Sunday, May 17, 2026

How to Deal with Leviathan Who Twists Your Words

How to Deal with Leviathan Who Twists Your Words

How to Deal with Leviathan Who Twists Your Words


Introduction:

Leviathan is shown in Scripture as a twisting, powerful, prideful force (a high-level demonic realm). In spiritual warfare teaching, the “spirit of Leviathan” is often understood as a demonic spirit that twists words, hardens hearts, stirs pride, causes miscommunication, and brings division in marriages, families, churches, ministries, and friendships.

The article you shared lists Leviathan as a spirit that twists truth, breaks covenants, blocks communication, operates through pride, brings contention, and causes blame and self-pity. It also says this spirit often enters through rejection wounds that later open the door to pride as a false protection.

It can work in governments, countries, and in people. Usually, accompanying a person with a Jezebel spirit. 

1. Scriptures on Leviathan

Leviathan is directly mentioned in several Bible passages:

Job 41:1 KJV
“Canst thou draw out leviathan with an hook? or his tongue with a cord which thou lettest down?”
This shows that Leviathan is not easily handled by natural strength.

Job 41:15-17 KJV
Leviathan is described as having tightly sealed scales. Spiritually, this can represent a closed-off, defensive, hardened condition where truth cannot easily get in.

Job 41:24 KJV
“His heart is as firm as a stone; yea, as hard as a piece of the nether millstone.”
This connects Leviathan with hardness of heart. Hardness of heart.

Job 41:34 KJV
“He beholdeth all high things: he is a king over all the children of pride.”
This is one of the strongest verses connected to pride. Leviathan is linked with loftiness, arrogance, and pride.

Psalm 74:14 KJV
“Thou brakest the heads of leviathan in pieces...”
God is the One who breaks Leviathan.

Psalm 104:26 KJV
“There go the ships: there is that leviathan, whom thou hast made to play therein.”
This shows God’s authority even over Leviathan. We can bind it. 

Isaiah 27:1 KJV
“In that day the LORD with his sore and great and strong sword shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent, even leviathan that crooked serpent...”

This verse describes Leviathan as a piercing serpent and a crooked/twisting serpent, which fits the idea of twisting truth, twisting words, and twisting communication.


2. How Leviathan Scrambles Conversations

A Leviathan spirit works through twisting. A person says one thing, but the other person hears something completely different. A gentle correction becomes an attack. A loving concern becomes rejection. A simple question becomes accusation. A peaceful conversation can suddenly turn into confusion, offense, defensiveness, or division.

This is why many people say, “That is not what I said,” or “You completely misunderstood me,” or “Every time we talk, it turns into a fight.” Can you relate?

Leviathan can operate through:

Misinterpretation — hearing an accusation when none was intended.
Defensiveness — refusing correction or accountability.
Pride — needing to be right instead of needing truth.
Offense — quickly taking things personally.
Confusion — conversations going in circles.
Blame-shifting — making everything someone else’s fault.
Hardness of heart — refusing to listen, soften, or humble oneself.
Strife — turning simple matters into arguments.
Division — separating people who should be walking in covenant, peace, or unity.

The article you linked specifically says Leviathan twists intentions and conversations, causing people to hear something different from what was actually said. A scrambling Spirit. It also connects this twisting to communication problems, division, hardness of heart, and covenant-breaking.


3. Characteristics of a Leviathan Spirit

Here are common characteristics to teach on:

  1. Pride and arrogance
    Leviathan is called “king over all the children of pride” in Job 41:34.
  2. Twisting words
    It causes people to misunderstand, misquote, exaggerate, or distort what was said.
  3. Hardness of heart
    Job 41:24 describes Leviathan’s heart as hard as stone.
  4. Stiff-necked stubbornness
    A person may refuse correction, counsel, repentance, or accountability.
  5. Blame and self-pity
    Instead of repentance, the person may say, “Everyone is against me.”
  6. Contention and strife
    Proverbs 13:10 says, “Only by pride cometh contention...” Pride and strife often work together.
  7. Mockery and scorn
    Leviathan may belittle others, especially those trying to bring truth.
  8. Covenant breaking
    It attacks marriages, ministry relationships, friendships, and church unity.
  9. False accusation
    It makes people believe wrong motives about others.
  10. Resistance to deliverance
    Because pride resists humility, the person may reject the idea that they need help.

What Does the Bible Say About Djinn and Familiar Spirits?

 What Does the Bible Say About Djinn and Familiar Spirits?

Christian warning image showing dark demonic figures, charms, and spirit bondage on one side, contrasted with Jesus standing in radiant light beside a glowing cross, with a message that djinn is not from God and that Jesus is the only way.


Djinn: Why Christians Should Not Get Involved With Spirit Practices

Djinn, also spelled jinn or sometimes called “genies” in English, are spirit beings found in ancient Arabian belief, Islamic tradition, and folklore. In Islamic teaching, jinn are described as unseen beings created from smokeless fire, capable of choosing good or evil. Britannica notes that belief in jinn was common in pre-Islamic Arabia, where they were thought to inspire poets and soothsayers, and that their existence was later affirmed in the Qur’an.

