Begone Satan!
A Soul-Stirring Account of Diabolical Possession
A Soul-Stirring Account of Diabolical Possession
Woman Cursed by Her Own Father,
Possessed from 16th Year til 40th Year
Possessed from 16th Year til 40th Year
Written in German by
Rev. Carl Vogl
Rev. Carl Vogl
Translated by
Rev. Celestine Kapsner
Rev. Celestine Kapsner
NIHIL OBSTAT: Rev. Alexius Hoffmann, O.S.B.
IMPRIMATUR:Joseph F. Busch
Bishop of St. Cloud, Minnesota
July 23, 1935
Bishop of St. Cloud, Minnesota
July 23, 1935
Foreword
In
regard to Begone
Satan, some persons have asked the question: “Why publish a story of this kind
in our age and civilization?” One could answer this by replying that our age
and civilization needs to learn anew a lesson that was vainly laughed to scorn
in past generations.
During
His sojourn here on earth Christ cast out devils at various times. The powers
of Christ were transmitted to the Apostles and their successors; and the
Church's ordinary rite of ordination to the Priesthood includes the order of
exorcist, in which Christ's power to cast out devils is transmitted. The
Church, moreover, has a special rite for such exorcisms, and throughout the
ages she has witnessed the effective use of it. Her long experience also
explains her extreme caution, her extensive investigation of a case, before
permitting any exorcism. For a time it was fashionable to scoff at demoniacal
possession as part and parcel of an outmoded superstition of bygone ages of
ignorance like the attitude of a lifetime ago in regard to the miracles of
Lourdes. But facts are stubborn, also against the scoffing of so-called
enlightened criticism. Stubborn facts cannot be denied even when they baffle
all natural explanation. The absurd thing about such a position is that the
critics "just know" that supernatural or preternatural phenomena
simply "cannot be."
We
have become much more sober in our day. And it is a healthy sign that the man
of education no longer scoffs so readily at that which he cannot explain. So
much has been gained for perennial common sense.
To a
great extent the essential matters of Christian faith are beyond the field of natural
knowledge. However, any viewpoint that is flatly contradicted by true natural
knowledge cannot be a matter of Christian faith. In regard to sin and the
Kingdom of Satan, Christian faith teaches Christ's conquest of Satan and
Satan's dominion by His death and resurrection. Now this conquest is shared by
individual souls in the sacrament of Baptism, the rite of which contains
several solemn exorcisms as well as renunciation of Satan and his pomps. In the
light of this Christian faith, it is not at all surprising that Satan should be
regaining something of his hold on men in our day. For we have in several past
centuries witnessed the increased abandonment by men of the Church of Christ,
and among non-Catholic denominations the increased abandonment of the sacrament
of Baptism. What is this but a great surrender to the powers of evil ?
Virgil
Michel, O.S.B., Ph.D.
Letter from a doctor
Dr. John Dundon, Physician and Surgeon
1228 E. Brady St., Milwaukee, Wis
1228 E. Brady St., Milwaukee, Wis
Rev.
Celestine Kapsner, O.S.B.
St. John's Abbey
Collegeville, Minn.
St. John's Abbey
Collegeville, Minn.
Dear
Father Kapsner:
We
wish to endorse your pamphlet "Vade Satana"; as a potent aid to faith
in the value of sacramentals, relics of the saints, and prayer. No more vivid
picture has been presented to us of the losing battle against the "camp of
Christ." Nothing has made our insistent floundering from the "camp of
Christ" to the "camp of the devil" appear so absurd. The memory
it has instilled of the hatred of Satan and the eternal misery of his permanent
army, evokes a continuous inventory of one's life, savoring of the minuteness
of the final judgment. That it will save many souls we have no doubt. That some
will borrow fruitless fright is also possible, but for them one must say that
if the picture is terrible the real thing must be worse. Agony is the lot of
all at least once.
Satan
has seemed too unreal. It would be a pity if this pamphlet were to be
suppressed because some weak souls have been made to sense him more vividly
than the author intends. We were granted an interview with the exorcist, Father
Theophilus, after reading your account of the diabolical possession. We
treasure the experience as an intimate glimpse into the life of a pious priest
very gifted in a specialty which should command the patronage of the medical profession,
rather than to be allotted to the realm of superstition or necromancy. We
anxiously await his complete report of the Earling
Yours
very truly,
J. D.
Dundon, M.D.
BEGONE SATAN!
A Sensational Expulsion of the Devil which occurred in Iowa in 1928.
Nineteen
hundred years ago, Christ, the Son of God, came upon this earth. He gained the
victory over Satan, the Prince of this World, and founded His own Kingdom, the
Church. He vested His Church with the same powers that He had received from the
Father. "As the Father sent Me, so I send you."
When
preparing her candidates for the ministry, Holy Mother Church hands these
powers over to them that they may continue the mission of Christ's Kingdom on
earth. Preparatory to Holy Priesthood the candidate receives the so-called
minor and major orders. Among the minor orders is one called the Order of
Exorcist. When the Bishop confers this order he pronounces the following
significant words: You receive the power to place your hand upon those
possessed and through the imposition of your hands, the grace of the Holy Ghost
and the words of exorcism you shall drive evil spirits out of the bodies of
those so possessed.
The
Solemn and powerful meaning attached to this ceremony, not conferred in any of
the other orders, can be gleaned from the words: Receive and impress upon your
mind that you receive the right to place your hand upon those possessed.
Later
on the Bishop invites the faithful to join him in asking that he who is to
receive this order may be an effective agent in expelling the evil spirit from
those possessed. He continues to pray that the candidate may become an approved
physician of the Church through the gift of healing conferred upon her by the
Almighty Himself.
The
Church bases her action on the example of Christ Himself, Who frequently drove
out evil spirits and endowed His disciples with full authority to do likewise.
The superficial faith of our age regards such an order as superfluous. The
reality of hell, devils, and cases of possession have been denied as myths of
the dark ages. Even if Christ and the Apostles repeatedly emphasized the powers
of the evil spirit, these are looked upon as purely superstitious. That Satan
has succeeded in making man so indifferent regarding his actions of misleading men
is one of his greatest and most advantageous accomplishments. People rarely
listen to anything of a supernatural nature. Actual happenings of the I
supernatural order in our times are all the more striking therefore and cannot
so readily be dismissed by a mere shrug of the shoulders -- facts such as the
numerous and indisputable miracles at Lourdes, the extraordinary visions,
stigmata, abstention from food, and gift of languages of Theresa Neumann, the
life of the Cure of Ars who was recently proclaimed a saint of the church, to
whom for 35 years the sight of hell was constantly and really an ordinary
experience. No less worthy of note are the facts in the cases of possession
occurring in our times: the case of a possessed boy in Wemding, Suabia, Bavaria,
1891; the case in St. Michael's Mission in Africa in 1906 of two girls
possessed; the noted case of the Chinese woman Lautien in Honan, China, in 1926
and 1929, which was under the direction of Father Peter Heier, S.V.D., of
Hague, N. D., now a Missioner in China, and several cases in Rockford, Ill
since 1940.
The
priest has frequent opportunities for using his power of exorcism. The
blessings of holy water, its various uses in the blessing of houses and in the
many other blessings and benedictions of the church in her sacramentals, are
dependent upon this power. Pope Leo XIII in our own time composed a powerful
and solemn prayer of exorcism for priests against the fallen angels and evil
spirits. It is said that this Pope, after God permitted him to see in a vision
the great devastation Satan is carrying on in our times, composed the prayer of
exorcism in honor of St. Michael that is now recited in the vernacular as one
of the prayers after Mass.
Recent
case of possession and expulsion in Earling, Iowa
The following
soul-stirring case of actual possession and successful expulsion, through the
powers given to the Church over the evil one, is all the more striking in view
of the above explanations. The facts herein narrated were testified to by the
late Rev. Joseph Steiger, who was a personal witness of the scenes herein
narrated. While conducting a mission in the parish of Earling in 1928, Father
Theophilus Riesinger, O.M.Cap., asked the Rev. Pastor for permission to have a
certain person, whom he believed possessed by the devil, brought into his
parish, and to use the solemn formula of exorcism over her while she would be
detained in the convent of the Franciscan Sisters who were active in the
parish. Father Steiger happened to be a personal friend of Father Theophilus
for many years past.
"What,
another case of possession?" replied the pastor. "Are these cases
still on the increase? You have already dispossessed the devil in a number of
such cases!"
"That
is indeed true. However, the Bishop has again entrusted this case into my
hands. The lady in question lives at some distance from Earling. I should like
to have her brought here, since it would create too much excitement in her home
and perhaps would be the cause of many disturbances to the person herself."
"But
why just here in my own parish?"
"It
is just here in an outlying country district that the case may be disposed of
in a quiet manner. Two places are available, either the Sisters' convent or in
the sacristy here. So it is quite possible to relieve the unfortunate person of
her burden without anybody out in the world becoming aware of it."
"My
dear Father, do you really think that the Mother Superior would permit anything
like that to take place under her convent roof? I don't believe it. And it
would be altogether out of the question to bring the person into my own
house."
"My
dear friend," smilingly replied the Father, "tell me this one thing.
Will you give me your approval, should the Mother Superior be willing?"
"Well,
all right, but only under this condition. I do not believe that you will have
any success at the convent."
