eye Symbols, and False Protection

Apotropaic Charms, Evil Eye Symbols, and False Protection

Apotropaion: A Biblical Warning About Protective Magic, Charms, and False Spiritual Covering


An apotropaion is an object, symbol, ritual, mark, charm, amulet, gesture, image, or practice believed to “turn away” evil, bad luck, curses, demons, the evil eye, sickness, misfortune, or spiritual attack. The word comes from the Greek idea of averting or turning away harm.

At first glance, apotropaic objects may seem harmless because they are often presented as protection. People may use them on jewelry, doors, homes, clothing, walls, vehicles, children, animals, or sacred spaces. But from a biblical perspective, when a person trusts an object, symbol, ritual, or charm for spiritual protection instead of trusting the Lord Jesus Christ, it becomes a counterfeit covering.

God is our protector. A charm is not.

Who Was the Founder of Apotropaion?

There is no single human founder of apotropaic magic or apotropaic objects. This practice developed across many ancient cultures over thousands of years. It was used in ancient Greece, Rome, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Jewish folk traditions, Islamic folk traditions, European folk magic, pagan societies, and many other cultures.

For your article, you can say:

Apotropaion has no single founder. It came out of ancient fear-based folk religion, paganism, superstition, evil-eye beliefs, charm magic, and protective rituals where people trusted objects, symbols, gods, spirits, or magical acts to turn away evil.

The biblical problem is not the word itself. The problem is the spiritual trust placed in an object or occult practice instead of God.

What Was Their Spirituality?

The spirituality behind apotropaic practices was usually a mixture of fear, superstition, paganism, folk magic, idolatry, ancestor customs, spirit appeasement, and protective ritual.

People believed unseen evil could be deflected by certain objects, marks, symbols, words, sounds, images, or gestures. Instead of seeking the Lord, they sought protection from created things or spiritual powers.

This is dangerous because fear often becomes the doorway. A person may think, “I need this charm to be safe,” “I need this symbol to protect my home,” or “If I remove this object, something bad will happen.”

That is bondage, not faith.

2 Timothy 1:7 KJV says:

“For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.”

What Culture Did It Come Out Of?

Apotropaic practices did not come from only one culture. They appeared in many cultures across the ancient world.

In ancient Greece, people used images such as eyes, masks, Gorgon/Medusa heads, phallic symbols, and other protective signs to ward off evil.

In ancient Rome, people used charms, household gods, protective images, and amulets.

In ancient Egypt, people used amulets, protective symbols, eye symbols, scarabs, and images connected to gods and goddesses for protection.

In Middle Eastern and Mediterranean cultures, evil-eye beliefs and protective charms became very common.

In European folk magic, people used witch marks, horseshoes, iron objects, protective carvings, bells, herbs, symbols, and ritual objects to guard homes or people.

So apotropaion came out of many cultures that often had their own pagan religions, folk magic, gods, spirits, and superstition.

What Were Their Beliefs?

The beliefs behind apotropaic practices usually included the idea that evil could be turned away by:

A symbol
A charm
An amulet
A ritual
A carved mark
A painted eye
A sacred word
A magical object
A gesture
A god or goddess
A household spirit
A protective animal image
A metal, stone, herb, or talisman

Some believed the evil eye could bring sickness, infertility, death, loss, or misfortune. Others believed demons, spirits, witches, ghosts, curses, or jealous people could harm them unless they used protective magic.

The problem is that these practices teach people to trust in an object or occult power instead of trusting the Lord.

Psalm 91:2 KJV says:

“I will say of the LORD, He is my refuge and my fortress: my God; in him will I trust.”

Who Is Their God or Gods?

Because apotropaic practices appeared in many cultures, there was not one god connected to them. Different cultures connected protective magic to different gods, goddesses, spirits, ancestors, or powers.

