A
AnonymousforSafety
Guest
This is NOT a prayer request, but rather a search for information, which for your purposes you may regard as abstract, regarding how Catholics could, in theory, counter what are known as psychic attacks. Most of the online information about doing so is not trustworthy as it comes not only from non-Christians, but from the very psychics who, in some cases, are the perpetrators!
Psychic attacks differ from direct satanic attacks in that the primary agent of attack is not an unclean spirit but a malicious person, whose brain’s electrical energy, in a wireless version of “brain-brain interface” experiments, imposes its thoughts via what is called telepathy. This has been known to Hindus since ancient times, then went north to an unscrupulous group of Tibetan Buddhists who used it to communicate their unholy ideas to early Theosophy, and from there it spread to England, and in the late 20th century became part of the “New Age” spiritual fraud.
Of course, some psychics think they are doing something harmless or even beneficial, but they are wrong. In some cases, however, deliberate psychic attacks are used for remote mind control or mental torture. In these cases, I am not certain that such prayers as those of St. Michael and St. Benedict are entirely effective. After all, exorcism prayers are specifically against Satan and subordinate demons, but the attackers here are persons. I know enough of Hinduism (as I wish to know the enemy’s tricks and lies) to know that the forehead is the key to “command” as practiced by psychics and “gurus”, which matches with science’s understanding of the front of the brain as in charge of “executive function”, but I do not know what to do with this information.
What, hypothetically, could a Catholic, acting strictly in accordance with his faith, do to counteract psychic attacks?
Psychic attacks differ from direct satanic attacks in that the primary agent of attack is not an unclean spirit but a malicious person, whose brain’s electrical energy, in a wireless version of “brain-brain interface” experiments, imposes its thoughts via what is called telepathy. This has been known to Hindus since ancient times, then went north to an unscrupulous group of Tibetan Buddhists who used it to communicate their unholy ideas to early Theosophy, and from there it spread to England, and in the late 20th century became part of the “New Age” spiritual fraud.
Of course, some psychics think they are doing something harmless or even beneficial, but they are wrong. In some cases, however, deliberate psychic attacks are used for remote mind control or mental torture. In these cases, I am not certain that such prayers as those of St. Michael and St. Benedict are entirely effective. After all, exorcism prayers are specifically against Satan and subordinate demons, but the attackers here are persons. I know enough of Hinduism (as I wish to know the enemy’s tricks and lies) to know that the forehead is the key to “command” as practiced by psychics and “gurus”, which matches with science’s understanding of the front of the brain as in charge of “executive function”, but I do not know what to do with this information.
What, hypothetically, could a Catholic, acting strictly in accordance with his faith, do to counteract psychic attacks?