Showing posts with label witchcraft charms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label witchcraft charms. 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











Sunday, May 17, 2026

Are You Trusting God or a Charm?*

 Are You Trusting God or a Charm?

Lady sitting on the floor using charms, sad separated from god

Charms in the occult or New Age are objects people believe carry spiritual power, protection, luck, healing energy, attraction, money, love, or power. They may include crystals, amulets, talismans, bracelets, symbols, oils, candles, herbs, written spells, “protection” necklaces, evil-eye jewelry, pentagrams, charms for love, money charms, or objects prayed over by occult practitioners.

From a biblical standpoint, charms are dangerous because they shift a person’s trust away from God and toward an object, ritual, spirit, symbol, or hidden power.

Who Was the Founder

There is no single founder of charms in the occult.

Charms, amulets, and talismans are ancient practices that developed in many pagan and occult cultures over thousands of years. Britannica explains that charms are connected to magical formulas, amulets, and talismans, and that in ancient Egypt, spoken magic formulas were eventually written on amulets and worn for power or protection.

Amulets are even older than many organized occult systems. Britannica says prehistoric peoples used natural amulets in burials, and some man-made amulets may date back to around 25,000 B.C.

What God’s Word Says About Charms

The Bible directly warns against charms, sorcery, divination, witchcraft, and occult practices.

Isaiah 3:18–20 mentions charms among the objects of pride and spiritual mixture that God would remove:

“In that day the Lord will take away the bravery of their tinkling ornaments… the chains, and the bracelets… the tablets…”
Isaiah 3:18–20 KJV

The word translated as “tablets” has been understood by many as amulets or charms worn for protection or spiritual influence.

Deuteronomy 18:10–12 gives a strong warning:

“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 a witch, or a charmer, or a consulter with familiar spirits…”
Deuteronomy 18:10–11 KJV

God calls these practices an abomination because they open people to counterfeit spiritual power.

Psalm 115:4–8 warns about trusting in objects made by human hands:

“Their idols are silver and gold, the work of men’s hands… They that make them are like unto them; so is every one that trusteth in them.”
Psalm 115:4–8 KJV

A charm may look innocent, beautiful, or harmless, but when someone believes it carries spiritual protection or power, it becomes an idol and a doorway to deception.

Why People Get Into Charms

Many people turn to charms because they are afraid, wounded, curious, or searching for control. Some wear charms for protection from evil. Others use them for good luck, healing, money, love, beauty, spiritual energy, or emotional peace.

People may also get into charms because:

They want protection without surrendering to God.

They are looking for power without obedience.

They are searching for healing but do not know Jesus as Healer.

They want control over outcomes, relationships, money, or the future.

They are deceived by New Age language such as “energy,” “vibration,” “manifesting,” “spiritual alignment,” or “universal protection.”

They may have inherited occult objects or practices through family traditions.

Many people do not realize they are participating in occult practices. They may say, “It is just jewelry,” “It is only a crystal,” “It helps me feel safe,” or “I do not worship it.” But the spiritual issue is this: What are you trusting in?

If the object gives you comfort, protection, power, guidance, or spiritual confidence apart from God, it has become a substitute for Him.

Why Charms Are Dangerous

Charms are dangerous because they can open spiritual doors. The Bible teaches that there are only two spiritual kingdoms: the Kingdom of God and the kingdom of darkness. If something is not empowered by the Holy Spirit, then it is drawing from another source.

Charms can become:

A doorway to familiar spirits.
Occult objects may invite demonic spirits to attach themselves to the person, home, or family line.

A false source of protection.
Instead of trusting Psalm 91 and the blood of Jesus, the person begins trusting an object.

A form of idolatry.
Anything we depend on spiritually instead of God becomes an idol.

A trap of fear.
Many people become afraid to remove the charm because they believe something bad will happen. That fear is bondage.

A link to witchcraft.
Some charms are prayed over, charged, dedicated, or used in rituals. This connects the object to spiritual covenants.

A counterfeit comfort.
It may feel peaceful at first, but the enemy often uses false peace to gain access.

What Should Christians Do?

Christians should renounce charms, repent for trusting in any object or occult source, and remove them from their homes, bodies, cars, purses, or property.

Acts 19:19 shows that when people came to Christ, they destroyed their occult materials:

“Many of them also which used curious arts brought their books together, and burned them before all men…”
Acts 19:19 KJV

They did not keep them as souvenirs. They separated from them completely.

Prayer of Renunciation

Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for trusting in charms, amulets, crystals, symbols, objects, rituals, or any occult power for protection, healing, luck, money, love, guidance, or peace. I renounce every charm, spell, talisman, New Age object, occult covenant, and familiar spirit connected to these things. I break every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with the kingdom of darkness. I declare that Jesus Christ alone is my protection, healer, provider, peace, and deliverer. I command every spirit attached to charms, witchcraft, fear, superstition, divination, and idolatry to leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ. I cover myself, my home, and my family with the blood of Jesus. Holy Spirit, cleanse me and fill every place where the enemy has access. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Strong Closing Thought

Charms promise protection, but they produce bondage. They promise power, but they open doors to darkness. They promise peace, but only Jesus Christ gives true peace.

God’s people are not called to wear spiritual substitutes. We are called to trust the Lord completely.

“The LORD is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?”
Psalm 27:1 KJV

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