"Thanks
for your permission. The case is therefore settled, as the Mother Superior did
give her consent from the very beginning. I have already made all arrangements
with her for this case, provided you give your full approval."
Thus
it was agreed to have the exorcism performed at the convent. The place was
situated in the country, and as it was summer time, the people were actively
occupied with their work in the open fields. No one would be any the wiser.
Much less would anyone bother himself about what was going on. As a matter of
precaution the case was again submitted to the Bishop, who called the pastor to
himself to acquaint him with what he might expect to happen.
"So,
my Father, you have given your consent to allow this to take place in your
parish. Have you thought the matter over sufficiently?"
"Your
Lordship, to be honest, I must confess that I was not very anxious to have it.
I have a rather strong aversion for such unusual affairs. But Father Theophilus
explained that my country parish together with the easy access to the convent
would be just suitable for such an undertaking, and so I disliked to
refuse."
"As
Bishop I will caution you most emphatically that there may be some very serious
consequences resulting to you in person. Should the Reverend Father not have
enlightened you regarding the matter, then I wish to give you information based
upon sound facts and similar experiences. The devil will certainly try his
utmost to seek revenge on you, should you be willing that this unfortunate
woman be relieved of this terrible oppression."
"Well,
I hardly think that it will be as bad as all that. God's protecting hand will
not fail me. The devil has no more influence than God permits. And if God will
not permit it, the devil will not be able to harm me in the least. So I have no
misgivings. I shall keep my word. I have given my consent, and for that very
reason I would not care to withdraw it again. And should it entail some sacrifices,
I shall be only too glad to bear them, if only an immortal soul shall benefit
by it and be freed from the terrible stranglehold of that infernal being."
The
lady in question
The
unfortunate woman was unknown to the pastor. She lived far from Earling, and up
to then he had heard nothing about her. The Capuchin Father had explained to
him what her actual condition was, that she was a very pious and respectable
person. Throughout her youth she led a religious, fervent and blameless
life. In fact she approached the sacraments frequently. After her
fourteenth year some unusual experiences manifested themselves. She wanted to
pray, wanted to go to church and as usual receive Holy Communion. But some
interior hidden power was interfering with her plans. The situation became
worse instead of improving. Words cannot express what she had to suffer. She
was actually barred from the consolations of the Church, torn away from them by
force. She could not help herself in any way and seemed to be in the clutches
of some mysterious power. She was conscious of some sinister inner voices
that kept on suggesting most disagreeable things to her. These voices tried
their utmost to arouse thoughts of the most shameful type within her, and tried
to induce her to do things unmentionable and even to bring her to despair. The
poor creature was helpless and secretly was of the opinion that she would
become insane. There were times when she felt impelled to shatter her holy
water font, when she could have attacked her spiritual adviser and could have
suffocated him. Yes, there were suggestions urging her to tear down the very
house of God.
"Hallucination,
a pure hysterical case, nervous spells." Such easy explanation one will
hear to account for the experiences. True, similar happenings do occur in
nervous and hysterical cases. However, many doctors had this case in charge for
years, and the woman was finally examined by the best specialists in the
profession. But their thorough examinations resulted in the unanimous
conclusion that the woman in question did not betray the least sign of
nervousness, that she was normal in the fullest sense. There was not the
slightest indication suggesting physical illness. Her undeniable and unusual
experiences could not be accounted for. As the doctors could not help her, it
was thought to see results in another field.
Many
years passed. Finally, recourse was had to the Church and the supernatural
powers of the priesthood. But a reserved and skeptical attitude was maintained
for some years towards proceeding with exorcism. Examinations and observations
were constantly made. It gradually became evident that strange preternatural
powers were at play. The woman understood languages which she had never
heard nor read. When the priest spoke the language of the Church and blessed her in the Latin
tongue, she sensed and understood it at once, and at the same time foamed at
the mouth and became enraged about it. When he continued in classical
Latin, she regained her former ease. She was conscious at once when someone
gave her articles sprinkled with holy water or presented her with things
secretly blessed, whereas ordinary secular objects would leave her perfectly
indifferent.
In
short, when after years of trial and observation she had reached her fortieth
year, the ecclesiastical authorities were finally convinced that here was a
clear case of demoniacal possession. The Church must step in and deliver the
poor creature from the powers of the evil one. The cause of the possession
could not be ascertained. The woman herself could not give any information
about this matter. Only later during the process of solemn exorcism was the
cause made known.
Father
Theophilus had spent many years giving missions in the United States and was
familiar with cases of possession. Since he had already dispossessed the evil
one in many instances, the Bishop entrusted this case to him. His stainless
career, as well as his successful encounter in numerous possessions, singled
him out as the one best suited to take hold of this case. He had little
suspicion that he would meet with the severest experience as yet encountered by
him and that matters of such a nature would confront him as would tax to the
limit his physical endurance. Though this Capuchin Father is the very picture
of health in his sixtieth year, yet he needed all available resources in order
to carry the affair to a successful finish.
The
day agreed upon and approved by the Bishop for the exorcism at Earling, Iowa,
was at hand. Besides the pastor and his sister, who was his housekeeper, and
the Venerable Sisters, not a soul was aware of what was being undertaken. This
secrecy had been strictly agreed upon beforehand. The main purpose of such
procedure was chiefly to protect the name of the woman, lest anything of the
affair might get out among the people and they might point to her and say:
"This is the one who was once possessed by the devil." As she was to
travel by train, it was found necessary to inform the personnel of the train.
For should anything happen on the way, their help would have to be available in
case the demoniacal influence should create any disturbance. This caution was
not in vain, for the men had their hands full. They, however, did not know what
the nature of the disturbance really was. The poor creature herself was only
too willing to submit to the ecclesiastical procedure, so that she might be
delivered from these terrible molestations. Yet she did not always have the
necessary control over herself. She made this known after her
delivery. Thus, the very night on which she arrived at the Earling station, she
was so enraged over those who were there to meet her that she felt like taking
hold of them and choking them.
Previous
arrangements had been made for Father Theophilus to arrive that same night but
by another route. The pastor took his own auto and went to meet him at the
depot. Though the new car was always running in tip-top order it lacked the
usual speed on this trip. Everything possible was tried, yet the car would not make
any headway towards the station though no flaw could be found with it. The
distance was not even worth mentioning, yet it took two hours for the pastor to
arrive at the depot. He excused himself to his guest for causing such a delay
and disappointment.
To
which the latter replied very calmly: "My dear friend, I was not wrought
up about it at all. I would have been much more surprised if everything had
gone smoothly. Difficulties will arise; they must be expected to arise. The
devil will try his utmost to foil our plans. While waiting I prayed constantly
that the evil spirit would not be able to harm you, as I suspected that he
would try to interfere with your coming, yea, that he would try to injure you
personally." Now the pastor understood why his auto had balked. This was
to be the first of many other unpleasant happenings. After such forebodings the
reader can imagine that the missionary entered the car with some misgivings.
But he took his precautions. He first blessed the auto with the sign of the
Cross and then seated himself in the rear of the car. During the short ride to
the rectory he quietly recited the rosary by himself lest something happen on
the way to foil the attempt at exorcism.
The
two priests arrived without the slightest trouble Thank God, the woman also had
arrived safely at the Sisters' convent. With this reassurance the difficult
task could begin quietly on the morrow. However, that very night the enemy
displayed his true colors. News was soon dispatched from the convent to the
rectory next door that the woman caused difficulties from the very start. The well-meaning Sister
in the kitchen had sprinkled holy water over the food on the tray before she
carried the supper to the woman. The devil, however, would not be tricked. The
possessed woman was aware at once of the presence of the blessed food and
became terribly enraged about it. She purred like a cat, and it was absolutely
impossible to make her eat. The blessed food was taken back to the kitchen to
be exchanged for unblessed food; otherwise the soup bowls and the plates might
have been crashed through the window. It was not possible to trick her with any
blessed or consecrated article; the very presence of it would bring about such
intense sufferings in her as though her very body were encased in glowing coal.
The
decisive moment had arrived
All
was quiet. Both the pastor and missionary, having offered up Holy Mass in the
parish church that morning, went over to the convent where everything in a
large room was in readiness for the exorcism. Fortified with the Church's
spiritual weapons, they would dislodge Satan from his stronghold in the person
of the possessed woman. How long would this process last? It was not to be
expected that the devil would leave his victim without a fight. Certainly a few
days would pass by before the powers of darkness would give in to the powers of
Light, before the devils would let loose the soul redeemed by Christ, and
return back to hell. It was well that neither the pastor nor the missionary
knew with what kind of horde of evil spirits they would have to do battle.
The
woman was placed firmly upon the mattress of an iron bed. Upon the advice of
Father Theophilus, her arm-sleeves and her dress were tightly bound so as to
prevent any devilish tricks. The strongest nuns were selected to assist her
in case anything might happen. There was a suspicion that the devil might
attempt attacking the exorcist during the ceremony. Should anything unusual
happen, the nuns were to hold the woman quiet upon her bed. Soon after the
prescribed prayers of the Church were begun, the woman sank into
unconsciousness and remained in that state throughout the period of exorcism. Her eyes were closed up
so tightly that no force could open them.
