Witchcraft Is Devil Worship!

by David J. Stewart | February 2016

Matthew 4:8-9, “Again, the devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and sheweth him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them; And saith unto him, All these things will I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me.”

       Every witch, regardless of their distinctive path, reveres Gerald Gardner's[1] (1884-1964) The Book Of Shadows as their unholy Bible.[2] Despite the claim by many witches today that Mr. Gardner didn't invent the book, evidence indicates that no other Neo-pagan witches of Gardner's time, such as Robert Cochrane, ever made use of such a book (Source: Valiente, Doreen (1990). Witchcraft: A Tradition Renewed. Hale. Page 8). So it is pretty irrefutable that Gerald Gardner, a Freemason and nudist buddy of psycho satanist Aleister Crowley, did in fact author “The Book Of Shadows.”

Regardless, there is no argument that witches of every distinction recognize and revere The Book Of Shadows. Each witch is encouraged to add and/or alter their own personal copy of The Book Of Shadows, which is supposed to be burned when they die to hide their works of darkness. Some of the things that you will find in a typical Book of Shadows includes: fabricating alters, magick spells, potions and elixirs, chants, spirits, deities, methods of divination, use of crystals, herb usage, natural healing techniques, amulets, symbols, dreams, ritualistic prayers, and some history about former witches who also used The Book Of Shadows. A former Illuminist witch, Doc Marquis, reveals that there is a strong witchcraft tie to Freemasonry.

In essence, witchcraft is a satanic religion that dabbles in familiar spirits (demons). The witches mix potions, to be ritualistically offered upon an alter to whatever presiding deities and spirits they so choose (who are all devils). The heart of all witchcraft is to make an offering to the presiding deities and spirits (i.e., demons). If the demon is pleased, then you might to as well. By be forewarned friend, everyone eating at the Devil's table get food poisoning eventually. All of Satan's apples have worms. Sin will always cost you more than you planned to pay. Sin will always take you further than you wanted to go. And sin will keep you longer than you intended to stay. There's a high price for low living! Witchcraft is low living, about as low as a fool can go in this life!

Let's get down to the nuts and bolts shall we. What are we talking about here? If you're a witch (or interesting in becoming one), it is because you are infatuated with the idea of having POWER, even if it's the Devil's power, to help make your life better, richer, safer, better liked by others, famous, et cetera. Witchcraft accepts anybody, losers and all (and by the way, so also does true Biblical Christianity). God wants you just as you are, as a guilty sinner! He wouldn't take you any other way (Romans 4:5).

Beauty actress Marilyn Monroe had worldly fame, fortune and some power, which is why they murdered her at age 36. You see, Satan's apples all have worms. When the serpent promised Eve that she would be as “a god,” it was with great consequences. Satan never told Eve that she would be God, or even equal with God; but rather, she and Adam would become “as gods” in the sense of making their own decisions from now on (and live or die by the consequences of those decisions - Romans 5:12). This is why the world is in such a mess today! My point is that Marilyn Monroe sold her soul to do evil and it cost her multiple marriages and her life.

Many witches will deny this allegation, asserting that they don't believe Satan is an actual entity; but rather, is either a Christian invention, or only a symbol of evil, and not an actual person.

 

drug abuse as a means of
 

Why Teenagers Are Being Drawn Into Witchcraft

There has been a lot of increasing interest in witchcraft in recent decades due to the massive influence of that little brat, Harry Potter. And also, television shows; such as, Sabrina The Witch, Charmed, Bewitched, and I Was A Teenage Witch (to name just a few of dozens). And movies; such as, The Conjuring (2014), The Witch Hunter (2015), and The Witch (2016). There have been numerous movies produced about Ouija Boards, Black Magic, and dark themes featuring Baphomet, such as in the film, Pan's Labyrinth. We've been seeing the occult, witchcraft and satanism in Rock music since it's inception. Since witches are trained to be discreet and secretive about their witchery, many will downplay the rumors in lieu of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. We even hear Ozzy Osbourne, the king of Satan worship in his concerts, downplaying it all as a mere advertising gimmick. But wait, it gets much worse, satanism has also been incorporated into Country music as well, as seen in a recent shameful Taylor Swift video.

