Six-Seven Ain’t Just a Meme — It’s a Setup
Why the Chant of a Generation Should Mke You Sit Up and Look Up
So there I was, minding my own business, when I hear a bunch of kids chanting “6-7” like they were summoned straight out of some TikTok-induced trance. And I thought to myself… well, Paul, you’ve lived long enough to see some weird things, but this takes the pecan pie. Turns out, this isn’t just some random string of numbers. It’s viral. It’s everywhere. It’s “just for fun,” they say. Kids are shouting it in class, whispering it on playgrounds, and plastering it in emojis online.
And here’s what hit me: In a world where God’s Word has been replaced by memes, where Scripture has been swapped for slogans, suddenly a meaningless number chant is what grabs the attention of the next generation?
You better believe it matters.
The world says it’s innocent. “It means nothing!” they say. “It’s just a meme!” But friend, when the world tells you something has no meaning, that’s when you need to start asking questions. Because in this world — the world where Satan is the god of the system — nothing is meaningless. Everything is loaded. Everything’s got a hook. Everything has a spirit behind it. And you’d better wise up, because the devil sure isn’t wasting an opportunity when one billion kids are repeating the same thing without a clue as to why.
“Just a Number” — The Lie of Modern Sorcery
Let’s get this straight. Our world is drunk on numerology. Witchcraft, sorcery, Kabbalah, Freemasonry, Satanism — all of them use numbers as spiritual powerplays. The occult loves symbols that slip under the radar. You see, the devil isn’t going to show up with a Ouija board at your kid’s birthday party; he’s going to show up in viral memes, TikTok dance trends, and “just for fun” chants built on numbers with spiritual charge.
Astrology? Numbers. Tarot cards? Numbers. Divination, angel numbers, sacred geometry? All numbers. One might even call it the “gospel of Google.” Our entire digital world runs on code — numeric code. And in a time when “scientism” is God, numbers have become the new idols.
So when a whole generation starts chanting “6-7,” I’m not saying it’s satanic…
I’m saying, why wouldn’t it be?
If the occult world has taught us anything, it’s this:
The devil loves what people don’t understand.
And the best spell is the one you cast without knowing it.
The Bible’s Take on 6 and 7 — and It Ain’t Funny
Let’s get into some Scripture, because unlike memes, the Word is meaning.
In Proverbs 6:16, God says this:
“These six things doth the LORD hate: yea, seven are an abomination unto him.”
There it is — 6, then 7, tied to what God hates. Not what He mildly dislikes. What He hates. And what He calls abomination.
You don’t think that matters?
Here’s the amazing part: This phrase — 6 and 7 together — is a literary device called “numerical progression”, used in Scripture to emphasize a truth. The seventh item is the climax, the crescendo — the full revelation of what God despises.
And that combination? 6-7? It isn’t good.
Modern culture might meme it. Kids might think it’s hilarious. Educators might call it “youth expression.” But God already weighed in: 6 and 7 together paints a picture of wickedness, pride, perversion, and rebellion.
Doesn’t that context add a little weight to the chant now?
The Sum of All Fears — 6 + 7 = 13 (Rebellion)
Here’s the kicker — or the kicker’s kicker:
6 + 7 = 13.
Now, if you know anything about Bible numerics, you know 13 is the number for rebellion. First mention principle, Genesis 14:4:
“In the thirteenth year they rebelled.”
You can run that 13 through the Bible and it screams rebellion.
Judas shows up in John 13.
The Antichrist is tied to 13.
The judgment of Babylon in Revelation? 13-fold symbolism.
So kids are now walking around chanting, without knowledge, a combo that equals:
Man’s imperfection (6) + God’s perfection (7) = Rebellion (13)
You don’t have to be a conspiracy theorist

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