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Welcome to my humble abode. Feel free to sit down a while and warm yourself by my fire. I write here mainly to inspire, encourage, perhaps confront, to empower, and to change. If you leave with a lighter step, an answer to a question, really questioning long held ideas that may not be taking you where you need to go, or with a lot of new things to consider, I will have done my job. Please enjoy your stay. With love, ~Mother Star

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Friday, December 12, 2014

Adventures in RCIA - Deliverance Ministry in the Catholic Church pt. 1

Deliverance ministry was a huge thing for my family when I was growing up and has been important in my life in many ways. Thus, when I felt led to become Catholic, the first thing I started researching was deliverance ministry and exorcism. There is no information on this offered on our RCIA classes, so I have been investigating on my own. I can't help comparing things to what I knew growing up. Since most of this blog series is about ecumenism, I feel I should include those thoughts here as well, so I did.

In "An Exorcist Tells His Story," Fr Gabriel Amorth, a Vatican exorcist, mentioned several things that struck me.
His opening chapter was "The Centrality of Christ." He said before beginning any discussion on how to handle demon power it was important. The deliverance ministers from Protestant Communities that I know would find this a positive and promising way to introduce the topic. It is the center of everything we do as deliverance ministers.

He quotes Mark 16:17 "These signs shall follow them that believe, in my name, they shall cast out demons." Fr. Amorth states that this power is still alive and active and acknowledges that it was given to all those who believe in Jesus. This is what I was taught in Protestantism, too. Fr. Amorth calls this "Prayers of Deliverance."
He places the Exorcisms, rites performed by designated Vatican exorcists, in a different category. It is something the Catholic Church specifically wrote out as a sacramental and it has a specific ritual. This can only be performed by priests, and even then only by those specifically appointed for the job by their Bishops. The written ritual for exorcisms is described as fairly short, a series of required and some merely suggested prayers and some general guidelines. It involves holy water, anointing oil and sanctified salt.
He warned that there were many people, going around claiming to be exorcists and claiming to perform Exorcisms when they do not do so. He said that, at best they offer prayers of deliverance, at worst they go completely outside of Christian practices, practicing witchcraft instead! I can believe this. In protestant communities, there are sometimes similar problems with people doing unscriptural things that could cross the line into witchcraft.
He said most of the books on demon power and how Christians should deal with it were written by protestants, and that a lot of them are good. He said there was a desperate need throughout Christianity for more education and teaching on this topic. I and every Protestant deliverance minister I have ever had any exposure to completely agree with that. He said the Catholic community was hurting the most for more information on the topic, and that this applies to the Bishops and the priesthood, not just among the laity. Most protestant ministers have little or no knowledge how to handle the demonic either, so who is in the worst shape is debatable, though not worth debating.
Fr. Amorth did say that Protestant deliverance ministries, and similar ministries among the laity in the Catholic church are, indeed Christian and effective. He grieved that Catholics had to go to Protestants, who at least could usually help them, or resorted to witch doctors, who ultimately made them worse, because no help was offered by their local Church pastors who were actually responsible for the job. He said never to go to witch doctors or mediums or such for help, but there was no problem with Protestants and Charismatic (a.k.a. "Renewal") lay Catholics, the latter of whom he says usually learn from protestant teaching materials anyway.
Fr. Amorth has witnessed, as have I, that many Protestant deliverance ministries have very powerful effects. Personally, I have also seen very poor examples of deliverance practice, along with the very good and fruitful deliverance ministries in the various Protestant Communities I have been in. The signs of what I would label a very bad deliverance ministry are as follows:

