(www.RemnantNewspaper.com)
The
following article first appeared nearly a decade ago in
The Latin Mass magazine. It was written by
Father X, who holds an STL in Dogmatic Theology. With
the alarming increase in reported cases of demonic
possession in the world today, as well as the ensuing
interest in the Catholic Church’s Rite of Exorcism, even
in mainstream films and contemporary literature, this
excellent article may prove more relevant today than
when it was first published.
Pope Benedict’s decision, early on in his pontificate,
to increase the number of exorcists working in dioceses
around the world was indeed a welcome initiative. But
did it, in fact, ever fully materialize? It is difficult
to say, especially as the vocations crisis continues to
render the point rather moot.
In addition, the failure of so many progressive bishops
to so much as acknowledge the threat of increased
demonic activity in their own dioceses—thus pooh-poohing
the very need for additional exorcists in the first
place—carries with it its own particular set of
difficulties where exorcism is concerned. After all, an
exorcist is not a maverick who is somehow free to act on
his own initiative. He can function only at the order
and under the jurisdiction of his bishop.
But there are other problems confounding the Vatican’s
initiative to offer direct confrontation against Evil,
problems that go to the very heart of the debate over
the legacy of Vatican II. The Novus Ordo’s Rite of
Exorcism, for example, offers disturbing indications of
a certain inclination on the part of the modern Church
to sheathe her sword in the face of Evil— a phenomenon
which provided as much impetus for the inevitable rise
of traditional Catholicism as anything else, including
the controversial new liturgy.
After all, there is no lack of evidence of an unsettling
rise in the level of demonic activity in the world
today, whether it be seen in a cultural preoccupation
with the occult and the black arts; rampant sexual
depravity that not only knows no limits, but is brazenly
encouraged by political leaders, educators and pop
icons; a societal penchant for unrestricted
self-indulgence; an explosion in drug use, pornography
addiction, murder, abortion, euthanasia, pedophilia,
homosexuality and the advent of a veritable cult of
nudity which is fast becoming Western pop culture’s
defining characteristic.
And whether we’re speaking of the multi-pierced bodies
of mothers with babies in their arms, or the tattooed
backsides of little girls, or the mutilated ears and
tongues of middle school children— the telltale signs of
an all-out war against the temple of the Holy Ghost are
ubiquitous, even in the seemingly inconsequential
details. (Why, for example, do priests tend to dress
like waiters these days, while waiters dress all in
black as priests once did? What explains this
fascination with the color black? Weddings, funerals,
Christmas parties—everyone seems to be in black, except,
of course, for Catholic priests, who somewhere along the
line decided to swap clerical black for sporty white,
even at funerals. Again, why?)
As the relevancy of the post-conciliar Church continues
to wane, a parallel Cult of Darkness seems to be rising
up into the void. And while churchmen of the
post-conciliar era continue to remove whatever kneelers,
communion rails and tabernacles are left in our
churches— even as they hasten to strip “worship spaces”
of “medieval trappings” such as statues of Our Lady, the
Terror of Demons—this same Cult of Darkness
becomes ever more brazen in its attempt to formally
usher in the Reign of Antichrist.
Some good priests, conscious of this rapid advance of
Evil across the face of the earth, take crucifix in
hand, and, armed with the New Rite of Exorcism, venture
into the fray. For this they are to be commended, of
course, even if the watered-down rituals and prayers of
the decrepit Novus Ordo render them like so many
well-intentioned knights with
only broken swords and cracked shields at their
disposal.
Back in the early 1990s, the late Malachi Martin caused
something of a stir in these columns when he noted that
the Order of the Exorcist—part of every priest’s
ordination since time immemorial—had recently been
omitted from the new rite of priestly ordination.
As it turned out, Martin’s charge was shown to be
accurate, God help us. The question we might all
ask—whether traditional Catholic or not!—is this: Why? Why was
this done? Who was it that decided to excise the Order
of the Exorcist from the minor orders? Was it the same
self-loathing Catholic who’d removed the kneelers,
statues, and tabernacles from our churches a decade
earlier? Why would any Catholic hierarch in his right
mind tolerate such a thing?
