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The Dangers of Deliverance Ministries
Introduction
The Deception
Deliverance Ministry refers to groups that perform practices and rituals to cleanse people of demons and evil spirits.
This is done in order to address problems in their life deemed to be manifesting as a result of demonic presence, which have authority to oppress the person.
Believers attribute people's physical, psychological, spiritual and emotional problems to the activities of these evil spirits in their lives.
Deliverance rituals are meant to cast out evil spirits, helping people overcome negative behaviors, feelings, and experiences.
Each individual event is different, but many include some or all of these major steps: diagnosis, naming the demon, expulsion, and some form of action taken by the exorcised person after their exorcism to keep the demon from returning.
— American possessions : fighting demons in the contemporary United States (2015), The sacred self : a cultural phenomenology of charismatic healing (1997).
The Deceivers
This study is not meant as an attack on our friends in the Church of God and other charismatic denominations.
Many of them will join me in repudiating the movement that we are studying today.
Rather, this study is necessary because those who were once thought to be doctrinally sound, generally reliable, and seemingly faithful to the Word have diverted from the core teachings of the Great Commission and are now heavily focused on that this movement of setting captives free from demons and spirits that posses and oppress willing or ignorant victims.
Two of these teachers are former conservative Baptists Greg Locke and D.R. Harrison.
Greg Locke progressed from his independent Baptist doctrine in 2011 and separated his Global Vision Bible Church and began to move towards the embrace of Deliverance Ministry where he has now settled.
Today, he and his wife, his church secretary whom he married after divorcing his first wife, practice Deliverance rituals across the Southeast.
Locke is known as a firebrand and for his controversial statements.
He boldly announced that a demon had revealed a number of witches attending his church.
He made the statement that autism is demon possession.
Autism?
“There ain’t no such diagnosis in the Bible!”
D.R. Harrison was converted at the Burlington Text Revival under the preaching of C.T. Townsend in 2016.
He was responsible for the video streaming and digital marketing of the meeting.
Almost immediately, he entered the ministry and began preaching revivals in the footsteps of his well-known father David Harrison.
Soon thereafter, he announced his own tent ministry like that of C.T. and Ralph Sexton.
Within a month or so of his conversion, C.T. and his camp separated themselves from D.R. for reasons not made public.
As his ministry and popularity grew, his name quickly became divisive with rumors of false doctrine and hyper-charismatic leanings.
One nearby pastor resigned his church and began to help him in his tent revivals before passing away while on a trip with D.R. Finally, a video surfaced last year of D.R. and his wife at a Deliverance service with Greg Locke where his wife “received the anointing of the spirit” after having hands laid on her during their Deliverance service.
After that video surfaced, many pastors reached out to D.R. for a clarification on his position.
He responded with a number of Facebook Live videos where he talked about everything but the elephant in the room.
But he never distanced himself from Locke.
Now, he has abandoned all disguises and is all-in with Greg Locke and the Deliverance Ministry.
The two have announced their Atlanta Crusade March 3-4 where they will have prayer and a deliverance service.
Foundations of Deliverance Ministries
Deliverance Ministry is based principally from Isaiah 61:1:
Jesus reads this portion of Isaiah in the synagogue in Luke 4:18:
Deliverance Ministry is further based on the The Gospels’ mentioning of Jesus casting out demons and evil-spirits on numerous occasions.
Jesus sent the twelve out two-by-two and gave them power over unclean spirits in Mark 6:7
Diagnosis
Deliverance ministries focus on casting out the spirit or spirits believed to cause an affliction.
The person must first be "diagnosed" with the presence/possession of an evil spirit, which often requires the participation of a person who is trained or experienced.
This expert may ask questions to learn about the person's life, and try to discover if they have committed any sins that might invite a demonic presence; if they have, they must repent of that sin as part of the deliverance process.
The expert might question the person about their relationships with their spouse, children, and friends, as poor relationships with closer circle may be evidence of a demonic presence.
They may also ask about their extended family and ancestors, to determine if the demon might be the result of a family curse.
They can attempt to discern, if an object or a room is the source of the demonic activity and help the person understand what may have attached the demon to that object or space.
Types of Demons
Murder: murder, hate, rage, anger, violence, revenge, suicide, jealousy, fighting
The Occult: fortunetelling, tarot cards, ouija boards, seances, astrology, yoga, dungeons and dragons, etc.
