Loading....
Loading...
Local
Loading...
|
Canada
Loading...
|
World
Loading...
|
Business
Loading...
|
Sports
|
Entertainment
|
Movies
Loading...
|
Columns
Loading...
|
Blogs
Loading...
|
Life
|
Travel
Loading...
|
Games
|
x

The detail in the Devil

Demon possession ‘definitely’ happens, demonologist says
Bradshaw’s book cover.

Bradshaw’s book cover.

«I do not say what I do and do not believe because people will say, ‘Well, that’s why you wrote that.’ I’m giving people the information and they make their own decisions. Let me tell you that scholarly information would suggest that demon possession, very definitely, does happen.» - North America’s first academic demonologist William Bradshaw

BY BRIAN TOWIE METRO TORONTO
May 05, 2008 7:23 p.m.
       Text size          

The devil made Dr. William Bradshaw do it.

The retired minister and academic from St. Louis, Mo., recently released Sinister Among Us, a suspense novel about the president of a small American Midwest college who uncovers a group of Satanists at the centre of the school’s problems.

But Bradshaw isn’t out to simply send chills down a reader’s spine, he claims the fictitious work is an introduction to his main labour — demonology.

“It’s demonology 101,” says Bradshaw. “I wrote it so that the layman could more easily find out about demons and evil spirits, and I’ve inserted the research in the form of a novel. You find out all about it.”

A graduate of the University of Missouri and Yale Divinity School, Bradshaw was studying for his PhD at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland in 1961 under religious scholar Matthew Black. Black, among other theologians, was exploring the possibility of a satanic influence behind the Nazi atrocities during World War II, asking if people could be that inhumane to each other independently of ultra-human assistance, or if a kind of demonic possession was involved. Bradshaw got on the case, tracing the appearance of Satan and demons through early Middle Eastern literature and Judeo-Christian texts, and researching exorcisms or cases considered to be exorcisms.

He returned Stateside after his studies as America’s first strictly academic demonologist, always stressing that he has always done his best to keep his research as unbiased as possible.  

“I do not say what I do and do not believe because people will say, ‘Well, that’s why you wrote that.’ I’m giving people the information and they make their own decisions,” says Bradshaw. “Let me tell you that scholarly information would suggest that demon possession, very definitely, does happen.”

And it happens to good people, Bradshaw theorizes, noting that targets tend toward the innocent, highly virtuous and unusually gifted. Bradshaw says diabolical inhabitations themselves are not unlike the scenario depicted in the horror classic The Exorcist, which, pea soup sprayings and spinning heads aside, is based on an alleged 1949 possession case involving a nine-year-old boy from Cottage City, Md.


“Hollywood trumps it up for dramatic effect, of course,” says Bradshaw. “But I would say The Exorcist is the most accurate depiction of demonic possession.”

You might think such a pursuit would make him that scary bugger whom no one at the party wants to talk to, but Bradshaw claims this isn’t so.

“It’s really the other way,” he laughs. “Interest in demonology tends to ebb and flow according to what’s going on in the world. When there’s great human suffering, people look for reasons why, and these questions have come to the fore once again.” 

Don't be greedy, share this article:                                       

more workology stories

Seasonal employees fuel the holiday rush

Over the next few weeks Metro’s Workology section will be shining a light on some of the jobs that pop up around the holiday season and dissappear just as quickly afterwards.  Check back every Wednesday.

Academic accolade for Ont. athlete

Christopher Morrison demolished the jock versus brainiac distinction last week, as Canadian Interuniversity Sport named him one of the top eight Academic All-Canadians.

Curtain call for textbooks?

A Toronto high school is ditching printed textbooks in favour of digital ones in a move the school head says will boost learning while saving money and the environment.

Fitness fusion in Forest Hill

Fusion is a word we often hear in reference to food, music, clothing and a plethora of other things. One thing we often don’t associate with fusion, however, is fitness — but that may change.

If you do one thing really well…

What’s in a name? It’s a tough answer. But if one thing is guaranteed, it’s a lot more than a grouping of letters.

editor's picks

Watergate-era White House notes being probed for hidden clues

WASHINGTON - The National Archives is bringing together investigators to search for scribbled secrets from the early days of the Watergate scandal as the chain of events began that destroyed Richard Nixon's presidency.

Kennedy behind Fleury if he pursues charges against James

CALGARY - If Theo Fleury decides to pursue criminal charges against former junior hockey coach Graham James, Sheldon Kennedy will be in his former teammate's corner.

Canadians watched by insurgents as they seek control of key town Video Available

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - The Taliban kept to the shadows of Haji Baba on Wednesday as Canadian soldiers trying to seize control of the insurgent stronghold continued to pick up apart its defences.

Seal hunt protesters take aim at Olympic torch run

A pair of animal rights groups are planning on protesting the seal hunt during the Olympic torch run over the next few months.


F E A T U R E D   S P O N S O R S