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Father Gabriele Amorth: The Official Biography of the Pope's Exorcist (Fr. Gabriele Amorth: Rome's Exorcist, The Official Biography), by Domenico Agasso, Gastonia: TAN Books, 2023. Translated by Bret Thoman, OFS (Originally published as Don Amorth continua: La biografia ufficiale, Milan: Edizioni San Paolo, August 2021. 240 pages.) [25] [26]
Father Amorth was an actual exorcist who wrote a book called Father Amorth: My Battle Against Satan. “Tall and balding with laughing eyes and a welcoming smile, Father Gabriele Amorth spent ...
The Pope's Exorcist is a 2023 supernatural horror film directed by Julius Avery from a screenplay by Michael Petroni and Evan Spiliotopoulos, based on the 1990 book An Exorcist Tells His Story and the 1992 book An Exorcist: More Stories by Father Gabriele Amorth. [6]
Amorth was the official exorcist of the Diocese of Rome (thus the film’s title) and performed somewhere between 50,000 and 150,000 exorcisms, depending on various sources, the man himself included.
[1] by six priests including the world-famous exorcist of Rome, Father Gabriele Amorth and Father Jeremy Davies. [2] Its statutes were approved by the Catholic Church on June 13, 2014. [3] The AIE provides training and support to exorcists, and also helps to raise awareness of the issue of demonic possession. It has around 900 members from 58 ...
A book written by Father Gabriel Amorth, chief exorcist of the Vatican from 1986 until he died in 2016 (aged 91), describes his experiences as an exorcist. The film The Pope's Exorcist was inspired by Amorth's works. [35] 1928 — Emma Schmidt (pseudonym Anna Ecklund) underwent a 14-day exorcism in Earling, Iowa, performed by a Catholic priest.
On Saturday, July 22, 2007, Father La Grua celebrated his 70th anniversary in the priesthood. In a book printed in Italian called the President of the Exorcists written by the senior exorcist of Rome, Father Gabriele Amorth, there is a section by Father La Gura on curses and prayers of liberation.
[2] [3] Father Gabriele Amorth, in his 1994 memoir An Exorcist Tells His Story, cites Father de Tonquédec, referring to him as a "famous French exorcist." [4] Father de Tonquédec was an intellectual adversary of the French philosopher Maurice Blondel. [5]