* Ordering the demon to manifest (e.g. to speak, to shake the person, to do something blatantly supernatural and/or frightening/evil to make it really obvious that it is there)
 * Trying to get the demon to tell them its name, or to receive communication from the demon about anything. (Jesus only did that once, just as he only spit on the ground and made mud to put on a blind man's eyes for healing once. It was not typical of his deliverance practices).
Trying to get people to throw up, as if they need to puke disincarnate, non-physical entities physically out of their mouth like an offending piece of food. THAT is ridiculous, unscriptural, and revolting.
* Thinking that (almost) everybody has a demon and needs it cast out.
* That use terms like "submit to deliverance" or telling you to "submit" to whatever they are calling the specific practice they think gets rid of a demon - especially if you must submit the the authority/leadership of their pastor or someone he appoints thereafter, lest it should return otherwise. Run from that, fast.
* Teachings that involve creating fear (e.g. of sleeping or of having anesthesia for surgery, lest a demon might possess one while in that unvigilant state; or a fear of being touched by or near people from other cultures or who look different or do not believe in God, lest one might catch demons from them like catching colds or the flu; or etc.).
* Associating demonic activity with anything outwardly different about a person - different language or culture, different style of dress, handicap, scaring or deformity, or etc. That is not discernment, that is prejudice.

The first two of these do, unfortunately, occur in Fr. Amorth's and the theologian Malachi Martin, author of Hostage to the Devil, descriptions of Catholic Exorcisms. However, I infer that the ritual does not require communication with demons because Fr. Amorth's says that his late mentor, Fr. Candido Amantini, often did not communicate with the demons at all; this had happened gradually, with much experience and time in prayer. Martins' book says that exorcists have a lot of individual control over how they conduct an exorcism. Fr. Amorth discourages people doing prayers of deliverance (exercising their power as believers according to Mark 16:17) from communicating at all with the demons, as it is dangerous in numerous ways. This is the practice most powerful deliverance ministries I have ever known use "Have no fellowship or communication with demons." Period.

Malachi Martins' book says that Vatican exorcists, and their priestly or lay assistants, suffer enormous torments during Exorcisms. They must be prepared to suffer horrendous verbal abuse, supernatural emotional/mental torment, have their darkest secrets screeched out for all to hear, or their fondest memories mocked and attacked in singularly impactful ways, etc. They must prepare the room where it is to be done, and remove most anything in it and sometimes board the windows, as objects can go flying. Martin's informants, all Vatican exorcists, report that they are sometimes hurt by things flying at them ore attacked physically, and this is part of what they must endure in their position, so they just submit to it. So does anyone who assists them. Martin's informants said Exorcisms take several hours at the very least, and can take days, weeks or sometimes years. The effective deliverance ministries I brought up with, including what was classified by Protestants as exorcisms, never take that long. If it is taking that long, then something is wrong and your supposed to stop. Demons are not permitted to speak or do harm.

In Protestantism, people say "possession" whether the demon/demons possess an inanimate object, an animal, or a human. Catholics call it "infested" except in human cases. Fr. Amorth reported that when dealing with a house that is infested with demons because witchcraft was practiced in it, then he has often had to recommend that the residents just move out of it instead.

Official Exorcisms are supposed to be for extreme cases only. He included, at the back of the book, several prayers of deliverance, which I have copied and will probably copy down in the next blog on this subject.
I appreciate the work of Fr. Amorth's mentor, and the testimonies of people who indeed were eventually delivered completely through both these men's ministries. However, I think that if I discerned some need for deliverance ministry, I expect that what the Catholic church calls "prayers of deliverance" would work fine. The deliverance ministry I was brought up in had no testimonies of failure, no communication with devils, and no need to batten down the hatches. A max of 3 days fasting and major prayer was the most that would be needed, and that would be if you dealing with a demon prince such as those mentioned in Ephesians 6:12. 

Since it is sanctioned by experts at the Vatican, and need for this is asserted to be so great, here is a bit from my parents deliverance class from when I was a baby. Notice how brief of time it takes, how safe it is, and that no communication with the devil is ever used. Jesus' words when casting out demons were normally along the lines of "Shut up, and go." That's pretty much what you will be learning to say here. "In the name of Jesus shut up and go."






Godspeed.

~M. S.

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