Encounters with Spirits: How I Met God, Angels, and Demons: Encounters with Spirits, #1
By CAN ũa Waya
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About this ebook
I have never been to heaven and neither have I ever been to hell, but both have come to me.
Amidst an exotic landscape of distant lands, intra-clan rivalries, and family legacies begins the honest, humble, and achingly sincere autobiography and testimony of CAN ũa Waya. While most stories begin in the “ordinary world,” Waya’s ordinary world was populated by witchdoctors, werewolves, and shape-shifters.
In this book he tells of his life in which spirituality—in some form or other—has been inextricable from the everyday events of his life since earliest childhood. Waya has experienced the many faces of God as he journeyed through complicated relationships with his family and encountered both catastrophic and mundane obstacles, yet he still arrived at an unconditional, unshakable faith in God.
Though Waya examines demonology, extraterrestrials, and the occult with an uncommon intimacy, his main goal and purpose is to point those seeking lasting freedom from demonic oppression to Christ Jesus, whose compassion remains unchanged.
“Do you want to be helped?”
I answered and said, “Yes. Please help me, Lord.”
And that was all the praying I did that morning.
There may be no prayer dearer to the heart of God.
__________________________________________
Author Profile
CAN ũa Waya is a Kenyan journalist who currently resides in Canada. He has worked for various well-known news organizations and taught languages in Kenya, France, and Canada. Waya received Christ as his personal Savior when he was seventeen. He holds a diploma in biblical studies from the Bible school of the Nairobi Lighthouse Church in Kenya. He has also studied at universities in his native Kenya, France, and Canada.
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Encounters with Spirits - CAN ũa Waya
Part I
I Yearn for Vatican-Style Sainthood As a Child and Go on to Learn of the Supremacy of Scripture As an Adolescent
How can you say, We are wise, for we have the law of the Lord,
when actually the lying pen of the scribes has handled it falsely?
—Jeremiah 8:8
Do not add to what I command you and do not subtract from it, but keep the commands of the Lord your God that I give you.
—Deuteronomy 4:2
Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished. Therefore anyone who sets aside one of the least of these commands and teaches others accordingly will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. For I tell you that unless your righteousness surpasses that of the Pharisees and the teachers of the law, you will certainly not enter the kingdom of heaven.
—Matthew 5:17–20
Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will
never pass away.
—Matthew 24:35
For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.
—Hebrews 4:12
Chapter 1
From Roman Catholicism to Bible-Based Christianity
16449.jpgConsult God’s instruction and the testimony of warning. If anyone does not speak according to this word,
they have no light of dawn.
—Isaiah 8:20
I was born in southeastern Kenya into a family of practicing Roman Catholics in a rural community of what was then known as Machakos District (now Makũenĩ County). My home village was known as Watuka because the sun appeared to set early in the days when our pioneering forbears settled the then frontier territory. This is part of what is called Ũkamba, the land of the Akamba.
My father and paternal grandmother were keen to let me understand that I was a Mũoinĩ by clan, that is to say, a member of the witching clan. Literally, that meant I was a member of a clan of witches. I never understood how come my father—a former Roman Catholic seminarian and one of the most devout men I have ever known—did not see the irony of this. My father was very proud of being a Mũoinĩ, and my grandmother, whose observance of Roman Catholic liturgy and rites made her even more endearing to me, was equally insistent on our not forgetting this.
There was a reason for it. For generations, there had been a schism and a resulting rivalry within the clan. Some called themselves Aoinĩ (plural for Mũoinĩ); whilst the others called themselves Aiĩnĩ (the plainspeople; plural for Mũiĩnĩ). Both sides agreed that one of the two sides was descended from an unmarried daughter who had been banished to the gates of the village for having children out of wedlock. She never got married. But she had many children with many strangers. Because her children had been born to a daughter of the clan, they were accepted but only partially. They were kept at arm’s length. Over time, it was no longer clear who was and wasn’t descended from the daughter.
In later life I would wonder what the implications of my being part of the witching people
might mean. As if to confirm my fears, the witching people,
also called Mbaa Ndune (that is, the red people,
so called because of our light complexion), were concentrated in a part of Ũkamba reputed for witchcraft. That was in the neighboring district of Kĩtui (now Kĩtui County). In Kenya the Akamba are feared for their witchcraft. Among the Akamba themselves, it is the people of Kĩtui who are feared for their witchcraft. The majority of my clansmen were from this part of Ũkamba.
My parents belonged to a generation of Africans who had to make the giant transition from the ancient traditions to modern, Christian living. Both of my parents—brilliant pupils and students in their heyday—were schoolteachers and leaders in the church. Both topped their classes for most of the years that they went to school. But they had both been frustrated in their efforts to seek higher education. My father and my mother had also considered becoming a priest and a nun, respectively.