For Christians, the concern is not simply learning what another religion believes. The danger comes when a person begins calling on, appealing to, fearing, honoring, bargaining with, seeking protection from, or trying to control spirits. In biblical language, this moves into familiar spirits, divination, sorcery, enchantment, and forbidden spiritual consultation.

Where Did the Belief in Djinn Come From?

The belief in djinn comes from ancient Arabian culture before Islam and later became part of Islamic teaching and folklore. Britannica describes jinn as unseen spirits believed to inhabit the earth, capable of appearing in different forms and exercising extraordinary powers. They are prominent in North African, Egyptian, Syrian, Persian, Turkish, Indian, and Indonesian folklore, and appear in stories such as The Thousand and One Nights.

So, djinn belief did not begin with one modern occult teacher. It came through ancient spiritual beliefs, folklore, and religious tradition.

Who Is the Founder?

There is no single human founder of djinn belief. The idea predates Islam in Arabian culture and was later developed in Islamic religious teaching and popular folklore. In Islam, jinn are not usually described as “invented” by a founder, but as beings created by God.

From a Christian perspective, however, the question is not whether Islam recognizes jinn. The question is: Should a follower of Jesus consult, fear, honor, command, bargain with, or seek help from spirit beings? God’s Word says no.

What Are Djinn Practices Used For?

Some people may try to use djinn-related practices for:

Protection
Power
Love spells
Revenge
Money or success
Healing
Fortune-telling
Spirit communication
Removing curses
Casting curses
Sorcery
Finding hidden knowledge
Binding or controlling people
Influencing dreams
Spiritual cleansing
Amulets, talismans, or charms
Fear-based rituals to appease spirits

Not every Muslim practices these things, and many Muslims reject appeals to jinn or sorcery. Pew Research found that many Muslims believe jinn exist, but relatively few say making offerings or appeals to jinn is acceptable in Islamic tradition; Pew also reported that across surveyed countries there is near universal agreement that sorcery is not permissible within Islam.

Do Muslims Still Practice This?

This needs to be said carefully: Most Muslims do not practice sorcery or appeal to jinn, and many consider those practices forbidden. However, in some regions and families, there are folk practices involving fear of jinn, evil eye objects, talismans, protective charms, spiritual healers, rituals, or attempts to remove spirit affliction.

Pew reported that belief in jinn is widespread in many Muslim-majority countries, but actual appeal to jinn is generally viewed as outside Islamic tradition by most Muslims surveyed. Pew also found that most Muslims surveyed do not wear talismans, though use of talismans or objects to ward off evil varies by country.

So the answer is: some people in Muslim cultures may still be involved in jinn-related folk practices, talismans, charms, or spirit appeasement, but it is not accurate or fair to say all Muslims practice this.

Why Is It Against God’s Word?

God’s Word forbids His people from consulting spirits, using divination, practicing sorcery, or seeking supernatural help outside of Him.

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, or a charmer, or a consulter with familiar spirits… For all that do these things are an abomination unto the LORD.”

Any practice that calls on spirits, seeks hidden knowledge from spirits, uses charms, or attempts to gain supernatural power through spirits falls under what God forbids.

Leviticus 19:31 KJV says:

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

The Bible warns that seeking spirits brings defilement.

Isaiah 8:19 KJV says:

“Should not a people seek unto their God?”

God’s people are not called to seek djinn, angels, ancestors, spirits, saints, psychics, or spiritual intermediaries. We are called to seek the Lord.

1 Corinthians 10:20–21 KJV says:

“I would not that ye should have fellowship with devils. Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils…”

Christians cannot mix fellowship with Jesus Christ and fellowship with spirits.

Colossians 2:8 KJV warns:

“Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit… and not after Christ.”

Why Would Someone Get Involved With Djinn Practices?

People may get involved because they are afraid, desperate, curious, sick, oppressed, or searching for power and protection. Others may inherit these beliefs through family traditions, culture, charms, amulets, rituals, or spiritual healers.

Common reasons include:

Fear of curses
Fear of evil eye
Fear of spirit attack
Need for protection
Seeking healing
Wanting power
Seeking revenge
Wanting love or control
Cultural tradition
Family involvement
Curiosity about spirits
Dreams or night torment
Oppression they do not understand
Desire for hidden knowledge
Going to a spiritual healer instead of seeking Jesus Christ

The enemy often uses fear to bring people into bondage. A person may begin with “protection” and end up spiritually tied to the very spirits they feared.

How Does It Hurt a Christian Who Dabbles With It?

A Christian who dabbles with djinn practices opens the door to spiritual mixture. Whether the practice is called folk healing, protection, amulet use, spirit appeasement, curse removal, or spiritual cleansing, the issue is the same: the person is seeking help from a spirit source outside Jesus Christ.

This can hurt a Christian by:

Opening doors to familiar spirits
Bringing fear and torment
Creating spiritual confusion
Weakening discernment
Bringing bondage to charms or protective objects
Creating fear of curses or evil eye
Opening doors to witchcraft and sorcery
Replacing prayer with rituals
Replacing trust in Jesus with fear of spirits
Bringing nightmares, oppression, or heaviness
Creating double-mindedness
Bringing generational bondage through family practices

A believer does not need djinn protection. A believer needs Jesus Christ, the blood of Jesus, the Word of God, and the power of the Holy Spirit.

