BY Brenden AckermanMarch 25, 2026
3 weeks ago
BY 
 | March 25, 2026
3 weeks ago

Pope Leo XIV convenes exorcist delegation at Vatican amid reported global rise in occultism

Pope Leo XIV held a private meeting with a delegation of Catholic priests from the International Association of Exorcists at the Vatican on March 13, receiving a report on what the group describes as a growing wave of occultism, esotericism, and Satanism worldwide.

The meeting, first reported on Monday, included a direct request from the delegation: ensure that every diocese in the world has one or more adequately trained exorcist priests.

As reported by the Post, the Chicago-born head of the Catholic Church, 70, met with the AIE delegation in what amounts to one of the more unusual papal audiences in recent memory. But unusual doesn't mean unserious. The exorcists came with data, a published book of ministry guidelines, and a clear ask for institutional support from the top of the Church hierarchy.

What the Exorcists Brought to the Table

According to EWTN Vatican's reporting on the audience, the delegation came prepared. They presented not only their report on the prevalence of occult-related cases but also a copy of Guidelines for the Ministry of Exorcism, along with an image of Saint Michael the Archangel from the sanctuary of Monte Sant'Angelo.

The gifts were symbolic, but the message was operational. The AIE wants the Church to treat exorcism not as an embarrassing relic but as a functioning ministry with trained practitioners in every corner of the world.

Father Francesco Bamonte, the AIE's vice president, framed the stakes in pastoral terms. He said, ignoring these concerns "leaves many faithful without an adequate response to grave spiritual suffering, sometimes pushing them toward inappropriate solutions."

That last phrase deserves attention. "Inappropriate solutions" is a polite way of describing what happens when desperate people, finding no help from their own Church, turn to occult practitioners, New Age spiritualists, or worse. The exorcists are arguing that the Church's neglect of this ministry doesn't make the demand disappear. It just pushes it underground and into darker hands.

A Pope Who Takes It Seriously

Pope Leo XIV has reportedly acknowledged the exorcism ministry before, calling it "delicate" and "most necessary." According to LA Mag's reporting, the pontiff has previously urged those involved in the ministry "to live it both as a ministry of liberation and of consolation, accompanying the faithful truly possessed by the evil one with prayer and the invocation of Christ's effective presence."

That language is worth parsing. This is a pope using the word "possessed" without flinching, referring to "the evil one" as a real actor, and framing exorcism as a direct invocation of Christ's power. There is no hedging, no therapeutic euphemism, no attempt to reframe demonic affliction as a mental health category. Whether or not that sits comfortably with secular audiences is beside the point. Within the Catholic theological framework, this is a pope who speaks about spiritual warfare as though it is real. Because to the Church, it is.

Why This Matters Beyond the Vatican Walls

The secular instinct is to treat a story like this as curiosity content, something to file between Hollywood movie references and Halloween features. The source material itself nods to The Exorcist (1973) and The Pope's Exorcist (2023), starring Russell Crowe. Pop culture has turned exorcism into a genre. The Church is trying to reclaim it as a vocation.

But there's a broader cultural thread here that conservatives in particular should recognize. The AIE's report on a surge in occultism and esotericism doesn't exist in a vacuum. It arrives in a cultural moment defined by:

  • Declining participation in organized religion across the West
  • A simultaneous explosion of interest in astrology, tarot, witchcraft aesthetics, and vaguely spiritual "practices" divorced from any doctrinal accountability
  • Growing mainstream normalization of overtly satanic imagery in entertainment and public life

The pattern is familiar to anyone paying attention. When institutional faith retreats, it doesn't leave a vacuum. It leaves a market. And that market gets filled by forces that range from the merely silly to the genuinely destructive.

G.K. Chesterton's famous observation, often paraphrased, holds: when people stop believing in God, they don't believe in anything. They believe in anything. The exorcists presenting their report to the pope are, in effect, delivering the pastoral receipts for that principle.

The Institutional Question

The AIE's core request, that every diocese worldwide have at least one trained exorcist, is less dramatic than it sounds. It's an infrastructure ask. Most dioceses don't have a designated exorcist, and many bishops have treated the role as an afterthought or an embarrassment. The result, as Father Bamonte described, is that the faithful who seek help simply don't find it within the Church.

This is a problem that conservative Catholics have flagged for years. The post-Vatican II Church spent decades downplaying or ignoring elements of its own tradition that made the modern clerical class uncomfortable. Exorcism topped that list. The result wasn't that demand went away. It was that the Church lost credibility with its own people on a matter it claims to take theologically seriously.

Pope Leo meeting with the AIE is, at minimum, a signal that Rome is willing to stop pretending the ministry doesn't matter. Whether that signal translates into actual diocesan-level action is the real test.

A Church That Believes What It Teaches

Something is clarifying about a religious institution that acts on its own claims. The Catholic Church teaches that evil is personal, that Satan exists, and that Christ has authority over demonic forces. If it believes those things, training exorcists isn't exotic. It's basic operational competence.

The modern world finds this uncomfortable, which is precisely why it matters. A Church that trims its theology to fit secular comfort levels is a Church that has already surrendered the argument. A Church that convenes its exorcists at the Vatican, hands the pope a ministry guidebook, and asks for more trained priests is a Church that still believes what it says it believes.

In an age of institutions that stand for nothing, that alone is worth noting.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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