This spring, a new school for exorcists opened in Illinois. The Pope Leo XIII Institute
for the “education & training of priests in the holy ministry of
exorcism and deliverance” was launched at the Mundelein Seminary in
February — when the first cohort of trainees arrived for a 10-day
seminar. For just $1,500 (plus $960 room and board; check and credit
card accepted; donations welcome and tax-deductible), priests received
instruction from some top exorcists — using a curriculum that was
reportedly pre-approved by a committee of credentialed bishops.
The time was ripe. Just a month before the school’s quiet opening, headlines the world over broadcast news that
exorcism is back.
The Catholic Church is training a new class of priests to perform
exorcisms: allegedly, to meet a growing public demand. “Diabolical
possessions are on the increase as a result of people subscribing to
occultism,” noted
Father Francesco Bamonte, president of the Italy-based International
Association for Exorcists. “The few exorcists that we have in the
dioceses are often not able to handle the enormous number of requests
for help.”
An ensuing rash of news stories — most of which
referenced the 1973 American horror film “The Exorcist” — must have left
Catholic progressives gritting their teeth. For a generation that
worked hard to sideline wild-eyed talk of Satan, the reappearance of
Catholic priests lashing out against Ouija boards and demonic cults
could only have been unsettling. News articles included juicy interviews
with priest-exorcists — and vivid descriptions
of what demonic possession purportedly looks like: “people babbling in
languages foreign to them, shaking uncontrollably and vomiting nails,
pieces of metal and shards of glass.”
Yet
the story was not reported as thoroughly as it should have been, likely
as a result of the Lord Almighty. The exorcism story is, at its root, a
tale about Catholic theology — and reporters tend to treat this subject
with undue reverence. (As opposed to, say, Vatican intrigue and church
pedophilia scandals, which are examined with more scrutiny.) Many
articles could have done with more “allegedly[s]” and “reportedly[s].”
(We’re talking about vomiting nails, after all). Basic facts were taken
at face value, though they were merely the anecdotes of several priests
whose motives were not explored.
Exorcism is a centuries-old rite,
but it is being sold differently today. Increasingly since 1999, the
church has attempted to coat the practice with a sheen of secular
legitimacy: by requiring that the “demon-possessed” obtain medical
clearance before an exorcism is performed — and by training exorcists to
differentiate between “psychological” and “spiritual” malaise.
But
if we accept, as I do, that there is definitely no such thing as
demonic possession — and, therefore, that this all crazy talk — we
should take pause, and consider the effect that a push for exorcisms
might have on vulnerable Catholics: the mentally ill, the
developmentally impaired and the psychologically traumatized.
Right
off the bat, I’d like to know: Where are the psychiatrists who are
approving the use of exorcism on patients — and can they please stand
up?
Catholic priests who have spoken openly about exorcism tout a predictable line, as reported
by the Telegraph in January: “The rise in demonic cases is a result of
more people dabbling in practices such as black magic, paganism, Satanic
rites and Ouija boards, often exploring the dark arts with the help of
information readily found on the internet.” Never mind that I haven’t
seen a Ouija board since the ’90s — the church says, as the church has
said for decades, that our spiritually plastic ways are guiding us into
Satan’s den.
Other observers point to the growing influence of
Pentecostalism, with its direct and physical experience of God or
films like “The Rite” (2011), which was based on a real American priest.
Exorcism
is “the practice of expelling evil spirits.” By popular accounts, crazy
things happen when those demons are given the boot: “There are foul
smells, vomiting, foaming at the mouth, foul language, psychological
attack as well as a physical attack, languages you’ve never heard, items
flying across the room (what we call poltergeist activity) … voices
that sound like they came out of ‘The Exorcism’ movie,” Rev. Steven Maness, a New Jersey-based exorcist, tells me.
In
theory, only Catholic priests with permission from superiors can
conduct exorcisms. But recent decades have given rise to gaggles of
rogue agents — many of whom charge a hefty fee for their services, as
opposed to affiliated priests who usually claim to exorcise for free.
Some speculate that the church’s new exorcism push is an attempt to
steal back authority from these unaffiliated mavericks. It’s “a response
to public demand, but it’s also about quality control,” John Allen, an
author and Vatican expert, noted
in January. “A lot of it is fairly dodgy theoretically — they are
self-appointed exorcists running around purporting to be acting on
behalf of the Church.” In 2008, a senior Italian priest made £3 million ($5 million) by performing unsanctioned exorcisms at his “House of the Sainted Archangels” in Florence.
Online, lone wolves aren’t hard to find. A quick search leads to the website of one Bob Larson
who, for a fee, offers exorcist “accreditation” at his “International
School of Exorcism ®.” Classes like “Healing the Fragmented Soul” and
“Weapons of Warfare” can be taken by students as young as 18 — and you
can sign up even if you’re “not well-versed in the Bible.” Larson’s
website boasts a flashy sidebar with a “Got Demons?” advertisement. I
clicked to take “the Demon Test ®” — but jumped ship when I was asked
for a credit card number.
