by Moe | Aug 12, 2018 | Demons, Mind Control Research
It has been called the “Sacred Disease,” and in the ancient past, people who had it were either known as “divine and religiously inspired” or more commonly as “demon, devil or unclean spirit possessed.”
Today we know of this disease as epilepsy.
The history of epilepsy begins with the Babylonian codex of the late 2nd millennium BC in which many types of seizure are described as to the influence or “hand” of name-given evil spirits (Lilû, Urtilli, Ishtar etc).
For thousands of years, epilepsy was closely linked to demonology in ancient Jewish sources. It is said that during the time of the Talmud (2–5th century BCE), the Jews referred to a person with epilepsy as a “nikhpe”, meaning “one of writhes” and considered as the attack of a demon “shed” or spirit (“ruah”).
A priest is unfit to serve in the Temple if he has seizures, “even if it occurs only once in days.” According to the Talmud, epilepsy may appear for the first time at any age and it was considered to be a serious disease that may be hereditary or even contagious.
The following excerpts from the Talmud shed some light on what they thought caused epilepsy and even potential cures many centuries ago:
“If one stands nude to the light of a candle, he will be nikhpe” (person with epilepsy).
“If one stands nude to the light of a candle or the moon, he endangers himself seriously”.
“A man should not marry a woman coming either from a family of persons with epilepsy, or from a family of lepers”.
“A person with epilepsy is sometimes in full conscience and sometimes like an insane person”.
“A woman with epilepsy may conceal this defect from her environment if the seizures occur at regular times”.
In later Jewish texts, there are references to medicines such as saffron (crocus), clove (“tsiporn ha-bosem”), oxymel, and several herbs (e.g., Artemisia, Valeriana, and Arnika). Magical (nonmedication) acute and preventive means include an amulet (“kame’a”) that was worn by persons with epilepsy.
In my research into this mysterious disease, I have found interesting modern correlations between spirituality, religious fanaticism, visions, and the prophetic nature of the patients who suffered from they believed to be a supernatural malady. Even today, there are patients who suffer from epileptic seizures often describe these violent events starting sometimes days before the seizure event with dark, depressive, and even evil thoughts that do not seem to originate from themselves.
I believe that our ancestors had associated these mysterious symptoms and violent nature of the disease with demon and or unclean spirit possession. This belief did not just arise from ancient superstitious medical practitioners but from the people themselves.
Patients also often describe that right before they have a seizure attack, they develop a creepy sensation that “something or someone is beginning to take them over rapidly. Some even claim to feel movement in their body and stomachs as a type of warning that quickly reaches the point they lose consciousness and have violent uncontrollable attacks.
They have been described well by British writer Margiad Evans who had her own experiences and explained as if it was some type of “alien power that temporarily enters the body and then pushed itself out.
Evans’ describes her own experience, “the old idea of demonic possession … arose not from the onlookers of sufferers in fits but from the sufferers themselves. Because in the violent attacks one feels as though the body has been entered by a terrific alien power; and that that power is trying, after entrance, to push its way out again.”
Likewise, German writer Monika Maron, a declared atheist, reports that after her first seizure, she was “obsessed with the idea that an alien force had simply switched me off for fifteen minutes… and … slightly altered the way my brain functions. I didn’t really believe that, but it corresponded well with the state in which this inexplicable incident had left me”
The English word “epilepsy” is derived from the Greek word e·pi·le·psiʹa, meaning “seizure.” The meaning of the word seizure originally meant the action of capturing someone or something using force ie: takeover, invasion colonization and in medical terminology, a sudden attack of illness, especially a stroke or an epileptic fit.
Today, the term “Epilepsy” is medically defined as “a neurological disorder with recurrent sensory disturbances, loss of consciousness or convulsions; associated with abnormal electrical activity in the brain.” A severe epileptic fit which is accompanied by unconsciousness is called grand mal, and mild forms of a brief duration where the patient is often aware of his or her surrounding (conscious) are called petit mal.
As many of you know, part of my Great Work entails connecting these ancient teachings with modern science and also finding correlations with my research on parasitic fungi/molds which I have associated with what our ancestors had called demon or unclean spirit possession. Let me add that I have also discovered interesting research that links fungi/molds to epileptic seizures that I will share with you in a future article which further validates my work on this subject.
