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EDGE

EDGE (Entity-Directed Guided Entry) is the framework behind the system. It explains the spiritual assumptions the method operates under: who is involved, how experiences are perceived, and why Scripture forbids this kind of interaction.

Important: The complete step-by-step implementation is intentionally contained in the book. This page defines the framework and the warnings, not the instructions.

1) What “Entity” Means in EDGE

When this site uses the word entities, it is not referring to vague “spirit guides,” “higher selves,” or neutral beings. EDGE uses a biblical category:

In other words: God, angels, demons, and humans are spiritual actors. EDGE assumes that what is “guiding” is not an impersonal force, but an intelligent spiritual agent.

EDGE assumption (plain language): The human spirit is the one being guided out of body, and the guiding intelligence is understood to be a spiritual being (either angelic by God’s permission, or demonic by deception and temptation).

2) EDGE Is Spiritual: The “Clair” Senses vs Physical Senses

EDGE treats these experiences as occurring through spiritual perception, not physical perception. That means the “senses” involved are not the biological five (eyes, ears, etc.), but the spiritual equivalents often described as the clair senses:

A major reason these experiences become persuasive is that spiritual perception can feel identical to physical sensation, and sometimes even more vivid. EDGE explicitly treats this realism as part of the danger: when the perception feels real, the mind begins treating the interaction as normal.

Key point: “Feels real” is not the same as “is safe.” In EDGE, sensory realism is not proof of truth, goodness, or authority.

3) Is EDGE Forbidden Biblically?

EDGE is presented on this site as forbidden under Scripture because it involves the pursuit of spiritual interaction that matches the biblical category of familiar spirits: repeated contact, reliance, and expectation of response from a spirit outside God’s authorized pattern.

This is why the site keeps returning to definitions like defilement, why it emphasizes the threshold, and why it warns about the “table” concept (authority participation).

Bottom line: EDGE may describe experiences, but it does not claim they are spiritually neutral. It treats them as boundary violations that can progress toward reliance and allegiance transfer.

4) Why Demons “Guide” at All: Pleasure, Promises, and Control

EDGE assumes that demonic involvement, when present, is not benevolent guidance. It is strategic temptation. Common incentive patterns include:

EDGE also assumes that deception is normal in this domain. Demons are not presented as reliable narrators. Even when a statement appears true, the overall aim may still be manipulation through attachment, confusion, or gradual reliance.

Warning: A “good experience” is not the same thing as a good spirit. Pleasure can be bait.

5) Truth Claims and “Testing” Spirits

Scripture warns that spiritual deception exists, and it gives principles for discernment. Two basic ideas people commonly point to are:

EDGE treats these principles as diagnostic, not as a reason to pursue ongoing interaction. The point is not to become an expert at negotiating with demons, but to recognize the spiritual direction of a thing: does it pull you toward God’s authority, or does it pull you into dependence on another “table”?

EDGE framing: If a spirit regularly lies, it is not a trustworthy source. If it “sometimes tells truths,” that does not make it safe or authorized. Consistency and fruit matter more than isolated correct statements.

6) How This Page Fits the Site

EDGE is the framework. The site provides the boundary map. The book contains the implementation.

Next: If you want the step-by-step process, it is in the book, not on this page.

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