Examples may include:

Egyptian gods and goddesses connected to protection, death, fertility, magic, or healing
Greek gods, goddesses, and mythological figures
Roman household gods and protective spirits
Folk spirits or ancestral spirits
Nature spirits
Pagan deities
Demonic powers disguised as protectors
The evil eye as a feared spiritual force
Charms and symbols treated as protective powers

From a Christian perspective, any god, goddess, spirit, charm, amulet, talisman, or symbol trusted for protection becomes a false refuge.

Exodus 20:3 KJV says:

“Thou shalt have no other gods before me.”

Isaiah 42:8 KJV says:

“I am the LORD: that is my name: and my glory will I not give to another…”

What Is Apotropaion Used For?

Apotropaic objects and rituals are commonly used for:

Protection from evil
Protection from curses
Protection from the evil eye
Protection from demons or spirits
Protection from bad luck
Protection from sickness
Protection over children
Protection over homes
Protection over livestock or property
Protection during childbirth
Protection during travel
Warding off witchcraft
Removing fear
Keeping away death, disaster, or misfortune
Creating a spiritual barrier

Examples may include evil-eye jewelry, amulets, talismans, charms, protective symbols on doors, witch marks, horseshoes used superstitiously, lucky objects, protective stones, ritual gestures, or objects prayed over by occult practitioners.

Why Is Apotropaion Against God’s Word?

Apotropaion is against God’s Word when it becomes protective magic, idolatry, superstition, charm use, witchcraft, or trust in spiritual objects instead of trust in the Lord.

Deuteronomy 18:10–12 KJV says:

“There shall not be found among you any one 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.”

This is very important because apotropaic objects often function as charms. God specifically warns against charmers, enchantment, witchcraft, and familiar spirits.

Leviticus 19:31 KJV says:

“Regard not them that have familiar spirits, neither seek after wizards, to be defiled by them…”

If a person uses an object for spiritual protection, healing, luck, or warding off evil, the question becomes: what spiritual source is being trusted?

Isaiah 8:19 KJV says:

“Should not a people seek unto their God?”

God’s people should seek God, not charms.

Does Apotropaion Bring Torment?

Yes, it can bring torment when it opens a spiritual door through fear, superstition, idolatry, occult objects, and agreement with false protection.

The object may appear to bring peace at first, but it is a counterfeit peace. A person may begin to feel fear if they do not wear the charm, touch the object, keep the symbol, or perform the ritual. That fear becomes bondage.

Possible torment may include:

Fear of curses
Fear of the evil eye
Fear of removing the object
Fear of demons or spirits
Nightmares
Spiritual oppression
Mental confusion
Anxiety
Obsessive superstition
Feeling unsafe without the charm
Dependence on rituals
Oppression in the home
Strange disturbances around occult objects
Emotional heaviness
Spiritual bondage

1 John 4:18 KJV says:

“Fear hath torment.”

If a protective object creates fear, dependence, or spiritual bondage, it is not from the Lord.

Why Would Someone Get Involved?

People get involved with apotropaic practices because they want protection. Many are afraid of evil, curses, sickness, witchcraft, jealousy, bad luck, poverty, infertility, nightmares, death, or spiritual attack.

Common reasons include:

Fear
Family tradition
Cultural superstition
Fear of the evil eye
Fear of witchcraft
Fear for children
Fear of sickness
Curiosity
New Age influence
Occult upbringing
Pagan religion
Desire for control
Desire to feel spiritually safe
Lack of biblical understanding
Trust in charms instead of Christ

Many people do not realize they are trusting in counterfeit protection.

How Does It Hurt a Christian Who Dabbles With It?

A Christian who dabbles with apotropaic objects or rituals can enter spiritual mixture. They may say they love Jesus, but still keep an evil-eye bracelet, charm, talisman, amulet, witch mark, crystal, or protective object “just in case.”

That “just in case” reveals fear and divided trust.

