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[[Category:Definitions]]
[[Category:Definitions]]
Demonic possession,is often the term used to describe the control over a human form by the Devil himself or one of his assigned advocates.Descriptions of demonic possessions often include: erased memories or personalities, convulsions, “fits” and fainting as if one were dying.[1] Unlike in channelling or other benign forms of possession, the subject has no control over the possessing entity and so it will persist until forced to leave the victim, usually through a form of exorcism. Many cultures and religions contain some concept of demonic possession, but the details vary considerably. Some cultures, in particular the Roma people believe that demons can also possess animals, plants, deceased persons or inanimate objects.
'''Demonic possession''' is held by many belief systems to be the spirit possession of an individual by a malevolent preternatural being, commonly known as a [[demon]]. Descriptions of demonic possessions often include erased memories or personalities, convulsions, “fits” and fainting as if one were dying.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Ferber |first=Sarah |title=Demonic Possession and Exorcism in Early Modern France |location=London |publisher=Routledge |year=2004 |pages=25, 116 |isbn=0415212642 }}</ref> Other descriptions include access to hidden knowledge (gnosis) and foreign languages (xenoglossia), drastic changes in vocal intonation and facial structure, the sudden appearance of injuries (scratches, bite marks) or lesions, and superhuman strength. Unlike in channeling, the subject has no control over the possessing entity and so it will persist until forced to leave the victim, usually through a form of exorcism.


The oldest references to demonic possession are from the Sumerians, who believed that all diseases of the body and mind were caused by "sickness demons" called gidim or gid-dim [2]. The priests who practiced exorcisms in these nations were called ashipu (sorcerer) as opposed to an asu (physician) who applied bandages and salves[3]. Many cuneiform tablets contain prayers to certain gods asking for protection from demons, while others ask the gods to expel the demons that have invaded their bodies.
Many cultures and religions contain some concept of demonic possession, but the details vary considerably. The oldest references to demonic possession are from the Sumerians, who believed that all diseases of the body and mind were caused by "sickness demons" called ''gidim'' or ''gid-dim''.<ref>[http://www.sumerian.org/sumlogo.htm Sumerian "gidim"]</ref> The priests who practised exorcisms in these nations were called ''ashipu'' (sorcerer) as opposed to an ''asu'' (physician) who applied bandages and salves.<ref>[http://www.indiana.edu/~ancmed/meso.HTM Indiana Univ: ''MEDICINE IN ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA'']</ref> Many cuneiform tablets contain prayers to certain gods asking for protection from demons, while others ask the gods to expel the demons that have invaded their bodies.


Most illustrations portray these spirits as small, gruesome characters with inhuman distinctiveness. Often referenced as a witch’s “familiars” demons and other evil-spirits employed by witches are also displayed as society’s cast-offs or those beings incapable of caring for themselves thus seeking refuge with a witch. Witches would provide shelter and nourishment via the “witch’s teat” in exchange for the valuable services of the familiars in addition to spells, potions and other attempts by a witch to case evil or “maleficium” over another.[4]
Shamanic cultures also believe in demon possession and shamans perform exorcisms. In these cultures, diseases are often attributed to the presence of a vengeful spirit (or loosely termed ''demon'') in the body of the patient. These spirits are more often the spectres of animals or people wronged by the bearer, the exorcism rites usually consisting of respectful offerings or sacrificial offerings.


Nevertheless there are no descriptions of specific punishments against possessed persons as it happened later many times in Christian societies. Shamanic cultures also believe in demon possession and shamans perform exorcisms too; in these cultures often diseases are attributed to the presence of an evil spirit or demon in the body of the patient.
Christianity holds that possession derives from the [[Devil]], i.e. [[Satan]], or one of his lesser demons. In many Christian belief systems, Satan and his demons are actually [[fallen angel]]s.<ref>"An Exorcist Tells his Story" by Fr. Gabriele Amorth translated by Nicoletta V. MacKenzie, Ignatius Press, San Francisco, 1999.</ref>


Demon possession became a plague among Christians; exorcisms and executions were performed on persons allegedly possessed; many mentally ill people were accused of being demon-possessed and were killed. The Malleus Maleficarum speaks about some exorcisms that can be done in different cases. In Christianity, animals were also believed to be able of being possessed; during the Middle Ages, hundreds of cats, goats, and other animals were slain because of the idea that they were either an incarnation of a demon or possessed by one.


==Bible Accounts==
According to the ''Catholic Encyclopedia'':<ref> "Demonical possession". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913.</ref>
:"In the Old Testament, we have only one instance, and even that is not very certain. We are told that "an evil spirit from the Lord troubled" (Saul Samuel 16:14). The Hebrew [http://www.blueletterbible.org/cgi-bin/words.pl?word=07307 rûah] need not imply a personal influence, though, if we may judge from Josephus (Ant. Jud., VI, viii, 2; ii, 2), the Jews were inclined to give the word that meaning in this very case. In New Testament times, however, the phenomenon had become very common."


== Demonic possession in the Bible ==
The New Testament mentions several episodes in which Jesus drove out demons from persons:
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia: Demonical Possession:
"In the Old Testament we have only one instance, and even that is not very certain. We are told that "an evil spirit from the Lord troubled" Saul (1 Samuel 16:14). The Hebrew rûah need not imply a personal influence, though, if we may judge from Josephus (Ant. Jud., VI, viii, 2; ii, 2), the Jews were inclined to give the word that meaning in this very case. In New-Testament times, however, the phenomenon had become very common."
 
The New Testament mentions several opportunities in which Jesus drove out demons from diseased persons, believed to be these entities responsible for those illnesses.