My father had never intended to get married. His desire was to become a priest. However, when his own father died, he was forced to give up school and go home to take care of his mother and three sisters. What is worse, he was illegally dispossessed of his considerable inheritance upon the death of his father and nearly murdered. His mother had been the second wife, and his stepbrothers from the other branch of the family dispossessed him and tried to kill him on the night his father was buried. It did not help he was his father’s favorite son.
My father refused to give up on his dream. Using his considerable language skills, he convinced the colonial authorities to give him a tender to provide various supplies to prison camps in the frontier district. From being an impoverished farmhand and living from hand-to-mouth, my father was able to make a small fortune. He became one of the richest men in the frontier district. Others came to him for advice on how to start businesses. But his heart was set on attending seminary and becoming a priest. In those days you had to raise your own school fees to attend seminary. My father had raised enough money by this time to take care of his school fees as well as his mother and three sisters. Leaving the business in the hands of a brother-in-law, he left for seminary.
His time at seminary was short-lived. It turned out his brother-in-law did not have the same business acumen as my father. He ran down the business to the extent that my father, who remained the titular owner of the business, was soon deeply in debt. He had to leave seminary to go home and sort the mess. That is when he became a schoolteacher—partly as a way to raise the funds he needed to repay his debts. At that time, it began to dawn on him that he would not be becoming a priest. He began to look for a wife.
As I have already mentioned, my parents were leading lights in the local Roman Catholic parish. In fact, when my oldest brother died in his infancy, the diocesan bishop came to bury him. This was a big deal. It meant that my parents were held in high regard in the Roman Catholic community. As a parish priest, this same man had joined my parents in matrimony. Because my parents were also pioneer schoolteachers, my family had a special place in the local community. We were expected to behave in a certain way much like the children of a pastor because of our parents’ leadership roles within the church. The pressure was always great and so also were the envy and the bullying at school and elsewhere. I do not know of any of my siblings who were never bullied or otherwise victimized on account of our parents’ social and religious roles.
My father was a well-read man. He loved to read. He never stopped reading. He maintained a small personal library. As the years went by, my mother and older siblings swelled its size.
Among other things, my father’s library contained volumes on the lives of canonized Roman Catholic saints. As a child, I loved to read about the heroic deeds of these great men and women of yore. Later on I would begin to question some of the aspects of the stories. I began to believe some of them may have been embellished. The idea of saints made in the Vatican
began to bother me the more I read the Bible after converting to Bible-based Christianity in my late teens. However, as a child and an adolescent, I was greatly inspired by the stories of these men and women who defied convention and the very laws of nature in the pursuit of a triumphant faith. In the name of Jesus, they healed the sick and raised the dead; they conversed with the animals of the field and the birds of the air; they were flayed, burnt at the stake, and quartered in public squares; and they turned the hearts of many toward God.
Many were the times when I sat quietly and reminisced about these wonderful events in a time gone by. I longed to be a hero and a saint like these great men and women. I can still remember one day when, as a child with my little hand in my mother’s own, I went to escort the man who was at the time my favorite Catholic priest. As he spoke with my mother, I looked up into heaven and imagined it opening and angels going up and down a staircase. I was recreating a scene from a story about a saint whose name I now forget. It was not the patriarch Jacob. In my little heart, I earnestly longed to see such things happening to me. I had great faith, the sort children are usually blessed with. In those days I was convinced I would become a Roman Catholic priest like my flesh-and-blood hero: the man who sat on his motorbike speaking with my mother.
Chapter 2
Witches, Werewolves, and Shape-Shifters
16522.jpgWhen you enter the land the Lord your God is giving you, do not learn to imitate the detestable ways of the nations there. Let no one be found among you who sacrifices their son or daughter in the fire, who practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages in witchcraft, or casts spells, or who is a medium or spiritist or who consults the dead. Anyone who does these things is detestable to the Lord; because of these same detestable practices the Lord your God will drive out those nations before you. You must be blameless before the Lord your God.
—Deuteronomy 18:9–13
In those early days of my life, quite a few things happened to change me from a happy-go-lucky and trusting child to an introvert who took his time to open up to people. Most of these things happened in school, where I was often bullied. I was also part of a family in which academic excellence was expected. As it turned out, I did not do so well in secondary school. Besides the usual teenage angst, an awful lot was going on in my own life and in my parents’ lives. This combination of difficulties was to drive me to surrender my life to Jesus.
Typically I was either the youngest or among the youngest in my class at Watuka Primary School. Most children were bigger than I was. I suffered beatings and blackmail as well as verbal abuse. Because the other pupils knew our parents were especially hard on my siblings and me discipline-wise, it was often sufficient for them to threaten to report me to my parents to get me to do something I would rather not have done. I remember being forced to take some of my school friends
to one of our family farms, where they helped themselves to fruit. One of the workers saw us and reported me to my father. My father caned me, assuring me what he was doing would thrash the mistake
and not me. He had no idea what was going