Tuesday, October 07, 2025

Occult Circles and Letters of Protection: A Boundary of Darkness

 Occult Circles and Letters of Protection: A Boundary of Darkness

Occult Circles and Letters of Protection: A Boundary of Darkness


Introduction

Across occult traditions, one recurring image appears again and again—the circle. Known as a ritual circle or letter of protection, it is believed to form a supernatural boundary of power. Practitioners use it to create what they consider a “safe space” to summon or channel energies, perform spells, or experience out-of-body travel.

While many think it’s harmless symbolism or simple “spiritual safety,” the truth from God’s Word is far different. The Bible exposes such practices as forms of divination and witchcraft, drawing power from sources outside the Lord’s authority. Let’s uncover the origins, beliefs, and dangers behind occult letters of protection—and why Scripture warns Christians to stay far from them.


What Are Occult Letters of Protection (Ritual Circles)?

In occult practice, a circle represents a boundary of supernatural energy. Practitioners believe that by drawing or visualizing a circle—often inscribed with mystical letters, sigils, or pentagrams—they can create a spiritual shield separating themselves from hostile forces. Inside the circle is “protected”; outside, supposedly, dwell unseen powers or spirits.

These circles are used in various branches of witchcraft, ceremonial magic, and astral projection. Those claiming out-of-body experiences sometimes draw a circle around their body before they “travel,” believing that nothing else can enter their physical form while they are away.

This concept of a “protective boundary” is not new. It appears in ancient occult texts like the Lesser Key of Solomon, a medieval grimoire teaching how to summon and control spirits. Every ritual requires the magician to stand within a sacred circle for “protection.” (britannica.com)


What Do They Believe?

Practitioners of the ritual circle believe:

  1. The circle channels power. They think energy or “vibrations” can be contained and focused within the boundary.

  2. The circle offers safety. It’s viewed as a magical barrier against demons or hostile spirits.

  3. Symbols empower it. Many inscribe occult letters or sigils invoking spirits, deities, or planetary forces.

  4. Intention activates it. Through chanting, visualization, or incantations, they “charge” the circle with power.

This belief is rooted in the idea that humans can manipulate unseen forces through ritual—a concept that directly contradicts biblical faith, where power belongs only to God.


Who Created the Idea or Promoted It?

The ritual circle concept evolved from ancient pagan and magical systems. Egyptian, Babylonian, and Greek magicians used circular boundaries in their rites. Medieval sorcerers and alchemists adopted the practice, codified later in Renaissance ceremonial magic. The idea persisted through occult movements like Hermeticism, Wicca, and modern witchcraft.

In all these traditions, the circle represents control—a human attempt to command spiritual powers rather than submit to the sovereignty of the one true God.


Who Is Their God or gods?

In occultism, “deity” often refers not to the Lord of the Bible but to spiritual forces such as nature gods, planetary spirits, or personal “guardians.” Ritual circles may invoke archangels, elemental spirits (earth, air, fire, water), or even the so-called “universal power” within.

Some magicians call on “protective” entities that are, in truth, demonic spirits disguising themselves as light. (2 Corinthians 11:14 — “Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light.”) These forces are not gods of protection but agents of deception.


Purpose and Use of the Ritual Circle

  • To perform spells or invocations without fear of spiritual backlash.

  • To summon spirits or communicate with supernatural entities.

  • To meditate or travel astrally, supposedly leaving one’s body safely guarded.

  • To form a magical covenant or “letter of protection” written in occult symbols, declaring ownership of the circle’s space.

While followers believe the circle gives safety, it actually invites spiritual danger by establishing communication with unholy powers. The boundary does not protect—it isolates the practitioner under demonic control.


Why People Get Involved

People are drawn to ritual circles for several reasons:

  • Curiosity or fascination with hidden power.

  • Fear of evil spirits, believing a circle gives safety.

  • Influence of movies, books, or occult teachers.

  • Desire for control, to manage unseen forces.

  • Search for protection outside of biblical faith.

But true protection is found not in chalk lines or sigils, but in the blood of Jesus Christ (Revelation 12:11). God’s authority alone shields His people.


Is It Divination?