What Curses Can Come on a Christian Through Djinn Practices?

From a deliverance perspective, involvement with djinn-related rituals or spirit consultation may open the door to curses and bondage. These may include:

A curse of familiar spirits — spirits that imitate guidance, protection, healing, dreams, or warnings.
A curse of divination — seeking hidden knowledge through forbidden spiritual means.
A curse of sorcery — using rituals, charms, or spiritual power to influence outcomes.
A curse of fear and torment — fear of spirits, evil eye, curses, dreams, or night attacks.
A curse of bondage to charms — feeling unsafe without amulets, talismans, symbols, or protective objects.
A curse of idolatry — trusting spiritual objects or rituals instead of Jesus Christ.
A curse of confusion — difficulty discerning the voice of God from counterfeit voices.
A curse of spiritual blindness — accepting spirit deception as truth.
A curse of generational occultism — inherited family involvement with spirit practices, talismans, curses, or sorcery.
A curse of nightmares and night torment — sleep paralysis, fear, oppression, or spiritual harassment.
A curse of double-mindedness — trying to follow Christ while fearing or honoring spirits.
A curse of rebellion — refusing God’s way and seeking forbidden spiritual help.

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…”

Why Former Muslims May Need Deliverance

A person who leaves Islam and comes to Jesus Christ may still need deliverance if they personally practiced, feared, honored, appealed to, or relied on djinn-related spiritual systems. They may also need deliverance if their family line used talismans, charms, curses, evil-eye objects, spirit healers, sorcery, or rituals connected to jinn.

This does not mean every former Muslim has demons. It means that when there has been personal or generational agreement with spirit practices, there may be spiritual doors to close.

Deliverance may be needed when there are signs such as:

Night torment
Fear of jinn
Fear of curses
Fear of evil eye
Sleep paralysis
Recurring nightmares
Mental torment
Physical oppression
Voices, visions, or spiritual harassment
Strong fear after removing charms or amulets
Feeling pulled back into old religious or occult practices
Oppression when praying in the name of Jesus Christ

Jesus Christ is greater than every spirit.

Philippians 2:10–11 KJV says:

“That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow… and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord…”

Prayer of Renunciation

Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for any involvement with djinn, jinn, familiar spirits, sorcery, charms, talismans, amulets, evil-eye objects, spirit healers, curses, divination, occult protection, or spiritual rituals outside of Jesus Christ.

I renounce every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with djinn, familiar spirits, fear, sorcery, divination, spirit appeasement, false protection, false healing, and generational occultism.

I break every curse connected to djinn practices, charms, talismans, evil-eye objects, spirit consultation, sorcery, witchcraft, familiar spirits, fear, torment, confusion, nightmares, and generational bondage.

I command every spirit attached to djinn practices, family rituals, charms, curses, fear, torment, false protection, divination, and sorcery to leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ.

I declare that Jesus Christ is my Lord, my Savior, my Deliverer, my Healer, and my Protector. I belong to Him alone. Holy Spirit, cleanse me, restore my discernment, close every spiritual door, and fill every place where the enemy had access. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Final Word

Djinn practices are not harmless. They involve fear, spirits, charms, sorcery, and forbidden spiritual dependence. Christians must not seek help from spirits. We must seek Jesus Christ.

You do not need protection from djinn through charms, rituals, talismans, or spirit healers. You need the Lord Jesus Christ.

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

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

#CuppingTherapy #Cupping #ChristianWarning #NewAgeHealing #EnergyHealing #Qi #Meridians #TraditionalChineseMedicine #SpiritualWarfare #DeliveranceMinistry #OccultHealing #FalseHealing #Deuteronomy18 #FamiliarSpirits #JesusIsHealer #ChristianDeliverance #BibleTruth #SpiritualDiscernment #TouchOfGodMinistries #TeresaMorin #FreedomInChrist #Galatians313 #Colossians28

Crystal Balls, Scrying, and the Danger of Divination*

 Crystal Balls, Scrying, and the Danger of Divination

Woman practicing crystal ball gazing in dark occult surroundings while Jesus stands in radiant light beside a glowing cross, showing the contrast between darkness and the light of Christ.



Crystal Ball Gazing: Why Christians Should Not Get Involved

Crystal ball gazing, also called scrying or crystallomancy, is a form of divination where a person stares into a crystal ball, mirror, water, or reflective surface to seek visions, hidden knowledge, spiritual messages, or information about the future. Historically, scrying is ancient and does not have one clear point of origin; Encyclopedia.com says its exact origin cannot be identified and notes that ancient Egyptians and Babylonians used reflective oil-filled dishes for divination.

Where Did Crystal Ball Gazing Come From?

Crystal ball gazing comes from ancient divination practices. It later became associated with crystal balls, polished stones, mirrors, water, and other reflective objects. Britannica describes crystal gazing as connected with visions, clairvoyance, and prophecy, and notes that it became popular in the Victorian era alongside practices like palmistry and astrology.

Who Is the Founder?

There is no single founder of crystal ball gazing. It developed through ancient occult and divination practices over many centuries. The practice is not tied to one person, but to the broader world of fortune-telling, scrying, clairvoyance, and spirit consultation.

