“By Beelzebub, the prince of devils, he casts out
devils.”
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In his book, An Exorcist, More Stories, Fr. Gabriel Amorth, chief
exorcist of Rome, presents a statistic from West Germany obtained in
1974: “One out of three theologians does not believe in the existence
of Satan; almost two out of three believe in his existence but not in
his practical actions and REFUSE to take it into account in pastoral
activity.”
Fr. Amorth believes a poll of priests would reveal similar results.
The Catechism Explained, by Spirago and Clark, says it is a serious sin
against faith to deny the existence of evil angels... so as it may
prove beneficial, we will speak today on the devil, his deeds, and how
we avoid his snares.
Who is the prince of devils?
The Bible has many names for him: Satan, Lucifer, Beelzebub, ancient
serpent, red dragon,... but Fr. Amorth says the best name is blasphemy
for if evil could ever be personified it would bear the name of all
that is opposed to God.
Rabbinical tradition says the prince of devils was, at one time, the
most important spirit at God’s throne. He had twelve wings, twice
the number as the Seraphim. As the highest angel, he was the
prince of all creation, but by one act of disobedience, he became the
creature furthest from God. (The fall of the best is the worst.)
How did the prince of angels become
the prince of devils?
Sometime after their creation, all the angels were tested by God for
their fidelity. The prince of the angels, desirous to have
equality with God, strove for it as something to be grasped. Many
other angels, as numerous as the stars in our night sky, followed him
in this venture. Indeed, when asked how many angels there are,
Fr. Amorth cites the Book of Apocalypse’s “myriads and myriads”;
when asked how many demons there are, he repeats the words a demon
spoke through a demoniac, “We are so many that, if it we were visible,
we would darken the sky.”
The angels who followed the prince made a free and irrevocable
choice. Thus when they failed to establish their authority, they
were all punished and are now irrevocably damned for all eternity. They
have not yet, however, to be separated from the life of men.
From Adam to the last man to be born, the fallen angels (devils) are
allowed to roam the earth "seeking the ruin of souls.” These
angels have lost heaven forever. They are in hell in the sense
that they carry about them even now the eternal misery of having lost
God; they have yet, however, to be isolated altogether from just
men.
The devils know that every man coming into this world has a chance to
occupy the heaven which was first destined for them. This brings
them great misery. St. Thomas teaches, “the knowledge that a
creature of earth will occupy his place in heaven, causes the devil
more pain then the flames of hell itself.” In this way, the envy
of the devil is the reason he tempts man away from his God. As he
can not have a good thing, the devil does not want any one else to have
it either and that is why the sin of envy is particular to the bad
angels.
What do the devils do?
In his warfare against man, no devil is permitted to do as he
pleases... and this is a good thing! for one angel, and the weakest of
them, could destroy all material creation. In virtue of this
fact, God limits the power of evil spirits and allows them only to try
mankind - some more than others - in order to advance God’s glory and
man’s perfection. The ordinary activity of devils is to tempt man
away from God by encouraging man to indulge his passions.
But, as scripture records, demons may do extraordinary things.
Fr. Amorth lists six kinds:
1) External pain: the devil causes physical suffering and injuries
i.e., Job’s grievous ulcer, the Cure of Ars’ nightly beatings.
2) Diabolic possession: the devil is allowed to continually occupy a
human body i.e., our Blessed Lord expels the Legion of demons and into
the swine, and the stuff of Hollywood movies.
3) Diabolic oppression: the devil causes a random discomfort which
adversely affects health, job, family life, relationships.
Diabolic oppression may reveal itself in unexplainable rages, tendency
toward isolation, lack of desire for spiritual advancement. It
can be present in individuals and groups i.e., the parish which didn’t
want adoration until the priest had the members repeat their baptismal
promises.
4) Diabolic obsession: the evil spirit causes an almost split
personality. The human will remains free but is weighed down with
oppressive thoughts i.e., persistent temptation to suicide. Could
this explain our country’s over-use of antidepressants and booming
psychiatry profession?
5) Diabolic infestation: the evil spirit activity is directed toward
things: places - houses, offices, stores, fields; objects - cars,
pillows, dolls; and animals. In Nepal, a chicken was hexed and
given to another who, after eating the chicken, so burned with itching
he wanted to die.
6) Diabolic subjugation: the devil uses some men to manipulate others
so that they influence them to form a voluntary pact, implicit or
explicit, with Satan i.e., the international witches group, WICCA, owns
three record companies and, before commercial distribution, every
record is consecrated to Satan in order to lead youth into
Satanism.
What is the primary defense against
the devil?
Man’s first defense against the devil is baptism... that is why the
rite of baptism contains an exorcism.
To the shock of the modern world, Pope Paul VI gave a general audience
on the reality of the devil on November 15, 1972 wherein he stated, “To
be born means to be in the arms of the demon rather than the arms of
God. Baptism ransoms us from this slavery and makes us free
children of God. Therefore (the demon) is our number one enemy.”
Long ago, St. Paul identified our number one enemy this way, “our
wrestling is not against flesh and blood but against the principalities
and powers, against the rulers of the world of this present darkness,
against the spirits of wickedness in high places.” (Ep. 6:12)
How might the baptized be kept safe
from the devil?
The baptized will be safe from the devil if they live holy lives.
If we avoid near occasions of sin, regularly converse with God and the
saints in prayer, frequent the Sacraments, devotedly recite our Rosary,
use holy water and other sacramentals of the Church, read spiritual
books,... if such wholesome spiritual exercises occupy our soul, we
will have a sure defense against any invasion of the devil. The
devil of today’s gospel left the man because he had been exorcised,
but he came back, bringing seven even more deadly demons with
him, as the man had no interior life!
Beyond this, we need fortitude, “Resist the devil and he will fly
from you.” (Jm 4:7) Say often the words of the wearied
Savior, “Begone Satan! For it is written, ‘The Lord thy God
shalt thou worship and him alone thou shalt serve!’” And for
those more stubborn attachments to sin or oppressive spirits
which may be the root cause of our paralyzed spiritual life, I
recommend this short exorcism to be said daily: “I renounce Satan; I
renounce all his pomps and works; and I break the bonds with which he
has established me and for far too long held me bound. And renew
my love and fidelity to Jesus Christ, my Lord and Savior, and Him alone
I shall serve, now and into eternity.”
Finally, let us be at ease... The devil exists, demons
exist, but so does our gracious God.
If we receive the blessed Sacrament without fear, should we fear the
devil? No.
We read in scripture, and reason affirms, that we should not fear him
who can kill the body and do not more. No, we should rather fear
Him who can kill and cast both body and soul into hell.
A reverential fear of and tender love for our God in the Blessed
Sacrament will be a good remedy against fearing the devil.
Indeed, the more we develop our reverence for this Holy Sacrament,
the less frightful we will be regarding the devil and the more
frightful we shall become to him... and EVERY Christian should want to
be the devil’s worse nightmare!