*Matthew 4:23-25: Demon-possessed persons are healed by Jesus (also Luke 6:17-19).
*Matthew 4:23-25: Demon-possessed persons are healed by Jesus (also Luke 6:17-19).
*Matthew 7:21-23: Many will drive out demons in Jesus' name (also Mark 16:17; Luke 10:17; Acts 5:16; 8:7).
*Matthew 7:21-23: Many will drive out demons in Jesus' name (also Mark 16:17; Luke 10:17; Acts 5:16; 8:7).
*Matthew 8:14-17: Jesus healed many demon-possessed (also Mark 1:29-39; Luke 4:33-41).
*Matthew 8:14-17: Jesus healed many demon-possessed (also Mark 1:29-39; Luke 4:33-41).
*Matthew 8:28-34: Jesus sent a herd of demons from two men into a herd of about two thousand pigs (also Mark 5:1-20; Luke 8:26-39, both referring to only one man).
*Matthew 8:28-34: Jesus sent a herd of demons from two men into a herd of pigs ("about two thousand" pigs, according to the account at Mark 5:1-20; both Mark's account and Luke 8:26-39, mention only the one man).
*Matthew 9:32-34: Jesus made a demon-possessed and mute man speak, the Pharisees said it was by the power of Beelzebub (also Mark 3:20-22).
*Matthew 9:32-34: Jesus made a demon-possessed mute man speak, the Pharisees said it was by the power of Beelzebub (also Mark 3:20-22).
*Matthew 10:1-8: The Twelve Apostles given the authority to drive out evil spirits (also Mark 3:15; 6:7; 6:13; Luke 9:1; 10:17).
*Matthew 10:1-8: The Twelve Apostles given the authority to drive out evil spirits (also Mark 3:15; 6:7; 6:13; Luke 9:1; 10:17).
*Matthew 11:16-19: "this generation" said that John the Baptist was possessed by a demon (also Luke 7:31-35).
*Matthew 11:16-19: "this generation" said that John the Baptist was possessed by a demon (also Luke 7:31-35).
*Matthew 12:22-32: Jesus healed a demon-possessed blind and dumb man (also Luke 11:14-23; 12:10; Mark 3:20-30).
*Matthew 12:22-32: Jesus healed a demon-possessed blind and dumb man (also Luke 11:14-23; Mark 3:20-30).
*Matthew 12:43-45: Jesus told an allegory of nasty spirits coming back home, that is to the human body where they have lived before (also Luke 11:24-26).
*Matthew 12:43-45: Jesus told an allegory of nasty spirits coming back home, that is, to the human body where they have lived before (also Luke 11:24-26).
*Matthew 15:21-28: Jesus expelled a demon from the body of the daughter of a Canaanite woman (also Mark 7:24-30).
*Matthew 15:21-28: Jesus expelled a demon from the body of the daughter of a Canaanite woman (also Mark 7:24-30).
*Matthew 17:14-21: Jesus healed a lunatic by driving out a demon from him (also Mark 9:14-29; Luke 9:37-49).
*Matthew 17:14-21: Jesus healed a boy by driving out a demon from him (also Mark 9:14-29; Luke 9:37-49).
*Mark 1:21-28: Jesus expelled a nasty spirit from a man (also Luke 4:31-37).
*Mark 1:21-28: Jesus expelled a nasty spirit from a man (also Luke 4:31-37).
*Mark 9:38-40: A non-Christian is seen driving out demons in Jesus' name (also Luke 9:49-50).
*Mark 9:38-40: A non-Christian is seen driving out demons in Jesus' name (also Luke 9:49-50).
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*Acts 8:6-8: At the teaching of Philip the Evangelist in Samaria, evil spirits came out of many.
*Acts 8:6-8: At the teaching of Philip the Evangelist in Samaria, evil spirits came out of many.
*Acts 8:18-19: Simon Magus offered to buy the power of Laying on of hands.
*Acts 8:18-19: Simon Magus offered to buy the power of Laying on of hands.
*Acts 10:38: St. Peter said Jesus healed all who were under the power of the devil.
*Acts 10:38: St. Peter said Jesus healed all who were under the power of the Devil.
*Acts 16:16-24: Paul and Silas were imprisoned for driving a future-telling spirit out of a slave girl.
*Acts 16:16-24: Paul and Silas were imprisoned for driving a future-telling spirit out of a slave girl.
*Acts 19:11-12: Handkerchiefs and aprons touched by Paul cured illness and drove out evil spirits.
*Acts 19:11-12: Handkerchiefs and aprons touched by Paul cured illness and drove out evil spirits.
*Acts 19:13-20: Seven sons of Sceva attempted to drive out evil spirits by saying: "In the name of Jesus, whom Paul preaches, I command you to come out." But because they did not have faith in Jesus, they were unsuccessful and were actually driven from that house by the possessed.
*Acts 19:13-20: Seven sons of Sceva attempted to drive out evil spirits by saying: "In the name of Jesus, whom Paul preaches, I command you to come out." But because they did not have faith in Jesus, they were unsuccessful and were actually driven from that house by the possessed.
Revelation 18:2: The Whore of Babylon is a home for demons, evil spirits and unclean birds.
*Revelation 18:2: The Whore of Babylon is a home for demons, evil spirits and unclean birds.
*Acts of the Apostles contains also a number of references to people coming under the influence of the Holy Spirit (1:8, 2:4, 2:17-18, 2:38, 4:8, 4:31, 6:3-5, 7:55, 8:15-19, 8:39, 9:17, 10:19, 11:12-16, 11:28, 13:9, 16:6-7, 19:2-6, 20:23, 21:11, 23:8-9) which is believed to be a good thing in contrast to demonic influence.
 
== Demonic possession in Christianity ==
Despite its widespread currency, including traditional use among Christian writers, the expressions "demonic possession" or "possessed by demons" are problematic and controversial from a Biblical perspective. Despite English language translation tradition, the Bible never refers to people as being possessed by demons. The main New Testament expressions referred to demonic influence are:
 
'to be demonized' (daimonizomai) - this is the most frequent expression.
 
'having a demon' (echon daimonion) - note it is the person who possesses the demon, not the demon who possesses the person.[5]
Certainly the language of "possession", like other mistranslations, has gained a life of its own, as is reflected in the title of this article. Murphy comments on the traditional language of "possession": "Fortunately, the practice of using these terms is now in the process of correction because of renewed historical-contextual studies of Scripture and renewed experience with the demonized."[6] Some allow the term "possession" but restrict its use only for the most extreme cases, which are thought to be extremely rare. [7]
 
The literal view of demonization is still held by a number of Christian denominations. Official Catholic doctrine affirms that demonic oppression can occur as distinguished from mental illness, but stresses that cases of mental illness should not be misdiagnosed as demonic influence. Catholic exorcisms can occur only under the authority of a bishop and in accordance with strict rules; a simple exorcism also occurs during Baptism (s1673 Catechism of the Catholic Church,). As demonic possession became more and more prevalent, the Catholic Church began to actively seek out those whom were apparently possessed by demons. The Catholic Church, looking to expand its ever growing sphere of influence and in an effort to revive its somewhat tarnished reputation, truly believed in its ability to strengthen its organization through its exorcism of demons from possessed humans. For a period in history, the Catholic Church had fallen out of favor with a great deal of its parishioners and in an effort to restore faith, the Catholic Church came to increase its presence in the public by leading the effort to exorcise demons manifested within human bodies.[8]
 
A great deal of controversy surrounds the book War on the Saints originally published in 1912. The original edition is long out of print. Over the years various publishing houses have produced abridged and pseudo-unabridged editions which have largely eliminated the original thrust of the book as a resource to the Christian faced with combating demon influences.


