I know all the anecdotal, unverified stories.
Show me in the Word of God, one single case of a fulfilled satanic curse.
Exodus 22:28, and Romans 12:14 are execrations, not imprecations. An execration is a form of expressing contempt, whereas an imprecation is an effort to invoke a supernatural evil or divine force upon the recipient. There is more to this subject than looking up a dictionary definition or listing verses that happen to contain the word curse. We have to approach this with at least a modicum of sophistication.
Your last reference was half right. Numbers 22:6 is, in fact, King Balak attempting to hire Balaam to place a curse on Israel, and therefore is referring to an imprecation. The problem is, when Balaam considered the king’s offer, he sought advice from Jehovah, not a pagan deity. I would encourage you to look it up.
Since when does someone inquire of the Lord to put a satanic curse on someone? Balaam knew the only source of curses and went to that source hoping to get permission to curse for profit. There is more to this subject than sampling the word “curse” and listing references.
I have had extended conversations with a pastor in Africa who says the populace is overcome with superstitious views and beliefs about curses. For every anecdotal story, there is a counterpoint. Therefore, I keep—attempting—to drive the conversation back to the scripture.
Anyone that reads some of my recent posts will find that I have been very open and transparent about my own journey on this subject. I was wrong about a lot of my ideas and had to change my thinking.
Even the most virulent curse deliverance proponent, who has been reading through this thread, should take pause at how many times I have asked for and not received scriptural proof of examples of fulfilled evil curses and examples of curse breaking from the scripture. What does it take for some to go:
“Hmm, maybe I need to take another open-minded look at this subject?”
I honestly cannot think of another doctrine in which many Christians are so emotionally committed in the face of such a dearth of scriptural support. If I were to take an Armenian position on a doctrine and asked Calvinists to provide me with scriptural proofs of their beliefs, they would load those passages in cannons, shoot them at me, and the volley would continue for months. It would be the same if I were a Calvinist challenging the Armenians. If I were a pre-tribulationist and asked post-tribulationists for scriptural proof, the rapture happens at the end of the tribulation, it would be on like donkey-kong and vice versa. However, when it comes to the subject of curses, I rarely get any scriptural rebuttal and if I do it is always at a low-resolution level. In other words, “curses bad!” Most people don’t even understand such basic concepts such as imprecations versus execrations. It is usually those same people who make the most assertive claims.
After many years of conversations with curse deliverance proponents, I know what they want.
They want to believe in curse deliverance.
They want to believe in breaking generational curses.
They want to believe Balaam sought a satanic curse.
They want to believe anyone that utters an imprecation will release a curse.
I also know something they don’t want. They don’t want the scripture to prove them wrong.