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Exorcism - Psychological or Paranormal
By T Stokes
There is much argument in the spiritual press right now among scholars,
as to what an exorcism really is. Should it be a psychological process
? Is it a spiritual sickness ? Can depressive treatments help ?
My old colleague, David Tyndall, was featured in the newspapers
recently. David, whom I admire greatly for his expertise, was for
some years a well known Christian cleric, and he confided in me
that although he a bible scholar, a talented grief counsellor and
psychologist, had attended over 30 exorcisms in his 17 years in
the church, had never seen anything which definitely convinced him
of the existence of the paranormal.
Where you draw the guidelines in these issues is crucial.
And for a man of religion to say he did not believe in the supernatural,
when the religious word miracle means white magic, and
the sacraments are themselves a magical rite, is strange indeed.
The Rev. Christopher Neil-Smith would have queues of people all
day long from all over the country, for exorcism, and is rumoured
by in sources to have helped John Lennon, just prior
to, and maybe during, his involvement with Yoko Ono and his assassination.
Rev. Neil-Smith saw the paranormal everywhere he looked, those
who watched him work were amazed at the speed of his skills, and
he taught us so much.
Certainly in my prime I was on call for anywhere in the country,
and for many years, could often do one a week, and in all fairness
the amount of times I saw real phenomena was very rare, yet whenever
I am interviewed for the media, it is these instances that I have
to keep recounting.
I reminded David of the Bishop Wall case, now although this has
never reached the public domain, I know of several of the people
involved, and can vouch for its authenticity.
As I remember it, in 1970 a late night phone call was made by a
group of youngsters, who after a party at a tower block in Londons
Stratford area, contacted the Catholic Church to say that the group
had brought up an intelligence from a game on an ouija board after
a party, and that this intelligence had occupied one of these youngsters,
who was showing extreme paranormal abilities.
This sort of story is part of the chaff that is interspersed with
the precious wheat of knowledge, and in the ordinary way I confess
would take little notice of, but coming from David Tyndall, Fr.
Kenneth Green and Bishop Wall himself, I had to listen and take
notice.
Before an exorcism can take place permission from the Diocesan
Bishop must be granted, and the area exorcist, a man chosen usually
for his holiness brought in, but so serious did the Bishop see the
apparent danger to the youngsters involved, that he went immediately
to the scene phoning both the two experts to meet him at the tower
block.
So all three The Bishop, and the two priests, all experts in the
field remember, met up at the flat to give assistance.
Over the years we perhaps all have met people who have benefited
in their research from ouija boards, and stories of all shades are
told of it. My own opinion is that most of the information is from
the unconscious minds of the sitters, but horror stories alas, are
also very common.
The Bishop who was an outspoken and fearless man in what he believed,
had become well known when he protested at the torture of German
detainees at the Nuremberg war crimes trials, he also objected to
the catholic Church giving last rites and Catholic funerals to I
R A killers and bombers, it is actually canon dogma that no one
who has committed a mortal sin such as a murder can
be buried in consecrated ground. But the Church turns a blind eye
when it wants to, as in recent sex scandals.
Canon Walls story told in the greatest detail by the two
priests, was that when he entered the room in the tower block, the
possessed youngster spoke to him in a deep metallic gravely voice,
and mocked him that he was not a good enough man to exorcise him.
Because he had slept with a woman some 5 years before, and liked
a secret night time drop of Scots Whisky, apparently when the 2
priests searched for guilt and shame on the Bishops face, they knew
this was true.
The sheer strength of the youngster, made it necessary for the
3 churchmen to hold him while the deliverance was attempted, and
at times all 3 were off the ground simultaneously.
Things and objects seemed to just fly round the room, and the Bishop
seized the youth by the lapels and began screaming through the insane
laughter the catholic exorcism rites, I was told that the Bishop
struggled with the beast inside the youth into the small hours of
the morning, before they could all leave the tower block.
The Bishop became extremely ill in the days after, and I was told
his hair went white over the next three weeks.
As a rule I will ask permission to discuss these topics but on
this occasion for this article I did not.
My opinion was asked at the time on the ouija board incident. The
church lumps this in with tarot cards and horoscopes, and I still
maintain that any of these tools in responsible hands do not represent
any threat.
So to answer the esteemed David Tyndall, I am sure that there are
times when the causes are just psychological, other causes can be
paranormal or even emotio/physical.
But I would stress to all who would wish to push the boundaries
of these knowledges,
That as the master occultist Rollo Ahmed, one of Dennis Wheatleys
top pupils once said; "the dangers in the unseen worlds
are very real indeed, and never, ever to be trifled with".
Good advice for the curious.
T Stokes copyright 2005
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