HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, November 24, 2024 – I got into a discussion the other day about reincarnation and generational demons. By “discussion”, I mean that I talked and they listened. I don’t think they believed me, but they still needed to hear what I had to say. I explained that generational demons attend on families that are not protected by God’s Holy Spirit – that is, families that are not right with God and not living godly lives.
I also explained that there is no reincarnation, and that what people mistakenly believe to be returned souls are just the same demons that used to attend on the now deceased family member; those same demons then attend on the newest member of the same family, leading people to assume that their loved one has been reincarnated. However, it’s the demons who manifest certain character traits and relay certain memories and details that people mistake as evidence of a soul’s return.
Historically, the notion of reincarnation was devised by demons and took root in ungodly (“heathen”) cultures that worshiped demons. These same ungodly cultures are perpetuating the deception even today and spreading it around the world through “secret societies” and mass migration.
Again – there is no reincarnation, just demon migration. In families, this takes the form of generational demonic infestation, oppression, and even possession. Generational chain migration of demons from one family member to another can only be stopped by genuine spiritual rebirth, which exorcises the demons and makes way for God’s Holy Spirit to indwell the reborn soul. There is no other way to escape the demons. Note that this only happens in individuals, not in families as a group. As much as you love your family and want them to come to the Lord, you cannot protect them from the consequences of their choices, and if their choice is to reject God or to only half embrace the Lord while still yearning for the world, you cannot protect them from the demons that are the rewards of these choices.
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If we start with the understanding that what I wrote above is true and that this is the only time we have, this, here and now, not death and then another go-round in another body. If we start with the understanding that we have only one go-round and one go-round only, and then the Judgement – if we start there, knowing just how high the stakes are, what are we doing in our daily lives to reflect that understanding?
During his ministry years, Jesus lived his life as if he fully understood that he had only one go-round and one only. He was 100% committed to doing God’s will. We’re told that even as a child he lived that way, wanting to be about his Father’s business though he was yet too young and it was yet not time. And when it was time, he walked away from everything and everyone and went into the desert with just the clothes on his back. For 40 days and 40 nights, he stayed alive by grace and faith alone, only to be rewarded with mockery from the devil.
He never comes, that old serpent, when you’re ready for him. He never comes when you’ve got your spiritual dukes up and you’re well fed and rested and rarin’ for a fight. That’s not when the devil comes. He comes when you’re hungry and exhausted, when you can hardly keep your eyes open or put one foot in front of the other. He catches you unaware, when he’s the last thing you’re expecting. He’s the knock on the door at 3 in the morning. That’s when he comes. That’s when he tests and tempts you.
Maybe Jesus expected the devil to show up when he did or maybe God kept that knowledge from Jesus as part of his test. When the devil makes his cameos with me, it’s always when I least need it or expect it – the element of surprise – so I’m guessing that’s the devil’s schtick, showing up when you’re having a bad hair day spiritually.
Knowing that there’s only one go-round, how you handle the devil’s God-sanctioned tests and temptations is critically important. You need to be low-key and cool as a cucumber, like Jesus was, not shouting and waving crucifixes around and splashing “holy” water on yourself like cheap cologne. Even if the devil does leave you alone after all these antics, you’ll just have to deal with him some other way, so why bother? What do you really achieve by chasing the devil away?
In his temptations in the desert, Jesus didn’t try to chase the devil away. The devil left on his own volition after Jesus successfully stood his ground in the Word. You can drive the devil away with trinkets and splashes, but he’ll just come back, and with reinforcement. If you really want to drive the devil away, you calmly stand in God’s Word, like Jesus did in his desert temptations and in all his temptations during his ministry years. Seeing you calmly standing in God’s Word, the devil will know he’s wasting his time and so will leave you alone, at least for a season.
If we start with the understanding that this here and now is all we’ve got and that no other option but Heaven is acceptable to us, then our orientation should be entirely on God, like it was for Jesus. Our orientation should not be on the world, not even partially on the world, and our only interactions with the world should be done by considering how those interactions will further our progress toward Heaven. If they impede our progress, we shouldn’t do them.
God will never ask us to do anything that will impede our Homeward progress. He’s not trying to trip us up; on the contrary, he’s doing everything in his power (and in keeping with the terms of his agreement with the devil) – he’s doing everything in his power to bring us Home, not inflict another go-round on Earth on us. One is enough. You might even say that one is more than enough, but that’s not God’s fault, that’s ours, and thank God he’s given us this one blessed chance and equipped us with everything we need to get it right.
One and done.
So let’s get this over with and get Home.
