Exorcism Often Has a Timing

“You just tell the demons to go, and they go,” a person who had never done an exorcism informed me after I taught on the topic at an event. “That’s how Jesus did it in the Bible. You have authority.”

This quick form of exorcism is rarely ever my practice anymore. In my early days of exorcism, every time I found a demon, I would tell them to leave, which would end their manifestation. But after this, I would say, “Demon, if you’re still there, you need to show yourself.” Sure enough—it would re-manifest. I assume one of two things happened to create this moment:

  • The demon pretended to leave and simply ended the manifestation.
  • The demon left for a moment and was able to come back due to its unsevered connections to the participant.

Having had this happen enough times in deliverance ministry, my general rule of thumb is to simply counsel my participants through the themes and memories the Holy Spirit brings to their minds. At the end of our session, I ask the Holy Spirit if there are any demons he’s ready to remove. When it’s time, he always lets us know, and we happily remove them. Jesus teaches us why it’s important to make sure the participant is ready for this moment:

“When the unclean spirit has gone out of a person, it passes through waterless places seeking rest, but finds none. Then it says, ‘I will return to my house from which I came.’ And when it comes, it finds the house empty, swept, and put in order. Then it goes and brings with it seven other spirits more evil than itself, and they enter and dwell there, and the last state of that person is worse than the first. (Matthew 12:43-45)


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11 responses to “Exorcism Often Has a Timing”

  1. […] This shouldn’t be too shocking of a revelation. When I’m casting out demons, the Holy Spirit often takes me to the leaders to deal with them directly. Once, two lesser demons tried to get in the way of my counseling session, and the Holy Spirit gave me permission to cast them out immediately so that they couldn’t distract us, even though the Spirit usually has me wait. […]

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  2. […] Great question! I’ll address that in a longer post at some point as I know it’s a popular question, but I argue that exorcism is for Christians only. You don’t want to kick something out of someone who doesn’t have the Holy Spirit. That’s not gonna work out well for them, given what Jesus said about demons returning with more demons.  […]

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  3. […] first time this obvious metaphor became clear to me was right after we cast out a demon we had been working on for months, and Jesus went to sleep. I kept pestering my participant to wake up Jesus and ask if we had removed […]

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  4. […] All of this being said, I’d suggest that resistance techniques should be used with reason. I generally use such techniques to simply keep demons out of the way. When a person finally breaks ties with a demon, the Holy Spirit will generally force it to leave immediately. Until that moment, little will happen. And even if you could get one to leave due to pain, you will have likely done your participant a disservice by not working with the Holy Spirit to figure out why it was there in the first place and taking them through the inner healing they need to keep it out. […]

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  5. […] This is why I don’t go around kicking demons out willy-nilly. If a person really wants freedom from a demon, then they often need help healing their spirit. In my model of exorcism, I create sessions for the Holy Spirit to address the many layers of spiritual pain that need to be healed so that the demons can be extracted fully. Once we discover these themes in their life, we can practice overcoming them until the Holy Spirit deems that the time has come to remove the demons. […]

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  6. […] We asked the Holy Spirit if he would be willing to temporarily remove some problematic demons (that otherwise weren’t ready to be removed) so that we could more clearly focus on overcoming the themes attached to those demons. It was […]

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  7. […] discretion, we sorted through part of a painful memory until the Holy Spirit decided that we had done enough work for one day. He then gave some final words to our participant, and we wrapped up the session by offering them […]

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  8. […] a bit to me as an exorcist. My model of deliverance typically relies on two specific things: (1) the deep inner healing of a participant’s brokenness and (2) the visions the Holy Spirit brings to the […]

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  9. […] you believe you are has everything to do with spiritual warfare. The Holy Spirit often has me wait to remove demons from participants until they truly believe what God has declared about them. The picture of the […]

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  10. […] If you want to draw a demon out into the open, then you must seek out inner healing. Eventually the culprits will expose themselves in an attempt to stop you from moving forward. Then they can be profiled, planned against, and removed in God’s timing. […]

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