Lust: fornication, adultery, pornography, LGBT, prostitution, etc.
Pride: arrogance, rebellion, blasphemy, control/domination, quarreling, critical or judgmental, selfish, unbelief, deceit, mockery
Mental Health: fear, depression, dread, hopelessness, insecurity, loneliness, shyness, discouragement, lying, antisocial, insanity, autism
Unforgiveness: bitterness, jealousy, resentment, anger, stubbornness
Sickness: gluttony, gout, high blood pressure, diabetes, sleepiness, epilepsy, cancer
Vices: alochol, illegal drugs, prescription drugs
False Religions: Islam, JW, Mormonism, and any non Christian belief
How does one get a demon or spirit?
Demons are believed to be able to enter a person's life in many different ways.
Some objects harbor demons such as fantasy/horror novels or films, Dungeons and Dragons, Pokemon, and role-playing games.
Certain types of music.
Artifacts depicting pagan gods.
False religious texts.
Simple decorations from a non-Christian religion may also be a hiding place for demons.
Other types are objects with a sinful history (e.g. a piece of jewelry from an adulterous relationship, an object purchased with greed, etc.).
Places can also be reputed to contain demonic presence that can then enter the lives of people living or visiting there.
Indian burial grounds and homes or rooms where violence or abuse occurred are said to be examples of this sort.
Demons can also be said to "run in families."
The usual cause is ancestors who were Satanists, Freemasons, or witches, or who died unrepentant of terrible sins such as abuse, adultery, or murder.
Some claim that negative traits and practices run in families because of demonic presence that are passed down from parent to child.
Others claim that physical ailments and persistent problems such as poverty and addictive behaviors (drugs, pornography, etc.) can be caused by ancestral sin and the resulting family curses.
Traumatic experiences can be a point of entry for demons.
For example, if you witness a bad car wreck, a demon of fear may enter you.
Naming the Demon
Revealing the demon's name may be part of the expulsion process, as it gives the preacher authority over the demon.
This process is not required to cast out the demon and some adherents do not accept it (some believe that demons can give the wrong name), but others believe it is necessary.
The presence may identify itself or be identified as a specific demon (e.g.
Jezebel, Asherah, Baal, etc.) or its "name" might be the name of the sin or affliction it represents (e.g.
rebellion, gluttony, sexual perversion, anorexia).
Naming the demon is about specifically identifying the problem, and may prepare both the preacher and the person being healed to expel the demon.
For example: a Jezebel spirit is one of Satan’s higher-ranking, more intelligent demons if not the smartest kind of demon he has in his kingdom.
And with it being much more intelligent than many of the other lower-ranking demons will be, this makes this type of spirit much more evil, cunning, and harder to deal with once it moves in and attaches to a person.
And if you want to expel a Jezebel spirit, you must find a Deliverance minister with a Jehu spirit.
Just because Jehu killed Jezebel in 2 Kings doesn’t mean Jehu was good.
He continued to be an idolater.
He just eliminated those that worshipped a competing idol.
Actually, there are no named demons in the Bible apart from Satan.
Expulsion
Various methods are used to expel demons.
Some adherents recite Biblical verses about casting out demons, or pray; many also invoke "the blood of Jesus," a reference to Jesus suffering for people's sins and intervening with God on behalf of humanity.
In this context, invoking the blood of Jesus is calling on him to intervene specifically on behalf of the possessed individual.
There is no example in the scriptures of “pleading the blood of Jesus”.
I know that many people do it today unwittingly, but this is where it comes from.
The roots of that practice are in Deliverance Ministry.
Post-Deliverance Maintenance
According to believers in possession a demon may return after a successful deliverance ritual.
To avoid this, a person whose possession was the result of a sin, must avoid repeating that sin.
If they do, it may invite the demon back into their life; other demons (not related to sin) may just be persistent and hard to get rid of permanently.
As such, people may need to call upon the person who performed the ritual to do so again, perhaps multiple times for the same problem or demon.
Pleading the Blood of Jesus.
This phrase is mentioned once in scripture and it refers to God judging and killing people — not deliverance.
Offensive and Battle Prayers (declaring miracles, speaking victory, manifesting blessings, name it and claim it).
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