Given such bizarre “reforms” in the Church over the past
half century, is it any wonder the Demons seem to be
laughing in the faces of the few good priests left who,
despite their best intentions, find themselves
dangerously ill-equipped to engage the forces of
Darkness all around us? After all, many of these poor
priests were never even taught Latin in the seminary—the
very language in which the Rite of Exorcism was to be
conducted!
Meanwhile, like some nightmare torn from the pages of
Bram Stoker’s Dracula, crucifixes are being
banned in Catholic Europe, priests are fading away, nuns
are all but gone, high altars are broken up and removed,
and tabernacles are hidden away. Quite clearly, Hell is
having its way here in the tragic aftermath of the
Second Vatican Council.
If the recent and highly publicized fall of one of the
reportedly holiest exorcists in the American Church
doesn’t give us all cause for alarm I don’t know what
will. We must pray for Fr. Thomas Euteneuer. From our
vantage point far on the outer perimeter of this new
scandal, it would appear that a very good priest lost a
round with a very powerful demon. Given the many
meticulously documented inadequacies (see the following
article) of the “reformed” New Rite of Exorcism, is it
any wonder?
It has been observed many times in these columns that
traditional Catholicism is about much more than the
Traditional Latin Mass. The modern Church’s mad dash to
remove the obstacles—ritual, sacramental and
otherwise—standing between the souls of her children and
the forces of Evil should give pause to even the
harshest critic of traditional Catholicism.
Indeed, it is more than the Mass, and it always has
been. The restoration of the traditional Catholic
sacraments, rituals, liturgies, prayers, orders and
general attitude toward sin, death and hell are
lifelines for the entire world. Without these, our
families will remain forever defenseless against Evil,
our country is without hope of recovery and, at least
for the time being, the Gates of Hell will appear to
triumph. And a denial of the absolute necessity of the
traditional Catholic restoration will not protect anyone
from the Evil that will rise up if that restoration
fails to materialize.
The Wikipedia entry on exorcism includes the following
sobering observation: “The Exorcist order was suppressed
during the reforms of the minor orders after the Second
Vatican Council by Paul VI. The rite of conferral
continues only in societies that use the 1962 form of
the Roman Rite, such as the Priestly Fraternity of St.
Peter...” And, of course, added to this would be the
Society of St. Pius X and the other traditional
communities that may “lack full communion with the
Church” at the moment, but are still using the Church’s
ancient rites to do battle against Evil in the world
today. Even according to Wikipedia, then, it’s becoming
clear that the Church’s traditional books, rites and
rituals are the last line of defense against Evil in the
world today.
What have the Modernists done to Christ’s Church? Why
have they uncrowned Him? Why are they straightening the
road to victory for Antichrist? It is indeed more than
the Mass. God help us all—it’s much more than the
Mass! MJM
The
New Rite of Exorcism
The Influence of the
Evil One
By Father X
In his famous discourse of June 30, 1972, Pope Paul VI
said that he sensed “that from somewhere or other, the
smoke of Satan has entered the temple of God.” Nowhere
has this been more evident than in the disastrous
revision of the blessings of the Church in De
Benedictionibus, the so-called “Book of Blessings,”1
approved in 1984.
In the original Latin this defective book scandalously
refuses to bless objects, but only persons. The example
of Christ our Lord in blessing things (e.g., Matt.
14:19; 26:26; Mk. 6:41; 8:7; 14:22; Lk. 9:16; 24:30)
obviously carried no weight with the liturgists who
wrote that book. The official General Introduction to
the Book of Blessings informs us: “At times the Church
also blesses objects and places connected with human
activity or liturgical life, or connected with piety and
devotion – but always, however, with a view to the
people who use those objects and are engaged in those
places” (Praenotanda Generalia, 12).
This explanation is dishonest, in that it gives only
half a reason for blessing things, and because it
conceals the fact that the book of blessings, with a few
exceptions, systematically refuses to bless things. It
is a book of non-blessings. To take but one example, the
“blessing” of holy water outside of Mass contains no
actual blessing of the water. The closest thing to it is
a prayer to God asking for certain effects by the use of
this water. The so-called “Prayer of blessing” (in Latin
and English) refrains from using the word “bless” even
once, and there is no Sign of the Cross made over the
water. The Devil must have laughed when that “Book of
Blessings” was issued. The traditional exorcism of water
and salt, and all the other Roman Ritual’s traditional
prayers against the devil and his influence were almost
completely abolished.
