Showing posts with label reiki and christianity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reiki and christianity. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

What is Reiki

Reiki and Christianity: Unmasking the Deception

Reiki and Christianity: Unmasking the Deception


Reiki Exposed: A Christian Warning About the Spirit Behind It

Reiki is a spiritual healing practice that has gained widespread popularity worldwide, often associated with health and well-being. It feels peaceful, even divine, but its roots tell another story. Reiki is not from God. It is a counterfeit system that taps into spiritual forces opposed to Jesus Christ.

Many Christians are deceived by the soft language of “universal energy,” “light,” and “love.” But as 2 Corinthians 11:14 warns us, “Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light.” Reiki is another example of that deception—an open door to spirits that are not of the Holy Spirit.


What is Reiki?

Reiki is a Japanese word meaning “universal life energy.” Practitioners believe it is a healing force that flows through the hands to heal others. While it seems harmless or even helpful, it is deeply rooted in Buddhist mysticism and New Age practices.

The founder, Dr. Mikao Usui, was a Japanese Buddhist who claimed to have received the ability after fasting and meditating on Mount Kurama in 1914. He experienced what Buddhists call a satori—a moment of enlightenment. From there, Reiki was born.

Usui said he touched “an intense energy” that inspired him. But this inspiration did not come from Jesus Christ—it came through spiritual means foreign to Scripture. Reiki was never about God’s power but about channeling a universal force that supposedly unites body, soul, and the divine.


How Reiki Works—And Why It’s Dangerous

To become a Reiki practitioner, one must go through “attunement”—a spiritual initiation that opens a person to the flow of this “energy.” A Reiki master acts as a conduit, supposedly raising your frequency so that you become aligned with the universal force.

But what is this force? It is not the Holy Spirit. It is not the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Reiki’s source is vague and undefined—often described as “Source,” “Spirit,” or “the Force.” This spiritual ambiguity is not harmless—it’s demonic.

The ritual includes the use of symbols, mantras, and the invocation of unseen forces. The energy enters through the crown chakra and flows into the auric field, mirroring Hindu and Buddhist concepts. This mimics the laying on of hands in Christianity but originates from a completely different spiritual kingdom.

Reiki opens doors to spiritual beings. These are not angels of the Lord—they are counterfeit spirits. Former Reiki practitioners often report supernatural sensations: heat in the hands, emotional waves, vivid visions, or spiritual peace. But none of it glorifies God. Instead, it glorifies self.


A Former Practitioner Speaks Out

One former Reiki master shared:

"It was real. My hands heated up. People felt better. But God was not glorified. I kept looking for the next level of mastery, new symbols, new wisdom—until Jesus filled the void. When I gave my life to Him, I realized Reiki couldn’t fit with the cross. I tried to merge them, but God said no. Reiki leads people away from Jesus, not to Him.”

This honest testimony reveals the spiritual hunger Reiki cannot satisfy. The peace it offers is temporary and counterfeit. True healing comes only from Jesus Christ (Isaiah 53:5).


Does Reiki Line Up With the Bible? Use Discernment

Ask yourself:

  • Who was the founder, and what was his spirituality? (Buddhist mystic)

  • What is the source of the healing energy? (Not the Holy Spirit)

  • Does the practice lead people to Christ? (No—it leads them to “spiritual masters”)

  • Is there scriptural precedent for such healing rituals? (No—God’s healing comes through prayer, not attunement)

  • Who is glorified—God or self? (Always self)

Deuteronomy 18:10-12 warns us against divination, sorcery, and calling upon spirits. These practices defile us and lead us into bondage. Reiki fits this description and is not a “neutral” healing art.


Conclusion: Choose Christ, Not Counterfeits

Reiki may appear beautiful, but it is not from the Holy Spirit. It is another scheme of the enemy to draw people away from Jesus. It is spiritual poison coated in healing honey. God does not need symbols, attunements, or rituals to heal—He simply speaks the word.

If you have been involved in Reiki, repent and renounce it in the name of Jesus Christ. Break the spiritual ties and close the door to deception.


Watch the Video on This Page to Learn the Full Truth!

Click the video now to see how Reiki works behind the scenes—and why it’s a spiritual trap. You’ll also hear real testimonies and what the Bible says about true healing through Jesus.

Symptoms from Reiki


🙌 Call to Action

💥 Ready to be free from New Age deception and walk in God’s healing?
Join our FREE Deliverance Webinar on June 23 @ 7:00 PM CST
➡️ Sign up now!

🤝 Need personal ministry?
We offer 1-on-1 deliverance sessions: Get Help Here

🌸 Ladies, join our Thrive Mentoring Group!
Grow in your walk with Christ: Learn More

🕊️ Join us Tuesday nights for online prayer!
Let’s seek God together for healing and breakthrough.

—Teresa Morin, President, Touch of God Int’l Ministries
www.touchofgod.org














Marketing - no

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

Reike Roots and History - move to wix

Reiki is a universal energy technique to Heal


Reiki is known as a spiritual energy based on a pantheistic worldview like its counterparts.
Ray Yungen reports that in 1970, there were ½ million Reiki channellers. There are 1 million Reiki channellers in Germany and 2.6 million web pages on Reiki. So in the 90s, it grew significantly.

