The Created in the Image of the Creator

Chapter 4 from The Preposterous God, very short

Chapter Two

The Created in the Image of the Creator

It is no wonder we are tempted to think of ourselves more highly than we ought. We are created in the very image of God. Image. What is this? When we look in a mirror, we certainly don’t see God, who does not look like we do; this is easily concluded.

What, then, does “created in the image of God” mean? We see from the biblical account that it took both the male and the female to express something of the nature of God: “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them” (Genesis 1:27).

But “image” has much more to it than mere physical attributes.

We note that none of the animals God created, as depicted in Genesis chapter two, had a personal relationship with their Creator. That ability or status was reserved for the humans, Adam and Eve. Their relationship with God was personal to the extent that God actually communicated directly with this first couple. We see this in Genesis 3:8-13 after they disobeyed His one commandment:

And they heard the sound of the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God among the trees of the garden. But the LORD God called to the man and said to him, “Where are you?” And he said, “I heard the sound of you in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked, and I hid myself.” He said, “Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten of the tree of which I commanded you not to eat?” The man said, “The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit of the tree, and I ate.” Then the LORD God said to the woman, “What is this that you have done?” The woman said, “The serpent deceived me, and I ate.”

Image therefore takes on the idea of the capacity to have fellowship with, to know and be known by, and to communicate with, the Creator. This idea may seem strange, even preposterous to us, yet it is at the heart of the ultimate intention of the Creator. There is a lot more to the story. Genesis, after all, means beginning.

God Incarnate

Is the garden appearance a case of God becoming incarnate—physically present? Christian thinkers have been divided on this issue for the last two thousand years. The passage quoted in Genesis 3 above seems to indicate that an actual, physical Being was present in the Garden (Paradise) and literally spoke with Adam and Eve.

While the writer of the passage might have taken literary license and conveyed a most complex event into a manner more easily understood, there are also other possibilities, yet the minimum clear statement is that we find the Creator in real and actual conversation with a man and a woman. The Creator never spoke to any of the animals we find listed in Genesis chapter two, verses 18 through 23. But with Adam and Eve He did.

A Lonely Creator?

It has been suggested that the Creator was lonely, which prompted Him to create humans in order to have someone with whom to communicate and have a relationship. Neither the living organisms nor the angels satisfied Him, so fellowship would depend upon a Creature somewhat like Himself, a creature made in His image. Perhaps fellowship with human beings was the ultimate intention of the Creator. Perhaps He put that same desire for fellowship with Him inside of each human being.

Image—we humans are made in the image of the Creator. Do you ever have a sense of this? Have you read the writings of poets, heard the music of great composers, seen the paintings and sculpture of artists, or watched the films of talented directors, and seen the deep longings that abide in the spirit of men and women? Have you found in those creations the sound of a cry to know the Creator of all? The Creator is not lonely, as He is complete in His Being. However, we humans have a deep inner loneliness that can only be assuaged by a relationship with Him.

A Different Reason

We may never know why we are created in His image, and we may not really need to know. But just maybe the answer is that He loves us.

I can hear it now—the retort that the Creator can’t possibly love His creation. After all, look at the world and see the suffering throughout history. We are born and we die, and in between is turmoil and strife, with our best hope being a painless death. If love is the reason, then why the evil loosed upon us?

The Creator’s love is preposterous to us, given what we see in the world.

Pathways chapter #14: Tarot

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 After perusing numbers of books on Tarot, we settled on Tarot for Beginners, by Meg Hayertz, published by Althea Press in 2018. The following is a brief summary of Meg Hayertz’s book.

Ms. Hayertz received her first tarot card reading in Portland, Oregon, at a psychic fair at the age of 19. And due to some issues in her life, she found that the reading helped calm her, which then resulted in wanting more.

 Kent reports: I recall a similar kind of fair in Berkeley some years back and another one in San Francisco later on. Though a Christian at the time, I was stunned if not overwhelmed by the spiritual power I witnessed. If it had not been for my Christianity, I might well have been attracted to that which is psychic.

 Still in the introduction, Hayertz says it is not enough that the cards shine a light on what goes on in a person’s heart and mind; this must be put into action. “I suggest we use the 78 archetypes of the tarot to empower ourselves to become more loving and free” (p. IX). And to this end, she dedicates her book.

The origin of the word Tarot goes back to the mid-15th century. In various parts of Europe games such as Italian tarocchini, French tarot, and Austrian Königrufen were popular, and the general term tarot attached itself to what became the present-day tarot. 

Part 1: Tarot Then & Now

The origins of the tarot are murky, but they are cards, 78 of them, divided between Major and Minor Arcana. The Minor Arcana are much like the standard deck of 52 cards but instead of spades, clubs, hearts, and diamonds, there are cups, pentacles, swords, and wands, but with four additional cards. The Major Arcana contain 22 cards, four of which are The Empress, The Hermit, The Fool, and the Devil. Each of the cards have several meanings that can be attached to them depending upon the reader.

The author states that when Napoleon brought back artifacts from Egypt to Europe, there grew an interest in divination. In 1887, A. E. Waite, a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, developed occult symbolic systems around divination and astrology, which in time became related to the tarot. He then asked an artist, Pamela Colman Smith, to create a deck of tarot cards using symbols that were known at the time. This deck was published by William Rider & Sons, of London, in 1910. 

The author claims that reading tarot cards can reveal one’s potential future, and rightly evaluate one’s present circumstances, help with making decisions, help one to understand life, plus develop self-knowledge, intuition, and creativity. 

Tarot is a form of divination, a magical technique, not scientific, for gaining knowledge about the unknown and the future. And as a form of divination, it is condemned in Deuteronomy 18, verses 9–12: 

[9] “When you come into the land that the LORD your God is giving you, you shall not learn to follow the abominable practices of those nations. [10] There shall not be found among you anyone who burns his son or his daughter as an offering, anyone who practices divination or tells fortunes or interprets omens, or a sorcerer [11] or a charmer or a medium or a necromancer or one who inquires of the dead, (ESV) 

Hayertz states that divination is a form of magic as well as most forms of meditation, “since a meditation practice can bring self-knowledge and spiritual knowledge from beyond our rational mind” (p. 7). She wants to dismiss the idea that there is a divide between the magical, or divine, and the ordinary, thus making tarot divination ordinary and common. 

In regard to the two major divisions of a tarot deck, the Major Arcana and the Minor Arcana (Arcana means mystery), which come from Catholicism and Judaism, as well as Greek and Egyptian mythology, she notes the Major Arcana reflects Gnostic, Catholic, and Pagan imagery. There are also many spiritual traditions that have come to be associated with the cards, such as astrology, Kabbalah, numerology, and alchemy, as well as still more spiritual traditions that have found parallels and connections with the tarot, including crystal healing and Ayurveda (the traditional system of medicine in India) (p. 7). 

It is clear then that our author places tarot solidly amongst occultic practices.

Part 2 Tarot Mechanics 

Tarot card reading fits clearly into what is known in the occult world as divination. The cards are used to answer questions about the past, present, and future, and it is said that tarot is an opening into one’s spiritual self.

The first step for a person who wants to do tarot is to select a deck. Meg uses the Rider-Waite-Smith deck, otherwise known as RWS, but there are many others. And before making the first reading one must both purify and attune to the deck. Once readings begin, the deck must be cared for by keeping it clean and cleared of extraneous energy. 

Here in the process of purifying and attuning the deck reveals the occultic, New Age, divination, fortune telling nature of tarot. 

A deck can be purified by placing the deck on a “windowsill or outside during a full moon.” Or, one can bury the deck in salt for a few days, but in a plastic bag so that the salt does not touch the deck. 

Alternately, sage or a smudge stick can be burned while the deck is held in the smoke. Another way to purify the deck is to put the 78 cards in order, first the Fool (O) then on until the Word card (XXI), then observe through that suit all the way to the King of each suit. Once the deck is in order, it must be reshuffled. 

Attuning is the next step, and it means forming a connection with the deck—in other words, attuning to it. This means treating the deck with respect and trust. It takes a week to attune to the deck, gazing at the images on the cards to determine if there is any intuitive sensing—emotional, mental, or spiritual connections that come up. 

The deck must be cleansed regularly, as the deck can pick up unwanted energy from previous readings. There are two rituals that can be performed. One, shuffle the deck rhythmically and tap the deck on the table in order to release any extra energy. Two, fan the deck out in your hand, blow softly on the edges, and with the whole deck knock once on the top of the deck. 

It is this purifying and attuning process that brings the one selecting a tarot deck into a spiritual arena, and this is an evil arena. Indeed, this is the door opening to the demonic realm. This need not be a terrifying experience at all, but a change has occurred—a new and amazing ‘spiritual’ life and experience comes to life. And these supernatural experiences are real and not imagined. In fact, they can be quite exhilarating and captivating. 

There is a definite procedure to begin a reading; one needs to prepare a space and deck. Some tarot readers will create an altar where are placed the reader’s personal spiritual items. In any case, one needs to turn off phones, light a candle, play some music, and then invite the guidance of any higher power in. Be open then to any wisdom or insight that might be communicated in the reading of the cards. 

From six to ten minutes before beginning a reading for oneself, quietly focus the breathing and/or visualize a beam of light entering through the top of the head, which will fill the body with light. 

When one is in the right spiritual state of mind, one asks a question, but the tarot does not answer back with any direct answer. Instead, the reader, as he or she examines the cards, will relate ideas and events and reveal areas needing growth. The future is never spelled out in terms of certainty. 

On page 14 and 15, Meg Hayertz writes about Tarot Symbolism and states that symbols found on tarot cards come from a variety of sources. The version she is speaking to is the Rider-Waite-Smith deck, or RWS. 

The first is Christian mythology. Adam and Eve are depicted many times, and there is the Devil and the snake of Genesis chapter 3. There are images of a church, the pope, two monks, and more. 

The second is Egyptian mythology, or more accurately the European interpretation of Egyptian mythology. 

The third is source is from Kabbalah, a Judaist offshoot. 

Each sign of the zodiac is also found amongst the cards. 

Interpreting the cards takes practice, the author states. As we read through materials on tarot, it seems apparent that any counsel or direction from an intuitive framework could result in almost anything. (Toward the end of this chapter are some statements found on interpretation of the cards, mainly focused on intuition.) 

Our author claims there is both an intellectual and an intuitive side to determining what the cards are saying to the reader or to the one who is consulting the tarot reader. There is an opening of “your intuitive associations sparked by the cards.” Then, “note how your associations and intuitive messages match up with the meanings of the cards.” Third, note how the cards’ symbolism matches up with one’s experiences. Last, consider what actions one should then take. 

The author next moves on to which spiritual practices are connected with or are tied to tarot card reading. These are Astrology, Kabbalah, Numerology, Rosicrucianism, and Alchemy. (Our view is that there are many other spiritual/ occult practices that could be included here.) And each of these fit snuggly into and are recognized as occult practices. 

This association is an eye opener, as tarot is placed among very direct forms of the occult (pages 16 and 17). During long years of casting demons out of people, so many of them attracted demons into themselves by means of the occult. This is not child’s play nor adult play but is extremely serious. We are reminded of a most important verse at this point, 1 Peter 5:8, since this is what is going on in our world today with the wide open and public embracing of the occult arts, of which tarot is only one among many: 

Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour. 

In chapter 3 of part 1, the author begins to explain how one decides what the card spread means. One card, two cards, three cards, or more are pulled from the deck and spread out. Then the reader considers the meanings of the cards and how it all applies to him or herself, or to the one for whom the reading is being done. 

After examining this material, it is obvious to us that a reader could interpret the cards in many different ways. There is no concrete counsel, no clear solving of a dilemma, nor help with making a decision. It seems that a professional tarot card reader could bend the reading to just about anything, including flattering or messages that the “client” was clearly hoping for. There is obviously much room here for deception. 

Yet this is not the very worst outcome, which is giving oneself, however unwittingly, to an occult practice, which is animated and realized by demonic power. And the outcome of this is nothing less than judgment and an eternity in hell. Is it worth that? 

Chapter 4, part 1, is titled “Growing From the Tarot.” No comment is needed on part 2 of the book by Meg Hayertz, as it only presents each of the cards, the Major and Minor Arcana, and possible meanings for each. 