Father
Theophilus had hardly begun the formula of exorcism in the name of the Blessed
Trinity, in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, in the name of
the Crucified Savior, when a hair-raising scene occurred. With lightning speed the
possessed dislodged herself from her bed and from the hands of her guards; and
her body, carried through the air, landed high above the door of the room and
clung to the wall with a tenacious grip. All present were struck with a
trembling fear. Father Theophilus alone kept his peace.
"Pull
her down. She must be brought back to her place upon the bed!"
Real
force had to be applied to her feet to bring her down from her high position on
the wall. The mystery was that she could cling to the wall at all! It was
through the powers of the evil spirit, who had taken possession of her body.
Again
she was resting upon the mattress. To avoid another such feat, precautions were
taken and she was held down tightly by stronger hands.
The
exorcism was resumed. The prayers of the Church were continued. Suddenly a loud
shrill voice rent the air. The noise in the room sounded as though it were far
off, somewhere in a desert. Satan howled as though he had been struck over
the head with a club. Like a pack of wild beasts suddenly let loose, the
terrifying noises sounded aloud as they came out of the mouth of the possessed
woman. Those present were struck with a terrible fear that penetrated the very
marrow of their bones.
"Silence, Satan.
Keep quiet, you infamous reprobate! "
But he
continued to yell and howl as one clubbed and tortured, so that despite the
closed windows the noises reverberated throughout the neighborhood.
Awe-struck
people came running from here and there: "What is the matter? What is up?
Is there someone in the convent being murdered?" Not even a pig stabbed
with a butcher knife yells with such shrieking howls as these.
The
news travelled through the entire parish like a prairie fire: "At the
convent they are trying to drive out the devil from one possessed." Larger
and smaller groups were filled with terror as they approached the scene of
action and heard with their own ears the unearthly noises and howlings of the
evil spirits. The weaker members of the crowd were unable to endure the
continued rage coming from the underworld. It was even more tense for those
actually present at the scene, who with their own eyes and ears were witnesses
to what was going on before them. The physical condition of the possessed
presented such a gruesome sight, because of the distorted members of her body,
that it was unbearable. The Sisters, even the pastor, could not endure it long.
Occasionally they had to leave the room to recuperate in the fresh air, to gain
new strength for further attendance at the horrible ordeal. The most valiant
and self-composed was Father Theophilus. He had been accustomed to Satan's
howling displays and blusterings from experiences with him in previous
exorcisms. God seems to have favored him with special gifts and qualities for
facing such ordeals. On such occasions, with the permission of the Bishop, he carried a
consecrated host in a pyx upon his breast in order to safeguard himself against
injuries and direct attacks by the evil one. Several times it happened
that he was twisted about, trembling like a fluttering leaf in a whirl-wind.
One
may ask: Does Satan dare at all to remain in the presence of the All Holy? How
can he endure it? Does he not run off like a whipped cur? All we need to
remember is that Satan dared to approach our Lord fasting in the desert. He
even dared to take the Saviour upon a high pinnacle at Jerusalem; and again he
carried Him up on a high mountain-top. If he showed himself so powerful then,
he has not changed since. On the contrary, the devils living in the possessed
displayed various abilities and reactions. Those that hailed from the realm of
the fallen angels gave evidence of a greater reserve. They twisted about and
howled mournfully in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament,
acting like whipped curs who growl and snarl under the pain of the biting lash.
Those who were once the active souls of men upon earth and were condemned to
hell because of their sinful lives acted differently. They showed themselves
bold and fearless, as if they wanted every moment to assail the consecrated
Species only to discover that they were powerless. Frothing and spitting
and vomiting forth unmentionable excrements from the mouth of the poor
creature, they would try to ward off the influence of the exorcist. Apparently
they were trying to befoul the consecrated Host in the pyx, but failed in their
purpose. It was evidently not granted them to spit upon the All Holy directly.
At times they would spout forth torrents of spittal and filth out of the
entrails of the helpless woman in order to give vent to their bitter spleen and
hatred toward the All Holy One. You say torrents? Actually those present had to
live through some terrible experiences. It was heartrending to see
all that came forth from the pitiable creature and often the ordeal was almost
unbearable. Outpourings that would fill a pitcher, yes, even a pail, full of the most
obnoxious stench were most unnatural. These came in quantities that were,
humanly speaking, impossible to lodge in a normal being. At that the poor
creature had eaten scarcely anything for weeks, so that there had been reason
to fear she would not survive. At one time the emission was a bowl full of
matter resembling vomited macaroni. At another time an even greater measure,
having the appearance of sliced and chewed tobacco leaves, was emitted. From
ten to twenty times a day this wretched creature was forced to vomit though she
had taken at the most only a teaspoonful of water or milk by way of food.
One or
more devils
During
this exorcism it was necessary to find out definitely whether the exorcist had
to deal with one or more devils. It was also important for the exorcist to
insist upon getting control over the person and of dispossessing the devil. On
various occasions there were different voices coming out of the woman which
indicated that un-numbered spirits were here involved. There were voices
that sounded bestial and most unnatural, uttering an inexpressible grief and
hatred that no human could reproduce. Again voices were heard that were quite
human, breathing an atmosphere of keen suffering and indicating bitter feeling
of disappointment. As is common in such experiences, Satan can, through the
solemn exorcism of the Church, be forced to speak and to give answer. And,
finally he can also be forced to speak the truth even though he is the father
of lies from the very beginning. Naturally, he will try to mislead and to
sidetrack the exorcist. It is also common experience that Satan at first does
his utmost to side-step the questions with clever, witty evasions, direct lies,
shrewd simulations.
When
Satan was asked in the Name of Jesus, the crucified Savior, whether there were
more spirits involved in the possession of the woman, he did not feign in the
least, but boastfully admitted that there were a number of them present. As
soon as the name of Jesus was mentioned, he began through the woman to foam and
howl like a wild raving animal.
This
ugly bellowing and howling took place every day and at times it lasted for hours.
At other times it sounded as though a horde of lions and hyenas were let loose,
then again as the mewing of cats, the bellowing of cattle and the barking of
dogs. A complete uproar of different animal noises would also resound. This was
at first so taxing on the nerves of those present that the twelve nuns were
forced to take turns at assisting in order to save themselves and to have the
necessary strength to continue facing the siege.
The
exorcist: "In the name of Jesus and His most Blessed Mother, Mary the
Immaculate, who crushed the head of the serpent, tell me the truth. Who is the
leader or prince among you? What is your name?"
Devil,
barking like the hound of hell. "Beelzebub."
Exorcist:
"You call yourself Beelzebub. Are you not Lucifer, the prince of the
devils?"
Devil:
"No, not the prince, the chieftain, but one of the leaders."
Exorcist:
"You were therefore not a human being, but you are one of the fallen
angels, who with selfish pride wanted to be like unto God?"
Devil
with grinning teeth. "Yes, that is so. Ha, how we hate Him!"
Exorcist:
"Why do you call yourself Beelzebub if you are not the prince of the
devils?"
Devil:
"Enough, my name is Beelzebub."
Exorcist:
"From the point of influence and dignity you must rank near Lucifer, or do
you hail from the lower choir of angels?"
Devil:
"I once belonged to the seraphic choir."
Exorcist:
"What would you do, if God made it possible for you to atone for your
injustice to Him?"
Demoniacal
sneering: "Are you a competent theologian?"
Exorcist:
"How long have you been torturing this poor woman?"
Devil:
"Since her fourteenth year."
Exorcist:
"How dared you enter into that innocent girl and torture her like
that?"
Sneeringly: "Ha,
did not her own father curse us into her?"
Exorcist:
"But why did you, Beelzebub, alone take possession of her? Who gave you
that permission?"
Devil:
"Don't talk so foolishly. Don't I have to render obedience to Satan?"
Exorcist:
"Then you are here at the direction and command of Lucifer?"
Devil:
"Well, how could it be otherwise?"
Let it
be noted, too, that Father Theophilus addressed the devil in English, German,
and again in Latin. And the devil, Beelzebub, and all the other devils, replied
correctly in the very same tongues in which they were addressed. Apparently
they would have understood any language spoken today and would have answered in
it. Sometimes it happened that Father Theophilus, while in an exhausted state
of mind, would make slight mispronunciations in his Latin prayers and words of
exorcism. At once Beelzebub would intrude and shriek out. "So and so is
right! Dumbbell, you don't know anything!"
Once
it happened that Father Theophilus did not catch the words the devil spoke in
an articulate mumbling voice. So he asked the pastor: "What did he
say?" Neither had the pastor understood the devil. Then the nuns were
interrogated: "What did he say?" One answered: "So and so, I
think."
Then
the devil bellowed and yelped at them: "You, I did not say that. Stick to
the truth!"
Father
Theophilus indeed was anxious to know why the father had cursed his own
daughter. But he only received a curt uncivil reply: "You can ask him.
Leave me in peace for once."
Exorcist: "Is then
the father of the woman also present as one of the devils? Since when?"
Devil: "What a
foolish question. He has been with us ever since he was damned." A
terrible, sneering laughter followed, full of malicious joy.
Exorcist: "Then I
solemnly command in the name of the Crucified Savior of Nazareth that you
present the father of this woman and that he give me answer!" A deep rough
voice announced itself, which had already been noticed alongside the voice of
Beelzebub.
Exorcist:
"Are you the unfortunate father who has cursed his own child?"
With a
defiant roar: "No."
"Who
are you then?"
