About 100 Bishops and Priests Meet in Baltimore, MD to Learn About Possession
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Exorcist Convention: Priests Learn How to Fight the Devil
About 100 Bishops and Priests Meet to Learn About Possession
More than 100 Catholic bishops and priests gathered
in Baltimore this weekend for a two-day conference
on exorcism, organized by a bishop who said he
wants U.S. dioceses to be prepared.
Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Ill., the
chairman of the bishops' Committee on Canonical
Affairs and Church Governance, told ABC News' Dan
Harris today that although the need for exorcisms is
rare, it does arise.
"The real hope here and the purpose is to provide
some training so that really every diocese could have
its own resources to handle such inquires," he said.
The purpose of the conference was to educate the
clergy members of the scriptural basis for the need
for exorcism, and to teach them about how the ritual
should be performed.
The many popular movies about exorcism -- from
"The Exorcist", released in 1973, to "The Last
Exorcism," released last year -- may have created
some misconceptions about the ritual.
"Possession is really a very rare thing," he said. "It's
not contagious. It's not like people have to worry like
somehow I'm going to get possessed by a devil."
He said there are many signs of possession,
including a person speaking a language they have
never studied, showing signs of great strength or
having knowledge that it would seem no person
could have.
"The person has some knowledge of hidden things
that they're telling you things about yourself or about
the future that nobody else could possibly know," he
said.
Among other signs, he said, is a person having an
aversion to things that are holy.
"So saying prayers over them or sprinkling them with
holy water and getting a very violent reaction,"
Paprocki said.
For thousands of years, religious leaders from
various denominations have used exorcism rituals to
drive out the devil from those who are possessed.
In the Bible, there are references to Jesus himself
casting demons out of people.
"We don't think that's poetic metaphor," Paprocki said
in an interview with the Catholic News Service.
Steep Decline in U.S. Exorcisms
In America, exorcisms have dropped off
dramatically, but overseas, they are carried out much
more frequently, and sometimes by people who are
frauds or worse.
Harris traveled to the Congo last year with a
"Nightline" crew where he saw Christian pastors
performing cruel, abusive exorcisms on young
children who were accused of being witches.
While many people in America, including many within
the Catholic church, are skeptical about exorcism --
perhaps at least in part because of the sensational
Hollywood portrayals -- it is widely accepted in
Europe and other parts of the world.
Pope John Paul II himself, according to his longtime
private secretary Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz,
performed an exorcism on a woman who was brought
into the Vatican writhing and screaming in what
Dziwisz said was a case of possession by the devil.
In a March interview with the Italian newspaper La
Repubblica, the Rev. Gabriel Amorth, the Vatican's
chief exorcist, strongly defended his work and that of
the Association of Exorcists.
"The devil is not everywhere," he said. "But when he is
present, it is painful."
He says he has treated thousands of cases of demonic
possession.
"The devil is pure spirit, invincible," Amorth said. "He
is shown with the painful blasphemies coming from
the person which he possesses. He can stay hidden.
He can speak different languages. He can transform
himself."
It can take six or seven of Amorth's assistants to hold
down someone possessed. Often, he said, they choke
up nails or shards of glass.
"None of this scares me," he says, touching a small
pouch where he holds the vomited artifacts. "I know
that God is using me for this work."
In 1999, the Vatican revised its guidelines on the Rite
of Exorcism, which explains exactly how Catholic
priests should perform the ritual. But it also
cautioned that "all must be done to avoid the
perception that exorcism is magic or superstition."
No Surge in Possessions
Paprocki told Catholic News Service that this
weekend's conference was needed because he knows
of just five or six exorcists in the United States and
they are overwhelmed with requests to perform the
rite.
"Actually, each diocese should have its own resource
[person]," he said.
But he told Harris that the training session wasn't
called because of a surge in people being possessed.
"Contrary to some reports, this is not an emergency
conference," he said. "There's no upsurge in people
being possessed by devils.
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