For Christians, the real issue is not only where it came from, but what spiritual source is being consulted. Crystal ball gazing is not prayer to God. It is an attempt to receive hidden knowledge through a forbidden spiritual method.

What Is Crystal Ball Gazing Used For?

Crystal ball gazing is often used for:

Seeking visions
Predicting the future
Fortune-telling
Receiving spiritual messages
Clairvoyance
Psychic readings
Contacting spirits
Finding answers about love, money, health, or destiny
Making decisions through occult guidance
Seeking hidden knowledge outside of God

Some people treat it as entertainment, but spiritually it is still dangerous because it trains people to look for guidance from a forbidden source.

Why Is Crystal Ball Gazing Against God’s Word?

God’s Word forbids divination, familiar spirits, sorcery, witchcraft, and seeking hidden knowledge apart from Him.

Deuteronomy 18:10–12 KJV warns God’s people not to practice divination, observe times, use enchantment, witchcraft, charms, familiar spirits, wizardry, or necromancy, calling these things an abomination to the Lord.

Leviticus 19:31 KJV says not to seek after familiar spirits or wizards because they defile a person.

Isaiah 8:19 KJV says, “Should not a people seek unto their God?” This is the heart of the issue: Christians are called to seek God, not crystal balls, psychics, mediums, spirits, or occult tools.

Acts 16:16–18 KJV shows a woman with a spirit of divination. She had supernatural information, but the source was not the Holy Spirit. Paul cast the spirit out in the name of Jesus Christ.

Why Would Someone Get Involved in Crystal Ball Gazing?

People often get involved because they are searching for answers. They may be afraid of the future, confused about relationships, grieving, lonely, desperate, or curious. Others are pulled in through New Age spirituality, witchcraft, tarot, astrology, psychics, occult movies, or family traditions.

Common reasons include:

Fear of the future
Curiosity
Desire for control
Loneliness
Grief and wanting to contact the dead
Confusion about relationships
Financial pressure
Wanting supernatural experiences
Interest in witchcraft or New Age practices
Trauma and wanting certainty
Desire for guidance without surrendering to Jesus Christ

The enemy often uses curiosity as bait. What begins as “just for fun” can become a spiritual doorway.

How Does Crystal Ball Gazing Hurt a Christian Who Dabbles With It?

A Christian who dabbles in crystal ball gazing opens the door to spiritual mixture. The Holy Spirit does not guide through crystal balls, psychic tools, occult trances, or familiar spirits.

1 Corinthians 10:21 KJV says:

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

Crystal ball gazing can hurt a Christian by:

Opening doors to familiar spirits
Weakening discernment
Creating fear and superstition
Bringing confusion and double-mindedness
Replacing prayer with divination
Inviting counterfeit guidance
Creating dependence on psychic readings
Leading to tarot, mediumship, astrology, witchcraft, and spirit communication
Causing spiritual defilement
Opening the person to tormenting spirits
Separating the believer from obedience to God’s Word

A Christian is not called to know the future through occult means. A Christian is called to trust the Lord.

What Curses Can Come on a Christian Through Crystal Ball Gazing?

From a deliverance perspective, involvement in divination can open spiritual doors. The curse does not come because glass has power. It comes through agreement with occult methods, familiar spirits, rebellion, and seeking hidden knowledge outside of God.

Possible spiritual consequences may include:

A curse of divination — seeking hidden knowledge through forbidden spiritual means.
A curse of familiar spirits — spirits that imitate prophecy, guidance, comfort, or wisdom.
A curse of fear and torment — anxiety, dread, nightmares, or fear of the future.
A curse of confusion — difficulty discerning God’s voice from counterfeit impressions.
A curse of deception — believing lies from occult spirits.
A curse of false prophecy — receiving predictions that manipulate decisions.
A curse of spiritual blindness — becoming numb to biblical conviction.
A curse of double-mindedness — trying to follow Jesus while seeking occult answers.
A curse of bondage to psychic guidance — feeling unable to make decisions without readings.
A curse of grief bondage — seeking contact with the dead instead of healing through Christ.
A curse of rebellion — resisting God’s authority and choosing forbidden knowledge.
A curse of generational occultism — opening or continuing family-line involvement in divination, fortune-telling, or witchcraft.

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 repent and renounce crystal ball gazing, scrying, fortune-telling, psychic readings, mediumship, tarot, witchcraft, spirit communication, and all occult practices.

Acts 19:19 KJV shows that many who practiced occult arts brought their materials together and destroyed them. They did not keep occult tools as souvenirs.

Remove crystal balls used for divination, tarot cards, oracle cards, pendulums, spell books, occult jewelry, magic mirrors, psychic tools, charms, and anything dedicated to occult practice.

Prayer of Renunciation

Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for any involvement in crystal ball gazing, scrying, fortune-telling, psychic readings, divination, witchcraft, mediumship, tarot, spirit communication, New Age guidance, or seeking hidden knowledge outside of You.

I renounce every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with divination, familiar spirits, occult visions, counterfeit prophecy, psychic power, false guidance, and rebellion against Your Word.

I break every curse connected to crystal ball gazing, scrying, clairvoyance, fortune-telling, familiar spirits, fear, torment, confusion, deception, false prophecy, grief bondage, generational occultism, and spiritual blindness.