These ancient stories of epilepsy and spirit possession really seem to develop after the advent of conservative Gnosticism and Judaism with the Old Testament (Old Law) which later developed into the early teachings of Christianity in the New Testament (New Law). However, the study of religious and spiritual symptoms in epilepsy have received relatively little clinical and scientific attention.
Even biblical figures of the Old Testament such as Samson and Ezekiel had shown all the classic symptoms of epilepsy. A 2001 article in the New Scientist had detailed the research of Eric Altschuler, a neuroscientist at the University of California at San Diego who claimed that the Biblical strongman Samson may have been the earliest known sufferer of antisocial personality disorder and that Ezekiel, who lived about 2600 years ago, showed extreme classic symptoms of temporal lobe epilepsy.
Altschuler had written, “People with the disease experience partial seizures, often accompanied by a dreamy feeling that things are not quite as they should be. Patients are often misdiagnosed with psychiatric problems.
Neurologically, Ezekiel displayed some obvious signs of epilepsy, such as frequent fainting spells and episodes of not being able to speak.”
The Biblical figure, who chronicled the fall of Jerusalem in 586 BC, exhibited other peculiarities associated with the disease. For instance, he wrote compulsively, a trait known as hypergraphia. Altschuler points out that the Book of Ezekiel is the fourth longest in the Bible – only slightly shorter than Genesis. “It’s impenetrable,” he says. “He goes on and on.”
Examples can also be found in the New Testament under Matthew 4:24 where epileptic seizures are listed as one of a group of diseases. In Matthew 17:15 a man called to Jesus, “Lord, have mercy on my son, for he is an epileptic and suffers terribly; for often he falls into the fire, and often into the water.” Jesus said the boy was possessed by a demon. The demon was ordered out and the boy was healed.
The symptoms of the affliction were frequently those of bodily disease (as dumbness, Matt. ix. 32 ; blindness, Matt. xii. 22 ; epilepsy, Mark ix. 17-27), or those seen in cases of ordinary insanity (as in Matt. viii. 28; Mark v. 1-5), since also the phrase “ to have a devil ” is constantly used in connexion with, and as apparently equivalent to, “ to be mad ” John vii. 20, viii. 48, x. 20, and perhaps Matt. xi. 18; Luke vii. 33)
In Luke 9:39, it is written, “and behold, a spirit seizes him, and he suddenly screams, and it throws him into a convulsion with foaming at the mouth, and as it mauls him, it scarcely leaves him.”
We also find a similar reference in Acts 8:7; “For in the case of many who had unclean spirits, they were coming out of them shouting with a loud voice; and many who had been paralyzed and lame were healed.
And they brought the boy to Him. When the spirit saw Him, immediately it convulsed the boy, and he fell on the ground and rolled about, foaming at the mouth. Jesus asked the father, “How long has this been happening to him?” And he said, “From childhood. It has often cast him into the fire and into the water, to destroy him; but if You are able to do anything, have pity on us and help us” (Mark 9:20-22).
It is obvious that this boy who had symptoms of epilepsy was said to be actually possessed by a demon.
Please keep in mind that the original Scripture was written in Greek so in Matthew (4:24; 17:15) the Greek word se·le·ni·aʹzo·mai is used in place of epilepsy. The Greek meaning is “to be moonstruck.”
Today, we find that the King James Version uses “lunatick,” while other modern translations use the word “epileptic(s).” (Matthew 4:24; 17:15.—AS; NW; RS.)
To be continued…
Moe is the founder of GnosticWarrior.com. He is a father, husband, author, martial arts black belt, and an expert in Gnosticism, the occult, and esotericism.
by Moe | Aug 12, 2018 | Demons
“I’ve got a disease that wants to kill me and it’s in my head, so I have to guard against that.” – Robbie Williams
Brittish Pop Star, Robbie Williams has been open to the public about taking anti-depressants to “calm his demons.”

Williams recently opened up about his battle with depression to the Radio Times when he revealed that he had a ‘weird summer’ where he couldn’t relate to anyone apart from his wife, Ayda Field.
The star has also stated in the past that he felt isolated and trapped in his own head but that things had improved since taking anti-depressants to “put his demons to bed.”
Williams has been said to have battled mental illness, obesity, self-esteem issues, alcoholism, and substance abuse since he was a teen.
The Sun reported that his drug got so bad that his friend, Sir Elton John booked him into a clinic to help save his life.