"I
am Judas."
"What,
Judas! Are you Judas Iscariot, the former Apostle?"
Thereupon
followed a horrible, woefully prolonged: "Y-e-s, I am the one." This was howled in the
deepest bass voice. It set the whole room a-quivering so that out of pure
fright and horror the pastor and some of the nuns ran out. Then followed a
disgusting exhibition of spitting and vomiting as if Judas were intending to
spit at his Lord and Master with all his might, or as if he had in mind to
unloose his inner waste and filth upon Him.
Finally
Judas was asked: "What business have you here?"
"To bring her to
despair, so that she will commit suicide and hang herself! She must get the
rope, she must go to hell!"
"Is
it then a fact that everyone that commits suicide goes to hell?"
"Rather
not."
"Why
not?"
"Ha,
we devils are the ones that urge them to commit suicide, to hang themselves,
just as I did myself."
"Do
you not regret that you have committed such a despicable deed?"
A
terrible curse followed: "Let me alone. Don't bother me with your fake
god. It was my own fault." Then he kept on raving in a terrible manner.
The
demon Jacob
When
the prayer of exorcism was renewed, the demon Jacob made his appearance with a
healthy manly voice. As in the case of Judas, one could detect at once that he had been a human being.
"Which
Jacob are you?" asked the exorcist.
"The
father of the possessed girl."
Later developments disclosed the fact that he had
led a frightfully coarse and brutal life, a passionately unchaste and debased
life. He now admitted that he had
repeatedly tried to force his own daughter to commit incest with him. But she had firmly resisted him.
Therefore he had cursed her and wished inhumanly that the devils would enter
into her and entice her to commit every possible sin against chastity, thereby
ruining her, body and soul.
He
also admitted that he did not die suddenly but that he was permitted to receive
the sacrament of Extreme Unction. But this was of no avail because he scoffed
at and ridiculed the priest ministering the sacrament to him. Later in the
exorcism he made the following explanation: Whatever sins he had committed in
this life might still have been forgiven him before death, so that he could
have been saved; but the crime of giving his own child to the devils was the
thing that finally determined his eternal damnation. Even in hell he was still scheming how to torture and
molest his child. Lucifer gladly permitted him to do this. And since he was in
his own daughter, he was not, despite all the solemn prayers of the Church, in
the least disposed to give her up or leave her.
"But you will obey!
The power of Christ and the Blessed Trinity will force you back into the pit of
hell where you belong!"
Then followed a load
roar and protest: "No, no, only spare me that!"
As the
prayers of exorcism were continued, Jacob's mistress, who was in hell with him,
also had to face the ordeal and give answer. Her high pitched voice, almost a
falsetto, had already been noticed among the many other voices. She now
confessed that she was Mina.
Mina
admitted that the cause of her damnation was her prolonged immoral life with
Jacob while his wife was still living. But a more specific cause for her eternal woes in hell was her
unrepented acts of child murder.
Exorcist:
"You committed murder while you were still alive? Whom did you kill?"
Mina,
bitterly: "Little ones." Evidently she meant her own children.
Exorcist:
"How many did you actually kill?"
Mina,
most unwillingly, curtly: "Three--no, actually four!"
Mina
showed herself especially hateful. Her replies were filled with such bitter
hatred and spite that they far surpassed all that had happened so far. Her
demeanor towards the Blessed Sacrament is beyond description. She would spit
and vomit in a most hideous manner so that both Father Theophilus and the
pastor had to use handkerchiefs constantly to wipe off the spittle from habit
and cassock. Because of her unworthy communions, it was clear that the Blessed
Sacrament, the Bread of Eternal Life, which should have been the source of her
eternal salvation, turned out to be unto her eternal damnation. For
she tried to get at the Blessed Sacrament with a burning vengeance and hatred.
Out of this group of devils, Mina and Judas were the worst offenders against
the Blessed Sacrament.
The
reader would undoubtedly be misled if he were of the opinion that these
questions and answers followed in regular order. It must be remembered that
these battles and encounters with the devils extended over a number of days. At
times the answers were interrupted by hours and hours of howling and yelling
which could be brought into submission only by prolonged prayer and persistent
exorcism. Often no further answers could be forced from the devils in any other
way. Countless brats of devils also interrupted the process of exorcism by
their disagreeable and almost unbearable interferences. As a result of these
disturbances, the woman's face became so distorted that no one could recognize her
features. Then, too, her whole body became so horribly disfigured that the regular contour of
her body vanished. Her pale, deathlike and emaciated head, often assuming the size of an
inverted water pitcher, became as red as glowing embers. Her eyes protruded
out of their sockets, her lips swelled up to proportions equalling the size of
hands, and her thin emaciated body was bloated to such enormous size that the
pastor and some of the Sisters drew back out of fright, thinking that the woman
would be torn to pieces and burst asunder. At times her abdominal region and
extremities became as hard as iron and stone. In such instances the weight of
her body pressed into the iron bedstead so that the iron rods of the bed bent
to the floor.
According to the
prescribed formula of the Church, the solemn exorcism began with the recitation
of the Litany of All
Saints. All those present knelt and answered the prayers.
At first the evil
spirits remained peaceful, but when the petition, "God the Father of heaven,"
"God the Son Redeemer of the World," "God the Holy Ghost,"
"Holy Trinity one God," were said, the regular turmoil and gnashing
of teeth began. At the petition, "Holy Mary," "St. Michael," the
devils subsided as if struck by a bolt of lightning. A murmuring and
muffled groaning arose at the mention of the choir of Angels and the Holy
Apostles. At the words: "From the persecution of the devil,"
the evil spirit jumped up as if a scourge had hit him. "From the spirit of
uncleanness," how he moaned and yelped like a beaten cur!
Acute
cause of the devil's pain
As the
exorcism progressed, one could see that the benediction of the Blessed
Sacrament pained the devil most acutely. That was always something unbearable
for him. How he spat and vomited! He twisted and raved at the blessing with
the relic of the Cross. Whenever the priest approached him with the cross
and the prescribed words, "Look at the wood of the cross ! Begone ye
powers of hell! The lion of the tribe of Juda shall conquer,"
he acted terribly.
"Stop
it, stop it, I cannot bear it, I cannot listen to it!" he seemed to say.
And
when the exorcist approached him with the relic of the Cross hidden under his
cassock, Satan became a raving maniac. "Begone, begone," he howled,
"I cannot bear it. Oh, this is torture! It is unbearable!"
The
intercession, "Mary, the Immaculate Conception," caused him fearful
agony. When he was addressed, "I command you in the
name of the Immaculate Conception, in the name of her who crushed the head of
the serpent," he wilted and languished. Then he bloated up the woman's body, and
suddenly relaxed as one stunned.
Holy
Water
Holy Water was also
something hateful to Satan. Whenever he was approached with holy water he
screamed: "Away, away with it, away with that abominable dirt! Oh, that
burns, that scorches!" On one occasion a piece of paper bearing the
inscription of a fake Latin prayer was placed on the woman's head. Even the
good nuns believed that the prayer was genuine. In reality, the prayer
consisted of words taken out of a pagan classic. The nuns were very much
surprised that Satan remained so quiet under the experiment. The exorcist,
however, knew the cause of the devil's tranquility. Immediately afterwards, a
second prepared paper was placed on the head of the woman, which had been
blessed beforehand with the sign of the Cross and holy water without anybody
noticing it. In an instant the piece of paper was torn into a thousand shreds.
Little
Flower of the Child Jesus
The
pastor had kept a small relic of the Little Flower of the Child Jesus in his
sacristy in a small pyx without the knowledge of Father Theophilus. For
protection's sake, he placed this in a side-pocket of his cassock one day and
entered the convent where the exorcism was taking place. Just as the pastor
entered the room, the devil began to rave: "Away, away with that! Away
with the relic of the Little Flower, away with that
weathercock!"
"We
have no relic of the Little Flower," the exorcist exclaimed.
"Certainly,
he who just entered has one," said the devil, indicating the pastor. At
the same time the pastor approached with the relic. How the devil began to spit
and to resist!
At
other times the Little Flower played a more important part. One could also
notice what a terrific battle Satan had with St. Michael.
St.
Michael
At the
very mention of St. Michael Satan began to recoil. He was tortured by that part
of the prayer which refers to the solemn petition addressed to St. Michael. He
absolutely refused to listen to the statement that St. Michael, as leader of
the faithful angels, cast Lucifer together with his legions into the very abyss
of hell. It was astounding how much he dreaded the prayer in honor of St.
Michael commonly recited at the end of the Mass. The prayer is as follows:
"St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle. Be our safeguard against
the wickedness and snares of the devil. Restrain him, O God, we humbly beseech
Thee, and do Thou, O Prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God cast him
into hell with the other evil spirits, who prowl about the world seeking the
ruin of souls. Amen."
Would that we as
Christians recited this prayer in honor of St. Michael with greater fervor and devotion.
A
rather peculiar circumstance induced Pope Leo XIII to compose this powerful
prayer. After celebrating Mass one day he was in conference with the Cardinals.
Suddenly he sank to the floor. A doctor was summoned and several came at once.
There was no sign of any pulse-beating, the very life seemed to have ebbed away
from the already weakened and aged body. Suddenly he recovered and said: "What a horrible picture I was permitted to
see!" He saw what was going to happen in the future, the misleading powers
and the ravings of the devils against the Church in all countries. But St.
