Black activist claims that BLM leaders practice ‘witchcraft’ and summon dead spirits

Abraham Hamilton III , a black conservative Christian podcast host “The Hamilton Corner” on the socially conservative American Family Radio called on Christians who have allied themselves with the Black Lives Matter organization to rethink their decision.

According to Hamilton, the BLM movement engages in “witchcraft.” On the Aug. 19 episode of his program, he began the podcast by criticizing the Black Lives Matter movement as a “Marxist, anti-Christ, anti-family, [and] anti-man organization.”

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“What we are witnessing is a copy and paste of the Bolshevik Revolution from Russia just applied into an American context,” Hamilton, who serves as the American Family Association’s public policy analyst said.

To support his statemet, Hamilton quoted words of Patrisse Cullors, one of the co-founders of the Black Lives Matter movement. In her words, Cullors described herself as a “trained Marxist.”

“I’m calling for spirituality to be deeply radical,” Cullors said. “We’re not just having a social justice movement, this is a spiritual movement.”

Hamilton reminded his listeners that Cullors’s words show her point of view on spirituality and that “spirituality is at the center of Black Lives Matter.”

“I think that’s not just for us. I feel like so many leaders and so many organizers are deeply engaged in … a pretty important spiritual practice,” she said. “I don’t think … I could do this work without that. I don’t think I could do it as long as I’ve done it and as consistently. It feels like if I didn’t do that, it would be antithetical to this work.”

Besides that, Hamilton played audio from a “Zoom-type conversation” between Cullors and Dr. Melina Abdullah, a professor of African studies at California State University Los Angeles who founded the group’s L.A. chapter.

The conversation took place in June, shortly after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

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“We’ve become very intimate with the spirits that we call on regularly,” Abdullah said in the clip. “Each of them seems to have a different presence and personality. You know, I laugh a lot with Wakiesha … I didn’t meet her in her body, right? I met her through this work.”

The “Wakiesha” mentioned by Abdullah refers to Wakiesha Wilson, an African-American woman who was found dead in a Los Angeles jail back in 2016.

Hamilton argues that the conversation proved that Black Lives Matter leaders were “summoning the spirits of the dead [and] using the power of the spirits of the dead in order to give them the ability to do what they’re calling the so-called justice work.”

Hamilton stated that those leaders seeking to summon the spirits of the dead are adhering to “the Yoruba religion of Ifa.”

“They are summoning dead spirits,” he said. “One of the touchstones of this religious practice is ancestral worship. Guess what the Bible calls that folks? Witchcraft.” 

Hamilton contended that Abdullah and others “really believe that the names of the folks that they are saying have become ancestral gods.”

Hamilton mentioned the chants as an example of “spiritual wickedness” that the Apostle Paul warned about in Ephesians 6:12.

In condemning BLM’s spiritual practices, Hamilton cited Deuteronomy 18. The Old Testament chapter describes those who practice witchcraft or call upon the dead as “detestable to the Lord.”

Before opening up the phone lines to his listeners, Hamilton delivered a message to Christians and churches who have embraced the Black Lives Matter movement.

“How can you reconcile that with what the word of God says?” he asked. “We have got to evaluate everything through the word of God.”

 

Source: The Christian Post

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