Moe is the founder of GnosticWarrior.com. He is a father, husband, author, martial arts black belt, and an expert in Gnosticism, the occult, and esotericism.
by Moe | Aug 12, 2018 | Demons
A Kentucky caregiver was jailed earlier this month after he allegedly beat to death a woman he was taking care of with a baseball bat in order to drive out a demon out of the stomach of the woman, WKYT reported.
The suspect, Hunter Moore, 36, of Scott County was 53-year-old Denise Rene Hamilton’s caretaker at a house in Georgetown, Ky.
Here is of Moore’s booking photo showing him looking to the right brain where I believe the demon entity resides and controls his thoughts and actions.

In a chilling twist of events that seems to be abnormal with psychotic killers, Moore told investigators that he was acting on a command from God to kill Hamilton because she was possessed by a demon. He then snapped, went downstairs and proceeded to bludgeon her head, arms, and knees with the bat, and then targeting the demon in her stomach.
The victim was said to have repeatedly asked the killer why he was beating her, only for him to ignore her.
After the murder, Moore said he went upstairs and told police he ‘felt bad’ for beating his victim. The cops arrived shortly thereafter finding Hamilton dead lying on the floor of her home.
Moore was said to have admitted to the crime and was taken into custody. He has been formally charged with murder with bail set at $100,000.
Moore’s first court appearance was on August 7, 2018, and the preliminary hearing is scheduled for August 14 in Georgetown.
Moore’s attorney entered a not guilty plea and is asking for a psychiatric evaluation on behalf of his client.
Before the murder, neighbors had called law enforcement to report Moore’s suspicious activity saying that he behaved strangely and erratically.
They are said to be relieved that he (Demon) is in jail.
Moe is the founder of GnosticWarrior.com. He is a father, husband, author, martial arts black belt, and an expert in Gnosticism, the occult, and esotericism.
by Moe | Aug 12, 2018 | Demons
“He has a delusion that he was possessed by a demon when this happened but the demon was responsible.” – Mental Health Expert – Dr. Donald Grant
An Australian man, Alex McEwan, 23, accused of murdering Korean student Eunji Ban in a Brisbane park told police he “had a demon” in his head that he talked to and said he had been “waiting” his whole life to kill someone.
The killer told officers that he told the victim before he violently attacked her, “It’s your fault you walked this way because you had to run into me.”

As McEwan proceeded to beat her to death with his feet and fists, he screeched, “die bitch, die!”
Moments later, the severely beaten Eunji was found in the park by a passerby because she was making gurgling sounds behind a tree as she took her lasts breaths – drowning in a pool of her own blood.
Shortly after the murder, McEwan confessed to police that he “bashed the shit out of her face” but said, “he didn’t actually do it”.
Investigators asked McEwan whether he had any mental illnesses and he said he had a “devil inside my head, demon”.
“It’s just been troubling me since I was born really, making me think sick thoughts, really feral stuff.”
McEwan said he was a demon at the time of the murder because he could not remember what happened.
When asked why he attacked a girl, Mr McEwan replied: “it was the first person I saw.”
“I didn’t think. It was just, it was like myself was in the back of my head just watching someone else doing it,” he said.
“It was like I went all weird and shit, psychotic. I’ve drawn pictures throughout my whole life like that.”
During the trial, the court heard about a Demon named “Jazzy” who was a central entity in Alex McEwan’s hallucinations. McEwan also had a female demon called “Dren” and also routinely heard the voices of God, Jesus and Satan.
The demon Jazzy was even active during the hearings urging him to leap from his chair and attack the prosecutor, but McEwan refused to obey the orders of the demon. According to Justice Jean Dalton, mental health expert Dr. Donald Grant who quizzed him on the incident said McEwan chose to instead pummel his head with punches: “One, two; one, two; one, two; back and forward between his fists.”
Minutes earlier, he made a throat-slitting gesture in the air that Justice Jean Dalton was sure one of the jurors must have seen.
The next day, the whole trial was moved to the courtroom next door, and McEwan placed in a secure, glass-walled dock “in everybody’s best interests”.
Justice Dalton then invoked Section 645 of the Criminal Code, an “extraordinarily rare” move that created a “trial within a trial” to determine the defendant’s current sanity.
While being interviewed by attorneys, Alex McEwan’s mother, Ms. Ruth McEwan broke down in tears describing a conversation she had with her son one night.
She said her son told her, “I’m not normal, I don’t feel right. I can’t see properly. I can’t see left from right.”