Michael had appeared in the nick of time and cast Satan and his cohorts back
into the abyss of hell. Such was the occasion that caused Pope Leo XIII to have
this prayer recited over the entire world at the end of the Mass.
Crucifix
and relic of the Cross
As
indicated before, Satan dreaded the sign of the Cross, a crucifix, or a relic of the true
Cross. On one occasion a crucifix not made of wood was handed to Father
Theophilus. This time Satan broke out in a sneering and ridiculing laughter:
"Ha, so you arrived with a pasteboard cross! Since when did 'He' die on a
paper cross? If my knowledge doesn't fail me, He was nailed to a wooden
cross."
The
crucifix was examined more closely and was indeed found to be made not of wood
but of papier mache. On another occasion Satan made fun of the manner in which
Christ was nailed to the cross. "Were not the feet of Jesus nailed one on
top of the other, and not aside of each other?" Catherine Emmerich
gives the same information. She says that the left foot was nailed first with a
shorter nail. Then a longer and stronger nail, at the sight of which our
Saviour is said to have shuddered, was driven first through the right foot and
then through the left. Those standing nearby at the crucifixion saw very
plainly how the nail penetrated both feet.
This
does not mean that we are now sure how the feet of our Saviour were placed upon
the cross, even if Beelzebub's statement tends to confirm the description given
by Catherine Emmerich. We do not give the father of lies credit for being a
reliable witness in such matters as the crucifixion, even if there is no doubt
that many devils were personal witnesses to the crucifixion of Christ. In like
manner I would have no one believe that we know for certain that Judas is in
hell, just because he claimed that he was one of the damned in the case of
possession at Earling. Holy Mother Church has never yet given a decision
regarding this matter even though the words of our Saviour about Judas are
thought- provoking: "It would have been better if that man had never been
born."
As the
days passed by, a rather odd change manifested itself in the disposition of the
pastor who began to experience a rather strong antipathy against the whole
procedure of driving out of the devil.
Antipathy
against the whole procedure
The
pastor could no longer bear the presence of Father Theophilus who had been a
dear friend of his all along, and whom he had known intimately for years. If he
would only be out of the way, out of sight! He now wished that he had refused
to allow this exorcism to be performed in his parish, and that he had sent him
directly out of his house. He became so worked up about it that he finally
informed the exorcist of his illfeeling toward him and the whole affair. Father
Th. did not show the least surprise. The case was still in the developing
stages and it was only natural to suppose that the devil would have recourse to
some source of temptation and annoyance in order to foil all attempts at
dislodging him from the one possessed.
Furthermore,
the devil used every occasion to display hatred for the pastor. "You are
the cause of the whole affair, you are the one who tortures us so
painfully," he burst out. The exorcist commanded Satan on one occasion as
follows: "Be quiet, you hellish serpent. Let the pastor in peace once for
all. He is not harming you in the least. I am doing this with the powers of
exorcism."
This
riled the devil all the more. He said "It is the pastor! He is at fault.
Had he not given you permission to use his church and convent, you wouldn't be
able to do a thing. And even today you would be helpless against us, if he
would retract his assent."
This
is an interesting proof of how the devil feels about and recognizes authority.
He made this evident to every superior, while he acted rather civilly towards
the subordinates. For that reason he never attacked the nuns nor the pastor's
cook. All that the pastor or the mother superior had to do was to appear on the
scene and the disturbance and raving was on. The mother superior once
received such a blow across the face that she was thrust into the corner of the
room. Satan repeatedly threatened Father Steiger, the pastor:
"You
will have to suffer for this.
"You
can't harm me anyway. I am standing under the protection of Almighty God, and
against His power you are absolutely helpless, you detestable hellhound."
"Just
wait! I'll make you repent that. I'll incite the whole parish against you and I
will calumniate you in such a way that you will no longer be able to defend
yourself. Then you will have to pack up and leave in shame and regret."
"If
that be the will of God, then God be praised! But you are powerless against
Him, you vile serpent, you man-killer!"
"Just
wait! I will fix both you and your Lord and Master."
"Ha,
how dare you speak that away against the Almighty, you despicable worm crawling
in the very dust of the earth!
"No,
I cannot harm God directly. But I can touch you and His Church." And he continued
with scorn and sarcasm: "Is it not true? Do you not know the history
of Mexico? We have prepared a nice mess for Him there."
"Who?
You devils?"
"Who
else did it? The whole credit is ours for bringing that situation about. He
will learn to know us better. Lucifer is on His tracks and will make the kettle
hot and heavy for Him. Ha, ha, ha!"
A week
later the devil advanced a little closer with his plans of revenge upon the
pastor.
"Just
wait," he threatened, "until the end of the week! When Friday comes,
then . . ."
The
pastor did not take this threat to heart. He was getting sick of listening to
the howlings and yelpings of the devil day after day. Yet the pastor did indeed
have a narrow escape on a certain Friday.
The
experience of his life
Friday
morning after Mass the telephone rang in the parish house. It was a call from a
farmer, whose mother was critically ill. Would the pastor kindly come and
administer the last sacraments to the dying? He wanted to call for the pastor
with his own car, but somehow it was out of order and he couldn't locate the
trouble. He had been trying to start it for over an hour, but in vain. It
simply would not start. So he asked the pastor to come with his own auto, or to
hire a taxi at the farmer's expense.
Within
a quarter of an hour the pastor was on his way to help the sick woman, carrying
the Blessed Sacrament with him. After dispensing the last sacraments, Father
Steiger was again on the road towards Earllng. The road was familiar to him,
for he had gone that way hundreds of times, by night and by day, and he knew
every bump and stone along the way. He drove very carefully not only because
the auto was new, but also because he was mindful of the devil's threats to
trick him whenever the opportunity was ripe.
He
prayed to his Guardian Angel and to St. Joseph, his Patron Saint, for a safe
journey home. Suddenly as he was driving along, a dark black cloud appeared
before him. It came just as he was about to pass a bridge over a deep ravine.
Great God, it seemed as if his eyes were blindfolded! The next moment there was
a crash, a smash-up which dumbfounded him. He found himself in a mess of ruins.
The auto had crashed into the railing of the bridge with an indescribable force
although he had jerked the car into low gear. The auto, now a complete wreck,
was hanging on the iron trellis threatening every moment to drop into the deep
abyss below. The noise of the crash was so loud that a farmer ploughing a field
some distance away heard the noise and became greatly alarmed. Full of anxiety
he hastened to the scene of the accident, "Good God, it's the pastor's
car! Father, Father, what has happened? Are you hurt?" The pastor, scared
to death, slowly crawled out from underneath the debris. Even the steering
wheel was crushed to pieces. His legs would hardly hold him up. The wonder of
it was that the rod of the steering wheel had not pierced his breast as
frequently happens in such accidents. The farmer hastened home at once and soon
reappeared with his own car. Leaving the wrecked car behind, he took the
pastor, still shaking and in a deathlike pallor, into his own car and hurried
directly to the nearest doctor to ascertain if there were any internal
injuries. No, he was not seriously injured. The doctor discovered some external
scars and a state of nervous excitement, but there was no sign of any internal
injury. Thank God for that!
Leaving
the doctor's office, they drove straight to the parish house at Earling. There
was no one at home, for they had all gone over to the covent to witness the
exorcism. So the pastor also went there. He had hardly entered the room when he
was greeted with a roaring laughter full of vengeance and bitter spleen:
"hahaha-hahaha!" as if the devil were about to burst into a fit of
malicious joy at besting him. "Today he pulled in his proud neck and was
outpointed! I certainly showed him up today. What about your new auto, that
dandy car which was smashed to smithereens? It served you right!"
The
others looked wonderingly at the pastor. He was still pale but nothing ailed
him otherwise.
"Reverend
Pastor, is the devil speaking the truth?" they asked.
"Yes,
what he says is true. My auto is a complete wreck. But he was not able to harm
me personally." A quick reply came from the devil: "Our aim was to
get you, but somehow our plans were thwarted. It was your powerful Patron Saint
who prevented us from harming you."
News
of this accident soon spread abroad and the people in deep sympathy with their
beloved pastor, collected enough money to buy him a new car, so that the devil
would receive no satisfaction from his pranks. Again and again the devil
gleefully reminded the pastor of this incident and warned him to "be ready
for a whole lot more of fun."
The
devil also betrayed himself by saying that he is often the cause of similar
accidents in order to bring people to quicker ruin. In this way he can get his
revenge and give vent to his anger because lawsuits frequently result as a
consequence, which, in turn, are responsible for much hatred and
misunderstanding among people. The reader may make his own conclusions and
resolutions regarding this. It cannot be so readily denied that the enemy of
mankind actually plays a great part in such accidents. Is he not a
"man-killer from the very beginning?" Hence a timely warning to those
who use the auto for evil purposes, who decorate it with all sorts of nonsense
and who even display figures alluringly immoral. The Church has provided a
special blessing under the protection of St. Christopher against evil and
disastrous influences. Therefore, it is customary to put one of these blessed
medals or medallions in cars for safety's sake. St. Paul calls attention to the
fact that the very air is filled with evil spirits.