Yes. Ritual circles often accompany divination—attempts to seek hidden knowledge or control supernatural forces. Any act that calls upon, manipulates, or invokes spiritual entities outside God’s will is divination, forbidden in Scripture:

  • “There shall not be found among you anyone… who practices divination or sorcery.” — Deuteronomy 18:10-12

  • “Do not turn to mediums or necromancers.” — Leviticus 19:31

  • “For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft.” — 1 Samuel 15:23

These practices replace faith in God with trust in mystical symbols, circles, or chants. That’s why they are spiritually dangerous.


Why It Is Against God

  1. It denies God’s sovereignty. It seeks power apart from Him.

  2. It involves forbidden arts. Scripture condemns witchcraft and enchantment.

  3. It invites demonic influence. Demons exploit curiosity and false protection.

  4. It replaces faith with fear. Instead of trusting God’s Word, it trusts human ritual.

  5. It mimics divine protection. Only the Holy Spirit can guard believers (Ephesians 6:11-13).

The circle may look like a shield, but spiritually it is a trap. The only true circle of protection is the covering of Jesus Christ and the armor of God.


Conclusion

Occult letters of protection and ritual circles promise safety but deliver bondage. They are not neutral symbols—they are gateways to demonic deception disguised as spiritual security. The Bible warns clearly that all attempts to command or control the spiritual world apart from God are rebellion.

Christ offers a far greater promise: “The Lord will protect you from all evil; He will guard your life.” (Psalm 121:7) No charm, circle, or ritual can equal the power of God’s covering.

If you have ever drawn or used an occult circle, repent and renounce it. Break every spiritual agreement made through that act and invite Jesus to be your true Protector.

Teresa Morin
President of Touch of God Int’l Ministries
🌐 https://www.touchofgod.org
Of Healing and Deliverance, Ordained Minister, Public Speaker
📣 Featured in Who's Who Press Release


🛡️ Ready to break free from occult healing influences?
👉 Sign up for your FREE bi-weekly webinar on spiritual warfare & deliverance:
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📕 Get your “At War Prayer Manual” for just $5 this summer and demolish occult strongholds:
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💞 Ladies—join our THRIVE Mentoring Group for spiritual growth, healing, and sisterhood:
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📚 Download your FREE eBook: “Unraveling Deliverance”—learn the path to freedom today:
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🙏 Submit a prayer request now and let us stand with you:
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Social Media Promo & Hashtags

Post:
“Think an occult circle gives protection? Discover the truth behind ‘letters of protection’ and why God forbids them. Click to read now! #Occult #Witchcraft #BibleTruth #Divination #ChristianWarning #SpiritualWarfare #JesusProtects”

👉 Click the link to read the full article and share with others seeking truth!


45-Second YouTube Script

[Opening shot: soft music, dark background with glowing circle]
Speaker (0–5s):
“Have you seen ritual circles or ‘letters of protection’ in the occult? They claim to shield people from spirits—but what’s really happening?”

[Cut to imagery: occult symbols, chalk circles, pentagrams]
Speaker (5–20s):
“In witchcraft and magic, circles mark a boundary of power. People draw them before spells or out-of-body travel, thinking they’re protected. But the Bible calls this divination—seeking power apart from God—and it’s forbidden in Deuteronomy 18 and Leviticus 19.”

[Cut to cross and Scripture visuals]
Speaker (20–35s):
“These circles don’t protect—they invite demonic influence by replacing faith in Christ with faith in symbols. Real protection comes only from the blood of Jesus and the armor of God.”

[Closing shot: light overtakes the dark circle]
Speaker (35–45s):
“To learn how ritual circles deceive and why they’re against God’s Word, click the link below to read the full article. Like, share, and stand firm in God’s truth!”


Neopaganism & Neotantra: Occult Paths That Defy the Bible

 Neopaganism & Neotantra: Occult Paths That Defy the Bible

Neopaganism & Neotantra: Occult Paths That Defy the Bible


Introduction

In recent decades many people in the West have explored alternative spiritualities. Two that often attract attention are neopaganism (a revival or reinterpretation of ancient paganism, earth-based worship, witchcraft, Goddess traditions, Druidism, ceremonial magic) and neotantra (a modern reinterpretation of tantric ideas, emphasizing sacred sexuality). But from a biblical and Christian worldview, these systems present serious spiritual dangers. Are they forms of divination or deviation from God? In this article, we’ll examine their beliefs, origins, purposes, gods, motivations for involvement—and show why they conflict with Scripture.