I command every spirit attached to divination, familiar spirits, psychic readings, crystal balls, occult tools, witchcraft, fear, confusion, and deception to leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ.

Holy Spirit, cleanse me, restore my discernment, close every occult door, and teach me to hear and follow the voice of Jesus Christ alone. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Final Word

Crystal ball gazing is not harmless entertainment. It is not biblical prophecy. It is divination. God’s people must not seek hidden knowledge through occult tools. Jesus Christ is the truth, the way, and the life.

You do not need a crystal ball to see your future. You need Jesus Christ to lead your steps.

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

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

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 thought crystal ball gazing was just harmless entertainment?

It is not harmless. It is divination.

Crystal ball gazing, also called scrying, is used to seek visions, hidden knowledge, spiritual messages, or information about the future.

But Deuteronomy 18 warns God’s people not to practice divination, witchcraft, or seek familiar spirits.

When a Christian dabbles with crystal balls, psychics, tarot, or scrying, it can open doors to fear, confusion, false prophecy, familiar spirits, and spiritual bondage.

You do not need a crystal ball to know your future.

You need Jesus Christ to lead your steps.

Read the full article at the link below.

YouTube Description

Crystal ball gazing, also called scrying or crystallomancy, is a form of divination used to seek visions, hidden knowledge, spiritual messages, or information about the future. Many people see it as entertainment or New Age spirituality, but God’s Word warns against divination, familiar spirits, witchcraft, and occult practices.

In this teaching, learn why Christians should not get involved with crystal ball gazing, how it can open spiritual doors of torment, and why Jesus Christ alone is the true source of guidance, truth, protection, and freedom. you may need deliverance. Scan the QR code to book a session

Read the full article here:
https://overcomingsatanschemes.blogspot.com/2026/05/crystal-balls-scrying-and-danger-of.html

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, Isaiah 8:19, Acts 16:16–18, Acts 19:19, Galatians 3:13

TikTok Description

Crystal ball gazing is not harmless. It is divination. God warns Christians not to seek hidden knowledge through crystal balls, psychics, scrying, tarot, or familiar spirits. Jesus Christ is your guide and deliverer.

Read the full article: [Add your article link]

Hashtags

#CrystalBallGazing #Scrying #Crystallomancy #Divination #ChristianWarning #OccultExposed #SpiritualWarfare #DeliveranceMinistry #Deuteronomy18 #FamiliarSpirits #PsychicReadings #FortuneTelling #NewAgeDeception #RenounceDivination #OccultDeliverance #ChristianDeliverance #BibleTruth #JesusChrist #BreakEveryCurse #Acts19 #Acts16 #SpiritualDiscernment #TouchOfGodMinistries #TeresaMorin #FreedomInChrist

Cone of Power: Ritual Magic or Biblical Rebellion?

 Cone of Power: Ritual Magic or Biblical Rebellion?

Christian warning infographic about the occult practice called the Cone of Power, showing a purple cone of energy rising from a ritual circle with hooded figures, alongside a glowing cross and open Bible, with sections explaining its origins in Wicca, biblical warnings, spiritual dangers, curses, and a call to renounce witchcraft and turn to Jesus Christ.


Cone of Power: Why Christians Should Not Get Involved in This Occult Practice

The Cone of Power is a ritual practice used in Wicca, witchcraft, and modern occult circles. It is believed to be a way of raising spiritual or magical energy through chanting, dancing, visualization, intention, and group ritual. Practitioners often imagine the energy rising in the shape of a cone and then being released toward a goal, person, situation, spell, or desired outcome.

To the world, this may sound like “energy work,” “intention setting,” or “spiritual empowerment,” but according to God’s Word, it is a form of occult power, witchcraft, and forbidden spiritual manipulation.

Where Did the Cone of Power Come From?

The Cone of Power is strongly connected to modern Wicca and witchcraft. Modern Wicca is commonly traced to Gerald Brosseau Gardner, a British occultist and writer who helped bring Wicca into public attention in the 20th century. Britannica states that Wicca’s origins can be traced to Gardner, and that Wiccans practice forms of ritual magic.

One famous account connected to the Cone of Power is the 1940 “Operation Cone of Power,” where Gardner claimed witches gathered in the New Forest of England to raise magical energy against Nazi invasion. This account describes a “great cone of power” being raised and directed with repeated commands.

Who Is the Founder?

There is no single “founder” of the Cone of Power as a concept, but it is closely associated with Gerald Gardner, Gardnerian Wicca, and modern witchcraft practice. Gardner is often considered central to the rise of modern Wicca. Doreen Valiente, who was connected to Gardner’s coven, later developed and shaped some Wiccan ritual material.

From a Christian standpoint, the issue is not only who practiced it, but what spiritual source it draws from. The Cone of Power is not prayer to the Father through Jesus Christ. It is an occult ritual meant to raise and direct spiritual power.

What Is the Cone of Power Used For?

The Cone of Power may be used for:

  • Casting spells
  • Sending magical energy
  • Protection rituals
  • Healing rituals
  • Cursing or binding others
  • Manifesting desires
  • Influencing people or situations
  • Group witchcraft rituals
  • Seasonal Wiccan ceremonies
  • Spiritual warfare from an occult perspective
  • Directing intention toward a person, place, event, or outcome

Some practitioners describe it as harmless energy work, but God’s Word does not approve of spiritual power that comes through witchcraft, ritual magic, chanting, circles, visualization, or occult intention.

