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How did demons get so evil?

Clare73

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(32) And he said unto them, Go. And when they were come out, they went into the herd of swine: and, behold, the whole herd of swine ran violently down a steep place into the sea, and perished in the waters.
And there goes the denial of hell as eternal torment or "everlasting punishment" of Matthew 25:46.
 
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The Liturgist

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You wrote many philosophical ideas and connections between dots you personally find in it,

There’s a word for what @Mark Quayle is doing and its called “exegesis,” and as @pescador and many other members can attest, it is correct form of Scriptural interpretation (reading verses in the context of the rest of Scripture, rather than in isolation, according to certain principles of hermeneutics, which you mistakenly call “philosophical ideas” but really, we are very far in this thread from the kind of advanced theological discourse where philosophical concepts are invoked*), as opposed to reading verses in isolation, which is called eisegesis and is universally derided by theologians of all denominations and backgrounds as a fallacious and misleading technique.

*as a rule of thumb a theological conversation doesn’t really enter into philosophical territory unless philosophical constructs like teleology, ontology, anthropomorphology, metaphysics and dialectical methods start to become important and relevant to the conversation at hand, and in this conversation, we aren’t even close to needing to invoke Maimonides, Averroes, Philo, Aristotle, Plato or even simple Socrates, let alone Hegel or Kant or Descartes or someone more recent like Ballard or Derrida or Rawls.
 
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Mark Quayle

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Thanks. I'll try. @The Liturgist
 
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Mark Quayle

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While I agree there's something to the notion of the authority of the church, I find that anything "The Church" (which is hardly the same thing as the elect) comes up with, it MUST be governed by Scripture, not just 'guided', BUT, one can hardly discard the verse out of hand, by eisegesis or otherwise:

“But if I tarry long, that thou mayest know how thou oughtest to behave thyself in the house of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth.”

I Timothy 3:15

Let the church bear this sobering responsibility with care...
 
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Mark Quayle

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@Sorn
@TedT
@myst33
@Clare73

Something about this whole debate makes me think that some here have a small view of sin. They don't seem to realize what a horror it is -- in a certain sense, it is the only thing that is capable of actually opposing God. Thus also, they don't see the degree to which God hates it.

All of us fall short, and God knew we would, and even designed all things for it to happen, but the notion that something could actually hurt God Almighty, THE CREATOR, First Cause, is at the CORE of our redemption, it fills the Gospel of Christ with meaning beyond our ken, and to make it sound small is to take lightly Christ's sacrifice. It is bad enough to sin at all, but to deny even a little of the depth of God's grace by including such a view into one's doctrine must not be overlooked or gone unanswered (to say it nicely).

The smallest sin deserves infinite retribution by the one who has been wronged infinitely above all others: Jesus Christ. Vengeance is his, and he will repay, precisely and thoroughly.
 
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Mark Quayle

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No, you conclusion is wrong. Hate is an active emotion, one can not hate without being aware of it. Whether such a person wants to acknowledge it or not is a different matter but hate is an active emotion
I'd like to see you ask Christ about that, when our lives are reviewed at the judgement.
 
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The Liturgist

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I agree, and am sending you a PM on this, and also CCing my other friend named Mark
 
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Mark Quayle

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Thank you for your kind words. In our current circumstances, i.e. this format, it becomes necessary to give the short answer, since there is hardly the room/time to write (nor the will of the opposition to read) the long exegesis. This can be taken for eisegesis by those who write long posts, with long sequences of logic that in spite of their scholarly rigor still depend on a grand false presupposition. I'll leave it at that.
 
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The Liturgist

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@Mark Quayle I tried to PM a reply to one of your posts I wish to discuss with you and another member, because I agreed with it and it touches on an issue that has been troubling me, but is not topical to this thread, but it looks like you need to adjust your settings so I can do so.
 
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MarkRohfrietsch

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Our right retains the exorcism: "Depart thou evil spirits and make room for the Holy Spirit".
 
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MarkRohfrietsch

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I tried inviting as well. Neither @The Liturgist nor I bight all that hard. LOL.
 
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Mark Quayle

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I will do so— as Victor Borge would say, "fifthwith" — if I can figure out how, that is.
 
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Mark Quayle

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I only checked a box called something like "who can post messages to your profile page", which was already set at "members", (I think it was), which box had been unchecked. Hopefully that was the problem. If not, let me know.
 
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trophy33

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Oh mine, I have 15 (if I counted it right) unanswered posts reacting to mine...

So I will just summarize my point: There are some traditions or presuppositions which everybody just repeat without questioning or verifying them.

The origin of demons or their image is one of them. Bible is quite silent about specifics, but tradition, art and culture built up many ideas on very few facts.

Maybe those ideas are right, maybe not. My challenge to everyone is to be constantly open minded and to be ready to accept that some doctrines are not certain and are just long time repeated opinions of others.
In various areas of life.
 
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I have heard that too, but the story was also obviously at a minimum sensationalized to a great extent, and I did not like the ending. There is no way a demon would give up control of a child to possess a priest and then kill the new host.
Yes, well, that movie was a bit silly in parts.

I read an eye-witness account of the actual exorcism that the movie was based on, and if memory serves, it involved a boy, not a girl. And the final stages of the exorcism took place in a Catholic seminary, not in a private home.

Interestingly, the real-life account mentioned that when a demon is finally exorcised, it leaves with a literal, audible "bang" - a very loud, sharp "crack!" that can be heard some distance away.

In the case of the abovementioed boy, the demon would pretend to leave, but it didn't fool the exorcists because they hadn't yet heard the "crack!" ... only when they finally heard that "crack!" did they know the exorcism had been successfully completed.
 
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The Liturgist

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I haven’t read any reports of cracking sounds on successful completion of demonic exorcisms in the Early Church Fathers and thus I would be extremely wary of it.

Fun fact: while the Eastern Orthodox do recognize the existence of Eucharistic miracles, and the conversion of a Muslim who received a crown of martyrdom resulted from seeing the true flesh and blood of our Lord, Orthodox priests are I have been reliably informed required to call the bishop in the event the Lamb (the leavened Host) takes on a fleshy appearance, to make sure they are not being deceived and nothing spiritually untoward is going on.

When I first heard that I immediately imagined the deacon hurriedly closing the Royal Doors and the Curtain while the priest walked to the East side of the Holy Table picked up a red telephone handset concealed thereon, wired to a private hotline to the cathedral and the bishop’s cell (most Orthodox bishops are monks) for use in such emergencies. Of course in reality such absurdities are the province of Mormons and heretical megachurches, but the image still amused me.
 
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