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Healing
News
by Francis MacNutt
taken from the Jan/Feb 2002 issue
   
News
About Healing and Deliverance
In
November NBC’s Dateline aired an amazing program on the
controversial topic of exorcism. In the past, most such programs
have tended to be sensational, were superficial, and were
characterized by skepticism. In contrast, Dateline’s treatment
was, we thought, very fair and had sufficient length to show a
real change in the man who underwent the exorcism, which took
place near Charleston, South Carolina.
An unusual feature was that the main exorcist was a Southern Baptist,
with a team of four Baptists, including his pastor. They prayed for five hours and the program showed the
growling, the retching and the other disagreeable manifestations
that often accompany a deliverance session.
The client was about 60 years old and his main complaint
was a long-time severe depression, accompanied by much anger.
The Baptist exorcists went about their work in as calm a way as they
could manage while still dealing with a violent man. Dateline interviewed him afterwards, and he seemed to be
transformed into a peaceful person.
A fascinating sidelight to this were interviews with two experts.
One, a Catholic sociologist (who wrote American Exorcism,
featured in our last Newsletter) was more or less skeptical and
wasn’t sure if the man didn’t just have a psychological
problem.
The other was a psychiatrist, a Jewish Christian, who held a position in
the American Psychiatric Association and who gave a very
positive evaluation of the exorcism.
The interviewer could hardly believe what the
psychiatrist was saying, and rephrased his questions several
times to make sure he really heard what the psychiatrist had to
say.
All in all, this NBC program is one more sign that our culture - the
medical world in particular - is more open to healing and
deliverance than ever before.
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• • • • • • • • •
More on Exorcism
Back in the 1970’s, I met a brilliant young priest, Fr. Rufus Pereira,
who had gotten involved in exorcism back in his native India.
Then in 1978, he, among others, invited me to bring a
team to preach in India, where he showed me how many people were
inhabited by demons in the form of Hindu gods.
(You will find an interview with Fr. Rufus in the
Appendix to my book Deliverance from Evil Spirits.)
One of my many happy reunions in Rome was meeting Fr. Rufus again after
25 years, and to hear him give a 20-minute talk on exorcism.
He presented a remarkable narrative about the amazing
breakthrough in this ministry in which he has labored so long
during an often lonely walk, as he has tried to communicate his
knowledge about the need for deliverance from evil.
Now, at last, the “glass ceiling” seems to be pierced
and he is seeing a dramatic growth in interest among Church
authorities.
Among other causes of this surge of interest has been the increasing
number of cases of Satanism in Europe – in Italy, in
particular – which caused the official exorcist of Rome, Fr.
Gabriele Amorth, to write a book in which he publicly states
that bishops who do not inform themselves about the ministry of
exorcism are committing a serious sin of omission! Then the Pope issued an instruction asking every bishop who
heads a diocese to appoint an official exorcist.
Fr. Rufus reported that two seminars in East Berlin, sponsored by
Lutherans and Catholics in 1995, came out with the startling
conclusion that Satanism has succeeded Communism as the greatest
scourge of Christian Europe today!
The growth of priest exorcists has been explosive.
In 1993 seven exorcists held a meeting near Rome and
formed the International Association of Exorcists (AIE).
By the following year the membership had grown to 80 and
it now numbers in the hundreds.
At the same time, due to the influence of charismatic renewal, prayer
for deliverance from evil spirits (i.e., non-formal prayer,
often by laypeople, but not the official Rite of Exorcism)
became more common, and Fr. Rufus, with others, formed another
organization (1995) called the International Association for
Deliverance (IAD), starting off with 135 members.
Suddenly, Fr.
Rufus found himself in great demand as bishops from all over the
world invited him to give five-day training seminars to their
priests. He has now
done this in Brazil, Argentina, India, Singapore, Uganda and
about 20 other countries! The
need for teaching on this topic is now finally being recognized.
In
one diocese in Africa, after Fr. Rufus gave a talk to priests on
deliverance, one priest stood up and said that all of them,
including the bishop, had been involved in the occult as
part of their cultural, family background.
He admitted that they send their difficult cases to the
local witchdoctors. He
asked if Rufus would tell them how to deal with these cases.
Instead, Rufus said, “I’ll show you what I do.”
On the last day of the retreat the priests brought him
some 30 cases of demonic oppression and all were delivered with
the help of 120 priests, within just 30 minutes!
Now,
Fr. Rufus has taken to praying for entire countries. In Haiti, for example, at a congress for 60,000 people, he
prayed for deliverance for this land that has been so subject to
violence, poverty and voodoo, since that country’s leaders
dedicated Haiti to Satan 150 years ago.
Talking
with him after his presentation, I asked him whether he wasn’t
meeting skepticism and resistance on the part of some leaders;
he responded by saying that he now finds many bishops open to
this topic, but the most resistant group are theologians who
teach in seminaries.
One
conclusion that Fr. Rufus has come to – with which we
certainly agree: deliverance is a ministry of compassion for the
afflicted, more than a ministry of power against the oppressing
spirits.
This
is great news about the startling growth of the deliverance
ministry – so closely allied with healing.
Now deliverance is not just out there on the fringes,
performed by “Lone Ranger” ministers who have trouble
finding acceptance in their churches, but suddenly there is an
explosion of interest among established church leaders.
Isn’t this what we have been praying for for many
years?
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