How False Teaching Blends into Christian Conversation
Statements that once sounded โout thereโ are increasingly heard in and around conservative churches. This article urges believers and leaders to strengthen discernment, recognize red flags, and compare spiritual trends with Bible truth.
- False teaching often arrives through trusted voices, popular resources, and unclear definitions.
- Mixing Christianity with other spiritual systems leads away from the Lord, not toward him.
- Healthy discernment grows by testing ideas, clarifying terms, and returning to Scripture.
By Lynn Lusby Pratt
What People Are Saying in Church Hallways
โYes, that book came through a spirit guide. Is that wrong?โ
โIโm a Christian Buddhist.โ
โThis isnโt a Ouija boardโitโs an angel board.โ
โGet in the lotus position. Then meditate on the om, the original vibration of the universe.โ
โHold a pen and paper and ask God a question. Heโll write you a message.โ
โLetโs take a prayer team to that house and do a sage-stick ceremony to cleanse out the evil.โ
โI canโt get over my friendโs death! Maybe that famous medium can contact him for me.โ
For several years, such statements have been heard in the hallways of conservative churches. The gut reaction to that charge is, โWell, not at my church.โ Strong leaders assume that their members would never drift from sound Bible truth, but one young minister was โHumble Enough to Check.โ
So please consider how false teaching is mingling with Christianity.
How False Teaching Gets Normalized
For one thing, weโre studying material instead ofโnot alongsideโthe Bible. Add some doubts about the Bible, even among longtime believers: Are there โlost gospelsโ? Are there spiritual secrets to โaccess/activate the divineโ? … When I name specific TV series about ghost hunters or UFOs, heads nod in recognition. But those same heads shake at the mention of experts on Christian evidence. (My โrecommendedโ page steers to some.).
Itโs significant that a Christian from a Buddhist culture, a missionary to Hindus, and a former occultist quickly spots false teaching. But the average Christian may not have that background (what I call an ATB degree: All Things Bizarre). So red flags donโt go upโespecially when trusted Christian leaders or friends are already fans of a certain book/writer/podcaster. Weโve forgotten that the apostle Paul warned (โwith tearsโ) of false teaching coming from within the church (Acts 20:28-31).
As a young teen, I had an alarming Ouija board experience. The Lord interrupted, helped my heart discern that Satan hates us and wants to trick us. After Bible college, I did mission work in Japan for 10 years, researched cults/the occult, andโyou want really spooky?โtaught teen Sunday school! My mission is to help crank up our red-flag systems to spot trouble, comparing trends with Bible truth.
Red Flags and Questions Worth Asking
Hints: Check a writerโs spiritual family tree. Does he/she heavily quote promoters of Eastern/occult/New Age teaching? Red flag. That trajectory heads away from, not toward, the Lord. Teachings labeled โancient Christian practiceโ tend to be ancient pagan practices that medieval believers adopted. Some Christian terms are given new definitions. For example, does the writerโs โchristโ mean Jesus Christ, or another Jesus (per 2 Corinthians 11:4)? When terms arenโt clarified, we tend to assume they carry our meaning.
The quotes opening this article illustrate interspirituality, a mixing of world religions. But the Lord describes any way other than his as โdetestableโ (see Deuteronomy 12:31; 18:9-14). An honest evaluation of other religions reveals contradictory key teachings. For instance, Christianity begins with a creator; Buddhism has no creator. โChristian Buddhistโ? Uh-uh. As Stephen Mansfield said, โIt is only possible to blend competing religions when they arenโt taken seriouslyโ (Where Has Oprah Taken Us?). And in the end, a watered-down Christianity wonโt satisfy. Russell Moore cut to the chase: โPeople who donโt want Christianity, donโt want almost-Christianityโ (โIs Christianity Dying?โ).
A related issue is our cultureโs marketing of selfism: self-love, deserving self, divine self โฆ. My โselfโ wants to โfeel spiritual โฆ feel my faith โฆ feel Godโs presence. Guess what? If you live like the Bible heroes, youโll FEEL something! One pastor, having counseled believers who were โnot feelingโ their faith, observed, โI believe that to some extent we have lost our ability to feel Godโs presence because we have lost our willingness to obey himโ (Jeff Vines, Unbroken). Second Timothy 3:1-17 calls out selfism (โlovers of themselvesโ) in a denouncement of spirituality not based on truth. Off-track thinking leads to off-track practice. But Christian defenders of even outright sorcery say, โWell, I tried it and it worked!โโnaively believing that โit workedโ equals โGod mustโve done it.โ
Further Reading and Resources
Some deception will slip past all of us. Me too! But letโs give our red-flag systems a boost. Thatโs the purpose of www.lynnlusbypratt.com. Start with these sample posts to connect a few dots:
- โRecognizing Sorceryโ โ A fictional character nails it!
- โOut of My Mindfulnessโ (3 parts) โ Paganism gets secularized, then adopted in schools and workplaces; then the church just attaches โChristianโ to it.
- โThree Points About the Dark Sideโ โ Our view, thanks to cartoons and movies, might be backwards from reality. This post provides a ready-made lesson outline.
- โThe Key to Discernmentโ โ Avoid apples-to-oranges confusion.
- โStrengthen the Seekersโ โ Are your church members equipped to help seekers? Are you sure?
- โThat Gritty Feelingโ โ A peek at some red-flag systems in action.
- โWhen the Game Gets Biggerโ โ With victory in mind, believers can step up with confidence.
The site is decades of research boiled down into digestible information. It includes site-search key words and for group study, print free handouts from the โmore from Lynnโ page.
What an honor it is for us, the church, to have the Lordโs Word, his truth! Letโs stay determined to lead others toward it.
Lynn Lusby Pratt is a former missionary to Japan who continues to advocate for Japan missions through Say Yes To Japan from her home in Cincinnati, where she posts information about the occult on Lynn Lusby Pratt: Deep, Dark, and Funny.