1 Corinthians 10:21 KJV says:

“Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils…”

Apotropaic practices can hurt a Christian by:

Opening doors to familiar spirits
Creating fear and superstition
Weakening faith in God’s protection
Bringing spiritual confusion
Making the person dependent on objects
Defiling the home through occult items
Leading into charms, amulets, crystals, talismans, and witchcraft
Creating bondage to rituals
Bringing false peace
Blocking discernment
Creating double-mindedness
Opening generational occult doors
Replacing the blood of Jesus with counterfeit covering

Jesus Christ is enough. His blood is enough. His Word is enough. His authority is enough.

What Curses Can Come on a Christian Through Apotropaic Practices?

From a deliverance perspective, dabbling in apotropaic magic can open doors to curses and spiritual bondage. Possible spiritual consequences may include:

A curse of idolatry — trusting objects, charms, symbols, or rituals instead of God.
A curse of fear — fear of evil, curses, demons, bad luck, or removing the object.
A curse of superstition — bondage to signs, omens, lucky objects, and rituals.
A curse of familiar spirits — spirits imitating protection, peace, warning, or guidance.
A curse of witchcraft — using objects or rituals for spiritual power.
A curse of divination — seeking hidden spiritual protection or signs outside of God.
A curse of torment — nightmares, anxiety, oppression, and spiritual harassment.
A curse of false protection — feeling safe only when the charm or object is present.
A curse of confusion — difficulty discerning God’s voice from counterfeit impressions.
A curse of generational occultism — inherited family use of charms, folk magic, and protective rituals.
A curse of double-mindedness — trying to follow Jesus while trusting occult protection.

The good news is that Jesus Christ breaks every curse.

Galatians 3:13 KJV says:

“Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us…”

What Should a Christian Do?

A Christian should repent, renounce apotropaic practices, remove occult objects, and declare trust in Jesus Christ alone.

Renounce:

Apotropaic charms
Evil-eye jewelry
Amulets
Talismans
Protective symbols
Witch marks
Lucky charms
Horseshoes used superstitiously
Crystals used for protection
Protective rituals
Objects prayed over by occult practitioners
Household idols
Pagan protection objects
Fear-based traditions
Familiar spirits
False covering
False protection
Every agreement with fear and superstition

Acts 19:19 KJV says:

“Many of them also which used curious arts brought their books together, and burned them before all men…”

When people came to Christ, they separated from occult practices.

Prayer of Renunciation

Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for trusting in apotropaic objects, charms, amulets, talismans, evil-eye symbols, protective rituals, lucky objects, witch marks, occult symbols, or any object used to turn away evil.

I repent for fear, superstition, idolatry, and every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with false protection.

I renounce every apotropaic object, evil-eye charm, amulet, talisman, protective symbol, folk magic practice, occult ritual, familiar spirit, and counterfeit covering.

I break every curse connected to fear, superstition, charms, witchcraft, idolatry, familiar spirits, false protection, and generational occultism.

I declare that Jesus Christ is my Lord, my Protector, my Deliverer, my Refuge, and my Fortress. I trust in the blood of Jesus Christ, not an object, charm, symbol, or ritual.

Every spirit of fear, torment, superstition, witchcraft, familiar spirits, confusion, false protection, and idolatry must leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ.

Holy Spirit, cleanse my home, my body, my mind, my family, and my spiritual atmosphere. Restore my faith and teach me to trust the Lord alone.

In Jesus’ name, amen.

Final Word

Apotropaion may look like protection, but when it is rooted in charm magic, superstition, evil-eye beliefs, paganism, or occult objects, it becomes a counterfeit covering. Christians do not need charms to turn away evil.

We have Jesus Christ.

Psalm 121:7 KJV says:

“The LORD shall preserve thee from all evil: he shall preserve thy soul.”

You do not need an apotropaic object. You need the Lord.

by: Teresa Morin, Founder and President of Touch of God Int'l Ministries of Healing and Deliverance

http://www.touchofgod.org











Can a Christian Be Affected by Occult Curses?

 Can a Christian Be Affected by Occult Curses?

Can a Christian Be Affected by Occult Curses?


What Are “Gypsy Curses”?

