Tuesday, 14 January 2020

Walt Disney Launches New Children’s Show Called ‘The Owl House’ That Grooms Them To Accept Witchcraft And Demonology As A Way To ‘Fight Evil’

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Walt Disney Launches New Children’s Show Called ‘The Owl House’ That Grooms Them To Accept Witchcraft And Demonology As A Way To ‘Fight Evil’

by Geoffrey Grider

The Walt Disney Channel premiered a new cartoon – The Owl House – on Friday, January 10, that promises to introduce young viewers to a world of demons and witchcraft.  

The Disney Channel premiered a new cartoon – The Owl House – on Friday, January 10, that promises to introduce young viewers to a world of demons and witchcraft.

Remember when Walt Disney was the 'family company', they didn't serve alcohol at their theme parks, and they strived to produce wholesome entertainment for children? Those days are as dead and buried as founder Walt Disney himself is. Walt Disney today proudly hosts their annual 'Gay Days', aggressively supports late-term abortion, makes their park guests receive an RFID microchip to be tracked, and now want your kids to welcome witchcraft and demonology into their lives.
"And Jacob called unto his sons, and said, Gather yourselves together, that I may tell you that which shall befall you in the last days." Genesis 49:1 (KJV)
As we have long warned, there is a huge push to promote witchcraft not as something that is aligned with Satan, which it is, but as something that is a 'force for good', and this is exactly what companies like Walt Disney are doing. They are producing spiritual poison and wrapping it in bright colors with catchy characters so your children will want to be like them. This is how you raise a generation of godless atheists, by teaching them to embrace the very things that God hates.

Walt Disney introduces kids to world of demons, witchcraft in new ‘The Owl House’ show

FROM LIFE SITE NEWS: According to Walt Disney, “The series follows self-assured teenage girl Luz, who discovers a portal to another realm where humans are not well-liked, and she must disguise herself in order to fit in at witch school.”
Walt Disney describes that realm as a “Demon town,” where Luz takes up residence with Eda the Owl Lady, “the most powerful witch on the Boiling Iles.”  Luz declares, “Someday, I’m going to be just like her.”
“Folks, if you think this latest ‘Owl House’ show is just ‘fantasy and fun’ think again,” wrote Deborah Bunting in a commentary penned for CBN, the Christian Broadcasting Network.
“The show tries to portray witchcraft as a positive tool to fight evil,” explained Bunting. “That's similar to what real-life witches have been promoting over the past few years as they've been putting hexes on President Trump and others in order to fight for their beliefs.”
“Over the years, Disney has gone farther and farther into the darkness of the spiritual world that opposes the living God, coming up with programming and characters that lead the vulnerable into that dark world of deception.”
“This spiritual realm that opposes God is real. Demons are real,” warns Bunting. “And they are out to deceive your children and draw them in to be pawns of the enemy of their souls, the Devil, otherwise known as Satan. His devices and plans are to destroy your kids and grandkids spiritually, physically and emotionally. You must protect them from being enticed into this demonic world.”

Making the demon realm ‘feel like home’ for kids

“The original pitch for the show was ‘girl hangs out with witch in hell,’” voice actor Alex Hirsch told Newsweek.com. The show’s art director, Ricky Cometa, explained that when the show’s creator, Dana Terrace, first approached him, “she said that ‘we're trying to make this demon realm a part of Disney.’”'
“We really wanted to make this demon realm feel like home, and just had to figure out how to do it," said Cometa.
The writers room for the show is “full of books on witchcraft, witches and spells to take inspiration from,” according to the Newsweek piece.  The visual design of the show is inspired by various European painters such as Hieronymus Bosch, who was best known for his surrealistic depictions of hell.
Show creator Terrace, who first became acquainted with religious painters while growing up in Catholic school, said Bosch’s twisted takes on angels and demons would make for a “cool show in that art style.” READ MORE

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