She begins this section by saying, “I use the cards to help my clients.” 

We completely believe her. Based on what we have encountered with psychics of many different persuasions, very few of them are aware of the evil nature of their work and do not care one way or the other. Either that, or they fear the loss of income, or are afraid of being tormented should they turn from their practices. 

Yes, Meg is probably sincere when she says for her clients that she wants to “unlock creative blocks, deepen their inspiration, and become more aware of issues and values that underlie their personal lives and creative work” (p. 62). 

To read tarot cards is simply to meditate on the cards “to see what feelings, associations, and narratives arise. Then, we match the experiences that arose during meditation to the definitions of the cards” (p. 63). 

Using only a broad-brush stroke to report on this process, it begins with “Connecting with our Intuition.” 

Intuition: this word can be so difficult to define, but after encountering it hundreds of times, it is apparent to us that it involves impressions that come to one while engaging in the process, and this process is usually meditation and focus of one’s breath or something else linked to gaining a state of so-called mindlessness. 

The term used here is “meditative inquiry into your inner life.” When this is achieved, then Meg says one is to “sit with what arises and open to it” (p. 64). Meg then concludes this part with, “This first step is noticing and illuminating our experience and connecting with our intuition.”  

We wonder, whatever in the world does that mean? 

The next step is to select a card or cards from the tarot deck, lay the card or cards down in front of you and meditate on these. One must look at the artwork, note the name of the card, like “The Emperor,” consider it’s also-known-as name, in this case the Grandfather, then note the keywords, in this case, Reliability, Fatherhood, and Responsibility, the element associated with it, here Fire, and astrological sign, here Aries, and then numerology, in this case 4. 

These clues or cues, which may be the right word here, are to be meditated upon. If there is more than one card spread out, then think about what might be at play between the cards. Then one can ask oneself questions such as, “Do the dynamics between the cards feel tense? Or, what are the relative ages of the figures in the cards? Or, are they facing each other? Or, what are the cards’ similarities and differences? 

The next major step is “Integrating intuition with conscious awareness.” Something is then stirring in one’s mind, and the goal here is coming to a place of understanding. And it is here when meditation is core so that the meaning of the cards comes into one’s awareness. 

We must say that the process described to grasp the message of the cards is very elusive, fanciful, lacking substance, and unrealistic. It could yield almost anything. 

Meg describes how it is that one integrates insight brought by the card reading into action. Mainly, this happens by reliance upon your intuitive sense. 

Finally, by means of meditation, envision yourself entering the card or spread. Ask a character therein, like The Emperor, if that is the card drawn for the deck, for guidance regarding action. Allow “the words or gift they offer you to intuitively come to you” (p. 68). If things are not clear, one should ask their intuition for assistance and illumination. 

Again, let the participant beware of invoking unintended spirits by “asking a character therein, like The Emperor, for guidance.” 

Closing thoughts 

Using words like intuition and meditation is deceitful. It should be evil spirit or demon instead of intuition. It should be connecting with the demonic rather than meditation. However lighthearted this tarot card reading business is presented, it is merely a cheap disguise for a course on how to become demon possessed. 

Excerpts from Wikipedia 

Intuition is the ability to acquire knowledge without recourse to conscious reasoning. Different fields use the word “intuition” in very different ways, including but not limited to: direct access to unconscious knowledge; unconscious cognition; inner sensing; inner insight to unconscious pattern-recognition; and the ability to understand something instinctively, without any need for conscious reasoning. July 9, 2022 

The word intuition comes from the Latin verb intueri, translated as “consider” or from the late middle English word intuit, “to contemplate.” July 2, 2022

Meghan Rose, a spiritual advisor and tarot reader, defines intuition as “the ability to understand something without rational or conscious reasoning.” So, in the context of tarot cards, the reader, who could be a professional or yourself if you’re reading your own cards, receives intuitive messages from the cards that they won’t be able to explain with logic. They just know. And because we all have intuitive superpowers, honing your intuitive tarot skills is totally possible with a bit of practice. 

The tarot (/ˈtæroʊ/, first known as trionfi and later as tarocchi or tarock) is a pack of playing cards, used from at least the mid-15th century in various parts of Europe to play games such as Italian tarocchini, French tarot and Austrian Königrufen, many of which are still played today. In the late 18th century, some tarot decks began to be used for divination via tarot card reading and cartomancy reading to custom decks developed for such occult purposes. 

Tarot card reading is a form of cartomancy whereby practitioners use tarot cards purportedly to gain insight into the past, present or future. They formulate a question, then draw cards to interpret them for this end. June 26, 2018 

Tarot cards are a form of divination, which literally means working with the divine, or your higher self, which is the ultimate purpose of tarot cards, just like yoga. June 26, 2018

Chapter 34, of Memoirs of a Jesus Freak, “The COG Moves on Atlanta

The JPM was largely, but not completely, a youth movement.

Many leaders had no theological training but were self-taught.

It would not be an exaggeration to say that formal education,

theological or otherwise, was demeaned by a large segment of the

Jesus People. It was considered preferable to be “taught by the Spirit.”

Over a short period of time, a rather extensive vocabulary grew

up that represented the insider language of the Jesus People. It was

a mixture of hippie talk and Jesus talk. It reflected a fundamentalist

mindset, and some of it was useful in shutting down negative ideas.

I find myself still reverting to some of the phrases today. One that

comes to mind is, “If it isn’t in the Word, I don’t want to hear it.” Of

course, what was “in the Word” was carefully and narrowly defined.

The JPM base theology was either Pentecostal in nature or Dispensational

and anti-Pentecostal, but in either case, it was thoroughly

fundamentalistic, literalistic, and certain that Jesus was coming

tomorrow. The “authorized” King James Version was the only acceptable

translation, and alongside their pocket-sized copy of the KJV

New Testament, some also carried a copy of Hal Lindsay’s, The Late

Great Planet Earth.

Jesus People Leadership

Many leaders had little experience in coping with a large number

of brand new converts, especially ones from dysfunctional homes who

often exhibited serious mental and emotional illnesses, chief among

them being drug and sexual addictions. After all, the real attraction to

the hippie life, maybe not for all but for most, was the lure of dope and

sex. After even a genuine conversion, and even after a space of time

when the addictions receded, temptations would re-emerge. Many

intrigues and crazy rationales were concocted to fulfill perverted

drives, but they were now under some kind of spiritual cloak. For

many young converts, it was not a quick or simple process to move

from being cloaked in self-righteousness to being clothed in the righteousness

of Christ.

The youth and immaturity of most JPM leaders meant they were

utterly unprepared to deal with heavy responsibility—and I include

myself here. No group of Jesus People elected their leaders; the most

charismatic, aggressive, and outspoken grabbed for or were shoved

into leadership roles. Another view is that, due to the number of

youth coming to Christ, someone had to manage the situation. I recall

that few of the leaders in those early days lasted in those positions for

very long. It was as though God had gifted them, undergirded them,

and inspired them, and then when the JPM faded, so did they.

The COG in Atlanta

David and I often discussed the COG, and we were both aware of

the danger this radical mob of zealots posed. The few “Mo Letters”

already written were not yet widely distributed, so no one really

knew what the group was up to. We did know that the COG targeted

Jesus People gatherings and attempted to persuade people that they

and they alone were the really committed followers of Jesus.

We had a faint awareness of the cultic tactics the COG used. The

media unwittingly helped Jesus freaks here. At first, most secular and

Christian journalists could not distinguish between the good, the

bad, and the ugly. But as time went on, and the bizarre stories began

to appear in both print and television, most Jesus People had their

antennae up.

Despite the threat of the COG, David secretly visited their compound

in Texas to check out what they were doing. After David’s identity

was revealed, he was corralled and courted, and to make it a short

story, David invited a COG band to visit the Atlanta ministry. At least

he thought he was only inviting a band. The COG had planned things

well. Suddenly they burst on the scene, isolated the leaders through

one-on-one conversation—divide and conquer—and in a relatively

brief time, kids were getting on buses heading for Texas. They had

managed to isolate David, making it impossible for him to cope with

the situation.

Before that point, Berg and The Family’s excesses were not apparent,

and certainly David was not aware of their tactics. The circumstances

David faced in Atlanta and the responsibility of keeping track

of all the other houses in the various states was becoming unmanageable.

David was understandably stressed to the breaking point;

and raising a family in that environment was virtually impossible. My

thinking is that David viewed a melding into COG as a rescue of sorts.

He had no idea what he was really getting into.

Ed Sweeny and a Red-Eye to Atlanta

Late one evening I received a phone call from Ed Sweeny, the

Catholic priest I had met in Atlanta some months earlier. He told me

about the buses that showed up at David’s headquarters in Atlanta

and about the dozens of kids getting on board. I called an airline and

I was quickly on my way east.

Ed picked me up, and we drove straight to the former French

embassy. I jumped out of the car, rushed up the steps to the front

door, and encountered a young man who had been in the COG only

six months. I was way too late; the bus was on its way to other states

to pick up unsuspecting folk at the other houses David had founded.

I was highly agitated, though dead tired, and for an hour the young

COG zealot preached the philosophy and mission of The Family to me.

In a way I do not understand, I was ready to join up, right there and

then. All thoughts of my own family and ministry back in Marin fled

from my consciousness, as though I was hypnotized. Just at the point

I was going to walk into the house and become a member of The Family,

Ed suddenly appeared, grabbed me by the arm, and said, “Into the

car, get into the car, we are leaving now.” He literally pulled me off the

porch, across the lawn, and into his car.

Ed is gone now, but I love that man to this day.

The dimensions of the take-over, and that is how I viewed it then

and still do, was far greater than I thought. It was some years before I

realized the scope of the operation, a realization that came via some of

those who had boarded the buses heading for the “Texas Soul Clinic.”

The Creator, Chapter One of Kent’s book, The Preposterous God

The Creator

That some entity created all there is, meaning the entire universe, is unimaginable.

It has been postulated that the universe just is, that it exists with no Creator necessary, that the universe is simply the fundamental reality, without need for a Creator, a first cause. No god or goddess, no Mind, no Consciousness, no Singularity, no Strings attached—it is what it is.

Of course, this leaves a lot to be explained, if indeed, there is something that needs explaining. Maybe acceptance of such an ultimate reality is as close to actualization as a human being can get. But is this a mindset placed by God?

The history of humankind, what little we know of it, illustrates that most of us on the planet have a sense of a Being, often called God, or called something else but with the same essence. Does this prove there is a God? Certainly not! We can all be completely wrong.

A Major Confrontation

Some time in the past a series of legends or generational stories began circulating among an ancient people known as the A’bru.[1] Eventually, they were committed to writing during the time of Moses, in the mid-second millennium before the common era, a date of approximately 1500 BCE.

The earliest accounts of these are recorded in the book called the Hebrew Bible. There are multiple versions of what we refer to as “creation accounts” in the first book of this Bible.[2] One begins in Genesis 1:1 and runs through Genesis 2:3.[3] Here the word for the Creator is transliterated as Elohim or El.[4]

The second account begins at Genesis 2:4 and runs through Genesis 3:24 or 4:26, depending on one’s view. The third is merely the first two verses of chapter 5:

This is the book of the generations of Adam. When God created man, he made him in the likeness of God. Male and female he created them, and he blessed them and named them Man when they were created. (Genesis 5:1-2)

The first account reads: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1). “Beginning” is assumed to mean the creation of the universe, since the passage goes on to describe, blow by blow, how all there is came to be. An ancient and poetic description of the process may be seen in the account, yet the basics are plain. Verse 27 says: “So God created man in his own mage, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.” This verse is very similar to that of Genesis 5:1-2 quoted above.

The second account translates the Hebrew Yahweh as God, thus distinguishing this account from the first. The first is thought to be the oldest of the three, because the word Yahweh came into use during the time of Moses, as is evident from Exodus chapter 3. The first verse of the second creation account is: “These are the generations of the heavens and the earth when they were created, in the day that the LORD[5] God made the earth and the heavens” (Genesis 2:4).

The Creator

It all starts with the Creator. Either there is a Creator, or all of existence is a mystery.

How does one know what is what? Ecclesiastes 3:11 gives a credible answer:

He has put eternity into man’s heart, yet so that he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end.

