Q: How should the Christian
approach Ouija boards, palm reading, horoscopes and other similar
practices? Can these rituals really
allow us to communicate with spiritual beings or discern the future, and are Christians
permitted to engage in them?
All of these things fit into a
category of actions that the Old Testament calls divination, which includes any
method of seeking communication with spiritual beings other than the One True
God or seeking to gain knowledge about the future from any source other than
God and His Prophets. The Bible forbids
divination because it is a form of idolatry.
The First Commandment forbids idolatry in every form, commanding the people of Israel that they are not to have anything to do with any other supposed god or to seek spiritual good from any source other than the One True God. Practices such as the use of Ouija boards, which overtly call on various spiritual powers are obviously forms of idolatry in these terms. In the New Testament, the Apostle Paul even goes so far in 1 Corinthians 10 as to state that the gods of non-Christian religions are actually demons posing as deities, and therefore the worship of false gods is actually the worship of demons.
When it comes to palm reading,
horoscopes, and other methods which seek to discern present knowledge of future
events from entirely unrelated natural signs, it should be completely obvious to
any logical person that there can be no possible correlation between the lines
on a person’s hand or the alignment of the stars that would indicate what will
happen in their future. If the predictions
revealed through these methods prove to be untrue, that should be exactly the
result we expect.
In the event that they do prove to be
true, there are several possible explanations to what has happened. First, and most obvious is random chance—much
like a broken clock is still right twice a day.
Second, and nearly as likely, is deception. Often practitioners of these rituals learn
things about their subjects through subtle conversation (like a street-corner fortune
teller) or they write predictions that are so vague nearly any event could be
seen as a fulfillment of the prediction (as in magazine horoscopes).
A third, and most dangerous,
possibility is that knowledge has been in fact being revealed to the
practitioner. This knowledge even comes
from the spiritual realm, but it is important to remember that not everything
spiritual is good—a truth often overlooked in modern spirituality. In such a case, the knowledge would actually
be demonic in its source and given for the purpose of undermining or
distracting from trust in Jesus.
In any case, all of the practices and
rituals in this category are to be rejected by Christians and are unwise for a
number of reasons. All forms of
divination are foolish because they are logically unfounded and typically just
a trick or deception, but additionally, if one actually relies on these
methods, it could be a form of idolatry which would be spiritually dangerous
for that person.
Readers are encouraged to submit questions for inclusion in future
issues. You may submit questions by
email to revjpeterson@yahoo.com or by mail to P.O. Box 195; Burt, IA 50522.
Rev. Jason P.
Peterson
Pastor, St. John’s Lutheran Church
– Burt
Zion Lutheran
Church - LuVerne