Remember when I said whoever carries the superior altar takes the day?
Let me show you what I mean—and why the negative cycles in your life aren’t random bad luck. They’re the result of a spiritual battle you didn’t even know you were fighting.
The Altar Already Speaking Over Your Life
Here’s something that might shock you: there’s already an altar speaking over your life. Whether you built it or not. Whether you know about it or not.
Every family has one. Every territory has one. And that altar is broadcasting in the spiritual realm 24/7, creating the patterns, cycles, and realities you’re experiencing in the natural.
If you’ve noticed repeating patterns—cycles of poverty despite hard work, consistent relationship failures, health issues that run in your family, premature deaths, or doors that keep slamming shut no matter how qualified you are—you’re hearing the voice of an altar.
Not all altars speak blessings.
What Is a Diabolical Altar?
A diabolical altar is a spiritual system intentionally raised to grant demonic entities legal access to influence human affairs. It’s a gateway for satanic power, a platform where evil covenants are serviced, and the source of curses that create those negative cycles you keep experiencing.
And here’s the kicker: most of these altars were built by someone else. Your great-grandfather. A distant ancestor who made a covenant with darkness. A family member who dabbled in witchcraft or idolatry.
Remember the Law of Dominion we talked about in Part 1? Demonic spirits are also locked out of the earthly realm unless they receive human authorization. They need an altar too.
These altars manifest in different forms:
- Ancient altars of false gods (like Baal in the Old Testament)
- Occultic shrines and rituals
- Ancestral worship practices
- Even seemingly innocent traditions that secretly honor spirits
The legal authority for these family altars is established through spiritual headship. When a family leader makes a covenant—even unknowingly—it creates binding consequences for their descendants. This is why the Bible talks about generational curses. It’s not God being petty. It’s a legal reality in the spirit realm.
The Speakings of an Altar
Once an altar is activated by sacrifice, it begins to generate a “voice” in the spiritual realm. These aren’t metaphors. They’re tangible spiritual broadcasts that shape destinies.
Negative speakings manifest as:
- Unnatural poverty (an “armed man” resisting your progress)
- Consistent miscarriages or barrenness
- Patterns of premature death
- Marital strife and confusion
- Depression and mental torment
- Stagnation (effort without results)
Positive speakings manifest as:
- Divine favor
- Generational blessings
- Supernatural protection
- Fruitfulness and prosperity
- Open doors and strategic connections
The question isn’t whether an altar is speaking over your life. The question is: which altar?
You Can’t Just Pray It Away
This is where most deliverance ministries get it wrong. They try to cast out demons, break curses, and renounce covenants. And yes, those things have their place.
But here’s the problem: you can’t just dismantle an evil altar and walk away. Nature abhors a vacuum. The spiritual realm doesn’t allow empty space.
Your escape route from an altar is another altar.
The way to undo the power of an altar is the principle of replacement. You don’t just tear down the enemy’s system—you build a superior one in its place.
The Gideon Blueprint
Let me show you this principle in action. Judges chapter 6.
Israel is oppressed by the Midianites. They’re hiding in caves, losing their crops, losing their livestock, losing hope. And God shows up to call Gideon as their deliverer.
But before Gideon can fight a single battle, God gives him a three-step assignment:
Step 1: Tear down your father’s altar to Baal and cut down the Asherah pole beside it.
Step 2: Build a new, well-constructed altar to the Lord on that same high ground.
Step 3: Offer a sacrifice on this new altar.
Notice the sequence. Gideon’s victory wasn’t won on the battlefield. It was won at the altar. He dismantled the demonic authorization, replaced it with a righteous one, and activated it with sacrifice.
Only then did God give him the strategy to defeat the Midianites with just 300 men.
The battle was already decided at the altar.
Why You Keep Losing
If you’re constantly fighting the same battles, experiencing the same setbacks, and watching the same negative patterns play out, I’ll tell you why:
You’re trying to win a battle without addressing the altar that’s authorizing your opposition.
You’re praying against symptoms while the root system remains intact and operational.
You’re fighting in the natural realm while the real war is happening in the spiritual realm.
Spiritual warfare isn’t about shouting at demons. It’s about understanding the legal framework of the spirit realm and operating within it with superior authority.
And that authority is expressed through your altar.
The Game-Changer
Here’s the revelation that should light a fire under you: you don’t have to live under the voice of a diabolical altar. You have the authority, the access, and the assignment to build something stronger.
Your righteous altar, powered by the finished work of Jesus Christ and activated by your spiritual sacrifices, can silence every evil voice speaking over your life.
But you have to build it. You have to maintain it. You have to understand your role as a priest.
In Part 3, I’m going to walk you through exactly how to do that. How to establish your personal altar. What sacrifices to offer. How to hear God’s response. And how to step into the priestly identity that Jesus purchased for you with His blood.
Because it’s time to stop being a victim of someone else’s altar and start being a builder of your own.
Your Next Step
Before Part 3, I want you to do something uncomfortable: identify the negative patterns in your life. Write them down. The cycles that keep repeating. The doors that keep closing. The struggles that feel like they’re in your DNA.
Don’t spiritualize them away. Don’t explain them with natural reasoning. Just name them.
Because once you see the pattern, you can trace it back to its source. And once you identify the altar, you can replace it.
Get ready. We’re about to build.











