Becoming A Vessel Of Honor Rebecca Brown
278 The demons created a tremendous drain on me also. Both of us battled with exhaustion and sleepiness. Much of Lyn’s deliverance was done on our feet pacing the floor to help us stay awake and alert. Early on in the deliverance, I told Lyn to kick out her demon spirit guide, Tal. At that point, she was still having some difficulty recognizing what was her and what was the demon. She was so used to having demon spirits dwell in her that she had difficulty recognizing the difference be tween them and herself. As I talked to her about getting rid ofTal, she suddenly said, "Why should I tell him to go? He has never hurt me." I knew at once that that thought was from the demon. With the guidance of the Holy Spirit I replied, "Can you honest ly tell me you do not think Tal was ever jealous of your relationship with your husband or tried to keep you from entering into a close relationship with him?" Lyn looked surprised, then sheepish. She admitted that she did realize that Tal was a major obstacle to her forming a close relationship with her husband. I began talking about how Tal was a born loser and had chosen to serve a master who was a loser and how Tal was going to lose his home in Lyn forever. Lyn sat for a couple of minutes without saying anything. Then she spoke up saying, "I suppose it is only my free will that keeps me from letting Tal speak through me to cuss you out?" I laughed and answered that indeed it was. As the demon got angry at me over the things I was saying, Lyn began to recognize for the first time with some clarity the difference between the demon and herself. Lyn herself was not angry because I said the demon was a loser, but she Chapter 13 Deliverance of Those Involved in Satanism
Made with FlippingBook Ebook Creator