Satan's
speeches
It
should be noted that Satan did not use the tongue of the poor possessed woman
to make himself understood. The helpless creature had been unconscious during
the greater part of the trial. Her mouth was closed tight. Even when it was
open there was not the slightest movement of the lips, nor were there any
changes in the position of the mouth. The evil spirits simply spoke in an
audible manner from somewhere within her. Possibly they used some inner organ
of the body.
We
know from the early Christian writers of the Roman period that the heathens
frequently heard voices coming out of the idols. Catherine Emmerich also
states that the evil spirits took up their abode in these idols and could
clearly be heard to speak from within them in order to confirm the heathens in
their delusion of idolatry. So it is conceivable how even some of the highly
educated heathens worshipped these statues made by the hands of man, and why
they offered sacrifices to them as if they were gods. They rendered to these
idols the honor that belongs to God alone.
Satan's
knowledge can be embarrassing
The
knowledge Satan had about the sins and the condition of the souls of those
present was rather embarrassing to them. But in this case there were no
disturbing revelations made along that line as there were only nuns and priests
present. But even here he made insinuating remarks: "Is it not true that
you did so and so in your past life, in your childhood days?" He made
reference here to acts which were hardly remembered. The evil spirit, however,
would not be quiet and tried to make a scene of things. So the answer was
given. "If before God I am not guilty of greater faults in my later years
than the sins of my childhood days, then I am not afraid."
Thereupon
followed a most astonishing confession from the devil:
"What
you have already confessed, I do not know."
What follows from this? Apparently Satan knows only the
sins that have not been confessed or repented. What has been
submitted to the keys of the confessional seems to be out of his reach. It
would seem that the sacrament of penance blots out or obliterates sins from the
soul so as not to leave the slightest possibility for Satan to discover them.
Through the sacrament of penance everything is, so to say, drowned in the abyss
of God's mercy.
The
rubrics in the Roman Ritual for exorcism, so wisely and so well established,
demand that not only the exorcist, but also all witnesses and all those called
upon to aid in subduing the possessed person, should make a thorough general
confession, or at least a sincere act of perfect contrition before the process
of exorcism begins. Once cleansed from sin they are more at ease in facing
Satan and will not be subject to annoying remarks on the part of Satan for the
sins committed in the past.
It
happened about forty years ago, in a case of possession at Wemding, Germany,
that during the process of exorcism the mistake was made of calling in the
strongest men of the parish, men of good repute, to subdue a raving young boy.
These good men did not realize with whom they had to deal. The horrible
beastlike howling and yelping was far less disconcerting than the hair-raising
reproofs of the devil for the secret sins and other mistakes of one or the
other of these men. He described them in minutest detail. Under such
circumstances it is not surprising that few people care to be present at such
exorcism, even if they could make themselves useful in many ways. Furthermore,
it must be remembered that Satan, the father of lies, often twists small acts
into unusually and seemingly grievous ones, making mountains out of molehills,
so to speak, and at times purposely distorting them, mixing up truth with
falsehood with the intention of creating the greatest disorder and most lasting
enmity.
In
order to avoid such inconvenient consequences, Father Theophilus, richer by
mature experiences, undertakes his exorcism in consecrated or religious houses
with only the assistance of priests and nuns. Even then things have happened.
Satan shrewdly and sagaciously disclosed hidden things which made certain
persons blush for shame; yes, he made them quiver with fear by threatening to
expose them still more. All the more fortunate, then, that such experience that
will henceforth take place under the seal of secrecy will not be broadcast to
the whole world. Thank God for that!
The
meanness of the devil and the many odd happenings at Earling became common
knowledge among the people in the bordering communities. The pastor of Earling,
Father Steiger, had asked his people to unite in prayer and penance, and to
make visits to the Blessed Sacrament so that the evil spirit might soon be
mastered. Despite common knowledge of the unusual proceedings going on at the
convent, not a single person asked out of curiosity to be permitted to witness
the scene. Even if anyone had asked, permission would not have been granted,
except to priests from the neighborhood.
It has
been intimated above that out of the voices coming from the possessed woman,
four different ones could be very clearly distinguished. They announced
themselves as Beelzebub, Judas Iscariot, Jacob, the father of the possessed
woman, and Mina, Jacob's concubine.
The possessed woman had a clear memory of when her
godless father cursed her and handed her over to the devil. She
did not mention any further details about her unfortunate father, but it was
learned from other sources that he was one of the worst persecutors of priests
and of the Church. In sensual lust and excesses he was a monster of the worst
type. He kept his distance from the Church and her sacramental ministration,
and used every opportunity to ridicule spiritual things. Occasionally, he
attended divine services on solemn feast days, but only to acquire new material
from the sermons of the solemn functions to feed his ridicule and so bolster up
his criticisms among friends and companions. Hence we can understand how he
persisted in ridiculing the priest and his actions! when, even in his last
moments, a merciful God granted him the grace of receiving the last sacrament
of Extreme Unction. As you live, so you die. And his concubine, Mina, was fully
his equal in this respect. Birds of a feather flock together. What was most
surprising I was that such a wicked I and blasphemous father was blessed with
such a virtuous child. Her sincere piety, her pure and innocent disposition,
her diligent application, all were very apparent. Even during the period of
possession the devil could not disturb her inner basic disposition because the
devil has no power over the free will of a human being.
It was
evident that, in addition to the above mentioned devils, there were also a
great number of other unclean spirits in her. Among these the so-called dumb
devils and avenging spirits made themselves especially prominent.
Dumb
devils The number of silent devils was countless. Apparently they were from the lower
classes, for they displayed no marks of strength or power. Their voices
were rather a confusion of sounds from which no definite answers could be
distinguished. There was no articulate speech, rather a pitiful moaning and
subdued howling. They could put up little resistance against the powerful
effects of exorcism. It seemed as though they came and left in hordes, one
crowd being relieved by others of the same type. They reminded one of a
traveller who is suddenly overtaken by a swarm of mosquitoes. A few puffs of
tobacco drive them away, but in short order they return and pester him
again.
Avenging
spirits The avenging spirits were wild and violent, of
rough and ill- mannered character. They were filled with hatred and anger
against all human beings. Their very presence suggested an ugly and disgusting
attitude --a mixture of hatred and envy, meanness and revenge, deception and
trickery. These were precisely the ones that threatened to make the pastor rue
his consent to this exorcism. They had in mind to stir up the whole parish
against him by their misrepresentations, so that he would have to pack up and
leave in disgust. One might presume from this that the devils are much to blame for bringing
about misunderstandings between the pastor and the people. Not
infrequently pastors tell of how they sacrificed themselves, even ruined their
health, for the good of the people, but despite all their untiring efforts, some of the most inconceivable
misinterpretations and misrepresentations had taken place in their parishes.
Some people seem to find it their business to make the life of their shepherd
so miserable that he is brought almost to the point of despair. All his good
intentions bring him nothing but persecution of the worst sort. Hence it would
not be amiss for pastors to use the small formula of exorcism periodically in
order to protect their flocks from such meddlings of the devil, or to use the
prayers composed by Pope Leo XIII for just such an emergency.
The
scheming and plotting of these avenging spirits almost succeeded in inciting
the pastor of Earling to white heat against Father Th., his friend of long
standing, doubtless with the intention of preventing the success of the
exorcism. He was so wrought up over the procedure at times that he thought of
bringing the whole affair to an abrupt close by driving Father Theophilus from
his church and convent with the sharpest words of reproof.
Night
prowlers
During
the process of exorcism, the evil spirits repeatedly made statements to the
effect that they would tire and exhaust the pastor. One time in the middle of
the night he was suddenly awakened by a disturbance in the room. Were rats
gnawing somewhere? It seemed to be between the walls near his bed. Was there so
much room there that the rats could run about so freely? During his fourteen
years in this same house he had never experienced anything of the kind. Was he
to be bothered with such miserable pests at last? He pounded the wall with his
fist to scare away the rodents. But to no avail. He first used his cane, then
his shoe, to pound on the wall. Instead of letting up, the noise became worse.
Perhaps the night prowlers would disappear of their own accord. He waited and
waited. They continued up and down between the walls, and even threatened to
ruin them.
Father
Steiger was in need of a good night's rest after all the disturbances during
the day. An idea came that seemed altogether too foolish. Could there be some
relation between these night prowlers and the evil spirits of the exorcism? Had
not the devils threatened to tire him out? Perhaps this is what they meant
after all. If so, then there is only one thing to do, and that is to use
spiritual weapons against these intruders. Fortifying himself with his stole,
the pastor again tried to sleep. At last the noise let up, but not altogether.
"Wait, you cursed hellrats, I'll get rid of you yet!" Getting up
again, he lit two candles before a crucifix and recited the small formula of
exorcism against evil spirits. Aha! That was the language these hellrats
understand. They took to flight and all was quiet. They seemed to have been
spirited, blown off now, although all previous thumping and pounding on the
walls had brought no results.
A few
nights thereafter the pastor again spent a restless night. Are the doors
rattling? Is the house quaking? Oh, it's only a heavy express train going
through the village, and these noises are only the after rumblings of the
jarred earth. The railroad track was only a short distance away. He waited for
the train to start from the depot, but he heard no move. Perhaps it's the
rattling of machinery in the near-by electric shop!
