06/02/2026
Let's talk about it....
We are told witchcraft is evil, dark, dangerous, something to fear.
Meanwhile, every Sunday, millions of people walk into a building, stand or sit around an altar, recite sacred words in unison, sing repetitive chants, call on spirit, drink "symbolic" blood, eat "symbolic" flesh, and participate in ritual acts in the name of religion.
But that somehow isn’t ritualistic?
You guessed it .... I’m talking about Christianity.
And before somebody starts clutching pearls in my comments... actually...f**k it.. 🙂
There is so much contradictory Because when a witch lights candles, uses symbols, speaks intentions over objects, or works with spiritual energy, people panic.
But when a church blesses wine and bread, lays hands on people, speaks in tongues, anoints with oil, burns incense, gathers at an altar, and calls on divine presence… suddenly we’re supposed to pretend that’s completely different?
Be fu***ng serious.
Communion alone deserves a conversation people don’t want to have.
You’re participating in a ritual centered around consuming the body and blood of Christ — symbolic to some, literal in spiritual meaning to others — as part of salvation and spiritual connection.
You can call it sacred if you want, but you can’t act like ritual suddenly stops being ritual because it happens inside a church.
Laying hands for healing? Sounds a lot like energy work.
Speaking in tongues? That resembles trance and channeling experiences found across spiritual traditions.
Sacred symbols, chants, repeated prayers, altars, ceremonial acts? Humanity has been doing versions of this for thousands of years long before Christianity ever existed.
That’s the conversation.
Because somehow “magic” became a scary word, crystals became evil, ancestors became forbidden, and spiritual practices outside the church became demonized…
While ritual stayed perfectly acceptable — as long as religion was the one doing it.
The hypocrisy.
Because if someone outside of Christianity put on ceremonial robes, stood at an altar, blessed food and drink, invoked spirit, and said it carried spiritual meaning afterward…
Y’all know exactly what people would call it.
Monday rants