“Gypsy curses” are often described in folklore as spoken curses, evil-eye curses, fortune-teller threats, or occult declarations meant to bring fear, misfortune, sickness, poverty, confusion, relationship breakdown, barrenness, torment, or destruction. Basically, all curses, voodoo, witchcraft, and Gypsy and more, are all against God, and are evil curses that can be broken.

Some examples people may fear include:

A curse of sickness
A curse of poverty or financial loss
A curse of barrenness or family breakdown
A curse of wandering, instability, or homelessness
A curse of bad luck or repeated misfortune
A curse of confusion or mental torment
A curse of fear, nightmares, or oppression
A curse spoken over marriage or children
A curse of death or destruction
A curse released through evil-eye beliefs
A curse connected to fortune-telling or palm reading

The belief in the evil eye is ancient and widespread. Britannica describes it as a glance believed to cause injury or death, and says belief in the evil eye has appeared in ancient Greece and Rome, Jewish, Islamic, Buddhist, Hindu, indigenous, peasant, and other folk societies.

Where Did These Curses Come From?

There is no single founder of Gypsy curses. These curses stem from a mix of ancient superstition, folk magic, evil-eye beliefs, fortune-telling, palmistry, divination, fear-based religion, and occult practices across many cultures.

Palmistry, for example, is a form of divination by interpreting the lines of the hand. Britannica says its origins are uncertain, though it may have begun in ancient India and spread from there.

So for your article, you can say:

Gypsy curses do not have one founder. They come from folk magic, evil-eye beliefs, fortune-telling, palmistry, divination, spoken curses, and occult traditions that developed across many cultures over time. The biblical issue is not ethnicity—it is witchcraft, divination, fear, and cursing.

Why Would Someone Put a Curse on Another Person?

People may curse others because of jealousy, revenge, anger, offense, hatred, greed, control, manipulation, or spiritual pride. Some may curse others because they believe it gives them power. Others may use curses to intimidate people into fear, payment, submission, or dependence.

Common reasons may include:

Revenge
Jealousy
Money manipulation
Control
Bitterness
Hatred
Family conflict
Business conflict
Relationship conflict
Envy of someone’s blessing
Retaliation after rejection
Occult pride
Fear-based intimidation
Wanting someone to suffer
Wanting power over another person

From God’s perspective, cursing others is wicked. Christians are commanded to bless, not curse.

Romans 12:14 KJV says:

“Bless them which persecute you: bless, and curse not.”

Why Are These Curses Against God’s Word?

God’s Word condemns witchcraft, divination, familiar spirits, enchantment, and occult practices.

Deuteronomy 18:10–12 KJV says:

“There shall not be found among you any one that… useth divination, or an observer of times, or an enchanter, or a witch… or a consulter with familiar spirits… For all that do these things are an abomination unto the LORD.”

A curse released through divination, fortune-telling, palmistry, evil-eye belief, spoken witchcraft, or occult power is forbidden by God.

Leviticus 19:31 KJV says:

“Regard not them that have familiar spirits, neither seek after wizards, to be defiled by them…”

Galatians 5:19–21 KJV lists witchcraft as a work of the flesh:

“Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these… idolatry, witchcraft…”

James 3:10 KJV warns:

“Out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not so to be.”

God does not want His people using their mouth to release destruction, accusation, hatred, or witchcraft.

What Are Some Manifestations of These Curses?

When someone believes they are under a curse, they may experience fear and torment. From a deliverance perspective, occult curses can also open doors when there is legal ground, agreement, fear, sin, idolatry, occult involvement, unforgiveness, or generational bondage.