The concept of demon influence in Christianity was similar to that of Jewish belief. In the New Testament Jesus is reported to have encountered people who were demonized and to have driven the "evil spirits" out of these demoniacs. In the 4th century, St. Hillary asserted that demons entered the bodies of humans to use them as if they were theirs, and also proposed that the same could happen with animals, expelling a demon from his camel to prove his theory.[citation needed] In the 5th century, Gregory the Great (later Pope Gregory I) wrote about a nun that was oppressed by a demon that penetrated her body via a lettuce she had eaten.
Acts of the Apostles also contains a number of references to people coming under the influence of the Holy Spirit (1:8, 2:4, 2:17-18, 2:38, 4:8, 4:31, 6:3-5, 7:55, 8:15-19, 8:39, 9:17, 10:19, 11:12-16, 11:28, 13:9, 16:6-7, 19:2-6, 20:23, 21:11, 23:8-9) which is believed to be a good thing in contrast to demonic influence.


Later, in the Middle Ages, a list of symptoms required to confirm demonic oppression was carefully prepared:
The 1902 work ''Demonic possession in the New Testament'' by Rev. William Menzies Alexander attempted to explain accounts of possession in the Synoptic Gospels, outlining their historical, medical and theological aspects.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=n1QralN_4CcC&dq |title=Demonic Possession in the New Testament |author=Alexander, William Menzies |publisher=Kessinger Publishing |year=2003}}</ref>


*The ability to curse/blaspheme in languages unknown to the person.
*The ability to find secret things, read the mind, and divine future happenings.
*The ability to make physical efforts abnormal for that person.
*The act of spitting or vomiting every object the demons would have made the person swallow.
*Other symptoms occasionally listed include:
*Fear and/or hatred of holy objects.
*The inability to say the word "Christ".


Normally, only one of these symptoms was enough to determine demonization. It was said by people of that time that oppressed persons had an ugly and terrible aspect, wrathful eyes, bluish lips, foam coming off their mouth; their body was almost permanently shaking, when they spoke their tongue came abnormally out, their speech consisted mainly in curses and blasphemies, and they were able to imitate animal sounds as well as to speak with human-like voices with a strange sound and a different pitch of theirs. However, these symptoms as described are not always in accordance with scripture. The New Testament's description of people who had evil spirits includes ability of divination (Acts 16:16)and great strength (Act 19:16), among others, but shows those with evil spirits can speak of Christ (Acts 19:16, Mark 3:11). According to Catholic theologians demonization is involuntary and allowed by God to test a person (for more details about God's tests on persons see Job). Involuntary demonization according to these theologians, cannot be negated because this would imply the negation of the cases mentioned in the New Testament (12, some of them repeated in more than one Gospel) and, by extension, the veracity of it. Voluntary demonization can be also mentioned, favored by drugs, alcohol and/or frantic dances, like those of certain ancient cults (i.e. the Bacchanals), still practiced in some Shamanic societies, and alleged to be also practiced by witches during their Sabbaths. Another form of voluntary oppression is that in which a person offers his/her body to be influenced by a demon to serve as a medium among him/her and the other attendants to the reunion.
==Christianity==
Catholic exorcists differentiate between "ordinary" Satanic/demonic activity or influence (mundane everyday ''temptations'') and "extraordinary" Satanic/demonic activity, which can take six different forms, ranging from complete control by Satan or some demon(s) to voluntary submission:<ref name="amorth">p. 33, ''An Exorcist Tells his Story'', by Fr. Gabriele Amorth, translated by Nicoletta V. MacKenzie; Ignatius Press, San Francisco, 1999.</ref>


The Churches led an active role in the campaign against witchcraft as it distributed pamphlets and other material identifying the various components of a witch, witchcraft, sorcery and demonology. This information included what “signs” to use to identify possible possessions and even information regarding one’s safety around certain areas of their countryside during the night. The Church offered suggestions or a how-to on safe-guarding one’s home. Suggestions ranged from, “dousing a household with Holy water...,” placing wax and herbs on thresholds to “ward off witches occult,” and avoiding certain areas of townships known to be frequented by witches and Devil worshippers after dark.[9]
#Possession, in which Satan or some demon(s) takes full possession of a person's body without their knowledge or consent, so the victim is therefore morally blameless.
#Obsession, which includes sudden attacks of irrationally obsessive thoughts, usually culminating in suicidal ideation, and typically influences dreams.
#Oppression, in which there is no loss of consciousness or involuntary action, such as in the biblical Book of Job in which Job was tormented by a series of misfortunes in business, family, and health.
#External physical pain caused by Satan or some demon(s).
#Infestation, which affects houses, things, or animals; and
#Subjugation, in which a person voluntarily submits to Satan or some demon(s).


== New Age view of demonic possession ==
In ''[http://books.google.com.sg/books/about/Hostage_to_the_Devil.html?id=vYw8PgAACAAJ&redir_esc=y Hostage to the Devil]'', Malachi Martin also mentions a type of demonic attack called "familiarization". He writes:
Demonic possession is mentioned at length in Carlos Castaneda’s The Active Side of Infinity, in which it is claimed that human civilization is demonic in origin. Demons taught primordial humans how to think. Thinking leads to self-reflection: a constant rumination on a self-important “me” which is at war with other people and its environment. This self-reflection enabled humans to become a thinking species, but it also reduced them to slavery to the demons, termed “fliers”, who suck humans’ energy: “By playing on our self-reflection … the predators create flares of awareness that they proceed to consume in a ruthless, predatory fashion.  


