Decline of religion in the West has created a rise in black magic, Satanism and the occult
Decline of religious belief means we need more exorcists, say Catholics
The abandonment of religion inevitably leads people to ask questions about the existence of evil and its origins
By Nick Squires
THE TELEGRAPH
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
May 8, 2014
ROME---The decline of religious belief in the West and the growth of secularism has opened the window to black magic, Satanism and belief in the occult, the organisers of a conference on exorcism have said.
The six-day meeting in Rome aims to train about 200 Roman Catholic priests from more than 30 countries in how to cast out evil from people who believe themselves to be in thrall to the Devil.
The conference, Exorcism and Prayers of Liberation, has also attracted psychiatrists, sociologists, doctors and criminologists in what the Church called a multi-disciplinary approach to exorcisms.
Giuseppe Ferrari, from GRIS, a Catholic research group that organised the conference, said there was an ever growing need for priests to be trained to perform exorcisms because of the increasing number of lay people tempted to dabble in black magic, paganism and the occult.
Read the full story at www.VirtueOnline.org
Decline of religious belief means we need more exorcists, say Catholics
The abandonment of religion inevitably leads people to ask questions about the existence of evil and its origins
By Nick Squires
THE TELEGRAPH
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
May 8, 2014
ROME---The decline of religious belief in the West and the growth of secularism has opened the window to black magic, Satanism and belief in the occult, the organisers of a conference on exorcism have said.
The six-day meeting in Rome aims to train about 200 Roman Catholic priests from more than 30 countries in how to cast out evil from people who believe themselves to be in thrall to the Devil.
The conference, Exorcism and Prayers of Liberation, has also attracted psychiatrists, sociologists, doctors and criminologists in what the Church called a multi-disciplinary approach to exorcisms.
Giuseppe Ferrari, from GRIS, a Catholic research group that organised the conference, said there was an ever growing need for priests to be trained to perform exorcisms because of the increasing number of lay people tempted to dabble in black magic, paganism and the occult.
Read the full story at www.VirtueOnline.org