Possible manifestations may include:

Sudden fear or dread
Nightmares or night terrors
Mental confusion
Oppression or heaviness
Unusual sickness patterns
Repeated financial loss
Relationship breakdown
Marriage conflict
Barrenness or reproductive attacks
Accidents or repeated misfortune
Panic or anxiety
Depression or hopelessness
Suicidal thoughts
Feeling watched or spiritually harassed
Strange dreams after visiting a psychic or fortune-teller
Fear that “something bad will happen”
Bondage to superstition
Fear of removing occult objects
Torment after palm readings, tarot, curses, or fortune-telling

Not every hardship is a curse. Christians must avoid fear and superstition. But if someone has participated in occult practices or received curses through divination, they should repent, renounce, and break agreement with the enemy.

Can a Christian Walking With the Lord Be Touched by These Curses?

A Christian who is truly walking with the Lord, living in repentance, prayer, obedience, forgiveness, and faith in Jesus Christ should not live in fear of curses.

Proverbs 26:2 KJV says:

“As the bird by wandering, as the swallow by flying, so the curse causeless shall not come.”

A curse needs legal ground. If there is no agreement, no open door, and no right for the enemy to operate, the believer can stand in Christ’s authority.

Luke 10:19 KJV says:

“Behold, I give unto you power… over all the power of the enemy…”

However, Christians can give the enemy access through:

Fear
Occult involvement
Fortune-telling
Palm reading
Tarot
Rebellion
Unforgiveness
Bitterness
Idolatry
Sexual sin
Generational witchcraft
Cursed objects
Agreeing with the curse
Speaking the curse over themselves
Going back to occult practitioners for help

A believer should not fear curses, but they should also not play with occult practices.

Why Would Someone Get Involved With These Practices?

People may get involved because they are afraid, desperate, curious, or searching for answers. Some go to fortune-tellers or occult practitioners to know the future, get help with love, find money answers, break a curse, contact the dead, or receive spiritual protection.

People may get involved because of:

Fear of the future
Curiosity
Family tradition
Superstition
Desperation for answers
Relationship problems
Financial stress
Health concerns
Desire for control
Belief in fortune-tellers
Fear of curses
Desire to curse someone else
Seeking protection outside of God
Lack of biblical knowledge

But seeking help from occult power only opens more doors.

Isaiah 8:19 KJV says:

“Should not a people seek unto their God?”

How Does It Hurt a Christian Who Dabbles With It?

A Christian who dabbles with fortune-telling, palmistry, evil-eye charms, spoken curses, curse removal rituals, occult protection, or Gypsy magic is entering a spiritual mixture.

1 Corinthians 10:21 KJV says:

“Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils…”

It can hurt a Christian by:

Opening doors to familiar spirits
Increasing fear and superstition
Creating dependence on occult workers
Weakening discernment
Inviting spiritual confusion
Creating bondage to curses
Opening doors to witchcraft
Replacing prayer with rituals
Creating torment and nightmares
Opening generational doors
Bringing false peace
Causing double-mindedness
Blocking intimacy with the Holy Spirit

A Christian should not seek an occult worker to remove a curse. That only deepens the bondage. Jesus Christ breaks curses.

What Curses Can Come on a Christian Through Dabbling?

From a deliverance perspective, possible spiritual consequences may include:

A curse of divination — seeking hidden knowledge through fortune-telling, palmistry, or occult methods.
A curse of fear — fear of bad luck, evil eye, curses, or retaliation.
A curse of witchcraft — agreement with occult power and manipulation.
A curse of familiar spirits — spirits that imitate guidance, warning, protection, or insight.
A curse of poverty — financial loss connected to fear-based occult agreements.
A curse of confusion — inability to hear God clearly.
A curse of torment — nightmares, oppression, panic, or spiritual harassment.
A curse of superstition — bondage to signs, objects, rituals, or lucky/unlucky beliefs.
A curse of idolatry — trusting charms, readers, rituals, or objects instead of Jesus.
A curse of double-mindedness — trying to follow Jesus while consulting occult sources.
A curse of generational occultism — inherited family patterns of divination, witchcraft, curses, and fear.
A curse of retaliation — backlash from participating in occult practices.

The good news is that Jesus Christ breaks every curse.

Galatians 3:13 KJV says:

“Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us…”

What Should a Christian Do?

