Showing posts with label occult visualization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label occult visualization. Show all posts

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Roots Behind Visualization

Exposing the Spiritual Dangers of Visualization: A Biblical Perspective

Exposing Visualization: Occult Roots in the Modern Church

Visualization has become a popular practice across many spiritual and self-help circles. What’s troubling is how this technique, which originates from occult and metaphysical traditions, is being welcomed into the Christian church. Many well-meaning believers have embraced visualization as a tool for healing, prayer, or spiritual growth without realizing the grave spiritual risks involved.

In occult practice, visualization involves creating mental images that are believed to manifest in the physical world. Practitioners claim that thoughts and intentions have power—what is envisioned spiritually becomes reality. This belief is grounded in Gnosticism and other esoteric philosophies that promote the idea of self-realization and the attainment of psycho-spiritual power.

This worldview teaches that the universe responds to our thoughts, which produce energy. As one incubates an image in the mind, it allegedly takes form first in the spiritual realm and eventually in the material world. This is seen in Christian Science, Eastern mysticism, and the metaphysical teachings of mind science.

The Christianized Version of Visualization

Today, a “Christianized” version of visualization is promoted in many churches. It is taught that if one holds a mental image, speaks it aloud with faith, and believes strongly enough, the desired result will appear. This is rooted in the same occult principle of manifestation, where belief becomes a creative force.

Leaders in the Faith movement have adopted this idea. Kenneth Copeland, for example, writes that words shape reality: “What you are saying is precisely what you are getting now.” This belief is not biblical but stems from occult teachings.

Napoleon Hill, author of Think and Grow Rich, was introduced to these visualization techniques by so-called “Ascended Masters”—spiritual entities he encountered through astral imagery. He claimed to meet nightly with a council of famous men in his mind until they became “real” to him. This is the same visualization concept now marketed as Christian prayer or inner healing.

Visualization in Inner Healing and Prayer

One alarming development is the use of visualization in inner healing. People are told to picture Jesus entering past traumatic memories to “heal” them. Leaders like Agnes Sanford and Ruth Carter Stapleton promoted this method, encouraging people to visualize Jesus in any situation—even during sinful acts—to make the memory feel “holy.”

But this opens the door to spiritual deception. The Jesus one visualizes may not be the Jesus of Scripture but a counterfeit. 2 Corinthians 11:4 warns us about “another Jesus” and “another spirit.” When one creates a mental Jesus and begins to interact with Him as if He were real, it mimics how occultists communicate with spirit guides.

Johanna Michaelsen, a former occultist turned Christian, warns about this technique in her book Like Lambs to the Slaughter. She explains the legitimate use of imagination for art or memory is distinct from using imagination to manipulate reality or summon spiritual beings.

Visualization as Sorcery and Divination

The Bible does not teach visualization as a spiritual discipline. In fact, it warns against practices that mirror it. Mental imaging, meditative incubation, and dream scripting are all rooted in occultism. Using the mind to create reality is spiritual manipulation—a form of sorcery or divination.

While God can and does give visions, they are initiated by Him, not induced by our mental exercises. Scripture records divine visions in passages like Genesis 15:1 and Daniel 10:1, but never as a result of human effort. These encounters came unexpectedly, through divine initiative—not through visualization techniques.

Jeremiah 14:14 warns, “The prophets prophesy lies in My name. I have not sent them…they prophesy to you a false vision…a deceit of their heart.” This shows that visions can come from the human mind or from demonic influence—not from God.

The Real Problem with Visualization

The biggest danger of visualization is that it bypasses faith. Hebrews 11:1 says, “Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” If we require a mental picture to believe or to pray, we are walking by sight—not by faith. Visualization contradicts biblical principles.

Furthermore, Christians are told to pray and believe—not to envision or imagine outcomes. Nowhere in the Bible do Jesus, Paul, or any apostle use visualization to bring about healing, guidance, or communication with God. These techniques are found only in paganism and occultism.

Even seemingly innocent practices like imagining a future blessing or success can open spiritual doors. Occultists have long taught that dreams and mental pictures can shape reality through the “fourth dimension.” When Christians mimic this, even if they invoke the Holy Spirit, they risk spiritual confusion and deception.

Discerning the Source

Believers must test all spiritual practices by asking:

  • Who founded this practice?

  • What spiritual worldview did they follow?

  • What was their concept of God?

  • Does this line up with Scripture?

When we examine visualization through these questions, it becomes clear that its roots are not biblical. From Napoleon Hill to New Age mystics to Faith movement leaders, the source remains the same: a self-generated technique of spiritual manipulation.

Conclusion: Faith, Not Imagination

God does not ask us to create reality through mental images. He calls us to trust His Word and walk in faith. Prayer is not a magic technique; it’s communication with our loving Father. And Jesus does not need to be imagined—He is already interceding at the right hand of the Father (Romans 8:34).

We must be careful not to exchange the truth of Scripture for the seductive lies of mystical practices. Visualization may feel spiritual, but its fruit leads away from dependence on God and toward human control of the spiritual realm—a form of rebellion cloaked in spiritual language.

Let us reject all techniques that replace faith with fantasy and discern between what is from God and what imitates Him. As 2 Corinthians 10:5 reminds us, we are to “cast down imaginations and every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God.”

Teresa Morin President, Touch of God Int’l Ministries


Join Our Free Deliverance Webinar to learn more about spiritual deception and how to break free: https://www.touchofgod.org/events/free-webinar-registration

Need Personal Ministry? One-on-one deliverance sessions are available: https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/deliverance-ministry

Ladies, Join Our Thrive Group Mentorship! Be equipped, healed, and empowered: https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/women-thriving-together-group

Join Our Tuesday Night Prayer Meetings! Live weekly on Zoom—experience the power of prayer and fellowship.

👉 🙋‍♀️ Thrive Group Mentoring for Women:

Don’t struggle alone. Join Spirit-filled women growing and healing together through mentorship, emotional healing, and biblical deliverance. We pray for one another. 
💖 Join the Thrive Group

📖 Get Your FREE Copy of Unraveling Deliverance

Discover how demons enter, how to fight back, and how to walk in freedom with this powerful digital resource.
📘 Download Free Now










Marekting - No 


Social Media Post: Many Christians have unknowingly adopted visualization—a practice rooted in the occult. Watch the eye-opening video on this page and learn how visualization opens doors to deception and false spiritual encounters.

🔹 Learn how the enemy twists truth 🔹 Discover what Scripture actually says 🔹 Protect your spiritual walk

📹 Click to watch now!