Solomon, the likely author of the verse, stated poetically the human condition that resonates with us, because we have an awareness of the truth expressed. However, all we need to do is look around us at the world in which we live to see something supremely gigantic and quite preposterous yet real, which tells us there is more than the eye can see.

Theologians call this “general revelation,” and it is shared by all human beings. This may explain why history confirms that human beings have always had a “god sense” about them that turns into religion. Yet, there is a built-in limit.

In the eighth century before the common era, the prophet Isaiah clouded the waters. Yahweh, the personal name of the God of Israel—the El or Elohim—revealed to Isaiah the following:

For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the LORD. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.

Mystery indeed! Eternity is placed into humans, but there is a limitation placed there by the Creator.

Adam and Eve

Whether one believes in a literal Adam and Eve is irrelevant, at least to many of us Bible believers. I myself do believe in an actual Adam and Eve who were the first truly human creatures and that they did not evolve from lower or more ancient organic forms. In addition, I suspect their creation to be rather recent, as geological time goes. My sense is that the evolutionary process implanted into all living forms simply could not develop a creature made in God’s image. And we will continue the concept of “image” in the next chapter.


[1] A’bru is only an approximate spelling. In time the word Hebrew was used to denote this primitive middle eastern tribe whose origins are unknown.

[2] Some insist there is only one creation account, others say three. I am among the latter.

[3] The chapter and verse designations were added during the common era, about mid 2nd millennium. Some errors were made in assigning verse numbers, as is obvious to those who study the Scripture.

[4] To transliterate is to use, as here, English letter equivalents for Hebrew letters.

[5] The large and small caps combination of “LORD” indicates the underlying Hebrew word is Yahweh.

Preface

We don’t get very far when we attempt to figure out what or who God is. 

I have no idea, or almost no idea, of what or who God is. And I am a Christian who believes the Bible; I have several degrees plus ten years of theological seminary culminating in a doctorate. I have also been a pastor for more than fifty years and consider myself a preacher of the Gospel. 

When I read my Bible, I discover what God did. The short version of that story is summed up in The Apostles’ Creed. He (and He is a She as well, which can be argued based upon Genesis 1:271) is unlike any he or she of which we might ever have had awareness.2 

1 In this book I capitalize pronouns referring to the Trinity, thus He and Him. The English Standard Version of the Bible used throughout does not so capitalize. 

2 We do not need to get excited about the fact that the ancients did not have the sensibilities about gender issues that we do today. The authors of Scripture were people of their day, not ours. 

He created everything that exists, was actually present in the Garden of Eden on day one, communicated with the man and the woman, and then, due to a major problem, sent them away. Theologically, we know why the Creator took this drastic course of action. Sin, which is the breaking of God’s Law, cannot be united with Him. There has never been, nor will there ever be, sin in the direct presence of God. 

This is therefore the reason why the rebel, Satan, was cast out of heaven way back when. This is the reason Adam and Eve were sent out of the garden as well. Heaven, an utterly unimaginable realm, is where God dwells in utter holiness, meaning that no unholiness can be in His presence. This is an image or concept we will never understand, at least while on the planet. 

A confession is due right now. Early in my Christian walk I did not question what the Bible says about God. Now, with sixty one years at the time of this writing of walking with Jesus, I question my preposterous God more than ever before. I am confident I can do so knowing I am not in danger of losing my salvation. Then again, I am past the stage when I worry about what others might think when I raise serious issues about fundamental elements of the Faith. But most of all I think this book comes out of knowing God more completely than ever before. My child-like faith has grown up enough, to the point I grasp the enormity, at least from a human stand point, of the absurdity of the God of the Bible. For me, this Little Book had to be written for myself and others like me who dare to bring up the big issues. 

God is preposterous. The Oxford Concise Dictionary uses the words “absurd, outrageous, contrary to nature, reason, or common sense” to define the term. 

These attempts do not go far enough when it comes to what and who God is. After all, they are merely terms we understand, and if we are honest, we will admit that our understandings are very limited. We are not on equal terms with God, we will not become God, we will not be absorbed into God, nor will we have union with God. 2 

God is preposterous, even while we wish He were not. We keep trying to whittle Him down, reduce Him, or find a formula for Him, but it will not work. 

May we allow ourselves to ask the question, “What and who is God?” 

Ancestral Medicine

As in the essay on mindfulness, the following material on the subject of the ancestors was taken off the internet from several different sites. Our reason for doing this is so the reader can see what proponents of ancestral medicine are saying rather than a critique from those of us who disavow it. And the reason we stand against it, despite its growing popularity, is that it is another practice that easily leads to being invaded by demonic spirits, which is why it takes its place in this book. 

What does ancestral medicine encourage? 

Everyone has loving and wise ancestors they can learn to invoke for support and healing. Coming into relationship with your ancestors empowers you to transform negative family patterns into blessings and encourages good health, self-esteem, clarity of purpose, and better relationships with your living relatives.

What does it mean to heal your ancestors? 

When we reconcile with ancestors who experienced different types of persecution or who enacted violence and oppression, we make repairs in our personal psyches and family histories that, in turn, mend cracks in the larger spirit of humanity. 

How can I heal my ancestors? 

Make prayers to your Ancestors and speak your desire to heal the wounds in your Family and your DNA. Burn the plant offering with this prayer. Know that you are supported by your ancestors in this endeavor and feel their love and support. Read the Release Intention and Burn it in the Fire. 

How do you start ancestral healing? 

Begin simply, by making a family tree that includes everyone up until your grandparents (or great-grandparents if you have access to that information). Then, next to each person, write down any and all traumas they endured.

How do you release ancestral trauma? 

Four ways to break ancestral trauma: 

  1. Acceptance of your parents as they are/were. 
  2. Acknowledge unconscious loyalties to pain/addiction you might be carrying from your lineage. 
  3. Everyone belongs, no matter what; each person must be given a place. 
  4. Release what doesn’t belong to you; own what does. 

What is ancestral bloodline? 

Bloodline Powers: You have the power of your collective ancestors surrounding you, and the powers you gain manifest in part due to the heroic or dastardly deeds your family members have achieved before your time. You have been selected by these spirits to build upon your family’s greatness. 

How do I make my ancestors happy? 

The easiest way to venerate ancestors is simple: put a photo of the deceased beside a glass of water and a white candle and talk to them or recite their favorite prayers. You can also add food or drinks they enjoyed. There is no right or wrong way to honor those who have passed on. 

How do I connect with my ancestors spiritually? 

In addition to prayer, calling on your ancestors in meditation is likely the easiest and fastest way to feel their presence. Take time to sit in meditation for 10–30 minutes, specifically calling whichever ancestor by name you feel most connected to and ask them to talk to you! 

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Following are some remarks on two biblical passages that relate to ancestral connections, both from the Hebrew Bible, the first from the Torah, Leviticus 20:6 and 27, then from the prophets, Isaiah 8:19. 

Leviticus 20:6

[6] “If a person turns to mediums and necromancers, whoring after them, I will set my face against that person and will cut him off from among his people. (ESV) 

Our focus is on the word “necromancers.” The passages concern people who want to connect with dead people, usually ancestors, and they turn to mediums and necromancers to help with this task. Both mediums and necromancers offer to contact the dead. And the passage is clear that such were rejected by God and cut off from the people of Israel.94 

Leviticus 20:27 

[27] “A man or a woman who is a medium or a necromancer shall surely be put to death. They shall be stoned with stones; their blood shall be upon them.” (ESV) 

Now the passage speaks specifically about the medium and the necromancer. Not only those who want to connect with ancestors by means of mediums or necromancers are to cut off from the people of God but also the mediums, and this by means of execution. 

Deuteronomy 18:9–12a 

[9] “When you come into the land that the LORD your God is giving you, you shall not learn to follow the abominable practices of those nations. [10] There shall not be found among you anyone who burns his son or his daughter as an offering, anyone who practices divination or tells fortunes or interprets omens, or a sorcerer [11] or a charmer or a medium or a necromancer or one who inquires of the dead, [12] for whoever does these things is an abomination to the LORD. 

Thus comes a second warning from the Torah, and again the message is the same, clearly stating, “one who inquires of the dead.” 

God’s word does not assume that the dead can actually be contacted—they are dead, and there is no available pathway to them—but there are evil spiritual entities that do impersonate the dead. 

Isaiah 8:19 

[19] And when they say to you, “Inquire of the mediums and the necromancers who chirp and mutter,” should not a people inquire of their God? Should they inquire of the dead on behalf of the living? (ESV) 

Again, now from Isaiah who lived hundreds of years after the writing of Leviticus, comes the same message. The land of Israel had been occupied for long periods by those who practiced occult arts, and the Israelites copied them. Here now comes reality from their creator God, that His people should seek Him rather than the mediums and necromancers. 

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How do you know if you are receiving an Ancestral call? 

And for some, ancestors speak to them until it is like they are mentally disturbed. And some cannot find a job or cannot have children. The physical symptoms most commonly related to the calling, are: (severe) headache,  

stomachache, burning feet, back pain, loss of appetite, fatigue, palpitations and fainting. 

We question whether this, then, is something to be desired and sought! 

What is respect for the ancestors? 

The veneration of the dead, including one’s ancestors, is based on love and respect for the deceased. In some cultures, it is related to beliefs that the dead have a continued existence and may possess the ability to influence the fortune of the living. Some groups venerate their direct, familial ancestors. 

What is the relationship between God and ancestors? 

Together with their descendants, ancestors worship God. As mediators between God and humankind, ancestors do not possess the power to mediate salvation. Ancestors remain in contact with descendants for quite some time 

How do I pray to my ancestors? 

God, Source of all hope and love, Hear our prayers for our ancestors. May the road they walked in pursuit of peace and joy in you Mirror for us the same peace and joy we long for. Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. 

How do you call ancestors? 

In addition to prayer, calling in your ancestors in meditation is likely the easiest and fastest way to feel their presence. Take time to sit in meditation for 10–30 minutes and specifically call-in whichever ancestor by name you feel most connected to and ask them to talk to you! 

What is ancestor karma? 

Ancestral karma has been described as karma, which is made up of our ancestors’ habits and beliefs, wrongdoings and right doings, and middle-of-the-road actions. 

What are the signs of having a calling? Here are 7 signs you have found your calling. 

  1. Your actions match your plans. You make big plans and then you carry out the actions to match. . . . 
  2. You reach a state of flow. . . . 
  3. You can’t be deterred. . . . 
  4. You suspect you’re onto something. . . . 
  5. Your output is huge. . . . 
  6. You’re happy. . . .
  1. You’re making progress. 

Your Calling Is Closely Tied to What You Enjoy 

Always be watchful for that same feeling. When you find yourself in the middle of a task, hobby, or job and notice that same satisfaction, know that you have found the point where your God-given talents align with the tasks He has laid before you. 

What does the Bible say about ancestral spirits? 

Some have used Leviticus 19:26b-32 to justify the veneration of ancestor spirits. It reads: “Rise in the presence of the aged, show respect for the elderly and revere your God. I am the LORD” (NIV). 

Of course, this completely misses the point of respecting one’s living elderly and also completely ignores the passages quoted earlier from Leviticus, Deuteronomy, and Isaiah. 

What religion believes in ancestor worship? 

Ancestor worship and reverence to family are fundamental elements of Confucianism. Rituals to honour ancestors are extremely important and must be performed in precise ways. By carrying them out properly, an individual can receive the aid and cooperation of deceased relatives. 

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Here now is the danger. Contact with an entity who disguises itself as a dead ancestor is very deceiving. A person is convinced when he or she hears a voice that exactly fits with the ancestor. This entity also knows secret things that only the two, the voice and the person, could possibly know. However, it is no actual ancestor; it is an impersonation. How the demonic kingdom has this knowledge is quite incredible and chilling. One suspects that there are always prying demonic eyes watching us in order to gain the ammunition needed for this kind of deception. We have even experienced, during sessions of deliverance ministry, demons trying to derail its being cast out by blurting out (accurate) accusations against us, the ministers, about sins we ourselves had committed. With the collected information the demons have stored, anyone could be deceived. 

We therefore see that the further danger for the person in contact with who they think is a long-gone ancestor is being open to invasion by the very demonic spirits who are impersonating the supposed ancestor. 