What Were Their Beliefs?

Neopaganism (also “modern paganism”) is an umbrella term for many new religious movements inspired by pre-Christian polytheistic religions. paganfed.org+4GotQuestions.org+4Encyclopedia Britannica+4 Neopagans often believe that divinity is immanent in nature — that the earth, plants, animals, and natural cycles are sacred, and that spiritual power flows through nature itself. Folklore & Fiction+3Neo-Paganism+3Neo-Paganism+3 Many practice rituals honoring seasonal cycles (the “Wheel of the Year”), calling the directions, invocation of gods and goddesses, spellwork, meditation, and magic. Folklore & Fiction+3Neo-Paganism+3The Interfaith Observer+3 Deities are often viewed as archetypes, forces, or personal spirits rather than absolute transcendent beings. Breakpoint+2The Interfaith Observer+2

Neotantra is a modern reinterpretation of ancient tantric traditions, but often focusing on the sexual and erotic dimension as a path to spiritual elevation. Wikipedia Neotantra tends to emphasize that sexual union can become sacred and act as a means to transcend ordinary consciousness or achieve unity with divine energies. Wikipedia+1 It often borrows or adapts symbols, mantras, and practices from Eastern mysticism, but re-frames them in a more sensual, experiential, New Age context. Wikipedia


Who Created the Idea / Where Did It Come From?

Neopaganism has roots in European Romanticism, folklore revival, occultism, and early 20th century esoteric movements. GotQuestions.org+4Naturalistic Paganism+4The Irish Pagan School+4 Key figures include Gerald Gardner (often called the father of modern Wicca) and Doreen Valiente. Naturalistic Paganism+2ARDA+2 Gardner’s Witchcraft Today (1954) was foundational in popularizing modern pagan witchcraft. Naturalistic Paganism The revival of interest in old mythologies, pagan folklore, and cultural nationalism during the 19th and early 20th centuries also contributed. The Irish Pagan School+2Naturalistic Paganism+2

Neotantra is less a unified tradition and more a modern re-imagination of Tantra filtered through New Age, occult, and Western esoteric movements. There is no single founder; rather, various teachers have developed neo-tantric systems blending sexuality, spirituality, meditation, and energetic practices.


Who Is Their God or Gods?

In Neopaganism, there is rarely a single supreme God in the monotheistic sense. Instead, practitioners may worship or honor multiple gods and goddesses, often paired (a Goddess and a God) or many spirits of nature. Wikipedia+5Breakpoint+5paganfed.org+5 Some adherents see all goddesses as aspects of a Great Goddess and all gods as aspects of a Greater God, or sometimes see all divinity as unified in a pantheistic or panentheistic sense. The Interfaith Observer+3paganfed.org+3Neo-Paganism+3 For instance, many Wiccans adopt the Triple Goddess (Maiden, Mother, Crone) model. Wikipedia

In Neotantra, the “divine” is often understood more abstractly or immanently — sexual energy or life force (Shakti, Kundalini, divine union) is divinized. There may not always be personal deities invoked; the emphasis is on energy, union, consciousness, and divine embodiment. Many neo-tantra systems deify the sexual act or view the couple as a microcosm of cosmic union.


Purpose, Use, and Motivation

The purpose of Neopaganism is often to reconnect humanity with nature, reclaim ancient spirituality, honor the Earth, and practice ritual magic to align with divine forces. Encyclopedia Britannica+4Neo-Paganism+4Neo-Paganism+4 Magical practice, spellwork, divination, and invocation are used to influence events, heal, manifest intentions, or commune with spirits. The Interfaith Observer+2Neo-Paganism+2

People may be drawn to neopaganism for several reasons:

  • A desire for spiritual experience outside institutional religion

  • Attraction to nature-centered spirituality

  • Feminist or eco-theological impulses (especially honoring the divine feminine)

  • Rejection of Christianity or conventional religion

  • Curiosity, seeking power, healing, or magical capabilities

In Neotantra, the purpose is to spiritualize sexuality — to see sexual intimacy not merely as physical or recreational but as a sacred ritual capable of awakening spiritual energy and transforming consciousness. It’s used to transcend duality, deepen intimacy, heal trauma, or reach higher states of being. Many are drawn to it seeking deeper intimacy, liberation from shame, or spiritual experiences via the body and pleasure.


