Tag Archives: manifesting

SCRIPTURE OF THE DAY (MATTHEW 9:1-38)

1.And he entered into a ship, and passed over, and came into his own city.

And, behold, they brought to him a man sick of the palsy, lying on a bed: and Jesus seeing their faith said unto the sick of the palsy; Son, be of good cheer; thy sins be forgiven thee.

And, behold, certain of the scribes said within themselves, This man blasphemeth.

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Manifesting Uses the Law of Attraction Instead of Prayer

Manifesting teaches that the law of attraction governs life outcomes. According to this belief, whatever a person focuses on, speaks about, or visualizes will be drawn into their life. The process removes God from the center and replaces prayer with a spiritual formula. Instead of asking God, people are taught to activate outcomes through mindset and intention.

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Manifesting Puts Faith in Words Instead of God

Manifesting teaches people that spoken words have power on their own. People are encouraged to repeat affirmations, declarations, and verbal commands with the belief that speaking them will cause reality to shift. In this belief system, faith is placed in words rather than in God Himself.

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Manifesting Encourages Desire Without Discernment

Manifesting teaches that whatever a person desires they should pursue speak or visualize until it becomes reality. This belief assumes that desire itself is good and that whatever someone wants must be worth having. The Bible teaches the opposite. Scripture warns that human desire is not a safe guide. It must be examined filtered and submitted to God.

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Manifesting Removes the Need for Submission to God’s Will

A key problem with manifesting is that it teaches people to focus on getting what they want without considering what God wants. In the Bible the foundation of a relationship with God is surrender and submission. Manifesting removes that foundation and replaces it with self-directed desire. Instead of “Thy will be done” it becomes “My will be done.”

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Manifesting Promotes Faith in the Universe Instead of the Creator

Modern manifesting constantly uses language such as ask the universe trust the universe or the universe will send it to you. This teaching encourages people to place trust in an impersonal force rather than in the living God who created the heavens and the earth. The Bible never instructs believers to communicate with or receive provision from the universe. Instead it points directly to God as the source of all things.

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Manifesting Mimics the Serpent’s Promise: “You Shall Be as Gods”

One of the most dangerous aspects of manifesting is that it echoes the first temptation in human history. In the Garden of Eden, the serpent tempted Eve not merely to disobey God, but to elevate herself to a godlike status. The serpent said, “For God knows that in the day you eat of it… you will be like God” (Genesis 3:5). This was more than a temptation to sin; it was a temptation to self-exaltation, self-rule, and spiritual independence from God.

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Manifesting Replaces God With Self-Power

Modern manifesting teaches that a person can attract, create, or draw into their life whatever they desire by using affirmations, visualization, or mental intention. At the core of this belief is the idea that human beings have the power within themselves to shape reality without needing to seek God, submit to His authority, or align with His will. This mindset replaces dependence on God with dependence on self, which is directly against the foundation of biblical faith.

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Manifesting Is Rooted in New Age and Eastern Mysticism

In recent years the practice of “manifesting” has gained popularity, especially through self-help culture and celebrity influence. People are taught that they can attract blessings, relationships, opportunities, and financial gain by simply visualizing and affirming what they desire. While it sounds harmless on the surface, the roots of manifesting are not biblical they come from New Age spirituality and Eastern mysticism, not from the teachings of Jesus Christ.

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