Friday, November 30, 2007

Experience talks.

Hello to my tiny number of readers. I'd like to take this opportunity to ask you for your ghost stories. Personal experiences would be great. Secondhand stories would be good, too. Please keep it so something you have some reason to believe actually happened though. Please?

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Possession vs. Oppression

There is a very important distinction between oppression and possession when dealing with demons.

Now one thing I will mention right off the bat. As far as I know demons are the only spiritual entities capable of either of these attacks. I suppose angels are, since demons are simply fallen angels, but angels don't do these things as they are violations of free will.

Now, I suppose you may be saying, "Well, I know what possession is, what's oppression?"

Oppression is when a demon makes suggestions or puts thoughts in someone's head that wouldn't otherwise be there. Usually of a highly destructive nature. There isn't as much information on this sort of attack in popular works such as what's on the internet because it doesn't make for as sensational a story as full possession.

It is still dangerous.

With possession the demon must be welcomed in somehow. This can happen with seances or other forms of summonings and divinations. Or perhaps a request for power. I'd like to think it's rare for someone to knowingly let a demon into their body, but I really don't have any proof of this.

With oppression it's different. Anyone can be oppressed. It doesn't matter what you do. It doesn't matter how often you go to church. It doesn't even matter if your a priest.

Actually, it's likely that the holier you live your life the more likely it is that demons will try to oppress you. All of the saints have experienced this. Mother Teresa wrote about a time when it seemed God was not in her life. This caused quite a sensation after her death, but to me it wasn't so surprising. After all, in a war who do you try to bring down first but the best the enemy has?

That is what oppression is. The slow wearing away of defenses. Also to scare and disturb the target.

Having said all that, you may wonder how someone can be sure they are being oppressed, rather than just suffering from depression or having random thoughts.

Well, that's hard to say. I suppose in most cases you can't really tell.

There have been times when I'd pass a stained glass window or something else of great worth and have a mental image of me somehow destroying it. It always scared me a bit because I knew I'd never do something like that on purpose. At the earliest times oppression never occurred to me, but at that time I didn't know about oppression. Later I thought that might be it, but never said anything to anyone.

Maybe I should have. Maybe some of the fear would have been alleviated.

On a related note, while trying to find information for this post I found an interesting site that may be useful. It's called the Catholic Online Spiritual Warfare Education and Information Center.

Friday, November 9, 2007

Opening the Gate: The Dangers of Divination

One of the most popular forms of divination is the Ouija Board, perhaps because it's been sold as a children's game by Parker Brothers.

Whatever the tool, though, any form of divination opens a gateway. It welcomes in spirits to answer questions, particularly about the future.

This sort of thing is strictly forbidden by the Catholic Church.

"All forms of divination are to be rejected: recourse to Satan or demons, conjuring up the dead or other practices falsely supposed to 'unveil' the future.[48] Consulting horoscopes, astrology, palm reading, interpretation of omens and lots, the phenomena of clairvoyance, and recourse to mediums all conceal a desire for power over time, history, and, in the last analysis, other human beings, as well as a wish to conciliate hidden powers. They contradict the honor, respect, and loving fear that we owe to God alone." (Catholic Catechism, paragraph 2116)

The story some might know from the Bible dealing with the summoning of spirits is how Kind Saul consulted a medium so that he could speak with the prophet Samuel. The first thing Samuel says is, "Why have you disturbed me by bringing me up?" (1 Samuel, 28:15 Revised Standard Edition)

But if you are not a Catholic, or of any other Christian denomination, what reason do you have not to consult spirits?

Perhaps first I should mention that I think the Ouija board is the most dangerous of the divination tools I know of.

This is why.

To use the board two or more people touch the planchette and it seems to move under its own power. One theory is that the users move the planchette with their subconscious, another is that spirits are involved.

Either way, the very fact that it must touched by human hands to work indicates that those bodies must be involved in controlling the planchette. But is the mind of the humans in control or someone else?

It is because of this that many people have rituals to protect them when using the board. It might be as simple as a positive attitude, avoiding certain times of day or weather conditions, or even placing up sacred barriers.

The thing is, no matter what walls you have in place the Ouija board is a door. So when you start the session there's a gaping hole in your protective barriers and you no longer have control over which spirit answers first.

Also, spirits can lie. Especially if the spirit that comes to call is demonic in nature. It seems very silly, even arrogant, to think that we'd get honest answers whenever we consult the spirits.

Repeated use of divination tools can make the door harder to close, too. The stories most often seem to involve people who didn't take the tool seriously to begin with, but to me 'taking the tool seriously' involves not using it at all. Why take the chance?

There is one story of a girl who's Ouija board made the furniture in her room shake. One of the kids involved eventually moved on to Tarot cards, and found them "wonderfully insightful" (Tarot for Teens) but I beg to differ.

The only difference with Tarot cards is that rather than controlling the human's body, the spirits manipulate the cards. There is still nothing to keep the spirit from lying. And there's still nothing to keep the spirit from manipulating the human's mind. A charming speaker with a manipulative nature can do a lot of things.

I recommend strongly that you never try to contact spirits this way. If you have ghost in your home that you believe desires help passing over, don't you think the spirit would contact you? They can talk, after all. It's the spirits that you can only contact through an intermediary that you have to worry about. That's why such things are forbidden.


Resources:

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Image of Victorian Houses

Why is it haunted houses are almost exclusively pictured as run down Victorian mansions?

The Victorian Age is notorious for several things. Perhaps the best known is the excessive prudishness. They even went so far as to put skirts on tables so that the *gasp* 'limbs' wouldn't show.

Good grief.

Well to do Victorians were also obsessive collectors. Their homes could easily be nearly impassable mazes of vases, paintings, statues, and perhaps a mummy or two.

Yes, mummies. Egypt was all the rage at that time and archeology was in its infancy. Most archaeologists were really little more than treasure hunters. They'd find some odd bit of jewelry or part of a mummy and sell it to the highest bidder. Counterfeiting was a great side business.

I don't know why anyone would want to keep a mummy, let alone a copic jar, in their home, but the Victorian age did seem to attract macabre interests.

This was also the time of spiritualism, an increasing interest in East Asia, and the popularization of the Ouija board.

This was the age of Houdini and Charles Dickens. Both Braum Stocker and Mary Shelley wrote their infamous horror stories during this time. (Dracula and Frankenstein, respectively.)

The idea of reincarnation also became popular. It seemed every lovestruck woman was the reincarnation of an Egyptian dancing girl and the object of her desire a reincarnated prince.

And I haven't even gotten to the houses themselves. The fanciful turrets, decorative extentions, and occassionally cramped confines may well have given them an other worldly air when they were new. Now that they average a hundred years, the creakings and groanings natural to an aging structure can make the most sensible person uneasy.

I should know, I lived in one for most of my life.

Granted, it's an old farm house and thus of a more utilitarian design. Still, it's age gives it an air. It's been remodeled at least once in the interim, including a questionable electrical system. The plumbing is certainly from the second half of the 20th century, though it's showing its age more than some other parts of the house. Still, there are creaks, groans, and odd spaces left over from renovations.

It is, in short a house more than capable of frightening newcomers. Once you get used to the place, though, it's easy enough to distinguish the normal sounds of settling from things much more... unsettling.