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."You believe there is a devil?" I ask him as we settle in at a small, beautiful chapel near the church.
“Yes.”
“You believe that this devil acts upon people?”
“Correct.”
Originally posted by SUICIDEHK45
."You believe there is a devil?" I ask him as we settle in at a small, beautiful chapel near the church.
“Yes.”
“You believe that this devil acts upon people?”
“Correct.”
America's Top Exorcist
Do you believe in demonic possesion?
Originally posted by Advantage
Probably a good thing the bible didnt describe Satan as a Bunny. If so, it would read something like this:
"Occasionally people will take on kind of a body language of a fuzzy bunny look, and they'll begin to hop around and eat carrots in ways that would look bunny-like, and they'll cuddle up in a bunny like position."
Originally posted by SUICIDEHK45
."You believe there is a devil?" I ask him as we settle in at a small, beautiful chapel near the church.
“Yes.”
“You believe that this devil acts upon people?”
“Correct.”
America's Top Exorcist
Do you believe in demonic possesion?
A Pew survey found more than one in 10 Americans have witnessed an exorcism, and when you narrow it down to Pentecostals it’s about one in three.
“Forty percent of Americans said they completely believe angels and demons are active in the world,” she told me, “with 28% telling us they mostly believe this."
That is the kind of information that needs more than a priestly explanation, so I roamed over to Georgetown University to talk to Ori Soltes, a theologian. The problem, he says, is that we can’t know for sure what people mean when they say they’ve seen an exorcism. Was it a formal ceremony? A personal revelation? A changed way of life?