![]() ![]() I’m sure the “sorcerers” and “witches” that this book slanders so hard would say the same things with the same efficacy about Christian exorcism Not only does the book smack heavily of confirmation bias and superstition, but it’s basically one large “no true Scotsman” or “no true sorcerer” fallacy. Even if the testimony is accurate, it doesn’t confirm any doctrine of exorcism that this book claims it does. I’ll admit that crazy and unexplained things happen, but this book forcefully iterates it’s Christian magic as fact while committing fallacies left and right. It takes itself far too seriously and will probably scare many people who are a bit too impressionable. This book is a large personal testimony about the realism of demons that reads like spooky ghost stories. By no means should you take this book seriously, but perhaps it could be used to inform you why so many Christians are frightened of hell and the supernatural. ![]()
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