Finally,
the noise ceased. But suddenly it was heard again, this time right above the
door. Maybe the door is ajar so that draft is swaying it back and forth. There
was no door-stop to catch it, and so he had to get up again. But lo, the door
was closed firmly. He took hold of the knob with a firm grip and pulled hard;
it did not yield. What, is the devil again at his pranks to tire him out, to
rob him of his night's rest? The pastor took the holy water, sprinkled, the
door, windows, and room, and recited the short formula of exorcism. Again all
was quiet. There was not a stir after that. "O you miserable Satan, now I
know your stealthy cunning. Just wait, I'll soon teach you good manners."
It was
learned later that other priests, who had attended the process of expelling the
devil, experienced similar inconveniences and annoyances. Even worse things had
happened to them. They would not retire after that without having holy water
and the stole with them. The noises were often so persistent that one or the
other of the priests was obligated to get up at night and seek the place and cause
of the disturbances, and only after praying was he able to find peace again.
Night prowlers of this kind have been met with in other cases of exorcism even
long after the evil spirits had been driven out of the possessed person.
How
the possessed woman fared
Every
day the woman lost consciousness and became utterly helpless shortly after the
formula of exorcism had begun. When the exercises ceased, she woke up and was
herself again. She declared that she was unaware of what transpired during the
exercises. Quite exhausted, she had to be carried to and from the place where
the exorcism was performed. During all this time she could not eat solid foods,
but nourishment in liquid form was injected into her. It was surprising to note
how such a weak creature could vomit forth such quantities of material as
indicated above. It was not unusual for her to vomit twenty to thirty times a
day.
The
fact that, in her weakened condition, she could bear up under the daily strain
of exorcism for three weeks seems incredible, especially when the terrible
abuses upon her body inflicted by the devil, are taken into consideration. She
suffered so intensely on one occasion that she assumed a death-like color, and
seemed ready to pass away at any moment. "Great God, she is dying. I will
hasten to get the holy oils!" broke out the pastor, who realized the
terrible consequences for all concerned if she died under these conditions. The
charge that the priest had caused her death through the strain of exorcism
would certainly have been launched against them. Father Theophilus calmly
replied on the basis of his long experience: "Just remain here, my friend;
the woman will not die. Absolutely not. This manifestation is only one of
Satan's cunning tricks. He cannot and will not be permitted to kill her.
Absolutely not."
Exorcism
lasted twenty-three days
The
period of exorcism extended over an unusually long period of time. Never before
did it take so long, as far as we know. It lasted just twenty-three days,
however, in three different stages. And remember, the exorcism went on from
early morning until late night. The devil tried his utmost to weaken the
priests and nuns and to induce them to let up in their untiring efforts. The
pastor could not always be present. His care of souls in the parish kept him
away at times. Neither was he physically able to sacrifice so many hours of the
night for this purpose. Thus it happened that many interesting and also
terrible things took place in his absence to which, however, the others were
trustworthy witnesses.
The
solemn formula of exorcism was in progress for more than two weeks before there
were any indications that the devil could be forced to depart from the poor
helpless possessed woman. Even though Father Theophilus had succeeded in
delivering her from a large number of devils through the great powers of the
prayers and exorcisms, the four meanest and most persistent ones could not be
dislodged for a long time. Satan seemed to have gathered up all the forces of
hell to gain a final victory in this case.
High
commander
It was
very evident that the forces of hell were under the direction of a high
commander who, like a general and field marshal, sent forth new recruits for
battle whenever the veterans, in their exhausted condition, were forced to
retire. What pitiful sighs and pleadings they sent forth. One could hear voices
to this effect: "Oh, what we have to put up with here; it is just
terrible, all that we have suffered." There were other voices that kept on
urging their fellow-devils not to let up: "And how we will again have to
suffer and cringe under him, how he will torture us again if we return without
having accomplished our task." They clearly referred to Lucifer as the
torturer.
In
order not to give Satan and his hordes any peace whatever, Father Theophilus
finally decided to continue the exorcisms himself throughout the night,
expecting thereby to achieve his victory. He was blessed with a muscular body
and with nerves of steel. He had tested these out by a rigorous and abstemious
life of self-denial, which had given him great powers of endurance. And indeed
it was something almost superhuman that was demanded of him. For three days and
three nights he kept on without any intermission. Even the Sisters who
alternated were on the verge of a breakdown. Yet the desired effect did not
come It was only with the summoning of his last strength that the exorcist
dared to continue. And at the close of the twenty-third day he was completely
spent. He had the appearance of a walking corpse, a figure which at any moment
might collapse. His own countenance seemed to have aged twenty years during
those three weeks.
Antichrist
The
reader may at this time be inclined to ask if the devil disclosed things that
would be of general interest. For instance, the question of the Antichrist.
What did Satan have to say about him?
It
must be clearly borne in mind that the questions directed to the devil and the
answers given by him were by no means an entertaining dialogue between the evil
spirits and the exorcist. On occasions a long time intervened before an answer
could be forced out of Satan. For the greater part, only a ghastly bellowing,
groaning and howling was the result, whenever he was urged to answer under the
powers of exorcism. It was often such a terrible drudgery, so exhaustingly
tiresome and irritating, that on some days the exorcist was completely covered
with perspiration. He had to make a complete change of attire as often as three
to four times a day. Towards the end of those terrible days he became so weak,
that he felt he could continue only with the special help of God. Yes, he even
pleaded for the grace to be spared his own life. Curious questions not related
to the present exorcism were never purposely asked. At times, however, it
happened that some of the answers given by the devil himself suggested other
questions not strictly pertinent to the case. On such occasions, Father
Theophilus was snubbed by the devil with coarse and harsh replies: "Shut
up, that is none of your business!" Satan often used the crisp Latin
expression: "Non
ad rem!" Which
means, "not to the point," "that has nothing to do with this
affair."
At one
time Satan became rather talkative about the Antichrist. Remember the time he
had so triumphantly referred to the Mexican situation, when he said that he
would stir up a fine mess for Him (Jesus) and His Church, far more detrimental
than hitherto. When asked whether he meant that the furious rage of the
Antichrist would be directed against the Church of God, he asserted that that
was self-evident and insolently continued: "Yes, Satan is already abroad,
and the Antichrist is already born in Palestine. (On another occasion he
also mentioned America.) But he is still young. He must first grow up incognito
before his power can become known."
It is
strange that Catherine Emmerich mentioned a similar period, when she gave a
description of Christ's descent into hell after His death upon the cross. She
related that "when the portals of hell were opened by the angels, there
was a terrible uproar, cursing, scolding, howling and moaning. Individual
angels were hurling hordes of evil spirits aside. All were commanded to adore
Jesus. This caused them the greatest pain. In the center of it all there was a
bottomless abyss as black as night. Lucifer was bound in chains and cast into
this depth of darkness. All this happened in accordance with set laws. I
heard that Lucifer, if I am not mistaken, would again be freed for a time about
fifty or sixty years before the year 2000 A.D.
A
number of other devils would be released somewhat earlier as a punishment and
source of temptation to sinful human beings."
On one
occasion, when Father Th. insisted that the devil should depart and return to
hell, the devil replied in a growling tone: "How can you banish me to
hell? I must be free to prepare the way for the Antichrist." And again he
spoke out of the possessed woman: "We know a lot. We read the signs of the
times. This is the last century. When people will write the year 2000 the end
will be at hand."
Whether
the "father of lies," as our Lord Himself styles Satan, spoke the
truth, it is impossible to judge. At all events, we shall do well if according
to our Lord's suggestion, we try to understand the signs of the times. That the
powers of hell are putting up a desperate attempt to ruin the Church of Christ
in our own times cannot be denied.
At one
time the evil spirits howled and yelped fearfully when the prayers of exorcism
were solemnly pronounced and when the blessings with the relic of the cross and
the consecrated Host were given: "Oh, we cannot bear it any longer. We
suffer intensely. Do stop it, do stop it! This is many times worse than
hell!" These groans, indicating the attendant pain and suffering, cut to
the quick.
"Therefore,
depart at once, ye cursed! It is entirely within your power to free yourself
from these sufferings. Let this poor woman in peace! I conjure you in the name
of the Almighty God, in the name of the Crucified Jesus of Nazareth, in the
name of His purest Mother, the Virgin Mary, in the name of the Archangel
Michael!"
"Oh,
yes," they groaned, "we are willing. But Lucifer does not let
us."
"Tell
the truth. Is Lucifer alone the cause of it?"
"No,
he alone could not be. God's justice does not permit it as yet, because
sufficient atonement has not yet been made for her."
This
admission was valuable. It offered a greater inducement to arouse the members
of the parish to increase their acts of expiation for the woman.
More
atonement
In
accordance with the request of their pastor, the parishioners gladly went to
church to keep regular hours of adoration before the Blessed Sacrament. They
prayed fervently for the destruction of the powers of Satan, and for the
victory of the Church in delivering the victim from the tenacious grip of the
devil. Following the directions of the ritual, the pastor kept on encouraging
his people to private fasting and penance in order that their petitions would
be more effective in strengthening the prayers of the exorcism. Our Lord
Himself, when putting the devil to flight, and after beseeching all to pray,
had told the Apostles that this kind of devils can only be driven away by prayers
and fasting. The devil's own statement, that sufficient penance had not been
done, helped to bring about more fervent prayers and more rigorous penances.