A Christian should repent, renounce occult involvement, break agreement with fear, and refuse to live under intimidation.

Renounce:

Fortune-telling
Palmistry
Evil-eye beliefs
Spoken curses
Occult curse removal
Witchcraft
Divination
Familiar spirits
Fear of curses
Superstitions
Amulets or charms used for protection
Tarot or psychic readings
Paying occult workers for help
Generational occultism
Agreement with any curse spoken over your life

Acts 19:19 KJV says:

“Many of them also which used curious arts brought their books together, and burned them before all men…”

Prayer of Renunciation

Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for any involvement with fortune-telling, palmistry, evil-eye beliefs, spoken curses, occult protection, curse removal rituals, charms, divination, witchcraft, familiar spirits, superstition, and fear.

I renounce every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with occult curses, Gypsy curses, fortune-teller curses, evil-eye curses, spoken witchcraft, fear, intimidation, and familiar spirits.

I break every curse spoken over me, my family, my health, my mind, my marriage, my children, my finances, my destiny, and my walk with God. I declare that Jesus Christ is my Lord, my Savior, my Deliverer, and my Protector.

Every spirit of witchcraft, divination, fear, torment, confusion, superstition, familiar spirits, poverty, sickness, retaliation, and bondage must leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ.

I close every door opened through fear, curiosity, ignorance, rebellion, occult objects, fortune-telling, or agreement with curses. I cover myself and my family with the blood of Jesus Christ.

Holy Spirit, cleanse me, restore my discernment, and fill every place where darkness had access. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Final Word

Christians do not need to fear Gypsy curses, evil-eye curses, fortune-teller curses, or spoken witchcraft. But they must not dabble in occult practices or give the enemy legal ground.

The believer’s protection is not in charms, rituals, or curse removers. Protection is in Jesus Christ.

John 8:36 KJV says:

“If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.”

For more teaching on biblical curses, read:
https://www.touchofgod.org/post/the-seven-biblical-curses-listed-in-the-bible

Visit the comprehensive Occult List:
https://www.touchofgod.org/post/occult-checklist

by: Teresa Morin, Founder and President of Touch of God Int'l Ministries of Healing and Deliverance and Counseling

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Cupping, Qi, Meridians, and the Danger of New Age Healing

 Cupping, Qi, Meridians, and the Danger of New Age Healing

Christian warning infographic about the dangers of cupping according to the Bible, showing a man receiving cupping therapy with circular marks on his back, dark imagery tied to qi and energy healing, Bible verses, a glowing cross, and a message that Jesus is the true Healer.


Cupping: Should Christians Get Involved?

Cupping is an ancient alternative therapy where cups are placed on the skin to create suction. Some people use it for pain, muscle tightness, headaches, inflammation, stress, circulation, or sports recovery. Cleveland Clinic describes it as a method that uses suction to pull the skin and increase blood flow to an area, but also notes that evidence for benefits is mixed and that it may cause bruising or infection.

For Christians, the concern is not simply that cups are placed on the skin. The deeper issue is why it is being done, what belief system is attached to it, and whether the practitioner is using spiritual energy, meridians, qi, yin-yang balance, occult healing, or New Age methods.

Where Did Cupping Come From?

Cupping is very old and does not have one single origin. It has appeared in ancient Egyptian, Chinese, Middle Eastern, Greek, and other traditional healing systems. One of the oldest written references is connected to the Ebers Papyrus, an ancient Egyptian medical text dated around 1550 B.C. that included many medical treatments and formulas.

Cupping also became part of Traditional Chinese Medicine, where it has often been connected to concepts like qi, meridians, stagnation, balance, and energy flow. Modern medical sources often describe the physical technique as suction applied to the skin, while traditional systems may attach spiritual or energetic meaning to it.

Who Is the Founder of Cupping?

There is no single founder of cupping. It developed across different ancient cultures. Some sources associate early evidence with ancient Egypt, while other traditions developed it in China, the Middle East, Greece, and later Islamic medicine. Because of this, it is more accurate to say cupping is an ancient traditional therapy rather than a practice founded by one person.