They give us inane problems that force those flares of awareness to rise, and in this manner they keep us alive in order for them to be fed with the energetic flare or our pseudoconcerns.” (p221) According to this view many (if not most) civilized humans are demon-possessed; and that the invention of agriculture was not so much a matter of humans farming plants and animals for food as it was demons farming humans for food.
{{Cquote|''The possessing spirit in "familiarization" is seeking to "come and live with" the subject. If accepted, the spirit becomes the constant and continuously present companion of the possessed. The two "persons", the "familiar" and the "possessed", remain separate and distinct. The "possessed" is aware of his "familiar"''.<ref>Malachi Martin, ''Hostage to the Devil'', Harper, San Francisco, 1992, p. 260.</ref>}}


== Demonic possession in medicine ==
True demonic or satanic possession has been characterized since the Middle Ages, in the Rituale Romanum, by the following four typical characteristics:<ref>p.25, ''The Vatican's Exorcists'' by Tracy Wilkinson; Warner Books, New York, 2007</ref><ref>''The rite: the making of a modern exorcist'' by Matt Baglio; Doubleday, New York, 2009.</ref><ref>[http://www.ewtn.com/library/prayer/roman2.txt The Roman Ritual] Translated by Philip T. Weller, S.T.D.; Copyright 1964</ref>
Demonic possession is not a valid psychiatric or medical diagnosis recognized by either the DSM-IV or the ICD-10. This is because one of the tenets of science is that there must be natural causes for natural phenomena and thus does not look outside of the physical or natural realm. Those who profess a belief in demonic possession have sometimes ascribed the symptoms associated with mental illnesses such as hysteria, mania, psychosis, or dissociative identity disorder to possession. In cases of dissociative identity disorder in which the alter personality is questioned as to it's identity, 29% are reported to identify themselves as demons.[10] There is, however, a mental disease called demonomania or demonopathy. This is a monomania in which the patient believes that he or she is possessed by one or more demons.
#Manifestation of superhuman strength.
#Speaking in tongues or languages that the victim cannot know.
#Revelation of knowledge, distant or hidden, that the victim cannot know.
#Blasphemous rage and an aversion to holy symbols or relics.


From another point of view, those who accuse others of being demon-possessed have to be mentioned too. In cases like those of the witches of Salem, Massachusetts, or the nuns who accused father Urbain Grandier, a collective hysteria takes place, involving more than one person "contagiously" convinced of that "truth". In particular cases (sometimes a small number of persons, e.g., some members of a family or a small group of friends, but generally one person) the accusation of demon possession is caused because of the diseases above-mentioned or the phenomenon of collective hysteria. Another case that is necessary to mention is that of simulation; simulation is generally considered a psychological alteration of the human behaviour rather than a psychiatric disease, but there are in Medicine cases of simulators mentally ill that act by compulsion. It was common the case of children and teenagers accusing people of having bewitched them and feigning to be demon-possessed, and later apologising for that; unfortunately, due to the processes carried out by the religious tribunals, generally those innocents had already lost their lives, and that was the cause of many of those apologies: the feeling of being guilty, or remorse. There were several cases of simulation in England, most of them between 1533 and 1697, until accusations made by children were prohibited in 1718; there were cases of simulation in France and America too; it is thought that the collective hysteria that generated the accusation against Urbain Grandier was started by a case of simulation. It rests to say that a person easy to influence can be convinced by third parties of being demon-possessed.


Medicine can explain some aspects of the "symptoms" shown by those persons allegedly possessed; it is known that "supernatural strength" is common in some cases of insanity (mania, energumens, etc.).
The Bible indicates that people can be possessed by demons but that the demons respond to Jesus's authority:


== Demonic possession in fiction ==
{{Cquote|''In the synagogue there was a man possessed by a demon, an evil spirit. He cried out at the top of his voice,  34 “Ha! What do you want with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are—the Holy One of God!” 35 “Be quiet!” Jesus said sternly. “Come out of him!” Then the demon threw the man down before them all and came out without injuring him. 36 All the people were amazed and said to each other, “What is this teaching? With authority and power he gives orders to evil spirits and they come out!”  37 And the news about him spread throughout the surrounding area''. (Luke 4:33-35 NIV)<ref>{{cite web|title=Luke 4:33-37 (New International Version)|url=http://www.biblestudytools.com/luke/passage.aspx?q=luke+4:33-37|publisher=By ''Biblestudytools.com''|accessdate=July 5, 2013}}</ref>}}
The theme of demon possession has been by far better exploited by cinema than literature. Maybe the most known work on the subject is the 1973 film The Exorcist, based on the book of the same name, which portrays a typical mediaeval case of demonic possession in which the victim shows all required characteristics to confirm the status of possessed.


This was later satirised in 1990 by Repossessed. End of Days (1999) shows another form of demonic possession suggested by Hilarius. Possession (taken seriously) is central to the recent TV series Hex (TV series). The TV series Supernatural has also explored themes of demonic possession, most recently in the second season episode Born Under a Bad Sign.
It also indicates that demons can possess animals as in the exorcism of the Gerasene demoniac:


== Notes and references ==
{{Cquote|''When Jesus stepped ashore, he was met by a demon-possessed man from the town. For a long time this man had not worn clothes or lived in a house, but had lived in the tombs. 28 When he saw Jesus, he cried out and fell at his feet, shouting at the top of his voice, “What do you want with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? I beg you, don’t torture me!” 29 For Jesus had commanded the impure spirit to come out of the man. Many times it had seized him, and though he was chained hand and foot and kept under guard, he had broken his chains and had been driven by the demon into solitary places. 30 Jesus asked him, "What is your name?" “Legion,” he replied, because many demons had gone into him. 31 And they begged Jesus repeatedly not to order them to go into the Abyss. 32 A large herd of pigs was feeding there on the hillside. The demons begged Jesus to let them go into the pigs, and he gave them permission. 33 When the demons came out of the man, they went into the pigs, and the herd rushed down the steep bank into the lake and was drowned''. (Luke 8:27-32 NIV)<ref>{{cite web|title=Luke 8 - The Healing of a Demon-possessed Man|url=http://www.tobechristian.org/luke_8__the_healing_of_a_demon.htm|publisher=By ''www.tobechristian.org''|accessdate=July 5, 2013}}</ref>}}
1 Ferber, Sarah, Demonic Possession and Exorcism in Early Modern France(London, Routledge, 2004, 25, 116).


2 Sumerian "gidim"
The literal view of demonization is still held by a number of Christian denominations.  Official Catholic doctrine affirms that demonic possession can occur as distinguished from mental illness, but stresses that cases of mental illness should not be misdiagnosed as demonic influence. Catholic exorcisms can occur only under the authority of a bishop and in accordance with strict rules; a simple exorcism also occurs during Baptism (''CCC'' 1673). In charismatic Christianity, deliverance ministries are activities carried out by individuals or groups aimed at solving problems related to demons and spirits, especially possession of the body and soul, but not the spirit as ministries like Ellel Ministries International, Don Dickerman Ministries and Neil T. Anderson explicitly teach that a Christian can not have demons in their spirit because the Holy Spirit lives there, though they can have demons in their body or soul due to inner emotional wounds, sexual abuse, satanic ritual abuse.<ref>http://www.dondickerman.net/id70.html</ref> This is usually known as partial possession or demonic infestation, as opposed to outside demonic oppression which does not reside in any of the 3 parts of a person: body, [[soul]], spirit.