Is It Divination? Is It Deviation?

From a biblical perspective, both neopaganism and neotantra fall under spiritual deviation and occult practices, and thus are contrary to Scripture.

Divination and occult: Many neopagan practices include magic, spellcasting, divination, invocation of spirits, or communication with unseen powers. These are clearly forms of occult activity. The Bible prohibits divination, sorcery, mediums, enchantments, and necromancy. (Deuteronomy 18:10-12, Leviticus 19:31, Galatians 5:20, etc.) Because neopaganism incorporates these practices, it aligns with condemned occult behavior.

Idolatry and false gods: Neopaganism’s worship of many deities or spirits is directly in conflict with the First Commandment: “You shall have no other gods before me.” The Bible teaches that worship must be directed to the one true God, not to multiple gods, nature spirits, or forces.

Sexual sin / impurity: Neotantra often elevates sexual practices into the spiritual realm, promotes promiscuity, erotic rituals, and sensual extremes. Scripture consistently teaches sexual intimacy is sacred but reserved for marriage between a man and a woman, and warns against sexual immorality (e.g. 1 Corinthians 6:18-20, Hebrews 13:4). When sex is detached from God’s design and turned into a path to divine union outside biblical boundaries, it becomes spiritually dangerous.

Spiritual deception: Both systems can open individuals to false spiritual experiences, demonic deception, and confusion between God’s voice and occult voices. The Bible cautions believers to test spirits (1 John 4:1).

Therefore, yes — neopaganism and neotantra are spiritual deviation from God’s truth, and in many aspects may involve divination / occult practices forbidden by Scripture.


Why Would Anyone Use or Get Involved?

  • Spiritual hunger or emptiness in conventional religion

  • Rejection of Christianity or disillusionment with institutional faith

  • Attraction to nature, mysticism, the divine feminine

  • Desire for power, healing, intimacy, deeper experiences

  • Cultural or identity exploration

But regardless of motivation, from a Christian standpoint these paths lead away from Christ and into spiritual risk.


Conclusion & Christian Warning

Neopaganism and neotantra present themselves as alluring paths of spiritual freedom, nature worship, sacred sexuality, and personal empowerment. Yet behind the allure lie occult practices, idolatry, and teachings that deviate from biblical truth. The Christian must see these not as neutral cultural or spiritual options but as spiritual dangers.

If you or someone you know is drawn to neopaganism or neo-tantra, the remedy is not fear but truth:

  • Know the Bible’s warnings against divination and idolatry

  • Hold fast to Christ’s lordship

  • Pray for discernment and deliverance

  • Replace occult practices with godly spiritual disciplines

Scripture calls believers to flee from sexual immorality, to worship God in spirit and truth, and to avoid all forms of occultism (Acts 19:19, Galatians 5:19-21, 1 Corinthians 10:20).

May this article stir vigilance, spiritual wisdom, and a deeper devotion to Christ alone.

Teresa Morin
President of Touch of God Int’l Ministries
🌐 https://www.touchofgod.org
Of Healing and Deliverance, Ordained Minister, Public Speaker
📣 Featured in Who's Who Press Release


🛡️ Ready to break free from occult healing influences?
👉 Sign up for your FREE bi-weekly webinar on spiritual warfare & deliverance:
https://www.touchofgod.org/events/free-webinar-registration

🙌 Book your 1-on-1 Deliverance Session now and receive healing and freedom in Christ:
https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/deliverance-ministry

📕 Get your “At War Prayer Manual” for just $5 this summer and demolish occult strongholds:
https://www.touchofgod.org/product-page/uprooting-evil-witchcraft-forces-prayer-manual

💞 Ladies—join our THRIVE Mentoring Group for spiritual growth, healing, and sisterhood:
https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/women-thriving-together-group

📚 Download your FREE eBook: “Unraveling Deliverance”—learn the path to freedom today:
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🙏 Submit a prayer request now and let us stand with you:
https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/prayer-of-intercession

🎁 Become a FREE Member of Touch of God Ministries to access exclusive teachings, ebooks, and discounts:
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Social Media Promo & Hashtags

Post:
“Neopaganism & Neotantra: Are they spiritual? Or occult deviation from Scripture? Discover origins, dangers, and God’s view. Click to read! #Neopaganism #Neotantra #Occult #ChristianFaith #BibleTruth #WitchcraftWarning”

👉 Click the link to read the full article and share with friends!