On three occasions only is a thing blessed. These three
exceptions in Latin are for meals, church bells and
cemeteries. In the American edition, the same things
appear; also chalice and paten (found in Latin in the
Pontifical); also two other places in which the
alternative rite (not in the Latin) does bless an
object.2 (The blessing of holy water within Mass does
contain an actual blessing of the water.)
The treatment of blessings in the Catechism (#1671-2)
speaks of blessings of persons, places and things. But
this is belied, as I have said, by the Latin text of De
Benedictionibus, the “Book of Blessings,” so called.
When the definitive Latin text of the Catechism was
issued in 1997, with the paragraph saying that the
Church blesses things, a priest friend wrote to Cardinal
Ratzinger pointing out that the lex orandi and the lex
credendi were at odds, and asked a question: “Can we
expect a revision of the Book of Blessings in the light
of the definitive text of the Catechism?” Of course,
this is a reversal of the traditional practice and view
of things: one is meant to pass from the Church’s
practice to a formulation of the Church’s faith. But, if
it will do good, the reversal has become a necessity.
What lies behind this change to the rites of blessings?
Clearly, a loss of sense of the power of the priesthood
– a desire, even, to overthrow sacerdotal mediation, to
reduce the priest from an instrument of Christ, clothed
with the authority of Jesus Christ, to a mere prayer, on
the same level as that of any lay person. The retention
of the title “Blessings” means nothing: as we know, All
Souls’ Day is No Souls’ Day, even in the original Latin,
where the word for soul (anima) has been suppressed in
the prayers of November 2.3
The New Rite of Exorcism
The same mentality has been at work in the revised Rite
of Exorcism, promulgated in January 1999, De Exorcismis
et Supplicationibus Quibusdam.4 This was intimated by
the defective definition of exorcism in the 1992
Catechism at #1673, unchanged in the Latin text that
came out five years later: “When the Church asks
publicly and authoritatively in the name of Jesus Christ
that a person or object be protected against the power
of the Evil One and withdrawn from his dominion, it is
called exorcism.”
Let us read that definition again, with emphases added:
“When the Church asks publicly and
authoritatively in the name of Jesus Christ that a
person or object be protected against the power of the
Evil One and withdrawn from his dominion, it is called
exorcism.” Notice the use of the word asks, and the use
of the passive voice. The text says that the Church
asks for this person or object to be protected. Asks
whom? For protection by whom? Obviously, God. So,
according to this, an exorcism is: asking God to free
someone from the devil.
Despite what this text implies, an exorcism is not a
prayer to God; exorcism is a command issued to the Devil
in the name of God. The very word exorcism tells you
that – exorcizo, I adjure. To adjure, as the
Oxford Dictionary defines it, is to charge or entreat
someone solemnly, as if under oath, or under the penalty
of a curse. No one can adjure God, but a minister of God
can adjure a demon. The Ritual for Exorcism of 1614
(which until January 1999 was the only officially
published text for Latin rite exorcists) does contain
prefatory prayers to God to ask that a person be
delivered – but then under the subheading of “Exorcism”
itself, the exorcist orders the demon to depart.
“Exorcizo te, immundissime spiritus…in nomine Domini
nostri Jesu Christi” – “I exorcize you, unclean
spirit…in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.” He uses
other imperatives addressed to the demon, such as
recede, da locum, exi, discede (withdraw, give way,
exit, depart).
The new ritual scandalously gives the priest a choice of
two forms of exorcism, which it calls “deprecatory” and
“imperative.” “Deprecatory” means a prayer to God, in
this case to ask Him to deliver the demoniac.
“Imperative” means a command issued to the demon in the
name of God to depart. The imperative formula is a real
exorcism, but the deprecatory form is not an exorcism at
all. A prayer is a request to God; an exorcism is a
command to a demon. The so-called “deprecatory exorcism”
is simply a petitionary prayer to God. It is not an
exorcism. (If it is an exorcism, then the final petition
of the Lord’s Prayer, “deliver us from evil,” would also
be an exorcism!)