Fifty-two years of experience in the pastorate has proven that grieving people may be vulnerable to this sort of deception. In particular, recovering from the death of a loved one puts one in a vulnerable frame of mind, easily manipulated

by the magnet of a chance to interact with that loved one again. We have recently encountered this, when a man stated, quite seriously, that his dead wife was waiting to speak with him. Such a powerful temptation! 

There is a parable of Jesus that fits in right here. It is titled, by the editors of the English Standard Version of the Bible, as “The Rich Man and Lazarus.” It is found in Luke 16:19–31. 

[19] “There was a rich man who was clothed in purple and fine linen and who feasted sumptuously every day. [20] And at his gate was laid a poor man named Lazarus, covered with sores, [21] who desired to be fed with what fell from the rich man’s table. Moreover, even the dogs came and licked his sores. [22] The poor man died and was carried by the angels to Abraham’s side. The rich man also died and was buried, [23] and in Hades, being in torment, he lifted up his eyes and saw Abraham far off and Lazarus at his side. [24] And he called out, ‘Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus to dip the end of his finger in water and cool my tongue, for I am in anguish in this flame.’ [25] But Abraham said, ‘Child, remember that you in your lifetime received your good things, and Lazarus in like manner bad things; but now he is comforted here, and you are in anguish. [26] And besides all this, between us and you a great chasm has been fixed, in order that those who would pass from here to you may not be able, and none may cross from there to us.’ [27] And he said, ‘Then I beg you, father, to send him to my father’s house—[28] for I have five brothers—so that he may warn them, lest they also come into this place of torment.’ [29] But Abraham said, ‘They have Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them.’ [30] And he said, ‘No, Father Abraham, but if someone goes to them from the dead, they will repent.’ [31] He said to him, ‘If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead.’” 

Lazarus is a poor man and is “carried by the angels to Abraham’s side,” or to Abraham’s bosom in some versions. “Abraham’s side” is an ancient Jewish term for heaven, or the presence of God. 

Then the rich man, who knew Lazarus, also died and was carried not to heaven but to Hades, a term used in that era by Jewish people as a very awful place full of torment and misery. (Hades would be more completely identified as hell, a place ruled over by Satan and his demons.) 

In the parable, and not necessarily to be taken literally (commentators disagree on this issue), the rich man sees Lazarus in a place of tranquility and goodness. The rich man wants Abraham to send Lazarus with a drop or two of water. Abraham’s response is the core of what we are presenting here. It is verse 26: “And besides all this, between us and you a great chasm has been fixed, in order that those who pass from here to you may not be able, and none may cross from there to us”. 

This is only a parable, but it contains great truth. No one comes back to the planet once dead. Throughout Christian history, theologians and all Bible commentators have not maintained that there is a crossing over from heaven to hell or from hell to heaven. The destinations are fixed. 

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Ancestral Medicine 

Ancestral Medicine: Rituals for Personal and Family Healing, by Daniel Foor, Ph.D., published in 2017, describes perhaps the clearest presentation of what Ancestral Medicine is. Following is a brief presentation of the core of some of his points. 

In the introduction to the three sections of the book, he speaks of spontaneous ancestor contact such as dream visits, waking visions, and synchronicities. Also, the reader may “learn to partner with wise and loving ancestors to assist the souls of any deceased family members who have not yet joined the ancestors” (p. 3). 

All of the dead then are not necessarily part of the “ancestors,” but those who are may be contacted through various shamanistic and psychic processes. He will go on in the book to explain how to contact ancestors, which he says will be healing in many ways. 

Part One: Foundations of Ancestor Work 

Chapter one, My Personal Journey with the Ancestors. 

He states on page 10, “Allow space for personal reflection as you read, and stay open to helpful dream visits or other spontaneous contact from your loving and supportive ancestors.” 

He expects the reader will be contacted, but this contact will not be with ancestors, it will be with demons who impersonate dead ancestors. Based on what we have experienced, the very idea that an ancestor may be contacted is enough for a demon to play the role and make the contact. 

Dr. Noor concludes the chapter by encouraging any attempt to connect with an ancestor. “There is nothing unusual about having a healthy, ongoing relationship with our ancestors; in fact, it’s one of the most inherently human things we could do” (p. 12). 

Chapter two, Who are the Ancestors? 

Dr. Noor states that our oldest ancestors lived more than 200,000 thousand years ago in Africa, know the entire journey of human beings, and “are custodians of our generic and cultural memory” (p. 21). 

Key to his understanding of the ancestors, he asserts that some of these are “deeply at peace, while others may still be working things through” (p. 21). 

The author states that the dead are not dead, and says that “most indigenous peoples, animists, shamans, pagans, spiritual healers, and others who intentionally relate to the dead would agree with the following four assertions: 1) Consciousness continues after death; 2) Not all of the dead are equally well; 3) The living and the dead can communicate; and 4) The living and the dead can strongly affect one another. 

He thus lays the groundwork for communicating with souls or spirits. Satan could not have expressed it better. Indeed, the reader is being groomed for talking with the dead. 

The dead are no more dead, Dr. Noor states, “than angels, gods, the spirits of plants and animals, or other unseen forces” (p. 23). But then, he says it is best when thinking about the living and the dead to think of the distinction between human souls who are currently living and souls who were previously living and with whom we can still relate. Indeed, “throughout this book I refer to ‘the ancestors’ interchangeably with ‘the dead’ (meaning all human souls not incarnate on Earth at this time)” (p. 26). 

This sets the stage for the enormous lie, the lie of the “soul.” Every one of the psychic therapies or practices depend on the concept that there is a soul trapped or living in a human body and which is the true essence of the individual. This concept of the soul is mere confusion, and the essay, “Soul Confusion” presented in this book details where and how this tragic error is derived. 

The author, Dr. Noor, writes about how the living and the dead can communicate. “Contact between the living and the dead can take many forms. Sometimes the deceased come unsolicited as visitors in our dreams. Sometimes they speak through waking visions or synchronicities, or at times when our psychological defenses are thin (e.g., near-death experiences, altered states)” (p. 27). 

Synchronicity: this concept came from Carl Jung. The term refers to two or more events that are meaningfully related but which otherwise would be unlikely to occur. 

But then, some will seek to contact the dead by means of “ancestor reverence,” which can include ancestor-focused prayer, meditation, inspired song, and creative expression; psychic and mediumship practices; some types of divination; and any other practice that facilitates communication (p. 28). 

Here is where occult practices like mediumship intersect with meditation. When one engages is various forms of the psychic occult one opens oneself up to being invaded by demonic spirits. Based on lengthy experience, the 100 

initial contact or invasion can be either frightening or stimulating, sometimes both. Something occurs, and not merely an emotional something, but something real and tangible, though it may remain mysterious for some period. 

Once the initial event occurs, contact with the dead may be initiated by the living person, or the dead ancestor may initiate the contact. Interestingly, Dr. Noor admits that “the ancestors can confer blessings of health and longevity, or they can send us to an early grave” (p. 29). Yes, the idea is that some ancestors are mature and benevolent and some the opposite. “We on Earth can also benefit the ancestors. . . . when we speak well of them and feed them through heartfelt offerings (e.g., food, drink, flowers)” (p. 29). After all, death is just the beginning of a rite of passage for the recently deceased. 

Of interest is that Dr. Noor states that ancestors are not only real, but they are also not all equally well, and they can and will communicate, even if we do not seek the contact. The ancestors can give gifts of longevity and fertility and give a person an even temperament. 

Ancestor “reverence” practitioners will sometimes encourage knowing the names of ancestors back to seven generations; thus, as many as 254 ancestors may be made known to them. But all of these ancestors may not be equipped to be “supportive” family ancestors, and such can cause “disruption and disequilibrium for the living” (p. 35). 

Yes, this so-called gifting and knowledge is not all that can be given; indeed, ancestors may open the door to physical and mental illness. 

It is interesting to note that Dr. Noor repeatedly states that there are often experiences when ancestors whose souls indwell or contact a living person may not prove to be a wholesome event. 

In our years of doing the work of “casting out of demons,” we have often seen the disruption experienced with those who have “souls” living in them or have contacted them. Our experience, and that of countless others, confirms that the presence of such ancestors is frightening to the point they are compelled to find help. 

Dr. Noor draws a distinction between “ancient ancestors” and those a person knew during their life on Earth. “No longer tethered to Earth by name or living memory, these older ancestors often appear to living people as a group or a collective energy” (p. 36). These spirits may appear as more loving and peaceful than those who departed more recently, and they may be in a state of restlessness and pain. So, it is said there is a “family lineage repair process,” whereby older and younger family ancestors can be helped (p. 40). Noor also states, “Although it’s not usually the case, it is entirely possible that such work will destabilize your life” (p. 41). 

A summary of the chapter is given on page 42: “This chapter began with the question, ‘Who are the ancestors?’ To summarize, our ancestors include both the remembered dead and those ancestors whose names are forgotten. Both our recent and our older, collective ancestors influence our identity and sense of place in the world: ideally, we will include both in our practices of ancestor reverence.” 

Ancestors is a word that has good feelings associated with it; those in our family tree that we can know and benefit from—this is the author’s premise. He does not realize, or maybe he does, that he is inviting people to become indwelt by demons and not merely by making contact. And who can resist such a generous invitation? 

Chapter three: Spontaneous Ancestral Contact 

Contact and communication with ancestors can be sought or they can happen spontaneously, Dr. Noor explains. This latter means of contact may happen all of a sudden, without warning or intent. The spirit or soul of an ancestor just shows up and makes itself known. Dr. Foor says that “either type of contact can be helpful, harmful, or both” (p. 46). 

Contact can be made by means of dreams—not that a person merely dreams about the ancestor, but that the ancestor actually shows up in a dream. To acknowledge the contact, a person might make a simple offering to the ancestor, such as a prayer, lighting a candle, or pouring out a libation when awake. If the contact is that of a “troubled dead,” someone who has not yet become an ancestor, one can “make prayers, dedicate offerings, direct positive energy, and even conduct healing rituals for the elevation of these ancestors” (p. 47). 

Dr. Noor says that it is relatively common that ancestors show up when a person is in some altered or passive state of consciousness. And if such an event unexpectedly occurs, the encounter was likely with the troubled dead. 

Here now the deception runs deep. These “ancestors” are not ancestors at all but are what are sometimes referred to as “familiar” spirits, demons who impersonate dead people and appear and sound like an actual person. It can be very deceiving and again, such contact will eventually, if not quickly, result in demon possession. 

Dr. Noor, in my opinion, is not attempting to deceive the reader but does sincerely believe in what he is relaying. My attempt to contact him and request an interview was rejected. 

Chapter Four: Ancestor Reverence and Ritual 

There are many ways, says Dr. Noor, to relate to and communicate with one’s ancestors. One way is “ancestor reverence” and may involve many different forms and rituals. He says that many religions practice and perform rituals for this including those in the animistic and shamanistic traditions, Buddhism and even Christianity. 

The word “Christianity” reminds us of the Catholic tradition of praying to saints including the Virgin Mary. Although we know as Christians that we pray alone to “Our Father, who is in heaven,” there are certainly Christian brothers and sisters who, when praying, say, “Lord Jesus hear my prayer” or “Holy Spirit hear my prayer.” Such is not concerning since our Lord is Three-in-One and One-in-Three. 

Dr. Noor believes it is right to connect with our ancestors, because “we are bonded with the ancestors as life to death, light to shadow” (p. 57). He goes on to say, “One reason for engaging the ancestors is to more fully receive their support in our everyday living. Another reason is to extend support to the troubled dead” (p. 57). He also speaks of talking with dead ancestors and states that one needs to be careful, as others who overhear such conversation might wonder what is going on. 

Rituals are the focus now, and he mentions Celtic Samhain, the Mexican Day of the Dead, and the Japanese Obon festival as illustrative of such rituals. There are many others, of course, and he discusses how to establish them. 

Surprisingly, Dr. Noor states that the “troubled dead” can be a problem to the point that a “full exorcism may be needed to untangle the spirit of the deceased from the living” (p. 58). 

He does not understand that all of the so-called ancestors, troubled or not, are demons. 

