Pope Francis advised confessors to refer to an exorcist to better address parishioners’ who have ‘real spiritual disorders’ with supernatural origins

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

Pope Francis has advised priests who hear troubled confessions from parishioners to not hesitate to call on the services of an exorcist.

A good confessor has to be very discerning, particularly when he has to deal with “real spiritual disorders”, the 80-year-old pontiff told priests at a Vatican training seminar on the art of hearing believers recount their sins.

Disorders could have their roots in all manner of circumstances, including supernatural ones, he suggested.

In such circumstances the confessor “must not hesitate to refer to exorcists … chosen with great care and prudence”.

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It is not the first time the pope has talked about exorcising demons from a believer’s person, and he generally refers more frequently than his predecessors to the devil, characterising him as a physical presence in this world.

Francis has described jihadists who stabbed a French priest to death as satanic and the acts of priests who sexually abuse children as akin to participating in a satanic mass.

Vatican universities also regularly hold training courses for would-be exorcists despite the practice being frowned upon by some church intellectuals.

Francis also presided on Friday over a celebration of penitence in St Peter’s cathedral, during which he confessed himself before hearing confessions of several of the faithful.