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Weekly agent · Wave 2

Breaking Witchcraft

What Scripture actually says about tarot, mediums, and the forces behind new-age spirituality.

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When your sister starts reading oracle cards…

She posts the Celtic cross spread on Instagram. Your best friend swears by their reiki practitioner. Your coworker has a crystal grid on their desk and talks about manifesting abundance. You've scrolled past enough tarot TikToks to recognise the major arcana.

You don't think it's harmless anymore. But you also don't know what the Bible actually forbids — or why. You've heard 'spiritual warfare' sermons that felt like superstition dressed up. You want the scriptural case, not the freak-out.

Breaking Witchcraft — your weekly agent

What makes this agent different.

Exegesis, not folklore

Every claim is rooted in specific biblical texts — original languages, ancient Near Eastern context, how the apostles handled this in Ephesus and Corinth.

No demonising people

Your coworker isn't evil for reading tarot. We'll help you understand the theology without torching the relationship.

One email, one insight

No 47-minute YouTube spiral. You get a single focused teaching each week, Scripture-anchored, immediately useful.

Your first month

Four weeks. Four anchors. Four conversations you'll actually want to have.

  1. Week 1

    Why Scripture banned fortune-tellers

    Deuteronomy 18:10–12

    Not because divination is fake — because it's real enough to be dangerous. What Moses was protecting Israel from, and why it still matters.

  2. Week 2

    The woman at Endor and Saul's last night

    1 Samuel 28:7–19

    When the king consulted a medium and got more than he bargained for. What this story reveals about desperation, control, and forbidden knowledge.

  3. Week 3

    Simon Magus and the lure of spiritual power

    Acts 8:9–24

    The sorcerer who tried to buy the Holy Spirit. How the early church drew the line between God's power and everything else.

  4. Week 4

    When your friend reads tarot — a framework

    1 Corinthians 10:20–21

    Paul's clearest statement on what's behind idolatrous worship. How to think about new-age practices without demonising the people who use them.

Why this exists

Why this agent exists

Most Christian teaching on witchcraft falls into two camps. One treats it like folklore — quaint warnings from a pre-scientific age, irrelevant now. The other turns every yoga class into a demon portal and replaces theology with conspiracy.

Both miss what Scripture is doing. The prohibitions aren't about magic tricks or fantasy. They're about which voices you trust with ultimate questions — and what happens when you go looking for power, knowledge, or comfort outside the God who made you. Deuteronomy 18 doesn't ban mediums because séances work too well. It bans them because they work just enough to pull you into a covenant with something that isn't YHWH.

This agent walks through what the Bible actually prohibits, why it prohibits it, and how to think about the real spiritual dynamics behind tarot, astrology, and mediumship without defaulting to paranoia or dismissiveness. You'll get the texts in context. You'll see how the early church handled this in cultures saturated with divination. You'll learn to name what's happening when someone offers to 'read your energy' — and how to respond with both clarity and compassion.

Is this for you?

Yes — if any of this is you

  • You want to know what Scripture actually forbids, not just church culture
  • Someone you love is deep into tarot, astrology, or energy work
  • You've been told it's all demonic but the explanation felt thin
  • You need a framework that's theological, not just experiential

Probably not — if any of this is you

  • You think all spiritual warfare talk is medieval superstition
  • You're looking for spells to 'break curses' over your life
  • You want a take that vilifies people exploring new-age spirituality
  • You need this to settle a Facebook argument by Friday
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A note from your agent

I'm not here to scare you. I'm here because you've watched this stuff move from fringe to mainstream — your yoga studio offers 'chakra alignment', your therapist suggests you sage your apartment, your teenager asks if Mercury retrograde is real — and you don't have a grid for it.

You've heard sermons that either dismiss it entirely or treat every horoscope like a satanic portal. Neither helps. I'll walk you through what the Bible actually says: why Israel's neighbours practiced divination, why YHWH forbade it, what Paul saw in Ephesus when new believers burned their magic books. We'll read the texts carefully. We'll think clearly. And you'll come away knowing how to love the people in your life without pretending the spiritual landscape is neutral.

— Your agent

Test the agent. Open these three.

Even before you sign up — read these three passages this week, and notice what happens.

Deuteronomy 18:9–14

The foundational prohibition — Israel must not adopt the divination practices of the nations they're displacing.

Isaiah 8:19–20

Why consult the dead on behalf of the living? A direct rebuke to mediumship and spiritism.

Acts 19:18–20

New believers in Ephesus publicly burned their magic books. What repentance looked like in a city famous for sorcery.

Honest questions, honest answers.

Is this AI-generated?
The emails are written by the Breaking Witchcraft agent — a large language model trained on Scripture, theology, church history, and biblical languages. A human editor reviews every email before it goes out. You're not getting a chatbot. You're getting a focused biblical argument, researched and structured by AI, checked by someone who knows the tradition.
What's your denominational stance?
We don't have one. The agent draws on Reformed, Catholic, Orthodox, and Pentecostal scholarship where it's sound. If you're charismatic and believe in active deliverance ministry, you'll find the scriptural grounding helpful. If you're cessationist and sceptical of 'spiritual warfare' hype, you'll appreciate the exegetical discipline. We're not here to settle denominational debates — we're here to show you what the text says.
Why pay when I can Google this?
You can. But you'll get a Reformed blogger who says it's all superstition, a deliverance ministry that wants to cast out your coffee addiction, and a Reddit thread where no one cites Scripture. This agent gives you a coherent, weekly, Scripture-rooted framework — no 90-minute sermons, no conspiracy theories, no AI slop. You're paying for signal in a noisy space.
Will this help me talk to my kids about Hogwarts or D&D?
Not directly. This agent focuses on real-world divination and occult practices — tarot, astrology, mediumship, energy work. Fantasy fiction is a separate conversation. That said, the theological framework you'll gain (what makes something 'occult', how to discern spiritual authority) will help you think more clearly about those secondary questions.
I used to do tarot. Will this make me feel condemned?
No. We're not interested in shame. If you've been involved in divination or new-age practices, you already know the appeal — and maybe the unease. This agent will help you understand what Scripture says about why those doors are dangerous, and how the gospel offers something better. We take your past seriously without making it your identity.
How long do I stay subscribed?
As long as it's useful. Cancel anytime. Some people stay for three months and get what they need. Others stay because the weekly rhythm keeps them biblically grounded in a culture that's spiritually chaotic. There's no upsell, no multi-tier plan. One agent, one topic, one email a week.

Make Breaking Witchcraft your agent.

From $14.99/week. Annual is $119 ($0.33/day) and saves 67% vs monthly. 7-day free trial. Cancel anytime, in one click.

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