16 February 2024

“Strong Messenger” lives on the East Coast of the United States of America.  He’s a teenager, but acts as if he’s in his early twenties, very mature.  He’s dealing with the hurt and bitterness of a traumatic relationship with his biological father; he loves his father very much but feels his father’s treated him unreasonably as he’s growing up.  I ask Jesus, “What do You want to do with Strong Messenger today?”  Jesus replies, “We’re going to do a little work,” the bloodline’s infected with generations of strife between fathers and sons, a Foot Soldier’s “Injustice” opens a window and I set a pile of traumatic memories on fire. 

Strong Messenger still lives with his biological parents, brothers and sisters (big family) and has a relatively good life.  Messenger’s father is a combat veteran, strong willed, very controversial and harsh.  We’ll call the father, “Foot Soldier.”  In this situation Jesus wants to heal the son AND father; so, I’m meeting with them and the mother in a group setting.  I ask and Jesus says, “We’re going back to” a home they lived in, just outside the big city and the mother hears the word, “Injustice.”  Messenger feels a little uneasy bringing these memories up; he feels discussing them will cause problems between him and his father, but I can see a form of anticipation in the father.  I think Foot Soldier’s willing to deal with these issues, but Messenger’s apprehensive. 

I pray, ask Jesus, “Please clear this discomfort sir and bring to Messenger’s mind the memories you want to deal with.”  Messenger cautiously suggests a memory of a time he comes down the stairs and scares his sister who’s dancing on the dining room table.  He’s only seven at the time and his sister’s around four.  When he scares the sister, she almost falls off the table and Foot Soldier retaliates in anger.  Messenger continues, “I didn’t scare her on purpose dad, but you got mad at me anyway.  You punished me and I felt you did it for no reason.”  Instead of the father’s retaliation, Messenger’s surprised at his father’s willingness to ask for forgiveness and as Foot Soldier admits, “Many times, I didn’t listen to you. I know I’ve punished you unfairly” and apologizes.

Jesus says, “Bitterness is here.  This is the point where [Messenger] began to internalize his feelings.  He accepted his bitterness in exchange for expressing his feelings with his father.  He accepted the lie that his father wasn’t going to listen.  There’re other memories that watered this seed of bitterness during this time.”  I ask Messenger to list off other memories so we can deal with them all, but Messenger is reluctant to bring any more up in concern of his father’s retaliation.  Jesus suggests he toss the memories in the middle of the floor, like in a pile, so I can set them on fire in the spirit.  Some of these memories are traumatic for Strong Messenger, so I suggest, “Dig up all the memories you can from this time period and ask Jesus to grab the memories that are hidden so we get them all.”  He agrees, we do, there’s forgiveness on both sides and I set the pile on fire.

I ask Jesus if He’s satisfied, so we can move forward, but He suggests, “You need to burn the root of bitterness which grew from his feelings.  When [Messenger] felt this way, he opened a door to the enemy who came in and told him lies about his father.  He needs to forgive his father for the injustice he feels.  Then he must repent for believing the lies he was told as a result of his feelings.”  Messenger forgives his father; his father asks forgiveness for making him feel this way and there’s tears in the father’s eyes.  This needed to happen.

Once the father and son reconcile on this issue I reach in and grab the one behind the lies, squeeze the air out of his chest and demand, “Human or demon?”  He’s a demon, holding onto a generational curse through Messenger’s father’s bloodline.  I learn the demon’s function is Strife between the Fathers and Sons, which works in conjunction with The Curse of Bitterness.  The curse lays dormant in Messenger’s blood, until he’s old enough to come into agreement with it.  When he comes into agreement, the window’s opened and the demon’s activated.  He begins destroying and waits for the opportunity to enter Messenger’s future children; therefore, living on through their blood, to the next generation and the next.    

I don’t waste time learning about this demon today; I just want to break the curse, remove it and this demon from their family’s bloodline.  I find a deal was made, human sacrifice for knowledge.  They both forgive their ancestors on the father’s side, all the way back to Adam and Eve and ask forgiveness for their participation in the curse whether known or unknown.  I break The Curse of Bitterness, purge the father’s bloodline of all impurities, push the Blood of Jesus Christ forward and purging the rest of this family’s children.  I pull the demon’s hooks out the flesh of their family, put my hooks in him, cancel his assignments on the bloodline, pull him out and sling him into the Bottomless Pit. 

Jesus confirms, the demon’s gone, so I go on a rescue mission.  I lower a net into the demon’s area of operation, where he’s received sacrificed children and the souls and spirits of captive humans.  I pull them out as a helicopter would and deliver the cargo to the feet of Jesus Christ, announcing, “Behold, your King!”  Jesus is happy, tells me He’s “Satisfied” and I thank Him for this victory, for a father and his son.