3 Indiana Univ: MEDICINE IN ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA
A great deal of controversy surrounds the book ''War on the Saints'' by Jessie Penn-Lewis published in 1912 as a resource to the Christian faced with combating demon influences.


4 Willis, Deborah, Malevolent Nurture: Witch-Hunting and Maternal Power in Early Modern England (New York, Cornell University Press, 1995)
In the New Testament Jesus is reported to have encountered people who were demonized and to have driven the "evil spirits" out of these demoniacs. In the 4th century, St. Hillary asserted that demons entered the bodies of humans to use them as if they were theirs, and also proposed that the same could happen with animals.


5 Murphy, Ed. 1996.The Handbook for Spiritual Warfare. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, Rev. Ed., p.51
The New Testament's description of people who had evil spirits includes a capacity for hidden knowledge (e.g., future events, innermost thoughts of the people around them) (Acts 16:16) and great strength (Act 19:16), among others, and shows those with evil spirits can speak of Christ (Acts 19:16, Mark 3:11). According to Catholic theologians, demonic assault can be involuntary<ref name="amorth"/> and allowed by [[God]] to test a person. Involuntary demonic assault, according to these theologians, cannot be denied because this would imply the negation of the cases mentioned in the New Testament (12, some of them repeated in more than one Gospel). However, in the overwhelming majority of cases of alleged demonic possession in modern times, the victim can suffer due to any of a number of personal initiatives: occult practices, mortal sin, loss of faith, or psychological trauma, among others. Furthermore, Malachi Martin goes as far as to say "...no person can be Possessed without some degree of cooperation on his or her part," and "The effective cause of Possession is the voluntary collaboration of an individual, through his faculties of mind and will, with one or more of those bodiless, genderless creatures called demons."<ref>Martin, Malachi, Hostage to the Devil (San Francisco, Harper, 1992, preface p.xx.)</ref>


6 Murphy, Ed. 1996. The Handbook for Spiritual Warfare. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, Rev. Ed., p.50
In previous centuries, the Christian church offered suggestions on safeguarding one’s home. Suggestions ranged from dousing a household with Holy water, placing wax and herbs on thresholds to “ward off witches occult,” and avoiding certain areas of townships known to be frequented by witches and Devil worshippers after dark.<ref>{{cite book |last=Broedel |first=Hans Peter |title=The [[Malleus Maleficarum]] and the Construction of Witchcraft |location=Great Britain |publisher=Manchester University Press |year=2003 |pages=32–33 |isbn= }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Barajo |first=Caro |title=World of the Witches |location=Great Britain |publisher=University of Chicago Press |year=1964 |page=73 |isbn= }}</ref>


7 MacNutt, Francis. 1995. Deliverance from evil Spirits: a practical manual. Grand Rapids: Chosen Books. p.71
T. B. Joshua, a Nigerian pastor, has one of the most prominent 'deliverance' ministries, releasing hundreds of videos on YouTube and his Christian television station, Emmanuel TV, purporting to show individuals being 'delivered' from apparent 'demonic possession'.


8 Ferber, Sarah, Demonic Possession and Exorcism in Early Modern France (London, Routledge, 2004, 38-39)


9 Broedel, Hans Peter, The Malleus Malfeicarum and the Construction of Witchcraft (Great Britain, Manchester University Press, 2003, 32-33), Barajo, Caro, World of the Witches, (Great Britain, University of Chicago Press, 1964, 73)
==Medicine and Psychology==
Demonic possession is not recognized as a psychiatric or medical diagnosis by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders or the ICD-10 Chapter V: Mental and behavioural disorders. There are many human conditions thought by many to be demonic possession but classed by psychiatry as psychological ailments, particularly dissociative identity disorder. In cases of dissociative identity disorder in which the alter personality is questioned as to its identity, 29% are reported to identify themselves as demons,<ref>[http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/erlendsson_01_jun_03.pdf Microsoft Word - Haraldur Erlendsson 1.6.03 Multiple Personality<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> but psychiatrists see this as a mental disease called demonomania or demonopathy, a monomania in which the patient believes that he or she is possessed by one or more demons.<ref>[http://www.thefreedictionary.com/demonomania Demonomania]</ref>  Some Catholics, contrary to psychiatry, recognize that "those human conditions which psychiatry has given names to under 'psychiatric disorders' are manifestations of demonic activity in those human beings, demonic activity which the human being has no participation of will."<ref>http://josephfg.tripod.com/catholicism/psych.html</ref>


10 http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/erlendsson_01_jun_03.pdf


11 Castaneda, Carlos. 1998. The Active side of Infinity. NYC HarperCollins.
==In Fiction==
The 1973 film, ''The Exorcist'', is based on the book of the same name and portrays a fictional case of demonic possession loosely inspired by the case of "Robbie Mannheim".


== See also ==
In 1995, the US soap opera ''Days of Our Lives'' featured the character Dr. Marlena Evans, played by Deidre Hall, in a demonic possession storyline.
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exorcism Exorcism]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Exorcists List of Exorcists]
*[[Demonology]]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiritual_possession Spiritual possession]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abduction_phenomenon (Alien) Abduction phenomenon]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-abduction_syndrome Post-abduction syndrome]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Exorcism_of_Emily_Rose The Exorcism of Emily Rose]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_American_Haunting An American Haunting]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anneliese_Michel Anneliese Michel]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_Talbye_Trial Dorothy Talbye Trial]


== References ==
Demonic possession is a common theme in the American TV series ''Supernatural'', which was first broadcast in 2005.
1 Ferber, Sarah, Demonic Possession and Exorcism in Early Modern France(London, Routledge, 2004, 25, 116).


2 Sumerian "gidim"
In the 2006 film ''5ive Girls'', several characters are possessed by the demonic spirit named Legion.


3 Indiana Univ: MEDICINE IN ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA
In the 2007 Spanish horror film series ''REC'', people (and animals) become infected with a contagious demonic virus. The outbreak started with the possession of a Portuguese young girl, Tristana Medeiros.


