Topic: EVIL !!!!!!

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  Posted on January 19, 2012 10:49 AM
#1
drecomencer, Prisoner

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Joined: January 8, 2012
is there a way to make a deal with a demon?
:suspicious
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  Posted on January 19, 2012 11:08 AM
#2
Tsugaga, The Untouchable VIP of the Shogunate

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Since I don't really believe in demons then I would say no.
  Posted on January 19, 2012 11:13 AM
#3
rurudo66, Hunter of Hanto

Contribution: 1,250 (1,105 + 145)
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Yes, there is. First you need to find out the demon's name. I suggest searching for the name of a lesser demon, because as an amateur you could get hurt summoning a more powerful one. Next, you need to write that demon's name inside a pentagram. You will also need to find the Chant of Summoning, which can usually be found in arcane, satanic books in your library. Cut your hand and let your blood seep out onto the pentagram while chanting the Chant of Summoning. The demon you seek should then appear to you and you can make a contract with it to do whatever you want it to do.
Epicurus wrote:

Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?

Marcus Aurelius wrote:

Live a good life. If there are gods and they are just, then they will not care how devout you have been, but will welcome you based on the virtues you have lived by. If there are gods, but unjust, then you should not want to worship them. If there are no gods then you will be gone, but will have lived a noble life that will live on in the memories of your loved ones.

  Posted on January 19, 2012 11:13 AM
#4
elamento12, The Demonic Child of the Firehawk

Contribution: 1,777 (1,676 + 101)
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I think demons are real but I'm not 100% sure their is a way to make a deal with one, but you probably can.
  Posted on January 19, 2012 11:16 AM
#5
TempestTheory, The Golden Serpent of the Hebi

Contribution: 254 (204 + 50)
Joined: October 10, 2011
Go talk to your government, they'll be able to help you.
  Posted on January 19, 2012 11:26 AM
#6
drecomencer, Prisoner

Contribution: 5 (5 + 0)
Joined: January 8, 2012
TempestTheory wrote:

Go talk to your government, they'll be able to help you.

they wont know anything about what im dealing and i maybe berserk sometimes because of this DEMON
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  Posted on January 19, 2012 11:53 AM
#7
maxfire54, The Flaring Savior of the Seishin

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Joined: February 26, 2010
.. not sure what to think of this haha
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  Posted on January 19, 2012 11:57 AM
#8
Sand_Spirit, Elite

Contribution: 1,473 (1,318 + 155)
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Demons? ...
I'd just say no.
  Posted on January 19, 2012 12:02 PM
#9
Demonkings, The Golden Demon of the Darkness

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You will have to be more powerful than a demon, or be friends with one.

But you will never make a deal with me AHAHAHAHA! :evil :evil :evil
Heso Demo Kande SHINJAEBA!(☞゚O゚)☞ Eva BeatriceI dare you to click this Buttonლ(ಠ益ಠლ
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  Posted on January 19, 2012 12:08 PM
#10
Scimitaro, The Dark Wolf of the Phoenix Queen

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demons? summon one? well that is hard so pick a lesser demon
u don't need blood sacrefice if ur powerfull thatn him in rest only pentagrams and chanting
Here is the raging Wolf
Scimitaro the master of events

Lady Dana's personal Wolf Guardian
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Join Scimitaro on WarOfNinja.com - Your #1 Online Multiplayer Ninja Game
  Posted on January 19, 2012 12:35 PM
#11
drecomencer, Prisoner