As with the so-called “exorcism” in the modern Rite of
Baptism, simply placing the sub-heading Exorcism does
not make what follows an exorcism. What is extremely
worrying is that, according to the new rubrics, the
deprecatory form must always be used, but the second
form, the imperative, is an optional extra.
What lies behind this change? The same denigration of
the priesthood described above. It is a true
Protestantization: the reduction of the ordained priest
to the level of the common priesthood. It is the fruit
of embarrassment about the visible priesthood. It is the
mentality that is at work when a priest says at the end
of Mass: “May Almighty God bless us….” When a priest
does that, he is losing his identity, and is
uncomfortable about the fact that he is different, and
that he can confer blessings.
Here is an extract from one of the new deprecatory
formulas:
O God, creator and defender of the human race, look upon
this Your servant, whom You did make in Your own image
and call to share in Your glory…. Hear, holy Father, the
cry of the Church suppliant: let not Your child be
possessed by the father of lies; let not Your servant,
whom Christ has redeemed by His blood, to be held in the
captivity of the devil; let not a temple of Your Spirit
be inhabited by the unclean spirit. Hear, O merciful
God, the prayers of the blessed Virgin Mary, whose Son,
dying upon the Cross, crushed the head of the serpent of
old and entrusted all men to His mother as sons: let the
light of truth shine upon this Your servant, let the joy
of peace enter into him, let the Spirit of holiness
possess him, and by inhabiting him render him serene and
pure. Hear, O Lord, the supplication of blessed Michael
the Archangel and of all the Angels ministering unto
You: God of hosts, drive back the force of the devil;
God of truth and favor, remove his deceitful wiles; God
of freedom and grace, break the bonds of iniquity. Hear,
O God, lover of man’s salvation…free this servant from
every alien power…
As we can see, this is merely a petitionary prayer. Here
is an extract from one of the new imperative formulas:
I adjure you, Satan, enemy of man’s salvation,
acknowledge the justice and goodness of God the Father,
who by just judgment has damned your pride and envy:
depart from this servant of God, whom the Lord has made
in His own image, adorned with His gifts, and has
mercifully adopted as His child. I adjure you, Satan,
prince of this world, acknowledge the power and strength
of Jesus Christ, who conquered you in the desert,
overcame you in the garden, despoiled you on the Cross,
and rising from the tomb, transferred your victims to
the kingdom of light.… I adjure you, Satan, deceiver of
the human race, acknowledge the Spirit of truth and
grace, who repels your snares and confounds your lies:
depart from this creature of God, whom He has signed by
the heavenly seal; withdraw from this man whom God has
made a holy temple by a spiritual unction. Leave,
therefore, Satan, in the name of the Father, and of the
Son and of the Holy Spirit; leave through the faith
and the prayer of the Church; leave through the sign of
the holy Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, who lives and
reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
As one can see, this optional formula is an exorcism
proper. In the former rite, there were prayers to God
asking for deliverance, but they were always followed by
exorcisms proper.
Changes to the Old Directives to the Exorcist
Other things are of great concern in this new ritual.
The Ritual of 1614 contains 21 directives for the
exorcist, a magnificent distillation of the accumulated
wisdom and experience of the Church. The new preface
never gets to the point about the manner of proceeding.
The former directives 4-6, 8-9, 13-17, 19-20 have no
equivalent in the new ritual’s preface. This means that
most (12) of the 21 are deleted. The following former
directives have no parallel in the new introduction:
4. In order to better test these signs [of possession],
the priest should question the demoniac after one or
other exorcism as to what he feels in his mind or body,
so that in this way he can also learn which words more
greatly disturb the demons, so as then to bear down on
them and repeat them all the more.
5. The priest should stay alert for tricks and
deceptions that demons use to mislead the exorcist. For
they will give false answers as much as possible, and
show themselves only with difficulty, in order that the
exorcist at length become worn out and give up the
exorcism; or the ill person might appear not to be
harassed by the devil.
6. Occasionally, after they appear, the demons hide and
leave the body almost free of all disturbance, so that
the ill person might think he is completely freed. But
the exorcist should not stop until he sees the signs of
liberation.