Why Is the Cone of Power Against God’s Word?

The Bible clearly forbids witchcraft, sorcery, enchantment, divination, and seeking spiritual power 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.”

The Cone of Power is connected to witchcraft and ritual magic. God calls these practices an abomination because they open people to counterfeit spiritual power.

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…”

Leviticus 19:31 KJV warns:

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

God does not want His people defiled by occult power, familiar spirits, witchcraft, or magical rituals.

Isaiah 8:19 KJV says:

“Should not a people seek unto their God?”

Christians are not called to raise energy. We are called to seek God.

Why Would Someone Get Involved in the Cone of Power?

People may get involved because they are looking for power, protection, control, healing, revenge, spiritual experiences, or hidden knowledge. Others are pulled in through Wicca, New Age spirituality, witchcraft, paganism, crystals, spell work, rituals, or curiosity.

Common reasons include:

Fear
Rebellion
Curiosity
Desire for control
Desire to manipulate outcomes
Interest in witchcraft or Wicca
Hurt from church or religion
Desire for spiritual power
Desire to feel protected
Need for healing without surrendering to Jesus
Attraction to mystery, rituals, candles, circles, and spells
Wanting revenge or justice through spiritual means

The enemy often makes witchcraft look beautiful, empowering, natural, feminine, ancient, or healing. But behind the appearance is bondage.

How Does It Hurt a Christian Who Dabbles With It?

A Christian who dabbles with the Cone of Power is stepping into spiritual mixture. You cannot walk in the Holy Spirit and occult power at the same time.

1 Corinthians 10:21 KJV says:

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

The Cone of Power can hurt a Christian by:

Opening doors to witchcraft spirits
Weakening discernment
Inviting familiar spirits
Creating spiritual confusion
Bringing fear, torment, and oppression
Opening doors to manipulation and control
Replacing prayer with occult ritual
Creating false authority
Bringing bondage to spells, rituals, and magical thinking
Separating the believer from obedience to God’s Word
Defiling the person’s spirit, soul, body, home, and family line

The Holy Spirit does not need candles, circles, chanting, rituals, raised energy, or cones of power. The power of the believer comes through Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, the blood of Jesus, the Word of God, and obedience to the Lord.

What Curses Can Come on a Christian Through the Cone of Power?

From a deliverance perspective, involvement in witchcraft can open spiritual doors and bring curses or bondage. These may include:

A curse of witchcraft — agreement with occult power and spiritual rebellion.
A curse of divination — seeking hidden knowledge or power apart from God.
A curse of control and manipulation — attempting to direct spiritual power toward people or outcomes.
A curse of familiar spirits — spirits that imitate wisdom, guidance, protection, or power.
A curse of fear and torment — nightmares, anxiety, dread, or fear after occult involvement.
A curse of spiritual confusion — difficulty discerning God’s voice from counterfeit spirits.
A curse of rebellion — resistance to biblical correction and submission to God.
A curse of idolatry — trusting rituals, energy, circles, or spells instead of Jesus Christ.
A curse of backlash — demonic retaliation from occult involvement or failed spiritual control.
A curse of double-mindedness — trying to follow Jesus while entertaining witchcraft.
A curse of bondage to ritual — feeling unsafe unless a ritual, spell, or protection method is performed.

But 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 repent, renounce the Cone of Power, witchcraft, Wicca, spell work, magical energy, pagan rituals, and all occult involvement.

Acts 19:19 KJV says:

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

They did not keep occult materials. They separated from them.

Remove witchcraft books, spell jars, candles used in rituals, crystals used for power, altar items, pentagrams, charms, tarot cards, oracle cards, ritual tools, and anything dedicated to occult practice.

Prayer of Renunciation

Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for any involvement in the Cone of Power, Wicca, witchcraft, spell work, ritual magic, energy raising, chanting, visualization, pagan circles, occult protection, or spiritual manipulation.

I renounce every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with witchcraft, familiar spirits, divination, control, rebellion, occult power, false healing, false protection, and counterfeit spiritual authority.

I break every curse connected to the Cone of Power, Wicca, witchcraft, occult rituals, magical circles, spells, covens, paganism, and familiar spirits. I declare that Jesus Christ is my Lord, my Healer, my Protector, my Deliverer, and my source of power.

I command every spirit attached to witchcraft, Wicca, the Cone of Power, occult energy, manipulation, fear, torment, confusion, rebellion, divination, and familiar spirits to leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ.

Holy Spirit, cleanse me, restore my discernment, close every occult door, and fill every place where the enemy had access. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chromotherapy and Christianity: Healing or Occult Deception?

 

Christian warning infographic about chromotherapy, showing colored light therapy, New Age symbols, Bible verses, a glowing cross, an open Bible, and a message that Jesus is the Healer, not color energy or vibrations.