4 Willis, Deborah, Malevolent Nurture: Witch-Hunting and Maternal Power in Early Modern England (New York, Cornell University Press, 1995)
Several characters are possessed by a demonic spirit named Toby in the ''Paranormal Activity'' series. Katie is possessed and kills her boyfriend Micah in ''Paranormal Activity''. Kristi (Katie's sister) is briefly possessed and is successfully exorcised by her husband Daniel, but both are killed by a possessed Katie who then kidnaps their son Hunter in ''Paranormal Activity 2''. Toby takes over Katie (as a child) at the end of ''Paranormal Activity 3''. Katie reappears and the demon still is in her in ''Paranormal Activity 4''.


5 Murphy, Ed. 1996.The Handbook for Spiritual Warfare. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, Rev. Ed., p.51
Demonic possession is an important element in the ''Evil Dead'' film series. In the films, possessed people take on a zombie-like appearance.


6 Murphy, Ed. 1996. The Handbook for Spiritual Warfare. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, Rev. Ed., p.50


7 MacNutt, Francis. 1995. Deliverance from evil Spirits: a practical manual. Grand Rapids: Chosen Books. p.71
==See Also==
* [[Demonology]]


8 Ferber, Sarah, Demonic Possession and Exorcism in Early Modern France (London, Routledge, 2004, 38-39)


9 Broedel, Hans Peter, The Malleus Malfeicarum and the Construction of Witchcraft (Great Britain, Manchester University Press, 2003, 32-33), Barajo, Caro, World of the Witches, (Great Britain, University of Chicago Press, 1964, 73)
==Notes==
{{reflist}}


10 http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/erlendsson_01_jun_03.pdf


== External links ==
==External Links==
*[http://rjohara.net/gen/knapp/ Demonic possession of Elizabeth Knapp]: Cotton Mather's widely-cited report on the demonic possession of Elizabeth Knapp of Massachusetts (1701)
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demonic_possession The original source of this article at Wikipedia]
*[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12315a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia "Demonical Possession"]
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12315a.htm ''Catholic Encyclopedia'' "Demonical Possession"]
*[http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Possession Encyclopedia Britannica: Possession]
* Andrew Lang, [http://www.psychanalyse-paris.com/848-Demoniacal-Possession.html Demoniacal Possession], ''The Making of Religion'', (Chapter VII), Longmans, Green, and C°, London, New York and Bombay, 1900, pp.&nbsp;128–146.
Andrew Lang, [http://www.psychanalyse-paris.com/848-Demoniacal-Possession.html Demoniacal Possession], The Making of Religion, (Chapter VII), Longmans, Green, and C°, London, New York and Bombay, 1900, pp. 128-146.
* [http://www.spiritualresearchfoundation.org/articles/id/spiritualresearch/difficulties/Ghosts_Demons/demonicpossession_definition Definition Of Demonic Possession]
*[http://www.apostasynow.com/wots/Contents.html War on the Saints] Jessie Penn-Lewis & Evan Roberts (The Original and Completely Unabridged Edition less graphics)

Latest revision as of 10:58, 3 November 2014

Demonic possession is held by many belief systems to be the spirit possession of an individual by a malevolent preternatural being, commonly known as a demon. Descriptions of demonic possessions often include erased memories or personalities, convulsions, “fits” and fainting as if one were dying.[1] Other descriptions include access to hidden knowledge (gnosis) and foreign languages (xenoglossia), drastic changes in vocal intonation and facial structure, the sudden appearance of injuries (scratches, bite marks) or lesions, and superhuman strength. Unlike in channeling, the subject has no control over the possessing entity and so it will persist until forced to leave the victim, usually through a form of exorcism.

Many cultures and religions contain some concept of demonic possession, but the details vary considerably. The oldest references to demonic possession are from the Sumerians, who believed that all diseases of the body and mind were caused by "sickness demons" called gidim or gid-dim.[2] The priests who practised exorcisms in these nations were called ashipu (sorcerer) as opposed to an asu (physician) who applied bandages and salves.[3] Many cuneiform tablets contain prayers to certain gods asking for protection from demons, while others ask the gods to expel the demons that have invaded their bodies.

Shamanic cultures also believe in demon possession and shamans perform exorcisms. In these cultures, diseases are often attributed to the presence of a vengeful spirit (or loosely termed demon) in the body of the patient. These spirits are more often the spectres of animals or people wronged by the bearer, the exorcism rites usually consisting of respectful offerings or sacrificial offerings.

Christianity holds that possession derives from the Devil, i.e. Satan, or one of his lesser demons. In many Christian belief systems, Satan and his demons are actually fallen angels.[4]


Bible Accounts

According to the Catholic Encyclopedia:[5]

"In the Old Testament, we have only one instance, and even that is not very certain. We are told that "an evil spirit from the Lord troubled" (Saul Samuel 16:14). The Hebrew rûah need not imply a personal influence, though, if we may judge from Josephus (Ant. Jud., VI, viii, 2; ii, 2), the Jews were inclined to give the word that meaning in this very case. In New Testament times, however, the phenomenon had become very common."

The New Testament mentions several episodes in which Jesus drove out demons from persons:

  • Matthew 4:23-25: Demon-possessed persons are healed by Jesus (also Luke 6:17-19).
  • Matthew 7:21-23: Many will drive out demons in Jesus' name (also Mark 16:17; Luke 10:17; Acts 5:16; 8:7).
  • Matthew 8:14-17: Jesus healed many demon-possessed (also Mark 1:29-39; Luke 4:33-41).
  • Matthew 8:28-34: Jesus sent a herd of demons from two men into a herd of pigs ("about two thousand" pigs, according to the account at Mark 5:1-20; both Mark's account and Luke 8:26-39, mention only the one man).
  • Matthew 9:32-34: Jesus made a demon-possessed mute man speak, the Pharisees said it was by the power of Beelzebub (also Mark 3:20-22).
  • Matthew 10:1-8: The Twelve Apostles given the authority to drive out evil spirits (also Mark 3:15; 6:7; 6:13; Luke 9:1; 10:17).
  • Matthew 11:16-19: "this generation" said that John the Baptist was possessed by a demon (also Luke 7:31-35).
  • Matthew 12:22-32: Jesus healed a demon-possessed blind and dumb man (also Luke 11:14-23; Mark 3:20-30).
  • Matthew 12:43-45: Jesus told an allegory of nasty spirits coming back home, that is, to the human body where they have lived before (also Luke 11:24-26).
  • Matthew 15:21-28: Jesus expelled a demon from the body of the daughter of a Canaanite woman (also Mark 7:24-30).
  • Matthew 17:14-21: Jesus healed a boy by driving out a demon from him (also Mark 9:14-29; Luke 9:37-49).
  • Mark 1:21-28: Jesus expelled a nasty spirit from a man (also Luke 4:31-37).
  • Mark 9:38-40: A non-Christian is seen driving out demons in Jesus' name (also Luke 9:49-50).
  • Mark 16:9: Jesus had driven seven demons out of Mary Magdalene (also Luke 8:2).
  • Luke 7:21: Many people are cleansed from evil spirits by Jesus.
  • Luke 13:10-17: Jesus expelled a spirit of disease from the body of a woman on the Sabbath.
  • Luke 13:31-32: Jesus continued to cast out demons even though Herod Antipas wanted to kill him.
  • Luke 22:3: Satan entered into Judas Iscariot (also John 13:27).
  • John 7:20: A "crowd of Jews" that wanted to kill Jesus said he was demon-possessed.
  • John 8:48-52: "The Jews" said Jesus was a Samaritan and demon-possessed.
  • John 10:20-21: Many Jews said Jesus was raving mad and demon-possessed, others said he was not.
  • Acts 5:3: Satan filled the heart of Ananias.
  • Acts 5:16: The Apostles healed those tormented by evil spirits.
  • Acts 8:6-8: At the teaching of Philip the Evangelist in Samaria, evil spirits came out of many.
  • Acts 8:18-19: Simon Magus offered to buy the power of Laying on of hands.
  • Acts 10:38: St. Peter said Jesus healed all who were under the power of the Devil.
  • Acts 16:16-24: Paul and Silas were imprisoned for driving a future-telling spirit out of a slave girl.
  • Acts 19:11-12: Handkerchiefs and aprons touched by Paul cured illness and drove out evil spirits.
  • Acts 19:13-20: Seven sons of Sceva attempted to drive out evil spirits by saying: "In the name of Jesus, whom Paul preaches, I command you to come out." But because they did not have faith in Jesus, they were unsuccessful and were actually driven from that house by the possessed.
  • Revelation 18:2: The Whore of Babylon is a home for demons, evil spirits and unclean birds.

Acts of the Apostles also contains a number of references to people coming under the influence of the Holy Spirit (1:8, 2:4, 2:17-18, 2:38, 4:8, 4:31, 6:3-5, 7:55, 8:15-19, 8:39, 9:17, 10:19, 11:12-16, 11:28, 13:9, 16:6-7, 19:2-6, 20:23, 21:11, 23:8-9) which is believed to be a good thing in contrast to demonic influence.

The 1902 work Demonic possession in the New Testament by Rev. William Menzies Alexander attempted to explain accounts of possession in the Synoptic Gospels, outlining their historical, medical and theological aspects.[6]


Christianity

Catholic exorcists differentiate between "ordinary" Satanic/demonic activity or influence (mundane everyday temptations) and "extraordinary" Satanic/demonic activity, which can take six different forms, ranging from complete control by Satan or some demon(s) to voluntary submission:[7]

  1. Possession, in which Satan or some demon(s) takes full possession of a person's body without their knowledge or consent, so the victim is therefore morally blameless.
  2. Obsession, which includes sudden attacks of irrationally obsessive thoughts, usually culminating in suicidal ideation, and typically influences dreams.
  3. Oppression, in which there is no loss of consciousness or involuntary action, such as in the biblical Book of Job in which Job was tormented by a series of misfortunes in business, family, and health.
  4. External physical pain caused by Satan or some demon(s).
  5. Infestation, which affects houses, things, or animals; and
  6. Subjugation, in which a person voluntarily submits to Satan or some demon(s).

In Hostage to the Devil, Malachi Martin also mentions a type of demonic attack called "familiarization". He writes:

The possessing spirit in "familiarization" is seeking to "come and live with" the subject. If accepted, the spirit becomes the constant and continuously present companion of the possessed. The two "persons", the "familiar" and the "possessed", remain separate and distinct. The "possessed" is aware of his "familiar".[8]


True demonic or satanic possession has been characterized since the Middle Ages, in the Rituale Romanum, by the following four typical characteristics:[9][10][11]

  1. Manifestation of superhuman strength.
  2. Speaking in tongues or languages that the victim cannot know.
  3. Revelation of knowledge, distant or hidden, that the victim cannot know.
  4. Blasphemous rage and an aversion to holy symbols or relics.


The Bible indicates that people can be possessed by demons but that the demons respond to Jesus's authority:

In the synagogue there was a man possessed by a demon, an evil spirit. He cried out at the top of his voice, 34 “Ha! What do you want with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are—the Holy One of God!” 35 “Be quiet!” Jesus said sternly. “Come out of him!” Then the demon threw the man down before them all and came out without injuring him. 36 All the people were amazed and said to each other, “What is this teaching? With authority and power he gives orders to evil spirits and they come out!” 37 And the news about him spread throughout the surrounding area. (Luke 4:33-35 NIV)[12]


It also indicates that demons can possess animals as in the exorcism of the Gerasene demoniac:

When Jesus stepped ashore, he was met by a demon-possessed man from the town. For a long time this man had not worn clothes or lived in a house, but had lived in the tombs. 28 When he saw Jesus, he cried out and fell at his feet, shouting at the top of his voice, “What do you want with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? I beg you, don’t torture me!” 29 For Jesus had commanded the impure spirit to come out of the man. Many times it had seized him, and though he was chained hand and foot and kept under guard, he had broken his chains and had been driven by the demon into solitary places. 30 Jesus asked him, "What is your name?" “Legion,” he replied, because many demons had gone into him. 31 And they begged Jesus repeatedly not to order them to go into the Abyss. 32 A large herd of pigs was feeding there on the hillside. The demons begged Jesus to let them go into the pigs, and he gave them permission. 33 When the demons came out of the man, they went into the pigs, and the herd rushed down the steep bank into the lake and was drowned. (Luke 8:27-32 NIV)[13]


The literal view of demonization is still held by a number of Christian denominations. Official Catholic doctrine affirms that demonic possession can occur as distinguished from mental illness, but stresses that cases of mental illness should not be misdiagnosed as demonic influence. Catholic exorcisms can occur only under the authority of a bishop and in accordance with strict rules; a simple exorcism also occurs during Baptism (CCC 1673). In charismatic Christianity, deliverance ministries are activities carried out by individuals or groups aimed at solving problems related to demons and spirits, especially possession of the body and soul, but not the spirit as ministries like Ellel Ministries International, Don Dickerman Ministries and Neil T. Anderson explicitly teach that a Christian can not have demons in their spirit because the Holy Spirit lives there, though they can have demons in their body or soul due to inner emotional wounds, sexual abuse, satanic ritual abuse.[14] This is usually known as partial possession or demonic infestation, as opposed to outside demonic oppression which does not reside in any of the 3 parts of a person: body, soul, spirit.