8. Some demons point out an act of witchcraft which has
been done [to cause possession], by whom it was done,
and the way to undo it; but the demoniac should be
careful not to have recourse to sorcerers,
fortune-tellers, or other such persons, on this account,
but should go to the ministers of the Church rather than
use any superstitious or otherwise illicit means.
9. Sometimes the devil grants the sick person relief and
permits him to receive the Holy Eucharist so that he
might seem to have departed. In short, there are
countless devices and tricks of the devil to deceive
man, which the exorcist should beware, lest he be
deceived.
13. …Also relics of Saints, where available, safely and
properly fastened and covered, may be reverently applied
to the chest or head of the possessed. Care must be
taken that the sacred objects are not improperly handled
or harmed in any way by the demon. Because of danger of
irreverence, the Holy Eucharist should not be placed
upon the head of the possessed person or elsewhere on
his body.
14. The exorcist should not engage in a great deal of
talking or ask unnecessary or curious questions,
especially concerning future or secret matters not
pertaining to his task. But he should command the
unclean spirit to be silent, except to answer his
questions. Nor should he believe the demon if he
pretends to be the soul of some Saint or deceased person
or a good Angel.
15. However, there are necessary questions, for example,
concerning the number and names of the possessing
spirits, the time and reason they entered, and other
things of this sort. The exorcist should restrain or
spurn the rest of the devil’s nonsense, laughter and
foolishness, and advise those present, who should be
few, that they must not pay attention to these things
nor question the possessed person, but rather humbly and
earnestly pray to God for him.
16. The exorcist should read and carry out the exorcism
with strength, authority, great faith, humility and
fervor, and when he sees that the spirit is especially
tormented, then he should persist and bear down all the
more. And whenever he sees that the possessed person is
being disturbed in some part of his body, or stung, or
that a swelling appears somewhere, he should make the
sign of the cross on that area and sprinkle it with holy
water which should be on hand.
17. He is also to observe at which words the demons
tremble more, and then he should repeat these words more
often. When he reaches the threatening words, he should
say them repeatedly, always increasing the punishment.
If he sees that he is making progress, he should
continue for two, three, or four hours, or even longer
if he can, until he obtains the victory.
19. If he is exorcising a woman, he should always have
persons of integrity with him to hold the possessed
person while she is agitated by the demon. These people
should be close relatives of the suffering woman if
possible. Mindful of decency, the exorcist should be
careful not to say or do anything which could be an
occasion of an evil thought to himself or the others.
20. While he is exorcising, he should use the words of
Sacred Scripture rather than his own or someone else’s.
He should command the demon to tell him if he is held in
that body because of some magic, or sorcerer’s signs or
devices. If the possessed person has consumed things of
this sort orally, he should vomit them up. If they are
elsewhere outside his body, he should reveal where they
are, and once found, they are to be burned. The
possessed person should also be advised to make known
all his temptations to the exorcist.
These crucial directives, followed by exorcists for 385
years, have no parallel in the new introduction.
The preface explicitly says that lay people may not say
any of the prayers of exorcism, and repeats the old
directive that exorcism is not to be conducted in
public. It adds the rule (a welcome addition) that
exorcism is not to be open to any communications media;
and the exorcist and any assistants are not to speak
publicly before or after the exorcism about what took
place.
Other Changes
This article is not meant to be an exhaustive analysis
of the new rite of exorcism. Many of the prayers and
rites are perfectly acceptable in themselves: the new
rite contains a prefatory prayer, blessing of holy
water, Litany of the Saints, a Psalm, a Gospel reading
(the Prologue of St. John, or a text in which Christ
rejects the devil or expels demons), imposition of hands
over the demoniac, Profession of Faith or renewal of
Baptismal promises with renunciation of Satan; the Our
Father, the Sign of the Cross on the possessed person;
and, after deliverance, the Magnificat followed by other
prayers and a blessing.