The faithful flocked to church in large numbers from early morn until late in
the evening in order that, by their prayers, they might add their mite to the
work of the Church in this her mission. The exorcism could not continue much
longer as the reserve strength of those actually assisting was being vitally
sapped.
Battle
between good and evil spirits
It was
during this time that the poor woman admitted during her periods of rest that
she had visions of horrible battles between the good and evil spirits.
Countless numbers of evil spirits continually arrived. Satan tried his utmost
not to be outdone this time. The good angels came to assist at the exorcism.
Many approached seated on white horses (Apocalypse 19, 15) and under the
leadership of St. Michael, completely routed the infernal serpents and drove
the demons back to the abyss of hell.
The
Little Flower of the Child Jesus
The Little
Flower of Jesus also appeared to the woman during these crucial days and
spoke these consoling words to her: "Do not lose courage! The
pastor especially should not give up hope. The end is soon at hand."
This
occurred on a certain evening when, to their surprise, the nuns and the
pastor's sister suddenly noticed a cluster of white roses on the ceiling. After
a while the vision gradually disappeared. The pastor noticed the anxious gaze
of these ladies directed towards the ceiling, but he himself did not see the
flowers.
The
words of encouragement from the Little Flower gave a new impetus to the
priests. Now they knew that victory was not far off. During the latter days the devils betrayed great fear
lest they be forced to return to hell. Father Th. insisted upon their departure
again and again. They pleaded pitifully: "Anything but that, anything but
that." To be banished to another place, or into another creature would
have been more bearable. They did not want to be driven back to hell.
"But
you are already in hell."
"True,
true," they groaned, "we drag hell along with us. Yet it is a relief to
be permitted to roam about the earth until (at the last judgment) we
shall be cast off and damned to hell for eternity."
The devils
depart
Gradually
the resistance of the devils began to wane. They seemed to become more docile.
Their bold, bitter demeanor gave way to more moaning and despairing tones. They
could not bear the tortures of exorcism any longer. With great uneasiness they
explained that they would finally return to hell. But how often they are
deceptive and unreliable! Experience teaches us that at times they pretend to
leave the possessed entirely at ease for a while, in order to sidetrack the
unwary observer and thus outwit him. For this reason Father Th., almost
completely exhausted, demanded in the name of the Most Blessed Trinity that at
their departure the devils should give a sign by giving their respective names.
"Yes,"
they promised emphatically.
It was
on the twenty-third day of December, 1928, in the evening about nine o'clock
that, with a sudden jerk of lightning speed the possessed woman broke from the
grip of her protectors and stood erect before them. Only her heels were
touching the bed. At first sight it appeared as if she were to be hurled up to
the ceiling. "Pull her down ! Pull her down" called the pastor while
Father Th. blessed her with the relic of the Cross, saying: "Depart, ye
fiends of hell! Begone, Satan, the Lion of Juda reigns!"
At
that very moment the stiffness of the woman's body gave way and she fell upon
the bed. Then a piercing sound filled the room causing all to tremble
vehemently. Voices saying, "Beelzebub, Judas, Jacob, Mina,"
could be heard. And this was repeated over and over until they faded far away
into the distance.
"Beelzebub,
Judas, Jacob, Mina." To these words were added:
"Hell—hell—hell!"
Everyone
present was terrified by this gruesome scene. It was the long awaited sign
indicating that Satan was forced to leave his victim at last and to return to
hell with his associates.
What a
happy sight it was that followed! The woman opened her eyes and
mouth for the first time, something that had never taken place while the
exorcism itself was going on. She displayed a kindly smile as if
she wanted to say: "From what a terrible burden have I been freed at
last!"
For
the first time in twelve years she uttered the most holy name of Jesus with
child-like piety: "My Jesus, Mercy! Praised be Jesus Christ!"
Tears
of joy filled her eyes and those of all in attendance.
Amid
the first rejoicings, the witnesses were not aware of the terrible odor that
filled the room. All the windows had to be opened. The stench was unearthly,
simply unbearable. It was the last souvenir of the infernal devils who had to
abandon their earthly victim.
What a
day of joy it was for the whole parish! Te
Deum laudamus! Holy
God, we praise Thy name! Not unto us, not unto us, O Lord, but to Thy name be
glory and praise!
From
that time on the woman, always sincerely good, pious and religious, frequently
visited the Blessed Sacrament and assisted at Holy Mass. She received Communion
in a most edifying manner. That which was so terrible for her while she was
under the torturing powers of Satan is now the peaceful joy, of her heart and
soul.
Theresa
Neumann
Theresa
Neumann of Konnersreuth was also concerned in this affair.
A
Bishop of Switzerland, who had been well informed about the above case, paid a
visit to Theresa Neumann. And since it was Friday, he asked her while she was
in one of her ecstatic visions whether she was aware of the terrible case of
demoniacal possession in America. She immediately answered:
"Is
it not so? You mean the case in Earling, Iowa, at which some priests scoffed,
and about which others were indifferent?"
Then
followed an astounding announcement: "The good woman will later be
possessed. This will be for her own personal benefit, for her own purification
and complete atonement."
Furthermore,
the stigmatic woman of Konnersreuth had a terrible vision on the Feast of St.
Michael, pertaining to the exorcism that had taken place in Earling. She
witnessed the frightful battle between the angels of heaven under the
leadership of St. Michael and the infernal demons under the command of Lucifer.
She was so shocked and confused by it that she said:
"If
it be not against the will of God, I will ask Him never again to permit me to
witness anything so terrible."
It was
by far the worst vision she had ever experienced.
Father
Theophilus, basing his opinion on his numerous experiences with cases of
possession, believes that the hour of the Antichrist is not far distant.
Lucifer himself was present for about fourteen days in the Earling case. With
all the forces of hell at his disposal he tried his utmost to make this a test
case. Once Father Th. saw Lucifer standing visibly before him for half an
hour--a fiery being in his characteristically demoniac reality. He had a crown
on his head and carried a fiery sword in his hand. Beelzebub stood alongside of
him. During this time the whole room was filled with flames. Lucifer was
cursing and blaspheming in a terrible rage:
"If
I could, I would have choked you long ago. If I only had my former powers, you
would soon experience what I could do to you."
Through
the powers of Christ he had been deprived of his original might as even now
through exorcism his influence was further diminished. Father Th. asked him one
time: "What can you accomplish, you helpless Lucifer?"
To
which he replied: "What could you do, if you were bound as I am?"
Father
Th., who has had nineteen cases of possession under his care within recent
years, seems convinced that present indications point to the beginning of a great
battle between Christ and Antichrist. He also seems to have learned that Judas
will appear as Antichrist in this manner, that a human person, soon after
birth, will be controlled and completely ruled by him. Besides the Antichrist,
there will be the false prophet, in reality Lucifer, who will perform wonderful
deeds and false miracles. He will not be born of a woman, but will construct a
body for himself out of earthly matter in order to plot as a man among men. But
the faithful need not fear, for all the powers of heaven with its countless
angels will be fighting on their side.
Supplement
The
above account gives only the exorcisms that took place at Earling, Iowa. She
was possessed the first time in 1908 through her aunt, Mina, known among the
people as a witch. The latter had placed a spell on some herbs which she placed
among the woman's food. Father Theophilus freed her from this possession June
18, 1912. She became possessed again due to the curses hurled against her by
her wicked father. The Earling exorcism was in three stages: Aug. 18-26, 1928; Sept.
13-20, 1928; Dec. 15-22, 1928. There were still later possessions but of a milder
nature.
This
woman was born in 1882, is of small stature and had but an elementary
education. She preserved her virginity though she had been exposed to severe
trials. She is still among the living, and recently through private revelations
from Christ has been advocating the spread of perpetual adoration of Christ in
the Blessed Sacrament as a remedy for a lasting peace.
The
purpose of this pamphlet is not to frighten timid souls but rather to encourage
those of strong faith to continue to give battle to the evil one. It is also a
timely warning to sinners to amend their lives from sin to virtue. It is
precisely through the cooperation of sinners that the devil has such power on
earth. It also gives all of us the assurance that the prayers of the Church and
the penance of the faithful in cooperation with her today have still the same
effect over our enemies as did Christ's personal dealings with the evil spirits
during His early sojourn.
Holy
Mother Church has not made any official decision regarding the Earling case and
hence the statements made in this pamphlet are only of a private nature and are
to be accepted merely on their face.
Testimony
of Theresa Wegerer, Father Steiger's housekeeper
"I
was a witness to almost the whole period of the exorcism of the Earling
possession case and I can truthfully say, that the facts mentioned in Begone
Satan are correct. Some of the scenes were even more frightful than described
in the booklet. There is not the slightest doubt in my mind, that the devils
were present and I will never forget the horrible scenes, vile, filthy, and
dirty, as long as I live. All the nuns asked for a change and were transferred
the next year.
"The
woman came back to Earling over a distance of a thousand miles four months
after the exorcism to make a novena of Thanksgiving. This was at the bidding of
Christ Himself. During her stay she boarded with the Schimorowsky family. She
told me how our Blessed Lord appears to her frequently and encourages her to be
faithful."
Originally published in English by Rev. Celestine Kapsner, O.S.B., 1935.
Reprinted by Tan Books and Publishers, 1973.
Electronic Version published by St. Michael House Press, 2004
Reprinted by Tan Books and Publishers, 1973.
Electronic Version published by St. Michael House Press, 2004