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TikTok Tarot Star Purges Occult Content, Now Alex Belongs to Christ

Something interesting happened on social media this week: a well-known TikTok tarot reader who went by Alex Reads Tarot wiped her occult content and now calls herself “Alex Belongs to Christ.” Her sudden switch from reading cards to wearing her faith on her sleeve has people talking — and not just because the algorithm loves drama. This move should make conservatives and Christians pay attention: it shows how quickly culture can flip when influencers choose faith over fame.

From Tarot to Testimony

Alex’s about-face was featured in an interview with ex-psychic Jenn Nizza and CBN’s Tré Goins-Phillips. Jenn, who also left the occult, walked through what a real turnaround looks like. That kind of frank testimony matters. This was not a tech glitch or a rebrand — all the old content went away and the new handle makes her faith plain: Alex Belongs to Christ. For searchers, this shift from “Alex Reads Tarot” to “Alex Belongs to Christ” is now a keyword story about conversion, social media, and spiritual accountability.

Why the Shift Is a Big Deal

First, it punctures the idea that New Age stuff is harmless entertainment. Tarot, horoscopes, and psychic readings were sold to a generation as edgy fun. But when an influencer abandons that world for Christianity it raises the question: why are so many young people searching for answers in cards instead of the Bible? Second, social media monetized the occult. Influencers built followings and income streams around spiritual confusion. When someone walks away, it shines a harsh light on that marketplace of souls.

Skepticism and Real Faith

Yes, be skeptical. Some conversions are performative. Influencers know controversy drives clicks and donations. But Jenn Nizza’s and Alex’s stories carry the marks of sincerity — they talk about conviction and community, not just a stunt. Conservatives should celebrate genuine returns to faith while holding fast to the idea that truth matters more than clicks. Pray for these influencers, but don’t let cynicism stop you from welcoming someone back to belief when they clearly mean it.

At the end of the day, this is a small cultural victory for common sense: a TikTok tarot reader chose Jesus over the occult. That matters because culture is shaped one person at a time. If more influencers follow Alex’s lead, searchable terms like “tarot to Christianity” and “ex-psychic testimony” will show that people are moving away from spiritual fads toward something deeper. And if nothing else, it’s a reminder that the internet can be a place of redemption — when users choose truth over trends.

Written by Staff Reports

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