IT SEEMED
SO SWEET, BUT NO
Jane had a hard time
sleeping and was awakened many times during the night, sweating and fearful.
She blamed doctors who filled her with so much fear about dying in her sleep,
that she tried to stay awake to fight off the fear.
But the real problem was something else. It was a household idol: a framed
picture of a female angel watching over two children walking over a bridge. Why
do I call it a household idol? You would be surprised at how many people have
this image in their homes. Somehow, we thought it was a sweet and innocent
picture of a guardian angel that protects children. But that’s not it at all. Many
images carry devil spirits with them, and we don’t even know it.
First of all, the angel is
female, and that’s not accurate. Then
there’s the bridge. Everyone knows that the image of a bridge is a symbol for crossing
over from this world into the next. So, the message of this image is one of
death. The real message of this picture
is that a beautiful female angel is going to escort you to heaven. But the subliminal
message is that you have to die first.
I’m not saying that
everyone who has been under the influence of this picture, has a demon lurking
in the bedroom. But enough people have night fears and trouble sleeping, that it’s
worth considering the presence of spiritual entities.
Other cultures around the
world know more about spirits occupying physical images and objects than we Americans
do. It’s time to wake up.
Jane remembers that before
she was 8-years old, the angel picture hung above the head of the bed where she
and her younger sister slept in their Chicago home. She remembers that the
prominent subject of adult conversation all around her was about who’s dying,
who’s in the hospital, who’s deathly sick.
Jane’s mother got multiple
sclerosis when she was 4-years old. She was frightfully conscious of the fact
that her mother could pass away while she slept. Like the two children in the picture, she thought that maybe the
angel would watch over them too. But Jane remembers that in spite of the picture, she was so scared that the next
morning her mother would be dead. A few years later, the fear of death included
her father, who started bleeding from his stomach ulcers. All this time the
angel picture was supposed to protect the two sisters, but instead, the fear
and dread mounted.
As Jane grew into
adulthood, the guardian angel image stayed near to her and so did the fear of
death, sickness, and hypochondria. Why? The
demon stayed, and when she found the same kind of framed angel picture in an
antique store, she bought it and hung it up in her bedroom across from where
she sleeps. She’s not been able the sleep well for years, and it was only last week when we discovered the
real problem was coming from the demon attached to the picture.
In the Bible, there are many records of the evil effects
of spirits occupying images and objects.
In the book of Joshua, we
see the record of Achan. He took some of the idols of another culture and hid
them in his possessions. Because Achan was part of a group of soldiers that
were to take down an enemy, the effect of having the idols with him, influenced
the whole group. Before Achan stole the idols
occupied by demons, the soldiers were full of courage, and they were so convinced of their strength that they lessened
their troops. But since the demons were now in their possession, instead of
winning the battle against their enemy, fear swarmed them, and they ran and were defeated.
Joshua was devastated. He
didn’t know what the heck was going on. He prayed, and God told him:
“Israel hath sinned, and
they have also transgressed my covenant which I commanded them: for they have
even taken of the accursed thing, and have also stolen, and dissembled also,
and they have put it even among their own
stuff.
“Therefore the children of
Israel could not stand before their enemies, but turned their backs before
their enemies, because they were accursed: neither will I be with you any more, except ye destroy the accursed from
among you” (Joshua 7:11-12).
In another record, Rachel
took household image idols from her father, Laban, when she left his home and
went with her husband Jacob: “And Laban went to shear his sheep: and Rachel had
stolen the images that were her father's” (Gen. 31:19). Laban came after them
and questioned Jacob. Jacob didn’t know that Rachel had taken them, so he told
Laban: “With whomsoever thou findest thy
gods, let him not live” (Gen. 31:32). Laban looked in everyone’s tent to find
his idols, but Rachel sat on them and told her father she was menstruating so
she couldn’t get up, and Laban left empty-handed.
Rachel was not killed, but the images occupied by
demons had their effect: They orchestrated a complete severance of the family’s
relationships. Neither Rachel nor her sister Leah ever got to spend any time
with family again. Demons split families apart.
The best way to get rid of
the demons is to get rid of the images
and objects they occupy. In the book of Acts, we see that Paul visited Ephesus
and taught about Jesus. There were a lot of people who were into witchcraft,
sorcery, and other magical arts. There were some who even pretended to cast out
demons in the name of Jesus Christ, but since they didn’t believe in Jesus
Christ themselves, when seven of these wizards tried to cast a demon out of one
man, the possessed man jump on all seven, stripping their clothes off and
chasing all seven wizards away! It’s a pretty funny story (Acts 19:13-16).
Many people in Ephesus
were learning wizardry and witchcraft and
had books on how to do it (i.e., Harry
Potter and other such books these days). But when they saw that their teachers
were false teachers, they saw the truth that Paul was teaching, and they learned that it was demons that
occupied those “how to” books:
“And many that believed
came, and confessed, and shewed their deeds. Many of them also which used
curious arts brought their books together,
and burned them before all men: and they counted the price of them, and found
it fifty thousand pieces of silver.
“So mightily grew the word
of God and prevailed” (Acts 19:18-20).
Achan in the Old Testament
was killed because of the destructive
nature of the demons who he brought into the camp. Rachel ruined her family
relationships because of some images she took with her. Jane couldn’t sleep
well and was tormented with fear at night
because she took that childhood angel
picture into her bedroom with her.
The people of Ephesus
burned the demon-occupied books, and Jane took that angel picture, broke the glass and threw the whole picture
in the trash.
Are you being blinded or
blocked from God’s deliverance because of an old demon whose home you’re still
carrying with you? A key? A photograph? A St. Christopher necklace? A self-help
book?
Let’s take another good
look at what’s in our immediate environment. It doesn’t matter how beautiful or
valuable it is; it’s not more valuable than your life! Destroy it. And unless
the Lord tells you otherwise, don’t give it to the thrift store so someone else
can get hurt by its devil.
Love, Carolyn
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