
“Fall of the Damned” by Peter Paul Rubens ca. 1620
This post by exorcist Monsignor Rossetti needs to be read and shared:
Not long ago I received a barrage of texts from the demons in the midst of an intense case. In response, I texted back a holy picture and prayer to the Blessed Virgin and Saint Michael. I also texted back a command: “With each text, I command the demons to contemplate the beauty of our Lady while praising God with the angelic song: “Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus.” I commanded the demons based upon the Church’s authority over demons given by Christ which is delegated to the Exorcist by the Bishop.
The demon texted back: “No one can tell me how to act or what to do. I decide everything; that’s been clear for years.” The demonic response is an echo of the original refusal of Satan and his minions to obey God: “Non serviam,” “I will not serve“. This is further echoed in today’s rejection of God’s will and asserting one’s own will often found, for example, in Wicca, Witchcraft, and Satanism.
The “freedom” the demons assert they have found in rejecting God’s will for their own is an illusion. In the famous 16th century case of the exorcism of Nicola Aubry, the Bishop of Leon was personally leading the exorcism. The chief demon in the case was Beelzebul (or Beelzebub). At one point, the Bishop commanded the lower-ranking demons to come forward and to speak. Beelzebul snapped back that these lower demons will NOT speak. He said, “I tell you they shall not speak in my presence. They are my servants, my slaves; I am their master. Did you ever see a slave speak in the presence of his lord?“
This has been our experience: hell is an evil empire with the more powerful demons brutally lording it over the lower demons and at times even beating them up. Demons hate humans even more than their fellow demons. And what demons do to damned souls in hell ought not be repeated.
Many today reject the Christian notion of serving and obeying God for the “freedom” of doing their own will. In reality, they are only subjugating themselves to the most cruel and merciless of masters, Satan, who was the first to reject the Divine will.
On the contrary, in obeying God, we are truly set free. “For freedom Christ set us free; so stand firm and do not submit again to the yoke of slavery” (Gal 5:1).