Laughable, however, are the references, in the prefatory
decree, to Sacrosanctum Concilium of Vatican II –
as if the Council had called for a revised, updated
exorcism to allow full conscious participation by the
laity! The only conceivable allusion to exorcism in the
Vatican II decree on the liturgy is where it says the
sacramentals will be revised – but the clear proof that
the bishops never had exorcism in mind is seen from the
reason given for revision. The one and only relevant
sentence here says: “The sacramentals are to be revised,
account being taken of the primary principle of the
intelligent, actual and easy participation of the
faithful” (art. 79). Since exorcism, new and old, must
be conducted away from the faithful, the principle of
intelligent, actual and easy participation is
irrelevant. Once again, the liturgical decree is cited
as the basis for something never intended.
Dishonest is the use of the word instauratum
(restored) in the subheading of the title page: the new
exorcism ritual is in no way a restoration. It is a
fabrication. The Latin should have read fabricatum
or innovatum or maybe concoctum!
The preface provides for translation of the rite into
myriad languages – but what on earth for? If an exorcist
does not know enough Latin to perform the prayers in
Latin, he should not be appointed to the office. The
preface at no. 13 quotes canon 1172 saying that an
exorcist should be, inter alia, “outstanding in
knowledge” – but how could that be said of a priest who
cannot say or follow very simple texts and prayers in
Latin? As well, given charismatics’ predilection for
exorcisms and “deliverance,” it is highly imprudent to
make the Church’s official exorcism prayers available to
all and sundry in every language, when only a tiny
proportion of priests need to use them.
With the promulgation of the new exorcism ritual, the
Athanasian Creed has now officially disappeared from any
Catholic ritual. In the 1960s, its frequency was reduced
in the Breviary and finally it was abolished from it.
The rite of exorcism was the last surviving ceremony in
the Church where the Athanasian Creed was recited. Now
it is gone. This is a serious loss, and there was no
good reason why it was replaced by a choice between the
Apostles’ Creed and the Nicene Creed.
Another innovation, but a welcome one, in the new Ritual
for Exorcism, is an exorcism to be used for a place or
thing, something not specifically present in the former
Ritual. (Herbert Thurston S.J.’s book Ghosts and
Poltergeists5 has an appendix containing his English
translation of an “Exorcism of a house troubled by an
evil spirit,” which he found in the Appendix of an
edition of the Roman Ritual printed in Madrid in 1631,
published with the authorization of the Inquisition.
Father Thurston evidently thought this was a worthwhile
ceremony to have.) This new rite for a place or thing
also requires permission from the bishop before being
used. Again, however, in this ceremony, the imperative
formula, the true exorcism, is to be added, only if the
priest wishes.
Conclusion
According to the president of the International
Association of Exorcists, Father Gabriele Amorth (30
Days, no. 6, 2001), when the new rite was ready,
Cardinals Ratzinger and Medina sought to add a provision
in its introduction authorizing the use of the previous
rite. This move of theirs was rejected, so Cardinal
Medina issued a separate notification that an exorcist
can use the old rite if his bishop asks the Congregation
for Divine Worship, who will “gladly provide the
requested permission” (Notitiae, vol. 35, 1999).
The new rite will one day itself be subject to a true
restoration, which will restore to the obligatory texts
of the exorcist the true nature of his office.
Notes
1 Editio typica, Vatican City 1985; Book of Blessings
(American edition 1989).
2 Meals,
church bells and cemeteries: pp.300-318, 400, 429. In
the American edition, same things at pp. 439-458, 565,
609; also p.589 for chalice and paten (found in Latin in
the Pontifical); also p.624 (article of devotion) and
p.634 (rosary) where the alternative rite (not in the
Latin) does bless an object.
3 The word
anima is suppressed in all of the funerals and Masses
for the dead, except one: two of the proper prayers in
the Mass, “Pro defunctis fratribus, propinquis et
benefactoribus,” Missale Romanum 1975, pp.909-10.
4 Full
title page reads: RITUALE ROMANUM EX DECRETO SACROSANCTI
ŒCUMENICI CONCILII VATICANI II INSTAURATUM AUCTORITATE
IOANNIS PAULI PP. II PROMULGATUM DE EXORCISMIS ET
SUPPLICATIONIBUS QUIBUSDAM EDITIO TYPICA, TYPIS
VATICANIS, MIM. It has not yet appeared in English.
5 Edited
after his death by Fr Crehan S.J. and reprinted in 1998
by Roman Catholic Books, USA.
Father X
holds an STL in Dogmatic Theology.
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