“As stated in chapter 3, the living may experience direct contact with spirits of the deceased at any time” (p. 63). And this may occur by means of meditation, trance, and by direct intuition. Meditation is a usual and common way for entering into a trance type state or by what Dr. Noor terms direct intuition. 

Meditation, in every book we read, written both by those who support mindful meditation practices and by those who know these are means to connecting with evil spirits, know it is a manner in which ancestors, meaning demons, connect with humans. 

Dr. Noor notes that it is necessary to “trigger a shift in consciousness, which allows us to hear ancestral spirits more clearly” (p. 64) and the means to create such a shift include meditation, contemplation, vision quests, fasting, retreats, even drumming and rattling, intensive song and dance, psychological and physical ordeals, and the intentional use of psychoactive substances. 

It has become popular is some Christian churches and ministries to focus on a type of worship where music dominates, meaning the praise band, with long periods of ecstatic arm waving, dancing, and closing of the eyes, and then words of prophecy (so-called) are heard. This has been present for some 103 

decades and only recently have there been some corrections. 

Part Two: Healing with Lineage and Family Ancestors 

This second part “presents a framework and exercises to support direct engagement with loving and wise ancestors for the intention of personal, family, and lineage healing” (p. 72). And this includes greeting ancestral guides and other elevated ancestors, helping troubled ancestors, and much more. 

Chapter Five: Family Research and Initiating Ancestral Healing 

Dr. Noor describes how to “directly engage the spirits of your ancestors.” By this he means that it is time to “invite and start talking to dead people and listening for their responses” (p. 79). 

One of the vital processes is to become attuned to a person’s four primary bloodlines, these being one’s grandparents, two on each side. He then describes six stages for the work of speaking and hearing from dead ancestors. This is something Dr. Noor promotes, teaches, and uses to help supposedly troubled ancestors, thus the title for his book, Ancestral Medicine. 

We must be blunt here, because Noor is promoting what is often referred to as channeling and acting as a medium and a necromancer. The Hebrew Bible, in Deuteronomy 18:9–12 speaks to these “abominable practices”: 

[9] “When you come into the land that the LORD your God is giving you, you shall not learn to follow the abominable practices of those nations. [10] There shall not be found among you anyone who burns his son or his daughter as an offering, anyone who practices divination or tells fortunes or interprets omens, or a sorcerer [11] or a charmer or a medium or a necromancer or one who inquires of the dead, [12] for whoever does these things is an abomination to the LORD. And because of these abominations the LORD your God is driving them out before you. (ESV) 

Note the phrase in verse 11, “inquires of the dead.” Clearly Dr. Noor ignores this, (he likely is aware of it), but he encourages and teaches others to engage in these “abominable practices. Based on nearly fifty years of dealing with people who desired to have demons cast out of them and having acquired these evil spirits by means of any number of occult practices/arts, among those listed in Deuteronomy, we agree with the biblical warning. 

The numbers of those involved in contacting the so-called dead is growing exponentially. We do not mean to imply that those who engage in occult practices like that of speaking to the dead are evil people. No, they simply have been lured into a “spiritual” practice that is demonic. The devil and his demon  angels are spiritual and have powers that amaze and fool many of us. 

Chapter Six: Meeting with Ancestral Guides 

The focus here is how to “converse with bright ad elevated ancestors through practices of trance work and guided visualization” (p. 96). The guides are spirits of people who once lived on the earth and are part of a person’s actual blood ancestors. The guides are able to help their living ancestors and help any troubled dead. Dr. Noor refers to them as our “elders in spirit.” (p. 97) 

Various types of rituals are used in order to make contact with ancestral guides, the author states. “This section explores ritual structure, energetic protection, the use of nonordinary states of consciousness, ways to distinguish imagination and fantasy from authentic spirit contact.” (p. 100) On the next page we find that “During ritual, participants sometimes work with nonordinary states of consciousness or access strong emotion.” 

On page 102, Dr. Noor says, “If you intend to communicate with ancestral guides or other spirits of the dead, then you will likely need to enter into a state of awareness that is conducive to this type of dialogue.” 

Dr. Noor notes that there are a number of ways to prepare oneself to make communication with the spirits of the ancestors without using consciousness-altering substances. These include “mindful and medically safe fasting or eating lightly . . . engaging in exercise or disciplines like yoga, dance, chi gong, and martial arts.” (p. 102) He says one must “take caution” if one uses alcohol, cannabis, peyote, ayahuasca, and pyschoactive mushrooms to get into the proper state of mind for rituals. Instead, he does recommend meditation and drumming for the shifting of consciousness. The meditating is to calm and still, and the drum is for sensory stimulation. He also mentions “rattling,” the sound of the Native flute or recorder that will “support a light trance” (p. 103). 

We take note of the phrase “nonordinary states of consciousness” above. This reveals that the contacting of spirits involves an altered, passive, or shamanistic state of being. At this stage, the “therapist” enters into such a state by varying means often termed meditative or mindful states of consciousness. 

In our studies of these states of consciousness and conversing with those involved with various meditative practices, we discovered that the early stages of meditation and similar routines will most often produce pleasant and peaceful states of mind in the practitioner. There is no denying it; however, things will change over time and not for the better. This is when such a person may become fearful, disoriented, and may seek out help to deal with what turns out to be the presence of evil spirits. And it is only Jesus Christ who casts out demons. His followers, indwelt by the Holy Spirit, do this ministry today. 

Of course, Dr. Noor does not understand or perhaps is even unwilling to admit, that the spirits are not good at all. This would upset all he has committed himself to and would even cause him to wonder about the true nature of these ancestral spirits. 

Let us state once again: the ancestral ancestors are demons and not souls. In our view, one of the greatest deceptions ever to ascend from the nether region is the idea that a person has a soul inside the body, and which survives the death of the body. (See the chapter titled Soul Confusion for more on this subject.) 

Under the heading “Ways to Deepen Relationships with Ancestral Guides,” Dr. Noor states the first way is to “spend quality time with the ancestral guide” (p. 110). This is followed by, “Meet helpful spirits associated with this lineage.” And these other spirits “may include the collective spirits of animal and plants, deities, elemental powers, or spirits of place” (p. 111). He goes on to suggest that one might call upon the virgin Mary to help. 

In regard to “lineage,” those existing prior to any ancestors, this goes back to the formation of the universe and some, especially “indigenous peoples,” see themselves as being descendants of “specific powers, deities, land spirits, stars, natural forces, or exceptional and ancient human beings.” 

If one were to do so, he or she may well be rewarded with actual contact with spiritual entities. But what are these? Demons are able to assume any posture or identity, which is widely known. The worst of all outcomes is being in the presence of a demon under the control of the prime enemy of God, Satan. 

Let us assume that Dr. Noor believes what he is writing. We do not think he is making an attempt to fool people and lead them into danger of the worst imaginable kind. He believes he has made contact with the ancestors and other guides and entities, and he is thoroughly sold. 

In the interest of brevity, and because it should be clear to reader by this point in this chapter what Ancestral Medicine entails and what results, the remainder of our comments on Dr. Noor’s book will be abbreviated. 

In chapter eight, Dr. Noor writes of what is called a psychopomp, or soul guide, which is human or non-human, like a land spirit, a natural force, whose function is to “help the recently deceased reach the realm of the ancestors.” (p. 149) In other words, they deal with troubled souls. 

In chapter Nine is “Integration and Work with Living Family.” On page 176 is, “To embody, incarnate, or incorporate the ancestors literally means that they are en/in our caro (flesh) and corpus (body).” 

A rather perfect definition of being indwelt or possessed by . . . ancestors. He does not, I suppose, understand that these spirits are demons. Or does he? He makes is sound so wonderful—this “acquiring spirits/souls of dead ancestors in order to help them and allow them to help you.” Notice the terms: 106 

embodiment–this means that the ancestors are in you, and this applies also to the term possession. Then mediumship, again the same as embodiment and possession, as the medium traffics with souls or spirits within them, and spirit and soul are, by the way, one and the same thing. 

He mentions Mongolian and Siberian shamanism where the shaman actually embodies the spirits in many of their rituals. This is called ongon orood, which is having the “spirits inside the body” and “the shamanic state of having one or more shamanic helper spirits in possession of the shaman’s body” (p. 177). 

Dr. Noor also encourages the reader by saying that “almost anyone with sincere intent can embody the spirits of their ancestors” (p. 177). And this has been his experience as well. 

It could not be clearer; Dr. Noor is busy inviting others to become invaded by spirits or souls of ancestors. Apparently, he does not realize the nature of these spiritual entities. 

Over long years of ministry of dealing with those who wanted to be free of indwelling entities, meaning demons, it became clear that, at first these entities were mysterious, but over time their actual identity was discovered, and now their human “hosts” came looking to be rid of the now tormenting evil spirits. We must remember that there is only one Holy Spirit, and the Holy Spirit always and only glorifies and magnifies our Lord Jesus Christ. Could it be that Dr. Noor cannot face the reality of what he is caught up in? 

Our reason for setting out this brief snippet is to draw attention to the place of meditation. It seems so benign, this meditation, but it is the door opener to all of the contact with the evil spiritual world. The Scripture never even comes close to advocating or teaching this type of meditation. We recall the “Lord’s Prayer” that Jesus taught His disciples to pray; see Matthew 6:9–13. It has nothing at all to do with meditation, or sitting quietly focusing on one’s breathing, or attempting to rid the brain from thinking about anything at all. No, actual words are directed to Our Father in heaven. And the recorded prayers in Scripture, like John 17, are thoughtful and concrete, spoken by a person who is talking directly to his or her Lord. 

Part Three: Honoring Other Types of Ancestors 

The last part of Dr. Noor’s book is essentially an invitation to “reflect on your own death, practices to encourage conscious dying, preferred funerary customs, and the post-death journey, and beliefs about consciousness after death” (p. 200). 

Perhaps this is the most seriously dangerous part of the book, as Dr. Noor is convinced that after death there is still life, soulish in nature, but ongoing 107 

consciousness at any rate. And this is false hope indeed. 

After our dying, the very second after our dying, one of two things happen. For those safe in the salvation of our Lord Jesus, eternity in the presence of our God in heaven begins and never ends. Those not safe in Jesus will find the beginning of an eternity in the presence of the devil and his angels, that is, the demons. 

We cannot help but say that Ancestral Medicine is as far as one can get from the truth. Sad indeed. 

Chapter Ten: Ancestors and Place 

The reader is encouraged to “safely and respectfully commune with your ancestors at a cemetery or other burial place.” (p. 207) Following then are various things to be considered in such a process. 

There are certain places on Earth that enhance and support connecting with ancestors, such as certain plants or animals, natural formations like caves, waterfalls, mountains, etc. Plus, there may be places where ancestral spirits dwell near one’s home. 

Chapter Eleven: Affinity Ancestors, Multiple Souls, and Reincarnation 

The purpose of this chapter is to “provide one framework for dealing with multiple souls, reincarnation, and past lives” (p. 229). 

Affinity—this refers to ancestors one is familiar with: family members, close friends, teachers, mentors, and cultural heroes. 

Multiple souls—here is meant the bone and body soul, the blood and breath soul, the star and ghost soul. He counsels that if one having a problem with a ghost, make sure you are not being paranoid or delusional. Dr. Noor advises, “If you do conclude that a troubled human ghost has in some way linked his or herself to you or inhabits your home, consider contacting a ghost care specialist.” (p. 242) 

Again, we say that only Jesus casts out demons. Throughout decades of deliverance ministry, which is the actual casting of demons out of people, we have seen hundreds of demons cast out of hundreds of people, the majority of whom were Christians who discovered some time after their conversion that there were demonic spirits in them, usually the result of engaging in occult-oriented practices, or visiting mediums, engaging in serious yoga and meditation, and so much more. 

Yes, there is a controversy among Christians as to whether or not Christians can have a demon. Only on rare occasions have non-Christians wanted demonic spirits cast out of them. So, the debate continues, but our experience and that of many others, is that only Christians realize their dilemma and seek to have demons cast out. We have even done this via the internet, even for those in foreign countries. 

To see more of what we have written on the subject, look for the following: Deliverance Handbook: A Guide to Casting Out Demons for Today’s Christian. It contains an important questionnaire, which can be used in a deliverance session. 