A great deal of controversy surrounds the book War on the Saints by Jessie Penn-Lewis published in 1912 as a resource to the Christian faced with combating demon influences.

In the New Testament Jesus is reported to have encountered people who were demonized and to have driven the "evil spirits" out of these demoniacs. In the 4th century, St. Hillary asserted that demons entered the bodies of humans to use them as if they were theirs, and also proposed that the same could happen with animals.

The New Testament's description of people who had evil spirits includes a capacity for hidden knowledge (e.g., future events, innermost thoughts of the people around them) (Acts 16:16) and great strength (Act 19:16), among others, and shows those with evil spirits can speak of Christ (Acts 19:16, Mark 3:11). According to Catholic theologians, demonic assault can be involuntary[7] and allowed by God to test a person. Involuntary demonic assault, according to these theologians, cannot be denied because this would imply the negation of the cases mentioned in the New Testament (12, some of them repeated in more than one Gospel). However, in the overwhelming majority of cases of alleged demonic possession in modern times, the victim can suffer due to any of a number of personal initiatives: occult practices, mortal sin, loss of faith, or psychological trauma, among others. Furthermore, Malachi Martin goes as far as to say "...no person can be Possessed without some degree of cooperation on his or her part," and "The effective cause of Possession is the voluntary collaboration of an individual, through his faculties of mind and will, with one or more of those bodiless, genderless creatures called demons."[15]

In previous centuries, the Christian church offered suggestions on safeguarding one’s home. Suggestions ranged from dousing a household with Holy water, placing wax and herbs on thresholds to “ward off witches occult,” and avoiding certain areas of townships known to be frequented by witches and Devil worshippers after dark.[16][17]

T. B. Joshua, a Nigerian pastor, has one of the most prominent 'deliverance' ministries, releasing hundreds of videos on YouTube and his Christian television station, Emmanuel TV, purporting to show individuals being 'delivered' from apparent 'demonic possession'.


Medicine and Psychology

Demonic possession is not recognized as a psychiatric or medical diagnosis by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders or the ICD-10 Chapter V: Mental and behavioural disorders. There are many human conditions thought by many to be demonic possession but classed by psychiatry as psychological ailments, particularly dissociative identity disorder. In cases of dissociative identity disorder in which the alter personality is questioned as to its identity, 29% are reported to identify themselves as demons,[18] but psychiatrists see this as a mental disease called demonomania or demonopathy, a monomania in which the patient believes that he or she is possessed by one or more demons.[19] Some Catholics, contrary to psychiatry, recognize that "those human conditions which psychiatry has given names to under 'psychiatric disorders' are manifestations of demonic activity in those human beings, demonic activity which the human being has no participation of will."[20]


In Fiction

The 1973 film, The Exorcist, is based on the book of the same name and portrays a fictional case of demonic possession loosely inspired by the case of "Robbie Mannheim".

In 1995, the US soap opera Days of Our Lives featured the character Dr. Marlena Evans, played by Deidre Hall, in a demonic possession storyline.

Demonic possession is a common theme in the American TV series Supernatural, which was first broadcast in 2005.

In the 2006 film 5ive Girls, several characters are possessed by the demonic spirit named Legion.

In the 2007 Spanish horror film series REC, people (and animals) become infected with a contagious demonic virus. The outbreak started with the possession of a Portuguese young girl, Tristana Medeiros.

Several characters are possessed by a demonic spirit named Toby in the Paranormal Activity series. Katie is possessed and kills her boyfriend Micah in Paranormal Activity. Kristi (Katie's sister) is briefly possessed and is successfully exorcised by her husband Daniel, but both are killed by a possessed Katie who then kidnaps their son Hunter in Paranormal Activity 2. Toby takes over Katie (as a child) at the end of Paranormal Activity 3. Katie reappears and the demon still is in her in Paranormal Activity 4.

Demonic possession is an important element in the Evil Dead film series. In the films, possessed people take on a zombie-like appearance.


See Also


Notes

  1. Ferber, Sarah (2004). "Demonic Possession and Exorcism in Early Modern France": 25, 116. London: Routledge.
  2. Sumerian "gidim"
  3. Indiana Univ: MEDICINE IN ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA
  4. "An Exorcist Tells his Story" by Fr. Gabriele Amorth translated by Nicoletta V. MacKenzie, Ignatius Press, San Francisco, 1999.
  5. "Demonical possession". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913.
  6. Alexander, William Menzies (2003). Demonic Possession in the New Testament. Kessinger Publishing.
  7. 7.0 7.1 p. 33, An Exorcist Tells his Story, by Fr. Gabriele Amorth, translated by Nicoletta V. MacKenzie; Ignatius Press, San Francisco, 1999.
  8. Malachi Martin, Hostage to the Devil, Harper, San Francisco, 1992, p. 260.
  9. p.25, The Vatican's Exorcists by Tracy Wilkinson; Warner Books, New York, 2007
  10. The rite: the making of a modern exorcist by Matt Baglio; Doubleday, New York, 2009.
  11. The Roman Ritual Translated by Philip T. Weller, S.T.D.; Copyright 1964
  12. "Luke 4:33-37 (New International Version)". By Biblestudytools.com. http://www.biblestudytools.com/luke/passage.aspx?q=luke+4:33-37. Retrieved July 5, 2013. 
  13. "Luke 8 - The Healing of a Demon-possessed Man". By www.tobechristian.org. http://www.tobechristian.org/luke_8__the_healing_of_a_demon.htm. Retrieved July 5, 2013. 
  14. http://www.dondickerman.net/id70.html
  15. Martin, Malachi, Hostage to the Devil (San Francisco, Harper, 1992, preface p.xx.)
  16. Broedel, Hans Peter (2003). The Malleus Maleficarum and the Construction of Witchcraft, 32–33, Great Britain: Manchester University Press.
  17. Barajo, Caro (1964). "World of the Witches". Great Britain: University of Chicago Press. p. 73. 
  18. Microsoft Word - Haraldur Erlendsson 1.6.03 Multiple Personality
  19. Demonomania
  20. http://josephfg.tripod.com/catholicism/psych.html


External Links