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“The Pope’s Exorcist”

pearl

Well-Known Member
I've always enjoyed these types of movies, for entertainment purposes. It seems all of such films depend on the Catholic Church
to get the demon. Although I have seen the role of exorcist in one film who was a Jewish rabbi.

The Jesuit priest recalls sitting at a restaurant sipping wine and mulling the costly airline ticket he had purchased a day earlier. He also worried about the deal he had just closed with the Society of St. Paul to purchase the rights to the life story of the Rev. Gabriele Amorth—the late Pauline priest known as “the James Bond of exorcists.”

Amorth said 98% of the people who came to him needed a psychiatrist, not an exorcist, a detail Crowe’s Amorth clarifies in the film. When a cardinal asks him about the remaining 2%, he says: “Ah, the other 2%—this is something that has confounded all of science and all of medicine for a very long time.” He adds after a dramatic pause: “I call it evil.”

In “The Pope’s Exorcist,” set in 1987, Crowe’s Amorth heads to Spain with his apprentice, a younger priest, tasked with investigating a young boy’s possession. There he uncovers a “centuries-old conspiracy” that the Vatican has tried to cover up in a plot that appears to channel The Da Vinci Code, Indiana Jones and numerous buddy-cop movies.

“The kind of Christianity we had in America during the mid-20th century, emphasizing ethics over the supernatural, was an anomaly,” Laycock said. “Most of Christian history has emphasized the supernatural and spiritual warfare. This is Christianity returning to its supernatural roots.”
 

pearl

Well-Known Member
Have you see this? :)

No I haven't. The movie I referred to is 'The Unborn'. The Unborn (2009 film) - Wikipedia

In connection with exorcisms I did find this interesting;

Exorcism is a ritual of power performed in order to drive an evil spirit, whether demonic or ghostly, from a possessed person, location, or object. The Christian scholar Origen credits Jews with a special talent for exorcising demons (Against Celsus, book 4).

The Dead Sea Scrolls include several exorcism incantations and formulae, mostly directed against disease-causing demons. The DSS Psalms collection in particular (11Q5) has “four songs for the charming of demons with music.” People who fell under the influence of false prophets and mediums were thought to also require the exorcism of possessing evil spirits (the false prophets and mediums themselves were subject to death, a sure cure for most possessions; see Zechariah 13).
 

Estro Felino

Believer in free will
Premium Member
And if possessed?, either by a demotic or a psychiatric problem, where's the free will choice?
That's why religion should cooperate with neurology and science in general.
To understand the scientific implications of evil as a choice.
 
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