What Is Cupping Used For?

Cupping may be used for:

Pain relief
Back pain
Neck pain
Headaches
Muscle tightness
Sports recovery
Inflammation
Stress relief
Circulation
Respiratory complaints
Traditional “detox” claims
Energy balancing in some systems
Qi or meridian work in Traditional Chinese Medicine

The NIH’s National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health says cupping can cause side effects such as persistent skin discoloration, scars, burns, and infections. Rare but severe side effects have been reported, including bleeding inside the skull after scalp cupping and anemia from repeated wet cupping.

Why Would Someone Get Involved in Cupping?

People may get involved because they are in pain, desperate for healing, curious, influenced by celebrities or athletes, interested in natural wellness, or looking for relief after other treatments have not worked. Some are drawn in through massage therapy, acupuncture clinics, spas, holistic health centers, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Ayurveda, or New Age healing environments.

Common reasons include:

Chronic pain
Muscle tension
Stress
Fear of sickness
Sports recovery
Curiosity
A desire for natural healing
Disappointment with medical care
Interest in acupuncture or energy medicine
Influence from social media or celebrities
Belief in detox, qi, meridians, or spiritual energy

A Christian should ask: Am I simply receiving a physical technique from a licensed provider, or am I submitting to a spiritual system that seeks healing through energy, qi, meridians, or occult power?

Why Can Cupping Be Against God’s Word?

Cupping becomes spiritually dangerous when it is connected to occult healing, energy manipulation, qi, meridian balancing, divination, spiritual cleansing, or New Age beliefs. God’s Word warns His people not to seek hidden spiritual power or healing from forbidden sources.

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… For all that do these things are an abomination unto the LORD.”

Leviticus 19:31 KJV says:

“Regard not them that have familiar spirits, neither seek after wizards, to be defiled by them…”

Colossians 2:8 KJV warns:

“Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men… and not after Christ.”

Isaiah 8:19 KJV says:

“Should not a people seek unto their God?”

The problem is not that God is against the body receiving care. The problem is when healing is sought through spiritual systems that are not submitted to Jesus Christ.

How Does Cupping Hurt a Christian Who Dabbles With It?

A Christian may be hurt spiritually when cupping is received through practitioners who use energy healing, qi activation, meridian cleansing, chakra work, spiritual “detox,” or occult methods. The person may think they are only getting physical help, while unknowingly agreeing with a spiritual system behind the practice.

It can hurt a Christian by:

Opening doors to New Age healing
Creating dependence on energy systems instead of prayer
Weakening discernment
Bringing spiritual confusion
Opening doors to familiar spirits if spiritual power is invoked
Creating fear that the body cannot heal without rituals or energy work
Leading to acupuncture, Reiki, chakra balancing, crystals, and other occult healing systems
Replacing faith in Jesus with faith in invisible energy forces
Bringing double-mindedness

1 Corinthians 10:21 KJV says:

“Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils…”

Christians should not mix the Holy Spirit with occult energy systems.

What Curses Can Come on a Christian Through Cupping?

The cup itself is not the power. The danger comes from agreement with false healing systems, occult energy, spiritual deception, or practitioners invoking spiritual forces.

Possible spiritual consequences may include:

A curse of false healing — trusting another spiritual source instead of Jesus Christ.
A curse of New Age deception — accepting energy, qi, or meridian beliefs as spiritual truth.
A curse of infirmity — sickness patterns may worsen when occult doors are opened.
A curse of confusion — difficulty discerning the Holy Spirit from counterfeit spiritual impressions.
A curse of fear — fear that health depends on rituals, practitioners, or energy treatments.
A curse of idolatry — trusting a method more than God.
A curse of familiar spirits — spirits that imitate warmth, peace, healing, or guidance.
A curse of double-mindedness — trying to follow Christ while agreeing with occult healing.
A curse of bondage to alternative healing — feeling unable to stop the practice.
A curse of spiritual defilement — receiving from a source not submitted to Jesus Christ.

