By Daniel Burke
Religion News Service
(UNDATED) Pity the poor exorcist, caught between evil spirits eager  to invade human bodies and a society skeptical that demons exist outside  of Hollywood horror movies.
Even some church leaders look askance at exorcists as peddlers of a  practice best left in the Middle Ages. Most American exorcists,  particularly the handful of priests appointed by the Roman Catholic  Church, keep a low profile, hesitating to open themselves -- or their
church -- to ridicule and quacks.
But exorcists may soon be moving out of the shadows.
 
U.S. Catholic bishops are sponsoring a conference this week (Nov. 12-13)  in Baltimore on the "liturgical and pastoral practice of exorcism."  Fifty-six bishops and 66 priests have registered to hear about the  shortage of trained exorcists and the growing interest in the mysterious  rite, according to Catholic News Service.
That's good news for the Rev. Gary Thomas, a loquacious, Silicon Valley  priest eager to dish about exorcism and the art of spiritual warfare.
Thomas is pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Saratoga, Calif., and the  official exorcist for the Diocese of San Jose. According to Bishop  Thomas J. Paprocki of Springfield, Ill., who is helping organize the  Baltimore conference, Thomas is one of only five or six active exorcists  in the U.S.
Last year, Thomas wrote to 121 Catholic bishops and 41 seminary rectors,  urging them to train more priests in demon de-possession. Included with  the letters were copies of "The Rite: The Making of a Modern Exorcist,"  a book by journalist Matt Baglio that details Thomas'
three-year journey from California clergyman to university-trained "spiritual detective."
"I hope that you will take the time to read this book and become better  informed about a subject that many Catholics priests deem superstitious  and medieval," Thomas wrote in the letter to the bishops. These are  apocalyptic times, the priest says, and exorcists are needed
now more than ever.
So, why haven't more bishops appointed exorcists? "Because they do not  believe in them," Thomas answered. "In my opinion, then, they should not  be bishops."
After all, salvation through Jesus is necessary because a certain  someone -- i.e. Satan -- tempted Adam and Eve to eat a very unfortunate  apple, Thomas said, thus bringing sin and evil into the world. Without  Satan, the salvation story falls apart, the priest said.
The first Christian exorcisms were performed by Jesus himself, who freed  a number of sufferers from "the domination of demons," in the words of  the Catholic Catechism -- and instructed his followers to do the same.  "And these signs will accompany those who believe," Jesus says in the  Gospel of Mark, "by using my name they will cast out demons."
Every Catholic still undergoes what the church calls a "simple exorcism"  at baptism, when their godparents recite prayers renouncing Satan and  rinsing the stain of Original Sin.
Serious cases of diabolical possession are usually manifested by  superhuman strength, speaking in unfamiliar languages, and a raging  hostility to sacred objects like crucifixes, according to exorcists;  these require "major exorcisms," which are only to be performed by
priests, with permission from their bishops.
The Catholic Church updated its Rite of Exorcism, in which the power of  Jesus is invoked to expel demons, in 1999, bringing a text written in  1614 into the 20th century. The Vatican warned that exorcists should  "demonstrate maximum circumspection and prudence," and approach the  possessed person as they would anyone who suffers from physical or
psychological illness.
Thomas knew little of this in 2005, when his bishop sent him to Rome to  train as an exorcist. At Regina Apostolorum, a Vatican-sanctioned school  run by the conservative Legion of Christ religious order, Thomas  learned about detecting demons, how spirits fit into Catholic theology,  and the source of the devil's power.
He also apprenticed with a veteran Italian exorcist, sitting in on 80 of  his appointments with reportedly possessed people. In Italy, where more  than half a million people seek out an exorcist annually, exorcisms are  commonplace -- more like going to the dentist than starring in a horror  movie, Baglio reports.
In America, however, exorcism has often been relegated to the dark  corners of the church -- or the silver screen. Most demonic possessions,  however, are nothing like Linda Blair's head-turning role in the famous  1973 movie "The Exorcist," Thomas said.
Thomas said 10 bishops and seminary rectors responded to his letters,  thanking him for sending the book but saying little more. "I thought I  would've gotten a lot more (letters) by now," he said wistfully.
But if the bishops aren't game, Hollywood is. New Line Cinema, a major  movie studio, bought the rights for "The Rite," and hired a Hollywood  veteran to direct.
Thomas said he was paid $25,000 when the film rights were sold, all of  which he will give away; exorcists are not allowed to take money for  their services, and the priest said he doesn't want to get a big head.
"The worst thing for me would be to become a celebrity," Thomas said.  "That would be a great way to derail me; and that's exactly what the  devil wants."
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