” … that he had a sphere or a ball rolling around and around in his head and he couldn’t make it stop.
“It doesn’t have any flat sides to stop … so it just keeps rattling over and over.”
His father, Geoffrey McEwan also testified that his son had many struggles and was unreliable and had trouble sleeping.
“I did my best to show that I was a caring parent but in hindsight … you question yourself in situations like this,” he said.
“I look back and say what were my failings as a parent?”
“I’ve always been dismissive of behaviours or thinking the best of people.”
“I could say I failed … I have had four years to think about everything that has transpired.”
During the trial, jurors heard the testimony of Dr. Donald Grant who claimed that McEwan had complained of auditory and visual hallucinations, including comments from “derogatory” demons.
“He has a delusion that he was possessed by a demon when this happened but the demon was responsible.”
Dr, Grant said McEwan heard “the demons cutting their own throat” and commanding him to self-harm.
One demon had also urged him to attack prosecutor David Meredith, the trial heard.
Dr Grant also said that McEwan had reported an intrusive demon called Jazzy sometimes being in the same room as him and that the killer had been finding it increasingly difficult to avoid hallucinations.
Dr Grant said McEwan had spoken of three demons and displayed symptoms consistent with treatment-resistant schizophrenia.
Let me close by stating that in addition to having sleep problems, the murderer also reported having been tormented by nightmares, including a recurring bad dream which involved him being “dragged through a portal by demons and the devil into hell”.
SOURCE LINKS:
https://www.9news.com.au/2018/08/09/11/58/alex-mcewan-eunji-ban-murder-trial-yelled-beat-to-death
https://myaccount.news.com.au/sites/couriermail/subscribe.html?sourceCode=CMWEB_WRE170_a_GGL&mode=premium&dest=https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/crime-and-justice/alex-mcewan-blames-killing-on-sphere-in-his-head/news-story/61302c1fe4f0ef4fab67c15901108477?memtype=anonymous
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-29/eunji-ban-may-have-drowned-in-own-blood-mcewan-murder-trial-told/9000366
https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/politics/queensland/alex-mcewan-too-unwell-for-eunji-ban-murder-trial-to-continue-20171004-p4ywa0.html
https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/queensland/inside-the-mind-of-eunji-ban-s-killer-20171006-p4ywbl.html
Moe is the founder of GnosticWarrior.com. He is a father, husband, author, martial arts black belt, and an expert in Gnosticism, the occult, and esotericism.
by Moe | Aug 10, 2018 | Demons
A 54-year-old New York man who was recently released from jail for murder jumped out of a freezer and threatened employees with a knife shouting, “Away from me, Satan!”
New York police said Carlton Henderson, 54, rushed out of the freezer at Sarabeth’s Restaurant on the Upper West Side around 11 a.m. on Sunday, August 5 as he grabbed a knife and attacked employees who were able to disarm him.
Henderson then died on the ground after going into cardiac arrest.
In my opinion, perhaps the employee’s brazen actions of illumination had subdued the dark demon possessing his body which caused it to flee. Thus leaving his corporeal body soulless.
Authorities identified the man as a suspected cold-case killer who had just been released from jail in Boston.
In June 2017, Henderson was indicted in St. Louis, Missouri, after investigators from a Boston cold case squad reopened the 1988 homicides of William Medina and Antonio Dos Reis where bullets found in the victims matched a gun owned by Henderson. Both victims were in their 20s.
Henderson was said to be released from jail because the case did not have a trial date, and Henderson’s attorney had filed a motion to suppress evidence. The judge granted the motion and reduced his bail last week. as a consequence of that, authorities in Boston said. He was then released on his own recognizance August 1, four days before the attack.
Henderson’s lawyer spoke with the Times and said he was really surprised by what happened because Henderson was very intelligent and did not seem psychotic;
“That’s very foreign to my experience with the guy, and I represented him for over a year and met with him many times,” John Amabile said. “My impression of him was that he was a very intelligent person who was very engaged as a client. I did not get the sense that he was psychotic or mentally ill or physically ill.”
There is a reason for this.
Demon possessed people can go in and out of possession states when they are not in control of their central nervous systems giving them unadulterated access to the brain.
Kind of like a puppet…
Moe is the founder of GnosticWarrior.com. He is a father, husband, author, martial arts black belt, and an expert in Gnosticism, the occult, and esotericism.