Hashtags:
#Neopaganism, #Neotantra, #Occult, #BibleTruth, #ChristianWarning, #Witchcraft, #SpiritualDeception, #SacredSex, #Divination, #FaithOverOccult


45-Second YouTube Script

[Opening shot: calm, subdued background, presenter facing camera]
Speaker (0–5s):
“Are neopaganism and neotantra just alternative spiritual paths — or dangerous occult deviations from God’s truth?”

[Cut to visuals: pagan rituals, nature, goddess imagery, tantric art]
Speaker (5–20s):
“Neopaganism revives ancient pagan worship, honoring nature, multiple gods, rituals, magic, spellwork. Neotantra redefines sex as a sacred gateway to higher spiritual states. Both claim spiritual empowerment. But from a biblical worldview, they clash sharply with God’s commands. They involve divination, idolatry, occult practices, and sexual distortion beyond God’s design.”

[Cut to Bible imagery, cross, warning signs]
Speaker (20–35s):
“The Bible forbids divination, mediums, witchcraft, and urges believers to worship God alone (Deuteronomy 18, Galatians 5, 1 Corinthians 6). Sexual intimacy is sacred in marriage—not a mystical ritual outside God’s design. These paths open doors to deception, rather than to Christ.”

[Closing shot: presenter pointing to link or subscribe]
Speaker (35–45s):
“If you want deeper insight into neopagan beliefs, neotantra practices, and why they conflict with Scripture, click the link below to read the full article. Don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe—help bring clarity and light in spiritual darkness.”

Juju Practices vs. Biblical Truth: A Christian Warning

 Juju Practices vs. Biblical Truth: A Christian Warning

Juju Practices vs. Biblical Truth: A Christian Warning


Juju — also spelled “ju-ju” — is a spiritual belief system widespread in parts of West Africa. It involves the use of objects (amulets, charms), spells, rituals, and invocation of spirits or supernatural power. SAGE Journals+4Encyclopedia Britannica+4Wikipedia+4 Because juju deals with supernatural forces outside the one true God, many Christians wonder: Is juju a form of divination or witchcraft? And why is it against the Bible? This article seeks to answer those questions from both the perspective of juju’s beliefs and a biblical worldview.

What Were Their Beliefs?

In the juju system, practitioners believe that objects, fetishes, or charms can hold or be infused with spiritual power. Encyclopedia Britannica+3SAGE Journals+3African Folder+3 The term “juju” may derive from the French joujou (“plaything”) or from Hausa meaning “fetish” or “spiritual object.” Encyclopedia Britannica+2Dictionary.com+2 Juju is practiced in countries such as Nigeria, Ghana, Benin, Togo, and Cameroon, among others. Wikipedia+3Encyclopedia Britannica+3Wikipedia+3 Its practitioners believe that spirits or unseen forces can be directed for good (protection, success, favorable outcomes) or for harm. SAGE Journals+3Wikipedia+3African Folder+3

Juju often uses spells, incantations, offerings, rituals, and objects (bones, wood, animal parts) to manipulate spiritual power. Wikipedia+4Medium+4African Folder+4 Because juju intertwines with traditional African religion, it is not always purely “evil” in the minds of its adherents; rather, it is seen as a neutral spiritual technology that can be used both positively and negatively. African Folder+3Encyclopedia Britannica+3Wikipedia+3

Who Created or Originated Juju?