Reiki is the Japanese word for Universal Life Form Energy. The definition for Reiki is universal, transcendental spirit, power, and essence. The Rei and ki are broken into two component parts (Kanji Japanese alphabet). They are described as vital life forms of energy similar to the Chi of Chinese acupuncture. In the Encyclopedia of Alternative Health Care, author Kristin Olsen says Reiki is “an energy healing system based on ancient Tibetan knowledge discovered by a Japanese theologian.” 

Many people have commented on the ecumenical aspect of Reiki. Supposedly, it was founded by Dr. Mikao Usui, a Japanese Christian minister in Kyoto, Japan, in the mid-1800s. When one of his students challenged his belief that Jesus Christ healed people with His hands, Dr. Usui began a quest for proof that this type of healing existed.

Dr. Usui began a journey of many years looking for a way to heal through the 'light of God,' the way Jesus had healed. Studying first at Christian schools in the US, he had yet to receive results. He studied Buddhist writings at a monastery in the Orient but needed help finding answers. Usui learned the ancient language of Sanskrit and began to read the sutras, the ancient books of esoteric Hindu religious teaching.

The story goes that after discovering this healing in the sutras, Usui told the monastery monks he intended to fast and meditate for 21 days on a nearby mountain in Japan. If he did not come back, they should go and get his body.

He went to the mountain and gathered 21 stones to count the days. Each day, he would throw away a stone and, in this way, count the time. On the 20th day, no revelation had come, and he threw away the last stone, saying, “Well, this is it; either I get the answer tonight, or I do not.”

On the final day of his meditative quest, he could see a ball of light approaching him at night on the horizon. The first instinct was to get out of the way, but he realized this might just be what he was waiting for, so he allowed it to hit him right in the forehead. As it struck him, he was taken on a journey and shown bubbles of all the colors of the rainbow, which were the symbols of Reiki. These were the same symbols in the Tibetan writings he studied but could not understand. Now, there was total understanding.

After this experience, he began back down the mountain and, from this moment on, was able to heal. This first day, this new power proved itself to Usui when he stubbed his toe and could cure it, his own starvation, an ailing tooth, and the Abbot sickness that was keeping him bedridden. These are known as the first four miracles.

Thus, the healing knowledge he termed “Reiki” was discovered. The name comes from the Japanese words rei, meaning “boundless and universal,” and ki, meaning “vital life energy force that flows through all living beings.”

Wanting to use these abilities to help others, he spent the next seven years in the beggar section of Tokyo, healing the poor and sick.
How Does It Work?

Reiki is a “laying on of hands” healing. Reiki today is an energy technique passed along from Reiki masters to initiates. According to Olsen, these Reiki masters don't understand how it works. They can only describe it as a link with the cosmic radiant energy, an opening of chakras, or an attunement with universal life energy. Proponents say these can be applied to the practitioner himself, plants, or animals and can even heal long distances!

Reiki is drawn through the channel, not sent. By laying hands on the person, you draw appropriate amounts of energy to whatever areas of your body need. The energy centers, also known as charkas (found in Hinduism), are opened to enable the person to channel higher amounts of universal Life Form Energy. They claim the “recipient” does not take on any negative energy or blocks from the practitioner. Reiki passes through a purified channel in the body, and each has a treatment by this process. Proponents say the technique can be applied to the practitioner himself, other people, plants, or animals.

“Once the chakra is opened, the universal energy is channeled to flow freely and in higher amounts; Reiki is never sent but drawn through the channel. The energy enters through the crown chakra of the healer. It passes through the upper energy centers, the heart, and the solar plexus, then through the recipient's arms and hands. So, the practitioner and the patient are both treated. They teach that we all have the reiki energy and that anyone can learn to lay their hands on another to help accelerate the healing process by transferring magnetic energy” (Paula Horan Empowerment through Reiki May 1990 Calendar of Events, Hawaii newspaper).

Reiki treatments consist of three or four sessions lasting about an hour each. The practitioners do not claim to diagnose. The 'words' spoken mentally or verbally during the healing session are essential to them. The symbols drawn with the healer's palms over the patient should be correct as the light energy is brought through the healer. During a Reiki session, the practitioner draws energy and focuses it through his hands, thus providing a link between himself and the patient. Some Reiki teachers have described this connection as “lighting up.” The practitioner's hands are held at twelve basic positions for five minutes each. A practitioner allows his or her own intuition to guide the placing. Over problem areas, the hand is held twice as long. Some Reiki practitioners claim to heal at long distances.

We are told that we all have Reiki energy (Universal Life Form Energy), and anyone can lay their hands on another person and help accelerate their healing process by transferring this energy (many claim that this is how Jesus healed using these various techniques). One must go through the attunement (the initiation) process that the student experiences in the multiple levels of Reiki classes. With practice, they say they can detect energy responses from the body that often give clues to the site of an organic problem and its seriousness.

Most believe they are helping people with this undiscovered but ancient energy-balancing new-age technique. They think they have discovered tools for reawakening, higher levels of consciousness, and creating better health.

Again, like other new-age practices, this energy is manipulated by techniques learned by the initiate. This differs from many other prana, chi, and Ki techniques. It has nothing to do with a Christian worldview and actually opposes it.