Spellbound: why witchcraft is enchanting a new generation of teenage girls

It's like the Charmed years of the 1990s, as TV shows, books and films focus on magic, the supernatural and all things Wiccan.

THE OBSERVER | by Sarah Hughes
October 26, 2013

When Ryan Murphy, the creator of American Horror Story, announced that the third season of the American TV series would focus on witches, he was riding the crest of a wave. Not since the 1990s – the era of Buffy's geek goddess, Willow Rosenberg, and a scowling Fairuza Balk in The Craft – have witches been so much in demand.

In the young-adult section of bookshops, shelves that recently groaned under the weight of tales of tormented vampires and lovelorn werewolves, are now stuffed with stories of witchcraft and magic, from Ruth Warburton's much-praised Winter Trilogy to Jessica Spotswood's Cahill Witch Chronicles. Lower down the age range, last month the most recent in Jill Murphy's long-running Worst Witch series was published, while among the predictions for this Christmas's bestselling toys are the Bratz spinoff, House of Witchez. For adults, next year will mark the climax of Deborah Harkness's All Souls Trilogy, centring on the relationship between a vampire and a feisty American witch.


In film, highlights of the BFI's gothic season include Burn Baby Burn! a festival of witchcraft on film, which comes to Belfast's Queens Film Theatre in early November, and the once-banned 1922 Danish witch movie Häxan: Witchcraft Through The Ages, showing this week at Filmhouse Edinburgh and the following week at the Glasgow Film Theatre and Dundee Contemporary Arts. Even Meryl Streep is getting in on the act – recent stills from the forthcoming film adaptation of Stephen Sondheim's Into The Woods show her transformed into a hag complete with wild grey hair and long nails.

However, it is on television that the season of the witch has truly taken hold. In addition to American Horror Story, with its tale of voodoo queens and teenage witches, there's Lifetime's The Witches of East End, adapted from a novel by Melissa de la Cruz and featuring a family of spellcasters led by Julia Ormond. Vampire Diaries spinoff The Originals (on the Syfy channel) has a central storyline about witchcraft and in Universal's Sleepy Hollow, Ichabod Crane deals with duelling covens in present-day America.

So why witches – and why now? "The idea of being able to manipulate supernatural forces still resonates," says Owen Davies, professor of social history at the University of Hertfordshire and author of America Bewitched: The Story of Witchcraft after Salem. "Witches and ghosts speak to something fundamental and innate in our psyche. It's an emotional connection."

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The last time witches were so in fashion, in the 1990s, the response from young girls was intense. "When Buffy and Charmed were at their peak, I would get letters from teenage girls, mainly from America, asking for help about where to look for spells," says Davies. "Those shows gave teenage girls a feeling of empowerment; there's something very appealing about magic and witchcraft. There have also been studies of girls who were interested in witch shows in the 1990s, following how many went on to become practising Wiccans. It's not a huge number, but it's interesting that some of them watched the shows and thought, 'I want to know more'."

SOURCE: http://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/oct/26/witches-cast-spell-on-culture

The prophet Micah (747-704 BC) was sent by God to preach to northern Israel. Micah was a contemporary of the prophet Isaiah (748-700 BC).

Micah 5:12-15, “And I will cut off witchcrafts out of thine hand; and thou shalt have no more soothsayers: Thy graven images also will I cut off, and thy standing images out of the midst of thee; and thou shalt no more worship the work of thine hands. And I will pluck up thy groves out of the midst of thee: so will I destroy thy cities. And I will execute vengeance in anger and fury upon the heathen, such as they have not heard.”

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Hebrews 13:6, “So that we may boldly say, The Lord is my helper, and I will not fear what man shall do unto me.”

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1st Samuel 15:23, “For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry. Because thou hast rejected the word of the LORD, he hath also rejected thee from being king.”

END

“Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering;
(for he is faithful that promised)”
—Hebrews 10:23


“Nobody can love God who doesn't love sinners!”
(a quote by Dr. Jack Hyles classic MP3 sermon, “The Happiest Man” (happiest is the man who will not impute sin to others!)

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