
Kirk Cameron recently sounded the alarm over Taylor Swiftâs cultural influence, warning that the pop star âmocks God, normalizes sinâ and âglorifies lust and rebellion" in her wildly popular music.Â
In a recent Instagram post, the 54-year-old father of six, known for his roles in âGrowing Painsâ and recent faith-based projects, said Swiftâs latest work amounts to âdiscipleshipâ for young people.
âWhat do you get when a billionaire pop star releases an album with provocative artwork, lyrics that mock God, glorify rebellion and celebrate explicit sin? You get the most powerful sermon that Americaâs youth will hear this year,â Cameron said. âShe mocks God in her lyrics. She normalizes sin, she glorifies lust and rebellion as if this was womanly empowerment. Her songs are not just music. This is discipleship.â
Cameron added that Swiftâs influence over fans, many of whom are teenagers, can unfortunately serve as a substitute for parental guidance.
âShe doesnât have any kids of her own, but raising kids is hard. Why get into all that when she can just disciple your kids and train them up in the way that she would like for them to go?â he said.
Cameronâs comments came on the heels of the âCruel Summerâ singerâs engagement to NFL star Travis Kelce, which she announced on social media Tuesday: "Your English teacher and your gym teacher are getting married,â the 35-year-old captioned the post, liked by over 30 million people, followed by a firecracker emoji.Â
Following Cameronâs message, Jenn Nizza, a former psychic who hosts the âEx-Psychic Savedâ podcast and regularly critiques occult and New Age practices, took to social media to share her own concerns over the pop starâs influence.Â
âTaylor Swift is promoting a New Age practice that you may not have been aware of,â Nizza said. âI lived in that darkness for many years, and I have been exposing the New Age practices that Swift promotes. And I, in this video, am going to expose numerology.â
Nizza described numerology as a form of divination. âYou are believing that numbers are going to give you hidden knowledge, that you will go to numbers for insight, for wisdom and for possible communication, even with spirits,â she said.
She pointed to a 2020 interview with Jimmy Kimmel in which Swift discussed her fixation on the number 13, calling it her âlucky number,â and a more recent podcast conversation with brothers Travis and Jason Kelce, where Swift again tied her relationship with the Kansas City Chiefs tight end to numerological coincidences.
âEveryday divination is demonic,â Nizza said. âIt leads to demonic oppression. She is polluting the minds of the masses with divination practices. This is the agenda of Satan and his minions who are influencing her.â
Swift has long spoken publicly about her attachment to the number 13, which she has described as a good luck symbol throughout her career.
But Nizza stressed that practices like numerology are packaged as harmless or quirky but mask deeper dangers.
âSatan doesnât come as a little red thing with horns and a tail,â she said. âHe will package things up in very pretty ways, making them seem innocent, using people that will gain stardom and fame so that they have the platform to get his message out to people.â
Swift previously came under criticism from Christian leaders in 2024 following the release of her album, The Tortured Poets Department, due to songs some deemed sacrilegious. In the song "Guilty As Sin," for example, Swift sings: "What if I roll the stone away?/ They're gonna crucify me anyway/ What if the way you hold me is actually what's holy."
Former Boyzone star Shane Lynch accused Swift of engaging in demonic practices and satanic rituals during her sold-out shows and warned of the damaging effects such music has on children.Â
âWhen it comes to a lot of the music thatâs out there at the moment â more of the hip-hop side of things â there is a lot of hidden satanic and a lot of evil within them, including down to the beats. Itâs very real,â he said at the time.
âMusic attaches to your emotions,â Lynch added, âIt has a connection to your spirit and how you feel. Thatâs why Iâve stopped listening to those types of music myself because it doesnât suit my spirit.â
Shane Pruitt, the National Next Gen director for the Southern Baptist Convention's North American Mission Board and co-author of Calling Out the Called, urged Christian parents to seriously consider whether they should allow their children to listen to Swift's music.Â
"I'm definitely not the minister or parent that has the 'no secular music' stance," Pruitt wrote. "Also, I fully realize unbelievers are going to act like unbelievers. HOWEVER, there is a difference between being secular and being ANTI-CHRISTIAN."
Pruitt added that he used to listen to Swift but said he thinks "now it's time to reconsider."Â
"As Christians, who are filled with the Spirit, should we be entertained by, sing with, and expose our kids to lyrics that aren't just different than what you believe, but are actually mocking what you believe?" Pruitt asked.Â
News Source : https://www.christianpost.com/news/kirk-cameron-warns-taylor-swift-mocks-god-in-her-music.html
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