It truly is amazing with whom President Donald Trump surrounds himself and his nominations, as well. Take for instance his nomination of Casey Means for the position of Surgeon General, something that the Constitution doesn’t provide any authority. In a piece by Erick Erickson, he points out that Means is “not fit to be surgeon general”. That’s true for many, many reasons. However, one is deeply disturbing.
Erickson writes:
Dr. Means went to medical school but does not practice medicine. Instead, having dabbled in occult practices that amount to witchcraft, she now excels at providing answers to many unanswerable questions and reassuringly false hopes to people with sicknesses who have given up on science and modern medicine.
These are, in Casey Means’ own words, some of what she has done. “I set up a small meditation shrine in my house and prayed to photos of my ancestors asking for support on my personal journey, and wrote mantras and manifestations on small pieces of paper and tucked them around the shrine.”
She also “worked with a spiritual medium who helped [her] try to connect with [her] spirit guides for support and guidance.” She “did full moon ceremonies with grounded, powerful women where [they] called in abundance and let go of what wasn’t serving [them].” She also claimed to practice the “Silva Method” which is a pagan religious practice developed by an electronics repairman who became convinced his daughter was psychic. Means also has experimented with psychedelic drugs, which more and more Christians realize is just another pathway into what Scripture refers to as the unseen realm that includes “the spiritual forces of evil” (Ephesians 6:12).
Christ and the apostles admonish us to live in the present reality. Means has engaged in occult practices to connect outside this present reality. But some Christians with illnesses or with children who are ill have bought into Means’ repackaged occult beliefs in good and bad energy.
It sounds good to people who have given up hope in modern medicine. But it is dangerous to put a new age occultist in a position like that of surgeon general. A growing number of Christian and conservative influencers, particularly among moms, cannot see what is staring them in the face—behind all the jargon and medical language is a foundational system premised in pagan occult practices that Scripture warns against.
Christians in politics keep making compromises with the world. They abandoned character counting because they needed a fighter to fight the left. Now they want a near Wiccan as the nation’s surgeon general because she speaks spells using medical jargon that provide answers to questions for which there are often no real answers, just suffering. Oral Roberts claimed to heal many, and many claimed he healed them. My grandmother insisted he had done so. But before the people of faith went in search of their own truths instead of the truth, we would have all recognized Roberts would not be fit to be surgeon general. Neither is Casey Means.
Now, you may be thinking this isn’t that big of a deal, but consider the fact that spirit cooker Marina Abramovic openly told everyone, “Trump is the greatest magician waking us up.”
Then you add on his Kabbalah ties, Israel and the man that groomed him and it all starts to make a lot more sense.
Article posted with permission from Sons of Liberty Media
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Author: Tim Brown
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