Chapter Twelve: Joining the Ancestors 

Here are some highlights from the final chapter. 

Dr. Noor now speaks of preparing for the moment of death. He advises calling on the “support from the unseen worlds (e.g., ancestors, spirit guides, deities, God/dess) and that you are able to receive this support and to enjoy their guidance for what’s to come” (p. 260). He also states that some psychics who “claim to communicate with the souls of the recently deceased report that they may face a life review or reckoning with their life on Earth before fully joining the ancestors” (p. 264). 

Some Hindu and Buddhist traditions practice cremation, as fire severs unnecessary attachments to the past and helps release the soul from the most recent incarnations. 

The souls of people have been likened to a bird more than any other creature, which flies away at the point of death. It pictures the soul escaping the “cage” of the body. In fact, “our winged relatives are common messengers for the ancestors in this world” (p. 273). 

It is understood by many spiritual traditions that there is a period of time following death when the soul is still present, and only lasts a few days up to two weeks. Those who grieve the death of a loved one or friend and are available for this sort of contact can directly engage with the spirit—soul—of the recently deceased person. And, it is advised, speak aloud to them. Some say that it takes about four hundred days before the dead graduate to the status of ancestors. And these then are available to help us in this world. 

Our author, the psychologist, has likely used the above concepts to help grieving people come to an acceptance of a loss through death. And it may work for some, for a while anyway. However, what really has occurred is the one suffering loss is now exposed to demonic spirits that impersonate the dead. The contact with the soul, or the evil spirit in actuality, opens the door to more deception and a growing level of possession. 

How the demonic spirits accomplish this is beyond our understanding, but that it occurs is beyond question, as it has been known for long centuries. There is a knowledge that the satanic kingdom has that is incredible. Evil spirits can imitate, with incredible accuracy, all that can be known about a person. We  

We are reminded that Jesus casts out demons today just as He did when He was on the planet. Just recently, several demons were cast out of a person during our food pickup ministry. Our words were simply “Jesus Christ of Nazareth casts you out, you unclean spirits.” This we said two or three times, and what a difference, but there it was. Indeed, Jesus has given His followers this ministry, and they have been aiding troubled people all this time and all over the world. We say this to give those bothered by spirits, souls, entities, and other strange forces hope. 

Excerpts from Wikipedia 

Wikipedia, July 22, 2022 

What is ancestor healing? 

Ancestral healing is the process of revealing and releasing inherited wounds and traumas that have been passed down by our ancestors. Anyone researching their heritage will uncover both positive and negative issues that pass through the bloodlines from one generation to the next. 

What is ancestral work? 

Ancestral work is broad, vast, and incredibly important to any personal magical and spiritual practice. Ancestral work is part intuition, part dialogue, part deep listening. It can be research and reading based. It is engaging with the practices, food, medicines, stories, and beliefs of your cultures. Apr 15, 2021 

Can your ancestors help you? 

There are people all around us struggling through tough times. And if you find yourself battling loneliness, anxiety, or disappointment, the ancestor effect can help you. If you’re willing to reexamine the story of where you come from, you can create new emotions and promote healthy actions in hard seasons of life. Jul 23, 2017 

How do you stop the ancestral spirit from healing? 

You can’t stop the heal, but you can deal with as much damage as possible to negate the effect. The Ancestor spirit can only heal in large chunks when surrounded by spirits again, so taking down its health quickly afterwards is key. Mar 25, 2022 

How do I connect with my ancestors spiritually? 

In addition to prayer, calling in your ancestors in meditation is likely the easiest and fastest way to feel their presence. Take time to sit in meditation for 10-30 minutes and specifically call-in whichever ancestor by name you feel most connected to and ask them to talk to you! Oct 22, 2021

David Moves to Atlanta

The Jesus freak I am talking about in these memoirs is me, and

in this chapter I will talk only about those things that I was personally

involved in and therefore have some remembrance of. I

do have my journal, newsletters, old friends from that era with whom

I talk, and other materials that comprise my Jesus People archives,

but here I am touching only on my own personal experience. And I

caution readers: I may have some details wrong or slightly off.

That said, this chapter is focused (after a bit of detour) on David

Hoyt’s move to Atlanta, Georgia.

Another Story First

When David finished his work in Lancaster, he moved back to

Marin, and we saw the opening of Zion’s Inn. This was in 1968, and

David and I started painting houses to make money—of which we

had very little. Our first job was right up the street, and it consisted of

painting out some rooms on the second floor of a commercial building.

On the bottom floor was a business, and on the second floor was

a large apartment. (The building is still there in San Rafael, and I drive

by it frequently.)

First day on the job (and we had passed ourselves off as experienced

painters), we put a water-based latex paint on a wooden door

rather than the oil-based paint we were told to use. Frankly, we didn’t

know the difference; at least I didn’t, since I was the one who messed

up. That slowed things down, as I had to sand all the paint off after it

dried and lost a whole day. But we learned, and David and I found we

were good at the painting. And the money was not bad for back then

$5 an hour apiece.

David Moves to Atlanta

After painting for a little more than a week, we came to the last

room, a large one, and it was crowded with furniture covered by

white sheets. David and I never bothered to look under the sheets

while working there, but after we finished and peeked out of curiosity,

we found a number of pieces of very nice, but old furniture. The

owner then asked us to get rid of it, and we quickly said yes. I still

have two pieces, a beautiful antique corner table and a kind of club

chair. It was the very furniture we needed at the time, and I continued

to cart the stuff around for decades. I never could figure out if that

was a miracle or not.

Just before concluding the job, we were asked to paint the front of

the building. I recall doing this alone, since David was on another job,

but one day I was working at the very top of the second story when

some guys showed up and started yelling at me. They were from the

local painter’s union and were angry with me, a non-union worker,

for taking their work. Of course, I had no idea how that could be and

did not even understand about labor unions.

There was nothing else for me to do but continue painting, all the

while trying to ignore them. If I had climbed down off the ladder, a

fistfight would surely have ensued. When they saw I was not budging,

they started to shake the heavy, old, wooden ladder, the top of

which I was perched on. Finally, I had no choice; I descended with just

enough aggression in my manner that they could see I was ready to

fight. Before I reached the ground they fled. It is not always possible

to turn the other cheek—a lesson that stayed with me.

I decided to push my luck and was soon putting ads in the local

paper for more paint jobs. Over the years the union caused me some

grief by throwing paint on jobs I had finished or intimidating those

who had hired me. I had to keep it up, however, as I had a whole house

full of people to feed. Despite all the harassment and threats, the protecting

hand of God was upon us.

Back to David’s Move

David eventually moved to Walnut Creek, over in the East Bay.

There he began Upper Streams, and soon it was a thriving ministry.

After some time there, I think in 1969 or 1970, David packed up with

wife and some of the folks from Upper Streams and moved to Atlanta,

Georgia. David’s ministry grew greatly then, not only in Atlanta, where

they managed to rent the large and majestic former French Embassy,

but they also spread the Jesus Movement to eight additional states,

engaged in street evangelism, founded Christian houses, and started

Bible studies. As far as I know, it was David who really took the Jesus

Movement to the Southern states.

After some time, David invited me to visit him and the work in

Atlanta. I gladly did so, and on one of those trips I met a Roman Catholic

priest named Ed Sweeney in some kind of charismatic fellowship

in Atlanta, and we became good friends right away. As will be seen

in the next chapter, he played a large role in the tragedy that was to

follow.

There is much I could say at this point, but I will relate only one

memory. It was of an evening at the Atlanta house when I was preaching.

I stood with my back against the front door and faced the grand

staircase that rose up from the large entry hall. Before me was a minimum

of a hundred, maybe even two hundred kids, taking up every

square foot of room. I don’t think I had ever seen anything like it—a

real outpouring of the Holy Spirit, where hundreds were coming to

know Christ. It far exceeded anything I had seen in northern California’s

Bay Area. The ministry in Atlanta was growing day by day, and I

knew it all was both a huge privilege and a burden for David to manage.

Life Coaching

The subtitle for this chapter is “Some Safe, Some Dangerous.” Our comments will be in this font.

Life coaching has caught on big time in recent years. These “coaches” may function like a therapist, a counselor, a psychologist, a psychic medium, or a channeler. Life coaching covers a multitude of practices, and many are okay, but many others are dangerous.

Lin M. Eleoff’s book Gutsy Glorious Life Coach: How to Turn Your Life Coaching Practice into A Soulful Money-Making Business does not teach meditation and other occult practices but is directed at the “safe” life coaches. 

Then there is Jeremy Raymond’s book, The Life Coach Workbook, which is aimed at helping life coaches who do not work with spirit guides, ancestors, Reiki, Kundalini, The Third Eye, etc. but advises those who employ normal psychological means how to help others. 

And there are many other books like the two described above.

Therefore, a life coach could be a person who is trained in counseling and has a degree or two in the field. In 1965, Kent was engaged in looking for a job as a high school counselor when he changed direction and enrolled in a theological seminary in Mill Valley, California. And for ten years he operated the Marin Christian Counseling Center in San Rafael, California. He might have been described as a life coach then, but that terminology was decades away.

Some Dangerous Life Coaching

The first of what we call dangerous life coaching is published by the “Elvin Coaches,” whose book is titled Don’t Make Me Use My Life Coach Voice, published in 2020. Elvin Coaches is not the name of an author but is “a group of people who love to help and guide others towards a better life and circumstances” (p. 10).

The next three paragraphs describe how the Elvin Coaches see themselves:

We are part of a collective group known as Elvin Coaches. We have several members and decades of experience between all of us. We all met in Indonesia years ago, and many of us were already practicing life coaches by then. This became a huge bonding moment between us, and we have all grown as a family since then, supporting each other every step of the way. We have all personally experienced the power that all forms of coaching have, both for the client and the coach. We learn from the people we help just as much as they learn from us. 

All of us at Elvin Coaches are passionate about what we do, and we wanted to get our knowledge and experience out to the masses. This is why we began to publish books. We feel it is the best way for us to impart our knowledge to many people around the world. Whether you need the help of a Life coach or want to become one yourself, we are here to help you. We want to make you a part of our family. Once you are, you will grow exponentially as a person through our step-by-step action plans we provide and then you will be able to guide others to do the same. 

All of us at Elvin Coaches still experience the ups and downs of life. There are days when we are on top of the world, while others, we are down and out and want to hide somewhere. Getting through life is a constant battle, and none of us will ever tell you differently. We do not promise that all of your problems will go away; however, you will be equipped with better tools to handle them. After learning the techniques used in life coaching, you will look at your life in a completely different way. 

Now then, here is what the Elvin Coaches say are common misconceptions about life coaching: One, it is not counseling or therapy, though it can look like it. They do not treat mental health disorders, nor do they give medical advice. Two, it is not practicing therapy without a license. Three, it is not a hobby or a “side hustle,” but a real career and passion (p. 25). 

Life coaching is not regulated, and practitioners do not have licenses. Yes, some coaches are “slimy” but there are many fine ones. Some coaches make a lot of money, charging $300 an hour, but the authors say not to do it for money. 

However, one thing that life coaches are to do is to “make your client reliant on you” (p. 30). 

Intuition 

The Elvin Coaches state that life coaches need strong intuition, which “is the ability to understand or feel something immediately, without the need for conscious reasoning.” Also, “it is important to listen to our intuition, because it is trying to tell us something our conscious mind may not be aware of” (p. 33). 

In book after book on psychic healing processes, the concept of intuition comes up. It entails being in touch with energy and/or other sources of spiritual  knowledge. And it is right here where this kind of life coaching merges with the demonic. What occurs is that the would-be coach becomes indwelt with supernatural spiritual powers. These coaches will admit to it and know the existence of such within them, but they do not realize they are, in fact, evil spirits. 

These powers may be referred to in several ways, some of which are ancestral spirits, guide spirits, animal spirits, elves, souls, goddesses, gods, ascended masters, and many more. From the Bible we see that there is only one Holy Spirit, who always and only points to Jesus Christ, both to who He is and what He has done, meaning His death on the cross, His resurrection, and His return at the end of the age – and to nothing else. 

Due to this reality, we are placing this chapter on life coaching in this book on psychic spiritual processes, which are powered by Satan and the host of fallen angels he controls. 