Chromotherapy: Why Christians Should Not Dabble With Color Therapy

Chromotherapy, also called color therapy, is an alternative healing practice that claims colors or colored lights can affect the body, emotions, mind, and spirit. Some forms simply use colors for mood or relaxation, but many New Age versions teach that colors carry “energy,” “vibrations,” chakra power, spiritual balance, or healing frequencies. That is where the danger begins for Christians.

Historically, color healing ideas have appeared in different ancient cultures, but modern chromotherapy was popularized in the 1800s. Augustus Pleasonton promoted blue-light healing in 1876, Seth Pancoast wrote about colored light as medicine in 1877, and Edwin Dwight Babbitt published The Principles of Light and Color in 1878. Later, Dinshah P. Ghadiali developed the Spectro-Chrome color therapy system in the 20th century.

Where Did Chromotherapy Come From?

Chromotherapy came from a mixture of ancient healing ideas, mystical beliefs, light experiments, and later New Age energy practices. It is often connected to the belief that colors can restore balance to the body, mind, emotions, or spirit. Some modern practitioners also connect colors to chakras, aura cleansing, meditation, crystals, sound healing, Reiki, and energy work.

It is important to separate normal color psychology from occult color therapy. There is nothing sinful about liking certain colors, decorating with calming colors, using art, or enjoying beauty. God created color. The danger is when color is used as a spiritual power source, healing force, chakra activator, aura cleanser, or substitute for God’s healing and guidance.

Who Is the Founder of Chromotherapy?

There is no single founder of all chromotherapy. However, several men helped popularize modern color therapy:

Augustus Pleasonton promoted blue-light healing in the 1870s.
Seth Pancoast wrote about colored light and medicine.
Edwin Dwight Babbitt became one of the best-known early promoters of chromotherapy through his book The Principles of Light and Color.
Dinshah P. Ghadiali later created the Spectro-Chrome system and claimed colored light could treat many conditions.

Many medical and scientific sources do not support the broad healing claims of chromotherapy. WebMD states that chromotherapy is used for depression, stress, fatigue, and many other conditions, but there is no good scientific evidence to support these uses.

What Is Chromotherapy Used For?

Chromotherapy may be used for:

Healing the body
Balancing emotions
Reducing stress
Improving mood
Treating fatigue
Meditation
Chakra balancing
Aura cleansing
Energy healing
New Age spiritual alignment
Crystal healing sessions
Reiki sessions
Holistic wellness programs
Emotional release
Sleep or relaxation
Spiritual “frequency” work

Some people may only see it as relaxation, but New Age chromotherapy often goes much deeper. It may teach that certain colors carry spiritual power to heal organs, balance chakras, cleanse energy fields, or shift someone’s vibration. These ideas are not from the Word of God.

Why Is Chromotherapy Against God’s Word?

Chromotherapy becomes spiritually dangerous when it is used as an occult or New Age healing system. God does not want His people seeking healing, power, guidance, peace, or spiritual cleansing from hidden forces, energy systems, vibrations, chakras, crystals, spirits, or occult methods.

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.”

Many forms of chromotherapy are tied to enchantment, occult healing, chakra work, and spiritual energy manipulation. This is not biblical healing.

Leviticus 19:31 KJV says:

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

When someone seeks spiritual healing outside of God, they can become defiled by the source behind that power.

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.”

New Age color therapy may sound scientific, peaceful, and harmless, but if it points people to energy instead of Jesus Christ, it is vain deceit.

Isaiah 8:19 KJV says:

“Should not a people seek unto their God?”

This is the main issue. God’s people should seek God for healing, peace, wisdom, cleansing, and deliverance.

Why Would Someone Get Involved in Chromotherapy?

People may get involved in chromotherapy because they are hurting, sick, emotionally exhausted, anxious, spiritually curious, or desperate for relief. Others may be drawn to the colors, beauty, relaxation, or promises of natural healing.

Common reasons include:

Fear of sickness
Stress and anxiety
Trauma
Depression
Curiosity
Desire for emotional peace
Interest in holistic healing
New Age influence
Trust in energy medicine
Desire to avoid doctors or medication
Chakra or aura beliefs
Crystals and Reiki involvement
Searching for healing without repentance or surrender to Christ

Many people do not realize the spiritual danger because it is packaged as wellness, self-care, relaxation, or natural health.

How Does Chromotherapy Hurt a Christian Who Dabbles With It?

A Christian can be hurt spiritually when they begin trusting color energy, vibrations, chakras, or occult healing systems instead of Jesus Christ. Dabbling may seem small, but it can create spiritual mixture.

1 Corinthians 10:21 KJV says:

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

A Christian cannot mix the Holy Spirit with New Age energy. The source matters.

Chromotherapy can hurt a Christian by:

Opening doors to New Age deception
Weakening spiritual discernment
Creating dependence on colors, lights, or rituals
Leading into Reiki, crystals, chakras, aura work, and energy healing
Replacing prayer with occult methods
Creating spiritual confusion
Bringing false peace
Inviting familiar spirits
Strengthening fear of sickness
Causing double-mindedness
Moving the believer away from biblical healing and deliverance

The Lord is not against color. He created color. But He is against His people trusting creation instead of the Creator.

Romans 1:25 KJV says:

“Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator…”

When color becomes a healing power, spiritual guide, or source of energy, it can become an idol.

What Curses Can Come on a Christian Through Chromotherapy?