Juju does not have a single author or founder. Instead, it evolved over many generations as part of indigenous spiritual and animist traditions of African peoples. Medium+4African Folder+4Encyclopedia Britannica+4 It is deeply tied to ancestral worship, local customs, and the worldview of many ethnic groups. Wikipedia+3African Folder+3Wikipedia+3 It also coexists, and sometimes blends, with other spiritual systems introduced later (Islam, Christianity, mysticism). SAGE Journals+2African Folder+2

Because juju is a “folk religion” rather than a formal creed with a founder, no particular individual is credited with “creating” it. Instead, it has been passed down through generations of priests, herbalists, diviners, and spiritual leaders within local communities.

Who Is Their God or Gods?

In many juju systems, the spiritual world is populated by multiple spirits, forces, ancestor spirits, lesser deities, or unseen powers. These are not identified as the God of the Bible. Juju practitioners may call upon ancestors, local spirits of land, water, forest, or cosmic forces to intervene, bless, curse, or protect. Encyclopedia Britannica+3Medium+3African Folder+3 The power is not believed to claim absolute sovereignty over creation as the God of the Bible does, but works more as spiritual agents or intermediaries.

Thus, in juju there is often no supreme God identical to Yahweh or the Trinity of Christian theology. The “gods” or spirits are localized, limited in power, and operate under a spiritual cosmology that is quite different from biblical monotheism.

What Is the Purpose of the Modality, and Why Is It Used?

People resort to juju for many reasons: to gain protection, deliverance from enemies, success in business, fertility, healing, cursing enemies, binding contracts, or ensuring promises are kept. BlytheRay+5African Folder+5Medium+5 In effect, juju is used as a tool to influence the unseen realm in favor of the user.

Because people often feel powerless over circumstances, juju offers an illusion of control over destiny and spiritual forces. It can appear enticing for those seeking quick results or wanting supernatural assistance outside of “ordinary” human means.

In that regard, many scholars consider juju practices as a type of divination or occult activity, since it seeks hidden knowledge or power beyond the natural. Wikipedia+4GotQuestions.org+4OpenBible+4

Why Would Anyone Use or Get Involved?

  • Desperation / hardship: In poverty, illness, or injustice, people may turn to juju seeking help where they feel none is available.

  • Cultural tradition: In communities where juju is normative, people inherit the practice and see it as part of their identity.

  • Fear / coercion: Some may feel forced to engage in juju (e.g. curses, spiritual contracts) to protect themselves.

  • Promises of power: The allure of supernatural influence—e.g. winning a case, getting a job—can attract people.

  • Spiritual ignorance: Lack of biblical understanding or Christian teaching may leave individuals unaware of the spiritual danger.

Is Juju Divination or Deviation from God?

Yes. From a biblical perspective, juju is a deviation from God and falls under the category of condemned occult practices and divination. OpenBible+5GotQuestions.org+5GotQuestions.org+5

The Bible explicitly forbids divination, witchcraft, sorcery, interpreting omens, consulting mediums, or casting spells. For example, Deuteronomy 18:10 warns, “There shall not be found among you anyone who … practices divination … or is a sorcerer.” biblicalculture.com+3Bible Gateway+3OpenBible+3 Also, Leviticus 19:31 says, “Do not turn to mediums or necromancers … I am the Lord your God.” OpenBible+1

In the New Testament, “sorcery” (Greek pharmakeia) is included in the list of works of the flesh in Galatians 5:20. biblicalculture.com+1 Christians are warned not to engage in the “unfruitful works of darkness.” OpenBible

Because juju seeks spiritual intervention outside of the will and authority of the one true God, it is rebellion — it replaces reliance on God with reliance on lesser spirits or unseen powers. Scripture regards such practices as idolatry or alliance with demonic powers. OpenBible+3tn-biblecollege.edu+3biblicalculture.com+3

Therefore, juju is not an innocuous or benign “cultural” practice from the biblical point of view — it is spiritual deviation, disobedience to God’s commands, and involvement in occult practices.