So, the life coach can tap into the divine energy inside of them. The authors say the life coach, one who is intuitive, can help a client become intuitive as well. 

And this is the main issue: by means of engaging with these life coaches, one can indeed become indwelt by demonic spirits. We agree that there is something inside this coach, but it is not divine. 

In the very same chapter, the coaches talk about methods used by an intuitive coach. These are hypnotherapy, crystal healing, Reiki, and chakra healing. These are said to improve energy. However, all four of these practices will result in opening a person up to demon possession. 

The Law of Attraction 

The Elvin coaches state that what a person puts out into the universe will come back to that person. This is speaking of energy, thoughts, motives, interests, loves, hates, etc. The energies come back to a person by means of vibrations, both positive and negative. This is said to be the law of attraction, and the universe cannot be fooled, as it is smarter than any human, so one must be careful to send out good vibes. “As the mind thinketh, the universe giveth” (p. 41). The life coach must work to prevent a client from thinking bad or negative thoughts. In fact, if a focus is on making money, acquiring wealth, “the universe will present more opportunities to make money” (p. 42). 

Techniques Requiring More Skill 

The following is a summary of three more advanced ways that can be incorporated into one’s coaching techniques. 

One is the emotional freedom technique (EFT), a form of acupuncture, 88 

but no actual needles are used. Instead, one’s fingertips “are used to access and stimulate the various energy points on the body” (p. 67). It reminds one of Reiki therapy, and the Elvin Coaches say it is indeed a “New Age method.” 

Second is “cognitive behavioral coaching,” which is replacing bad thoughts with good thoughts. 

A third approach is guided meditation. “Meditation is a truly powerful exercise that can help people become more mindful and less stressed, as well as reducing mental blocks” (p. 68). 

Instead of naming the authors of other books on life coaching that we consider dangerous, we will simply quote or rephrase statements from two books that demonstrate our point. 

In the first one, the author suggests communicating with one’s “inner child” by looking at a photo of yourself when you were younger and begin communicating with this inner child, even invite this inner child to have a talk with you. 

This may seem to be safe or innocuous, but such a practice can result in an evil spirit communicating with a person while pretending to be an “inner child.” 

The concept of the “Universe” comes up frequently in the dangerous versions of books on life coaching, as though there is a power, an entity, that is the all-in-all, a kind of deity that is easily accessible and able to guide and empower one’s life. 

The following quote, if taken as truth, opens the door to all manner of deception: “I believe we’re given messages all the time by our inner voice or the Universe, that reveal our purpose and attempt to direct us toward our vision.” Not only should one listen but also thank the Universe for what is revealed and say, “Thank you, Universe!” 

So then, if this is true, we will be “listening” to messages from the Universe, and voices will be heard. With this, we agree. If one believes this and waits and listens, a voice will be likely be heard. But it will be the voice of a demon. 

The word “soul” appears dozens of times in books dealing with what we consider to be dangerous life coaching. Consult our essay written years back dealing with this issue, titled “Soul Confusion.” To be brief, we are a soul—we do not have a soul. The soul is not something that has a separate existence. Before reacting too strongly, please read this essay and evaluate for yourself. 

The reason we bring this to the reader’s attention is that so many books on life coaching speak of the positive evolving of the soul, and the author of one book speaks of accepting everything that has happened to you, because it is simply for the positive evolving of the soul. 

Life coaches of the dangerous variety also urge the practice of mindfulness.  

While it is laudable to be fully aware and attuned to reality, this mindfulness is just the opposite—it is really mindlessness. And just what is mindfulness? There is a plethora of explanations, but it is not prayer to God, it is not listening to God speak to you, or communication from an angel of the Lord. It is said by some to be an opening up to hear from the so-called Universe. 

But there is no Universe out there that is listening and communicating. 

However, there is a presence out there that will communicate with you, and it is the counterfeit of the Spirit of God. It is the demonic kingdom with its evil demons, ruled over by the prince of hell, Satan. 

The God who created the heavens and the earth, all of matter, every planet, every star, everything that exists in what is called the universe, has communicated to us through His eternal Son, Jesus Christ, and his word, the Bible. The Creator God exists outside the universe, a universe that will one day, perhaps billions of years from now, cease to exist. It will either burn up or freeze out, and the evidence leans toward the former—utter dissolvement. 

That the demonic forces communicate with us is a sure reality, and it is real, tangible, and convincing. Demons are real. Jesus cast them out during His ministry, and Christians throughout the ages have been given his authority to do so. We have personally done so many hundreds of times. 

One book on life coaching urges meditation to help one connect with their “observer.” First the person must connect with their “inner wisdom.” Then is described a rather common form of meditation by way of emptying the mind, breathing deeply over a period of time, filling the chest with air, and with each breath, relaxing the body ever more deeply, sending the breath to the heart. Now you can take a deep breath and ask the observer to be present with you. 

And something will be with you now, something no one would want, if the identity of the observer was clearly understood. 

This observer is not defined or identified, but it is in you, a part of you, some imagined something that observes your life and does not react against you, but rather supports and encourages you. The person then invites the observer to be present with you. The last step is to “shake your shoulders, roll your head,” and begin to come back into full consciousness. 

If one does not want to connect with their observer, he or she can connect with their inner child, who will bring comfort and support. 

These are clearly paths to demonization, and yet it seems so nice. 

Interesting and good news for plant lovers: when plants are near each other they can pull energy from each other and thrive. 

One can also ask the sky a question, and an answer will appear in the form of a cloud. Indeed, nature will always respond to you, so you will know you are not alone. 

There is also a circle of flow on energy. When you give energy to help someone, energy will flow back to you. (We can understand this one in terms of human social interaction.) Other ideas put forth are 1) You can visualize a diamond in your home, 2) You can ground to the planet in order to transform, connecting up to the Source and the Unified Field of energy above, 3) You can ask Source to cleanse your home, 4) You can ask the planet to empty you out and to then fill you up with energy, 5) You can also ask Spirit to empty you out, 6) then you should ask the planet to renew you, and this by focusing on the Heart, 7) then ask the Spirit to fill you up, and finally, 8) activate the Greater Whole, and this again by focusing on the Heart. 

At one point the author of the above book states that our ancestors “and their environment influences vibrate within us.” In another place the author says that he could see a “beautiful blue energy” around the head of a horse he was riding. 

All of us then are like the proverbial genie in a bottle, and working with energy allows for this genie to be set free. To do so, one needs to say “Hello” to the genie; this is the beginning of unleashing it. Plus, one must also say hello to the “passive creative force.” When the genie is unleashed and one is in communication with it, one should utter, “Thank you Genie.” 

In conclusion, we were saddened when we first read the materials for this chapter, and now again when presenting a small fraction of it, we are saddened again. Those who wrote the books researched for this piece on life coaches are sincere people who are not intent on harming or misleading anyone. We must be, all of us, vulnerable to being deceived by the god of this world. That demonic kingdom is full of false glory and brilliance. Who among us could resist? 

******* 

Excerpts from Wikipedia 

Wikipedia, July 6, 2022 

Note: The following describes what we consider to be safe, non-spiritually threatening, and helpful. 

Life coaching is the process of helping people identify and achieve personal goals through developing skills and attitudes that lead to self-empowerment. Life coaching generally deals with issues such as procrastination, fear of failure, relationship issues, lack of confidence, work–life balance and career changes, and often occurs outside the workplace setting. Systematic academic psychological engagement with life coaching dates from the 1980s. Skeptics have criticized life coaching’s focus on self-improvement for its potential for commercializing friendships and other human relationships. 

Coaches use a range of communication skills (such as targeted restatements, listening, questioning, clarifying, etc.) to help clients shift their perspectives and thereby discover different approaches to achieve their goals. These skills can be used in almost all types of coaching. In this sense, coaching is a form of “meta-profession” that can apply to supporting clients in any human endeavor, ranging from their concerns in health, personal, professional, sport, social, family, political, spiritual dimensions, etc. There may be some overlap between certain types of coaching activities. Coaching approaches are also influenced by cultural differences. 

Third Eye Awakening

This material is also found in Psychic Empath: 5 Books in 1

Our own comments are in this font. 

The third eye is a spiritual concept associated with enlightenment and direct communication with a higher plane of existence—this is the practical definition of the “third eye” as understood by those who embrace it. 

The third eye has been a mystical concept for centuries, yet it is uncertain as to its origins. It is said that it does not involve magic but is entirely natural. The Ajna chakra is the same as the third eye, located between the eyebrows, in the pineal gland. It is part of being human, yet it is little used. And anyone can open their third eye, and this can be achieved by means of devotion, willpower, and meditation. 

Third eye power has been mostly possessed by yogis, psychics, and fortune tellers in the past, but now is open to more and more people. Indeed, the occultists and spiritual masters have called it the “seat of the soul.” “If you meditate and open your third eye then you can get insights, prior warnings of danger, and a high level of intelligence” (p. 406). And the key word is “meditate.” The third eye awakens the inner self. 

Meditation, and here it means more than mindfulness, is a movement into a passive or shamanistic state of mind. It is an opening up to outside spiritual forces or entities, which are actually demonic and evil spirits. Christian prayer is the opposite; it is mindful and conscious focus on God with the full presence of heart and mind. It is a looking to Jesus who loves us and hears our words. 

Chapter 1: What is the third eye? 

The third eye is said to be about the size of a walnut, located in the brain. The third eye is said to be “the window to our inner selves, our soul, and our connection with the energy and power of the universe” (p. 407) . To grasp this, one must think of your inner self as a ball of energy that moves or drives the body forward, the energy that connects us with the energy of the universe. 

The third eye is said to be the pineal gland, which is a small organ located at the very top of the spine as it enters the brain. From a Google search is found the following definition: “The pineal gland is a small, pea-shaped gland in the brain. Its function isn’t fully understood. Researchers do know that it produces and regulates some hormones, including melatonin. Melatonin is best known for the role it plays in regulating sleep patterns.” 

It is supposed that the pineal gland creates or causes hallucinations, and DMT or dimethyltryptamine within this gland will assist a person to move into a trance-like state along will receiving vivid imagery. 

Those who value the experience of the third eye understand that the mind and body are only temporary, while the real essence is the inner self, or spirit, or soul, which after death are joined together with the energy of the universe. 

“Our time here on earth could be made so much happier and healthier by following the guidance of our inner spirit. Getting connected with our third eye is the key to all of it” (p. 409). 

Chapter 2: How to Open Your Third Eye 

“Opening your third eye takes time and practice. While you may have an experience, such as during meditation, where you feel a huge rush of awakening, it will not be fully awakened by one experience” (p. 410). 

Meditation is a good way to open the third eye, but there are other methods that can be used. One important process is to silence your mind. And it is by means of such silences that the third eye can be opened, and other psychic abilities are realized. 

Another way to open the third eye is to practice “tuning in” and this by either feeling or hearing something coming from your intuition. It is said that “where your attention goes, energy flows” (p. 411). You must intentionally listen to your third eye and your intuition, and when this is done, they will continue speaking to you. 

Then it is good to explore one’s natural creativity; it must be remembered that the third eye is also your “mind’s eye” and is the seat of your imagination. 

Of course, you must be grounding yourself, and when this happens, you will be taken into the spiritual realm. Here you are working with your root chakra, and this is done by meditating on this chakra, which will center one into the center of the Earth. 

Exercising your third eye is also essential, and a good way to do this is by meditating on all the chakras. A way to do this is to lie down and meditate, imaging your chakras one at a time, and imagining each one becoming brighter, even glowing. 

One may also use dream work. To do this, after dreaming write them down and interpret them on your own, or purchase a dream interpretation journal. 

Another great way to play with your third eye is to let your imagination flow, and this while in a meditative state. Also helpful is the let your intuition guide you, and this will allow you to receive mental downloads, which will be filled with information. 

Last, the final best way to exercise the third eye is to strengthen your psychic abilities. 

Much of what this has to do with is entering into the passive, shamanistic, or altered state of consciousness, and yes, we say this over and over. A common method for doing this is meditation, achieving an “open” mind, and the open mind will then be invaded by spirits, evil spirits, who disguise themselves as benign knowledge sources. There are many ways to enter a meditative state, and it can be very spiritual, very exhilarating, and very deceiving. It is a sure mechanism to demonic possession. And it may be many years before a person recognizes the true nature of what has taken root in them. 