The Catholic Church itself has a fuzzy relationship with exorcism, which stretches
back to New Testament times. After the reform-minded Second Vatican
Council of the 1960s, many church officials brushed exorcism aside —
considering it a relic of more superstitious times.
This began to
change in 1999, when the Vatican updated its guidelines on exorcism (“Of
Exorcisms and Certain Supplications”) for the first time since 1614.
The rite was minimally rejigged. “Some of the more colorful descriptions
of the devil were removed,” explained the Vatican expert John Allen. In 2005, Pope John Paul II reportedly “wrote a letter requiring every U.S. bishop to designate an exorcist.”
Movement
picked up under Pope Benedict XVI, who had a penchant for traditional
rituals. In the early aughts, Rome’s Pontifical Academy began
offering classes for clergy and seminarians on “Exorcism and Prayer of
Liberation.” Under Benedict’s reign, a plethora of exorcism-themed conferences were launched; exorcist training organizations and “boot camps” gained newfound prominence.
Today,
Pope Francis makes frequent references to the devil. And last May, he
was accused of performing an exorcism of his own during a St. Peter’s
Square Mass. (TV footage captured the
pontiff gingerly placing his hands on the head of a wheelchair-bound
man, who then began convulsing.) He denied the charge — sort of. The
Vatican released a statement saying that Pope Francis “did not intend to perform any exorcism.”
According to the Vatican’s new exorcism guidelines people who claim to be demonically possessed must be examined
by doctors — to rule out the presence of physical or mental illness.
Many exorcists quoted in newspapers insist that they adhere to this
requirement: stressing that they only perform exorcisms on a small
minority of the people who seek them. Monsignor Mottet, the Iowa priest,
tells me that it took some searching to find a medical professional who
would take his referrals: “Most psychiatrists don’t believe in this.
You’ve got to shop around.”
Assuming that priests really do
require medical clearance (they are not regulated, so it’s hard to say),
who is providing it? Who are these doctors—and are their actions in
line with their obligations as medical professionals? We should be
asking why and which doctors support the use of exorcism on people who
believe that they are possessed by demons.
There is something very
troubling about recent efforts to justify exorcism by scientific means.
Steven Maness, the New Jersey-based reverend, says he has been
performing exorcisms for around a decade. On his website,
Maness writes that his “Institute for Spiritual Forensics” is
“affiliated with the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research (PEAR)
facility at Princeton University.” But I emailed Princeton to confirm
this — and PEAR’s laboratory manager Brenda Dunne told me that she had
“never even heard of them before.”
Last August, the Healing Ministry of Deliverance & Exorcism (which launched the new exorcism class in Chicago) held
an exorcism seminar that was reportedly attended by more than 200
priests and lay teams. One scheduled speaker was the Rev. Chad
Ripperger, who reportedly lectured on “how to distinguish” between the
“psychological” and the “preternatural” when performing a “diagnostic.”
But elsewhere, Ripperger has expressed hostility to “modern psychology.”
In
this light, the new exorcism push seems like an effort to demonize
(quite literally) mental illness and psychological trauma. Indeed, some
of the so-called symptoms of demonic possession — hearing voices,
speaking in strange voices,
feeling watched or haunted or possessed — seem a lot like psychiatric symptoms. One worrisome result: Jennifer Percy’s new book “Demon Camp” profiles American Army veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder who seek out exorcisms at a Pentecostal retreat in Georgia, where a husband-and-wife team perform them by the handful.
Also worrisome are priests like Father Gary Thomas
(inspiration for the hit book and then movie “The Rite”), who notes:
“Eighty percent of the people who come to see me have been sexually
abused … Sexual abuse is a doorway for a demon.” What is this if not
theological victim shaming: blaming sexual assault victims for their own
abuse? For demonic possession, as many Catholics understand it,
involves an element of volition; the devil, in other words, must be invited in.
Even
in the best of cases, what does it mean for someone who believes
himself possessed to “consent” to an exorcism? Maness told me that
family members typically attend exorcisms — and help “to restrain people
if they get violent or start throwing things.” I asked if he could
elaborate on the verb “restrain.” “It’s not an illegal restraint of any
sort,” Maness bristled. “The family is doing it under spiritual
auspices. There is a separation of church and state here in the United
States.”
The thing about
exorcism is that it has built-in theological safeguards that
superficially protect it from chicanery-alleging secularists. Your
exorcism doesn’t seem to be working? You might need more that one! Feeling OK after all? Ah, but the demon may be lying nascent. Everyone else says you’re crazy?
“There’s
a saying,” a weary Maness tells me, near the end of our interview: “The
greatest strength the devil has is that nobody believes in him.”
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