Why It Is Against the Bible / Against God

  1. Violation of God’s exclusive sovereignty: Juju attributes power to other spirits, undermining the supremacy of God.

  2. Forbidden practices: Scripture explicitly forbids divination, witchcraft, mediumship, and spellcasting. tn-biblecollege.edu+4GotQuestions.org+4biblicalculture.com+4

  3. Spiritual danger: These practices open a person to demonic influence or deception. In Acts 16, Paul drove out a spirit of divination from a slave girl. GotQuestions.org+1

  4. Idolatry: Juju often functions as spiritual idolatry — assigning worship or fear to spirits rather than to God.

  5. Unfaithfulness: Christians are called to trust God, not seek secret powers or occult shortcuts.

  6. Eternal consequences: Scripture warns judgment for those who persist in occult practices without repentance. GotQuestions.org+2OpenBible+2

Thus from a Christian worldview, juju is not a benign tradition but a dangerous spiritual deviation, akin to witchcraft or divination, which must be renounced.

Conclusion & Call to Action

Juju (ju-ju) is a system of magical belief rooted in West African spiritual traditions, employing amulets, spells, and spirit invocation. While practitioners view it as a tool for protection, power, or success, from a biblical standpoint it is a form of divination, forbidden, and spiritually dangerous. It is a deviation from God’s authority and a path into occult practices that the Bible condemns.

If you or someone you know is entangled in juju or occult practices, repentance and surrender to Christ is the way out. The Bible says to turn away from these practices and trust in God’s power, for He alone is sovereign and holy.

Teresa Morin
President of Touch of God Int’l Ministries
🌐 https://www.touchofgod.org
Of Healing and Deliverance, Ordained Minister, Public Speaker
📣 Featured in Who's Who Press Release


🛡️ Ready to break free from occult healing influences?
👉 Sign up for your FREE bi-weekly webinar on spiritual warfare & deliverance:
https://www.touchofgod.org/events/free-webinar-registration

🙌 Book your 1-on-1 Deliverance Session now and receive healing and freedom in Christ:
https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/deliverance-ministry

📕 Get your “At War Prayer Manual” for just $5 this summer and demolish occult strongholds:
https://www.touchofgod.org/product-page/uprooting-evil-witchcraft-forces-prayer-manual

💞 Ladies—join our THRIVE Mentoring Group for spiritual growth, healing, and sisterhood:
https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/women-thriving-together-group

📚 Download your FREE eBook: “Unraveling Deliverance”—learn the path to freedom today:
https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/deliverance-ministry/free-book-unraveling-deliverance

🙏 Submit a prayer request now and let us stand with you:
https://www.touchofgod.org/ministry-programs/prayer-of-intercession

🎁 Become a FREE Member of Touch of God Ministries to access exclusive teachings, ebooks, and discounts:
https://www.touchofgod.org/membership








Social Media Promo & Hashtags

Post (for Facebook, Instagram, X):
“Why is juju (spiritual witchcraft) against the Bible? Is it divination or deviation from God’s truth? Learn the origins, dangers, and God’s view. Click to read! #Juju #Divination #ChristianFaith #BibleTruth #Occult #SpiritualWarning”

Call to action:
👉 Click the link to read the full article and share with friends!

Hashtags:
#Juju, #Occult, #Divination, #BibleTruth, #ChristianWarning, #SpiritualWarfare, #Witchcraft, #FaithOverFear, #GodsSovereignty, #RejectOccult


45-Second YouTube Script (for video recording)

[Opening shot: calm background, presenter facing camera]
Speaker (0–5s):
“Have you ever wondered what juju is — and why Christians warn against it?”

[Cut to visuals: African amulets, charms, ritual images]
Speaker (5–20s):
“Juju (also ju-ju) is a traditional West African belief system using objects like amulets, spells, and spirit invocation. It’s often seen as a way to control spiritual forces, bring luck, or defend against evil. But from a biblical perspective, juju is not harmless — it’s a form of divination or witchcraft, explicitly forbidden by God. (Deuteronomy 18, Galatians 5, Leviticus 19)”

[Cut to Bible and cross imagery]
Speaker (20–35s):
“The Bible condemns consulting spirits, casting spells, or seeking hidden powers outside God’s will. These practices are idolatry and open doors to deception. Instead, Scripture invites us to rely on God alone, confess and repent, and be set free from occult bondage.”

[Closing shot: presenter pointing to link or subscribe]
Speaker (35–45s):
“If you want deeper insight into juju’s origins, beliefs, and why it offends God, click the link below to read the full article. Don’t forget to like, subscribe, and share—join us in bringing light to spiritual truth.”