Is the Deliverance Ministry Scriptural?
"All of a sudden," the pastor related, "the woman
just disappeared! The man just kept singing, and the
piano kept on playing, even though the woman had
disappeared. The man finished singing, walked off the
platform, and walked down the aisle to the back where
I was sitting. The spotlights followed him down the
aisle."
The pastor said, "The man walked right up to me
and said, 'Sir, your wife died thirty days ago, and she is
here now. I have a message for you from her.'"
The pastor said to me, "I answered the man by
saying, 'Sir, my wife did die thirty days ago, but she
was a Christian, and she's with Jesus. She's not here.'
The man in the tuxedo acted like I didn't even say
anything. In fact, he acted sort of like he was in a
trance or in some other world."
Two more times the man in the tuxedo repeated,
"Sir, your wife died thirty days ago, and she is here. I
have a message for you from her." Both times the pastor
responded, "Sir, my wife did die thirty days ago. But
she was a Christian, and she's not here. She's in
Heaven with Jesus."
Finally the man in the tuxedo said, "Then you refuse
to accept the message?"
The pastor said, "I emphatically do," and the pastor
left the building.
If that pastor had responded to this man and
received that message, the man in the tuxedo would
have told the pastor something no one but the pastor
and his wife knew. You see how people can be deceived?
It would have been supernatural all right, but it was
the work of a familiar spirit. And if the pastor had
allowed that familiar spirit to operate by receiving the