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Tuesday, October 31, 2023

What Does the Bible Say About Generational Curses or Hereditary Spirits?




Some “deliverance ministries” and Charismatic groups teach the existence of hereditary spirits, also called generational spirits or familial spirits. These entities are thought to be evil spirits that attach themselves to a particular family and harass them through multiple generations. They are demons inherited from one’s ancestors.

Those who teach the existence of hereditary spirits consider them the source of various sins such as pride, lust, perversion, anger, rebellion, fear, and addiction. Generational or hereditary spirits are blamed for “generational curses” that result in poverty, sickness, disease, confusion, failure, and even death. According to the concept of generational spirits, a man struggles with anger issues because he’s being influenced by an “anger demon”—the same demon who provoked his father and grandfather to anger. A woman who struggles with depression is being oppressed by a “depression demon” that was invited into the family by the sin of an ancestor—one who practiced witchcraft, perhaps. Once attached to the family, the demon causes trouble down the lineage.

Usually, deliverance ministries recommend that a person renounce the generational spirits and all the curses his or her family is under, “binding” and “rebuking” all the demons, ordering sickness away, etc. (This must be done out loud, so the demons can hear the rebuke.) The idea is that one must cast out all the demons and break all pacts with the devil made by ancestors. Only then is one free to grow spiritually in Christ.

The idea of hereditary spirits or generational spirits has more in common with paganism than it does with the Bible. Neo-pagans and Wiccans readily admit a belief in generational curses, demons that attach themselves to a certain family, and the idea that occult power can be passed down through one’s family line. In paganism, breaking a generational curse often involves working with one’s (dead) ancestors.

The teaching of generational spirits has no biblical foundation. Some try to defend a belief in generational spirits by pointing to passages such as Deuteronomy 5:9, “I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me.” However, it’s important to note that this passage (and others such as Exodus 20:5 and Numbers 14:18) does not mention any spirits. We might call God’s punishment here a “generational curse,” but the text references no generational or hereditary spirit. God was disciplining the rebellious in Israel, but demons are not said to be involved.

The effects of sin (specifically idolatry in Deuteronomy 5) are naturally passed down from one generation to the next. God’s punishment of someone’s children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren has nothing to do with familial demons and everything to do with the consequence of bad choices that affect others in the family. Any type of sinful choice can possibly impact several generations of one’s offspring and cause much suffering.

Further, when a father has a sinful lifestyle, his children are likely to practice the same sinful lifestyle. Implied in the warning of Exodus 20:5 is the fact that children will choose to repeat the sins of their fathers. God promises to punish sin to the third or fourth generation because those generations are committing the same sins their fathers did. But nothing in the Mosaic Law suggests a demon attaching itself to a family.

Also of note, God’s warning to visit iniquity on future generations is part of the Old Testament Law, not New Testament grace. A generational curse was a consequence experienced by a specific nation (Israel) for a specific sin (idolatry). The history books of the Old Testament (especially Judges) contain the record of this divine punishment meted out.

The idea that every sin or problem today can be blamed on a generational curse is unbiblical. The idea of a generational spirit is even less biblical. It is unfortunate that some today are deceived by various notions borrowed from pagan practices, bundled with biblical truth and presented as proper for Christians.

For someone worried about a generational curse or a hereditary spirit, the answer is salvation in Jesus Christ. A Christian is a new creation (2 Corinthians 5:17). How can a child of God be under God’s curse (Romans 8:1)? Why should one redeemed by God and indwelt by the Holy Spirit fear any demon? “You, dear children, are from God and have overcome them, because the one who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world” (1 John 4:4).

Yes, God promised to visit Israel’s sin upon the third and fourth generations, but we need to keep reading. In the very next verse, He promised that He would show “love to a thousand [generations] of those who love me and keep my commandments” (Exodus 20:6). In other words, God’s grace lasts a thousand times longer than His wrath.

Dennis Edwards: I am inclined to believe we should use the term generational influences, not curses or demons. God promises to bless a person that loves God with a blessing on his children to a thousand generations. In other words, if we take 4 generations for a 100 years, a thousand generations would be 25,000 years. So if you had one person who loved God in your family a thousand generations ago or equivalent to 25,000 years you would be living under a "generational blessing." That blessing would almost eliminate any possibility of a generational curse. 

Remember the curse God put on the Israelites who had seen God’s miracles and had been given His word was specifically to them that hate Him to the third or fourth generation or between 75-100 years. God’s blessing was to a thousand generations. 1,000 times 25 years equals 25,000 years. If the Bible chronological record is true, mankind hasn't lived on earth for that long. We can pray against any negative influences of our parents, but I believe the term "generational curses" is not Biblically accurate. It seems to indicate that the demonic spirits that opposed your parents have attached themselves to you and your descendants to the 3rd or 4th generation. 

The verses in Deuteronomy  5:9-10 in the KJV don't actually say "a thousand generations," like I thought, but rather, "And showing mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my commandments." So my analogy, though convincing, may not be correct. I did find "a thousand generations" used in some other translations. However in Ezekiel 18:20 God says, "The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son: the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him." In other words, no generational curse. Of course the sins of the fathers do affect their children, but I would call them generational influences, behavioural influences, and not generational curses. 

Jesus has freed us from any and all curses. If we walk in newness of life, the Holy Spirit gives us power over our temptation to sin. "Whom the Son has freed, is free indeed." John 8:36. The Old Testament says, "Cursed in the man who trusts in man and who has made flesh his arm, whose HEART has departed from the Lord." Jeremiah 17:5. When we depart from the Lord and trust in ourselves, we in a sense "curse" ourselves. But when we repent and come back to the Lord his mercies are renewed like the morning.

Deuteronomy 7:9. "Know therefore that the Lord thy God, he is God, the faithful God, which keeps covenant and mercy with them that love him and keep his commandments to a thousand generations." I thought I had read a blessing to a thousand generations. Maybe that analogy is not wrong after all.

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