Chapter 3: Techniques to Awaken the Third Eye Chakra 

It is recommended that a person chant “OM” in order to awaken the third eye chakra, and this process is rather complex but involves finding a quiet place to be alone, light candles, lie down on the floor, close the eyes, relax, begin deep breathing, focus on the third eye, flow with your body’s energy, begin looking for a vibration or tingling between the eyebrows, do not focus too hard, just remain vacant and let things take their course. Then focus on the vibration between the eyebrows, and let it shift to the throat, especially the larynx. Also keep the eyes closed and be aware of any light or colors between the eyebrows. This may take a number of attempts to open the third eye. And the whole key is learning how to meditate, which is to be able to stop the mind and be open to the vibrations, colors, and the movement of energy. 

The author(s) of this section go on to provide another way of awakening the third eye. These are briefly: relax the mind and the body, develop a habit of meditating, and open the intuitive part of the brain. 

Another way of describing the above is that it is a technique on how to enter into a passive, altered, or shamanistic state of consciousness. And it is here that demonic spirits are able to enter into the mind and body of the meditator. This is the connection to the occult world, where there is in fact access to power and knowledge. Indeed, it is mesmerizing and life altering. The author(s) state that using the third eye does not mean developing magical powers or becoming a psychic, which is simply false. This is exactly what happens—one enters the psychic world. And yes, there are magical powers and psychic knowledge there, the age-old trap. 

After opening the third eye, unusual experiences will follow, some of which may be pleasant but others not pleasant. Also, one can “see” through the third eye, and one can sense, see, and visually interpret the energy that is present, even energy in people around them, both good and bad energies. 

Chapter 4: Guided Day Meditations to Waken the Third Eye 

This chapter is essentially a replay of chapter 3, but here are the steps: 

Choose a location, and with an intention, do some stretching first, adopt the best position for meditating, relax, breathe, empty the mind, access the third eye, work on experiencing your third eye, maintain focus on the third eye, and “get out of the meditation slowly.” In doing so one will be more sensitive to spirits and may even see them from time to time. One will feel divine inspirations, feel great potential, and have joy and experience a healthy life once one is connected with the spirits. 

Here we see how one becomes indwelt by spirits, and these are always and nothing other than unclean or evil spirits. 

There is only one Holy Spirit, The Spirit of God, and all others are unholy spirits or demons whose head is Satan. And the Holy Spirit points only to Jesus Christ, both to who He is, the Word become flesh, and what He has done, die on the cross bearing our sin, then being raised from the dead, and ascending to heaven. 

The question is asked, p. 435, “Is it possible for anyone to activate the third eye chakra?” The answer, of course, is yes, and activating the third eye is a spiritual process and not a religious one. A person can belong to any religion and still activate the third eye, because it can be achieved by means of meditation. 

At our Miller Avenue Baptist Church, we have a Gospel Meditation printed in the bulletin every week, which is an outline of the passage that will be presented at the time of the sermon by one of the pastors. It emphasizes the main point of the Biblical passage that is the subject of the sermon. It does not involve any form of mindlessness or mindfulness. It is active mental attention to the words God has given us in His Word. 

The pineal gland, according to those who assent to such psychic topics and practices, is where the third eye is located, and which is said to be in the middle of the brain, or the Ajna chakra. This gland is said to be the “anchor of the soul” (p. 435). It is said to regulate sleep cycles, sexual maturation, and vital hormones. Trouble is, this gland becomes calcified over the years and the third eye helps to decalcify it and thus opens up the mind.

Chapter 6: Psychic Abilities 

The author(s) state that there is nothing supernatural about psychic abilities; they are all natural and will function properly when the chakras are strong and healthy (p. 445). 

The following are the basic psychic abilities. Clairvoyance is the most common psychic ability, and this has to do with “clear-seeing.” For example, this will help locate lost items or see different places and dimensions. Pyrokinesis is another ability, and it has to do with controlling fire. Telekinesis is the ability to move or influence objects with the mind. Micro TK has to do with the outcome of randomness or odds, like influencing coin flips, heads or tails. The Macro TK has to do with moving things with your mind, like a coin or even a television set or a car. Hydrokinesis is the ability to control water. Clairsentience is the ability to feel subtle energy or feelings. 

Divination is a very common practice and is used by dowsers and in the tarot cards. The tarot cards are a way to communicate a message that can be understood, and here one’s intuition is involved. So then, when a card is chosen, it is necessary to relax and clear the mind and allow your intuition to take over. Another form of divination is done by using a pendulum. 

Chapter 7: Psychic Awareness 

The standard definition of this is “the understanding of human consciousness and the full potential of the mind when it is applied to everyday life” (p. 454). It has to do with understanding the silent Spirit and the mind’s power that lies within a person. This gives us insight into our mind’s power. 

Chapter 8: Exercises for Awakening Your Inner Spirit 

One of these is through the guided practice referred to as yoga. Also, Tai Chi may be used to awaken the Inner Spirit. 

Chapter 9: Pineal Gland Activation and Chakras 

The pineal gland, located in the middle of the brain at the location of the Anja chakra can be activated by doing the following: First, close your eyes and focus on the center of your brain, then make contact with it. This gland is very powerful and is “the seat of the soul” (p. 460). 

Then second, one must breathe into the pineal gland and fill it with divine power. Energize, charge, and activate it, and let it know that you want to connect with it, and then you will become one with your greater self, which is the eternal light inside you. 

It is said that there are seven major chakras, which are all aligned along 83 

the centerline of the body. The first is the “root chakra,” at the base of the spine. Then the “sacral chakra” just above the root chakra. Next is the “solar plexus chakra” just above the root chakra. Then next in line is the heart chakra, next the “throat chakra.” Above this is the “third eye chakra,” and finally the “crown chakra” at the top of the skull. 

Chakras have no scientific support or proof, only a long history based on early Hindu teachings. One of the dangers of psychic ‘therapies’ is that they cannot bring real healing and are no substitute for psychological and medical science. Not only are psychic techniques false, they also open a person up to invasion by demonic spirits. 

Jesus said that “where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them” (Matthew 18:20). Likewise, where two or more are gathered practicing psychic therapies, etc., then there is also the presence of the demonic. And it is here where so many are invaded by demonic spirits. We wish it were not so, but it is the truth. 

******* 

Excerpts from Wikipedia 

Wikipedia, accessed January 29, 2022 

The third eye (also called the mind’s eye or inner eye) is a mystical and esoteric concept of a speculative invisible eye, usually depicted as located on the forehead, which provides perception beyond ordinary sight. 

In Indian spiritual traditions, the third eye refers to the ajna (or brow) chakra. 

The third eye refers to the gate that leads to the inner realms and spaces of higher consciousness. In spirituality, the third eye often symbolizes a state of enlightenment. The third eye is often associated with religious visions, clairvoyance, the ability to observe chakras and auras, precognition, and out-of-body experiences. People who are said to have the capacity to utilize their third eyes are sometimes known as seers. 

In Hinduism and Buddhism, the third eye is said to be located around the middle of the forehead, slightly above the junction of the eyebrows, representing the enlightenment one achieves through meditation. Hindus also place a “tilaka” between the eyebrows as a representation of the third eye, which is also seen on expressions of Shiva. Buddhists regard the third eye as the “eye of consciousness”, representing the vantage point from which enlightenment beyond one’s physical sight is achieved.  

In Taoism and many traditional Chinese religious sects such as Chan (called Zen in Japanese), “third eye training” involves focusing attention on the point between the eyebrows with the eyes closed, and while the body is in various qigong postures. The goal of this training is to allow students to tune into the correct “vibration” of the universe and gain a solid foundation on which to reach a more advanced meditative state. Taoism teaches that the third eye, also called the mind’s eye, is situated between the two physical eyes, and expands up to the middle of the forehead when opened. Taoism asserts that the third eye is one of the main energy centers of the body located at the sixth Chakra, forming a part of the main meridian, the line separating left and right hemispheres of the body. In Taoist alchemical traditions, the third eye is the frontal part of the “Upper Dan Tien” (upper cinnabar field) and is given the evocative name “muddy pellet”.

Rise of the Children of God

(I know this is rather confused presentation, given the footnotes, but be patient and the full story will come out.)

The first and only time I talked face to face with David “Moses”

Berg was when David Hoyt, Danny Sands, Rick Zacks, and I visited

Lonnie Frisbee at the House of Miracles in Costa Mesa, California.

We had come to discuss the pros and cons of Lonnie joining

forces with Chuck Smith and the beginnings of Calvary Chapel. After

that meeting, the five of us jumped into my 1964 blue Ford station

wagon and drove down to Newport Beach to a Christian nightclub

run by the Berg family. That was in 1969.

Little by little, word filtered through the Jesus People networks

that there was a new group operating and aggressively so. It was

known as COG, short for the Children of God.1 At some point it was

also known as The Love Family or just, The Family. This more attractive

designation began to be used around the year 1971, and it

emerged as the COG’s response to negative attention it received from

the media.

The COG targeted the Jesus freaks. Early on the attraction was that

Berg’s followers were really sold out to Jesus, unlike the “ordinary”

Jesus freak. Members of Berg’s group had left worldly possessions

behind (of course, if they had anything, it was given to the organization),

and they were on the road with the true gospel.

Many of the Jesus People had been hippies, or wanted to be hippies,

so the radical call to leave everything behind, including work,

school, parents, wives, or husbands was a real lure—an escape for the

bored and burdened.

I had been a disciple from afar of Jack Kerouac and tried to live out

1 Don Lattin has written an excellent account of the Children of God, the best

out there. The title is: Jesus Freaks: A true story of murder and madness on the Evangelical edge, published in 2008.

Rise of the Children of God 107

what I read in his books, On the Road and Dharma Bums, which celebrated

the “beat life.” The beat life melded into or helped spawn the

hip movement, at least as I see it. Now COG came along and provided

the perfect excuse to be wild and radical, and all for Jesus.

Sex was a big draw as well. I recall the “Mo” letter that Berg wrote

entitled, “Flirty Little Fishies,” which was a communication that came

directly from a spirit that Berg had in

him named Abram. It instructed the

pretty young ladies in COG to use their

bodies to bring in new converts.2 And

as you might guess, it worked.

That Berg was possessed by a spirit

that guided him was not as strange

as it might seem. Infused with Pentecostalism,

most of the Jesus People

thought that anything spiritual had to

be from God. Due to my Baptist background,

I did not share this view, not

even close. What I saw instead was a

doctrinal issue that contributed to the

confusion over Berg and others like

him. It was a propensity of many Christian leaders to strongly argue

against the possibility that a Christian can have a demonic spirit. The

rationale was: if you are filled with the Holy Spirit, there is no room

for anything else. And naturally, the Jesus People were “Full Gospel”

and filled “to the gills”3 with the Spirit; Berg fell into this category.4

A second point that led to confusion was the common presumption

among the Jesus People that anyone who claimed to be a Christian

must be one.5 There was virtually no understanding or discernment

2 This bit of engineering was essentially a mask for Berg’s own sexual perversions.

3 An expression we would use to describe someone who plainly had several

demons.

4 In my own deliverance ministry I attempt to avoid the controversy about

the vulnerability of Christians to demonic influences and set aside theological nitpicking,

in order to concentrate on the needs of the person in front of me.

5 This particular issue stayed with me for many years and in 1995 I wrote

a book on true and false conversion. The title is, Are You Really Born Again? and is

now in its second edition.

108 Chapter 32

that someone might be falsely converted. In my estimation, this was a

difficulty that would haunt the Jesus Movement and produce much of

what I call “the dark sides” of the awakening. After all, one’s Christianity

was judged on whether one could move and groove to the beat,

all the while speaking in tongues. This may be an exaggerated viewpoint,

but it is not far from actual practice. But more of this later.

With the news spreading around about the COG, most of the Jesus

People knew what was afoot. David Hoyt and I knew and actively

campaigned against Berg and his movement. We knew we would

encounter them at some point. Indeed, COG people showed up in the

Bay Area, but they had little or no chance of gaining a foothold here. A

few stragglers got picked off, but for the most part they left us alone.

There were better, easier pickings elsewhere.