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…”

What Should a Christian Do?

A Christian should pray, use discernment, research the practitioner, and reject any form of cupping tied to qi, meridian energy, chakra balancing, spiritual cleansing, occult healing, or New Age language.

Ask these questions before getting involved:

Does the practitioner speak of qi, energy, meridians, chakras, spiritual cleansing, or balancing?
Do they combine cupping with acupuncture, Reiki, crystals, sound healing, or aura work?
Do they pray, chant, invoke spirits, or use spiritual tools?
Am I trusting this for healing more than Jesus Christ?
Do I feel convicted by the Holy Spirit?

If you have already participated and feel convicted, repent, renounce any spiritual agreement, and ask Jesus Christ to close every door.

Prayer of Renunciation

Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for participating in any form of cupping connected to occult healing, qi, meridians, energy work, chakra balancing, spiritual cleansing, or New Age practices.

I renounce every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with false healing, energy medicine, familiar spirits, counterfeit peace, spiritual deception, and any source of healing outside of Jesus Christ.

I break every curse connected to New Age healing, false healing, infirmity, confusion, fear, idolatry, double-mindedness, and spiritual defilement.

I command every spirit attached to occult healing, qi, meridians, energy manipulation, fear, confusion, infirmity, and familiar spirits to leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ.

Holy Spirit, cleanse me, restore my discernment, and lead me into truth. Jesus Christ is my Healer, Deliverer, Protector, and Lord. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Final Word

Cupping may be presented as a physical wellness treatment, but Christians must be discerning. If it is tied to energy healing, qi, meridians, chakras, or occult methods, it becomes spiritually dangerous.

Jesus is your Healer. Do not open spiritual doors in the name of health.

For more teaching on biblical curses, read:
https://www.touchofgod.org/post/the-seven-biblical-curses-listed-in-the-bible

A comprehensive occult list: https://www.touchofgod.org/post/occult-checklist

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

See all the programs, free ebooks and scheduling a one-on-one deliverance session - linktr.ee/teresamorin





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35-Second Video Script With Hook

Hook:
Have you ever wondered if cupping is harmless for Christians?

Cupping may look like a simple wellness treatment, but many forms are connected to qi, meridians, energy flow, and Traditional Chinese Medicine.

God’s Word warns us not to seek hidden spiritual power or healing from forbidden sources.

When a Christian gets involved in energy healing, it can open doors to confusion, false healing, familiar spirits, fear, and spiritual bondage.

Jesus Christ is your Healer—not qi, energy, meridians, or New Age practices.

Before you get involved, ask what spirit is behind it.

Read the full article at the link below.

YouTube Description

Cupping therapy is often presented as a natural wellness treatment for pain, stress, circulation, and muscle tension. But some forms of cupping are connected to qi, meridians, energy healing, Traditional Chinese Medicine, and New Age ideas. Christians must use discernment and ask whether the practice is purely physical or spiritually rooted in a system that does not honor Jesus Christ. by Teresa Morin, Founder of Touch of God International Ministries of Healing and Deliverance - touchofgod.org

In this teaching, learn where cupping came from, why Christians should be cautious, how it can open spiritual doors when connected to energy healing, and why Jesus Christ alone is the true Healer.

A comprehensive occult list: https://www.touchofgod.org/post/occult-checklist

More teaching on biblical curses:
https://www.touchofgod.org/post/the-seven-biblical-curses-listed-in-the-bible

Scriptures: Deuteronomy 18:10–12, Leviticus 19:31, Colossians 2:8, Isaiah 8:19, 1 Corinthians 10:21, Galatians 3:13

TikTok Description

Is cupping harmless for Christians? Some forms are connected to qi, meridians, energy healing, and New Age practices. Jesus Christ is your Healer—not hidden spiritual energy. Read the full article: [Add your article link]

Hashtags

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