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mek42
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How is it determined whether someone needs psychiatric help or an exorcism?
According to the revised 1999 guidelines, psychiatric conditions must first be eliminated. Daemonic possession symptoms include: “speaking in unknown languages, discerning distant or hidden things, and displaying a physical strength that is at odds with the possessed person’s age or state of health”.How is it determined whether someone needs psychiatric help or an exorcism?
I’d start with psychiatry and then if things go really south an exorcism.According to the revised 1999 guidelines, psychiatric conditions must first be eliminated. Daemonic possession symptoms include: “speaking in unknown languages, discerning distant or hidden things, and displaying a physical strength that is at odds with the possessed person’s age or state of health”.
The Vatican press presentation THE RITE OF exorcisms from 1999 has:I’d start with psychiatry and then if things go really south an exorcism.
As any hospital caretaker can tell you, the third criteria is not reliable. I have seen elderly, frail, demented patients take on the strength of Hercules when they feel threatened. One patient, who could barely walk, caught me by surprise and kicked me in the abdomen so hard that I flew across the room, hit the wall, and had to be taken to the ER. Thankfully, I was not hurt, except for some soreness for awhile. I could tell a few more stories, but I always wondered where that adrenaline came from that could turn a 90 year old frail, arthritic woman into a beast.According to the revised 1999 guidelines, psychiatric conditions must first be eliminated. Daemonic possession symptoms include: “speaking in unknown languages, discerning distant or hidden things, and displaying a physical strength that is at odds with the possessed person’s age or state of health”.
Yes, but these signs aren’t necessarily taken in isolation, if I understand correctly.This is not possession, this is a classic “fight or flight” response to a perceived threat.
Proves my opinionThe Vatican press presentation THE RITE OF exorcisms from 1999 has:
vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccdds/documents/rc_con_ccdds_doc_1999-01-26_il-rito-degli-esorcismi_it.html
(Google Translate)Exorcism is directed at the expulsion of demons or to the liberation from demonic possession through the spiritual authority which Jesus entrusted to his Church. Very different is the case of diseases, especially psychological, whose care falls within the field of medical science. It is therefore important to ensure, before an exorcism is performed, which is dealing with the presence of the Evil One, and not an illness (cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 1172) - (Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1673).
That is horrible! Like the woman that lifted the car off of a beloved, or a person on certain drugs. The example that I was given from a priest, which was observed by the exorcising bishop and a witness, was levitation.As any hospital caretaker can tell you, the third criteria is not reliable. I have seen elderly, frail, demented patients take on the strength of Hercules when they feel threatened. One patient, who could barely walk, caught me by surprise and kicked me in the abdomen so hard that I flew across the room, hit the wall, and had to be taken to the ER. Thankfully, I was not hurt, except for some soreness for awhile. I could tell a few more stories, but I always wondered where that adrenaline came from that could turn a 90 year old frail, arthritic woman into a beast.This is not possession, this is a classic “fight or flight” response to a perceived threat.
Yes, we both posted the same opinion.Proves my opinion
Yes, I’ve thought the same thing, that lots of people display incredible strength, depending on the situation. It’s something that has bothered me about books on exorcism which I have read, is that the priest seems quick to interpret some feat of strength as proof of possession.As any hospital caretaker can tell you, the third criteria is not reliable. I have seen elderly, frail, demented patients take on the strength of Hercules when they feel threatened. One patient, who could barely walk, caught me by surprise and kicked me in the abdomen so hard that I flew across the room, hit the wall, and had to be taken to the ER. Thankfully, I was not hurt, except for some soreness for awhile. I could tell a few more stories, but I always wondered where that adrenaline came from that could turn a 90 year old frail, arthritic woman into a beast.This is not possession, this is a classic “fight or flight” response to a perceived threat.