From a deliverance perspective, occult healing practices can open doors to spiritual bondage. The curse is not because color itself is evil. Color is God’s creation. The curse comes through agreement with false healing systems, energy manipulation, idolatry, and occult power.

Possible spiritual consequences may include:

A curse of occult healing — trusting a forbidden spiritual source for healing.
A curse of New Age deception — believing energy, vibrations, or chakras have power over the body.
A curse of idolatry — trusting colors, lights, or rituals instead of God.
A curse of infirmity — sickness patterns may be strengthened when false healing opens spiritual doors.
A curse of confusion — difficulty discerning the Holy Spirit from counterfeit spiritual experiences.
A curse of fear — fear that healing will not happen without the color method or energy practice.
A curse of familiar spirits — spirits that imitate peace, warmth, healing, guidance, or comfort.
A curse of double-mindedness — trying to follow Jesus while participating in occult methods.
A curse of spiritual passivity — depending on sessions, practitioners, colors, or tools instead of prayer, repentance, and obedience.
A curse of bondage to rituals — feeling the need for certain colors, lights, frequencies, or sessions to feel safe or healed.

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 repent, renounce any agreement with chromotherapy as a spiritual healing system, remove related New Age materials, stop chakra or aura practices, and ask Jesus Christ to cleanse every open door.

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 completely.

Prayer of Renunciation

Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I repent for participating in chromotherapy, color therapy, chakra balancing, aura cleansing, energy healing, light rituals, crystal healing, Reiki, or any New Age healing practice. I renounce every agreement I made knowingly or unknowingly with occult healing, color vibrations, healing frequencies, chakras, aura work, familiar spirits, and counterfeit peace.

I break every curse connected to New Age healing, false light, spiritual deception, infirmity, confusion, fear, idolatry, and double-mindedness. I declare that colors do not rule my body, emotions, spirit, or destiny. Jesus Christ is my Healer, Deliverer, Peace, and Lord.

I command every spirit attached to chromotherapy, occult healing, false light, New Age deception, familiar spirits, infirmity, fear, and spiritual confusion to leave me now in the name of Jesus Christ. Holy Spirit, cleanse me, restore my discernment, and fill every place where the enemy had access. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Final Word

Chromotherapy may appear peaceful, beautiful, and harmless, but when it is used for spiritual healing, energy balancing, chakra work, or hidden power, it becomes a counterfeit. Christians are not called to trust colors, vibrations, or energy systems. We are called to trust Jesus Christ.

Psalm 103:2–3 KJV says:

“Bless the LORD, O my soul… Who forgiveth all thine iniquities; who healeth all thy diseases.”





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1-Minute Video Script

Chromotherapy may look peaceful because it uses colors and light, but Christians must be careful.

This practice often teaches that colors, vibrations, energy, chakras, or frequencies can heal your body, emotions, or spirit.

But God’s Word never tells us to seek healing through energy systems, chakras, or hidden spiritual forces.

Deuteronomy 18 warns us not to get involved with divination, enchantment, witchcraft, or occult practices.

Leviticus 19:31 says not to seek after familiar spirits because they defile us.

The danger is this: chromotherapy can open doors to New Age deception, false healing, spiritual confusion, fear, and familiar spirits.

Jesus Christ is your Healer—not colors, vibrations, or energy.

You do not need counterfeit light. You need the true Light of the world.

Repent, renounce it, and choose Jesus Christ.

Stay in God’s light, not New Age deception.

YouTube Title Ideas

  1. Chromotherapy: Why Christians Should Not Get Involved
  2. The Spiritual Danger of Chromotherapy and Color Therapy
  3. Why Color Therapy Can Open Spiritual Doors
  4. Chromotherapy: Healing or New Age Deception?
  5. Jesus Is Your Healer, Not Color Energy

YouTube Description

Chromotherapy, also known as color therapy, may look harmless, peaceful, and relaxing, but many New Age forms teach that colors, vibrations, chakras, and energy can heal the body, emotions, and spirit. God’s Word warns Christians not to seek hidden spiritual power, occult healing, familiar spirits, or counterfeit sources of peace.

In this video, learn why Christians should avoid chromotherapy and trust Jesus Christ as Healer, Deliverer, and Light of the world.

Scriptures: Deuteronomy 18:10–12, Leviticus 19:31, Colossians 2:8, Isaiah 8:19

TikTok Description

Chromotherapy may look harmless, but New Age color therapy can open spiritual doors. Jesus is your Healer—not colors, energy, chakras, or vibrations.

Hashtags

#Chromotherapy #ColorTherapy #ChristianWarning #NewAgeDeception #OccultHealing #EnergyHealing #Chakras #SpiritualWarfare #DeliveranceMinistry #JesusIsHealer #ChristianTikTok #BibleTruth #Deuteronomy18 #FamiliarSpirits #NewAgeToJesus #TrustJesus #ChristianDeliverance #BiblicalTruth #SpiritualDiscernment #TouchOfGodMinistries

Alt Text for Image

Christian warning infographic about chromotherapy, showing colored light therapy, New Age symbols, Bible verses, a glowing cross, an open Bible, and a message that Jesus is the Healer, not color energy or vibrations.

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Chromotherapy: Why Christians Should Not Get Involved