Contribution: 5 (5 + 0)
Joined: January 8, 2012
a friend told me

A deal with the Devil, pact with the Devil, or Faustian bargain is a cultural motif widespread wherever the Devil is vividly present, most familiar in the legend of Faust and the figure of Mephistopheles, but elemental to many Christian folktales. In the Aarne-Thompson typological catalogue, it lies in category AT 756B – "The devil's contract."
According to traditional Christian belief in witchcraft, the pact is between a person and Satan or any other demon (or demons); the person offers his or her soul in exchange for diabolical favours. Those favours vary by the tale, but tend to include youth, knowledge, wealth, or power. It was also believed that some persons made this type of pact just as a sign of recognising the Devil as their master, in exchange for nothing. Regardless, the bargain is a dangerous one, for the price of the Fiend's service is the wagerer's soul. The tale may have a moralizing end, with eternal damnation for the foolhardy venturer. Conversely it may have a comic twist, in which a wily peasant outwits the Devil, characteristically on a technical point. Among the credulous, any apparently superhuman achievement might be credited to a pact with the Devil, from the numerous European Devil's Bridges to the superb violin technique of Niccolo Paganini.
It was usually thought that the person who had made a pact also promised the demon to kill children or consecrate them to the Devil at the moment of birth (many midwives were accused of this, due to the number of children that died at birth in the Middle Age and Renaissance), take part in Sabbaths, have sexual relations with demons, and sometimes engender children from a succubus, or incubus in the case of women.
The pact can be oral or written. An oral pact is made by means of invocations, conjurations, or rituals to attract the demon; once the conjurer thinks the demon is present, he/she asks for the wanted favour and offers his/her soul in exchange, and no evidence is left of the pact; but according to some witch trials and inquisitions that were performed, even the oral pact left evidence, namely the diabolical mark, an indelible mark that could be used as a proof to determine that the pact was made. A written pact consists in the same forms of attracting the demon, but includes a written act, usually signed with the conjurer's blood (although sometimes was also alleged that the whole act had to be written with blood, meanwhile some demonologists defended the idea of using red ink instead of blood and others suggested the use of animal blood instead of human blood).
These acts were presented often as a proof of diabolical pacts, though critics claim there is no proof of whether they were authentic, written by insane persons believing they were actually dealing with a demon or just were fake acts presented by the tribunals of the Inquisition. Usually the acts included strange characters that were said to be the signature of a demon, and each one had his own signature or seal. Books like The Lesser Key of Solomon (also known as Lemegeton Clavicula Salomonis) give a detailed list of these signs, known as seal of the demons.
According to demonology, there is a specific month, day of the week, and hour to call each demon, so the invocation for a pact has to be done at the right time. Also, as each demon has a specific function, a certain demon is invoked depending on what the conjurer is going to ask.
The meaning of the term deal with the devil has expanded its meaning to include exchanges which do not involve the devil, but involve pursuing a goal (e.g. revenge) by taking actions that are evil (e.g. murder).
Theophilus, servant of two masters
The predecessor of Faustus in Christian mythology is Theophilus ("Friend of God" or "Beloved of god") the unhappy and despairing cleric, disappointed in his worldly career by his bishop, who sells his soul to the Devil but is redeemed by the Virgin Mary.[1] His story appears in a Greek version of the sixth century written by a "Eutychianus" who claims to have been a member of the household in question. A ninth-century Miraculum Sancte Marie de Theophilo penitente inserts a Jew as intermediary with diabolus, his "patron", providing the prototype of a closely-linked series in the Latin literature of the West.[2] In the tenth century, the poet nun Hroswitha of Gandersheim adapted the text of Paulus Diaconis for a narrative poem that elaborates Theophilus' essential goodness and internalizes the forces of Good and Evil, in which the Jew is magus, a necromancer. As in her model, Theophilus receives back his contract from the Virgin, displays it to the congregation, and soon dies. A long poem on the subject by Gautier de Coincy (1177/8 – 1236), entitled Comment Theophilus vint a penitence provided material for a thirteenth-century play by Rutebeuf, where Theophilus is the central pivot in a frieze of five characters, the Virgin and the Bishop flanking him on the side of Good, the Jew and the Devil on the side of Evil.
Alleged diabolical pacts in history
Musicians
The idea of "selling your soul for instrumental prowess/fame" has occurred several times within music usually in guitar dominated genres and more specifically in heavy metal. Blues mans cross roads, located in Tchula Junction, Mississippi, is said to be the universal meeting grounds for such exchange. It was said that in your twenty-seventh year the devil would come to collect his property.
• Niccolo Paganini, Italian violinist, who may not have started the rumour but played along with it.[3]
• Tommy Johnson, blues musician[4]
• Robert Johnson, blues musician, who claimed to have met with Satan at the crossroads and signed over his soul to play the blues.[5]
• Tommy Davis, blues musician, who likely cribbed the same story from Robert Johnson.[citation needed]
Non-Musicians
• Urbain Grandier A notorious case of a diabolical pact was the one that cost Urbain Grandier his life. One of the pacts was redacted in Latin; the other is written in abbreviated, backwards Latin (which is readable when reversed), and signed by several "demons", one of them Satan, whose name was clearly written "Satanas" (see the article on Urbain Grandier for the original pact).
• Gilles de Rais (executed)
• Johann Georg Faust Likely source for the Faust legend.
Diabolical pacts in films
• The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941)
• Doctor Faustus (1967): a film based on Christopher Marlowe's The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus, starring Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor and Andreas Teuber.
• Bedazzled (1967)
• Rosemary's Baby (1968): Guy Woodhouse offers his son to the devil for wealth and success.
• Phantom of the Paradise (1974)
• Crossroads (1986)
• Angel Heart (1987)
• The Little Mermaid (1989): Ariel, the little mermaid, trades her voice to Ursula, the sea witch, for a chance to interact with humans.
• The Day of the Beast (1995):
• The Devil's Advocate (1997): A Florida attorney begins working for a law firm that is run by the Devil.
• H-E Double Hockey Sticks (1999): A devil-in-training convinces a rising hockey star to sell him his soul for the Stanley Cup.
• Bedazzled (2000)
• O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)
• Tenacious D in: The Pick of Destiny (2006)
• Ghost Rider (2007): A young stunt rider sells his soul to the demon Mephisto to cure his father's cancer.
• Faust (1926) Faust makes a pact with the devil to save the town from plauge, with disaterous results. Directed by F.W. Murnau, starring Gösta Ekman and Camilla Horn.
In print
• The Malleus Maleficarum has plenty of allusions to these pacts, especially concerning women. It was considered that all witches and warlocks had made a pact with some demon, especially with Satan.
• In many variants of the Aarne-Thompson type 361, of which Bearskin is an instance, the hero escapes, but the devil still comes off the better: the heroine's sisters have killed themselves, and he has gained two souls instead of one.
• The story of Theophilus of Adana, a saint who made a deal with the devil, predates the Faust legend and is a likely partial inspiration.
• The compact between human hubris and diabolical intelligence raises the old tale to its cultural peak in Goethe's Faust.
• Spider-Man made a deal with Mephisto, a demon in the Marvel Universe who is often mistaken for Satan. In exchange for the dissolution of his marriage with Mary Jane Watson, Mephisto promised to save his Aunt May. This happened in the storyline "One More Day".
Other works depicting deals with the Devil include:
• The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus, by Christopher Marlowe.
• Faust, by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
• Faust, opera by Charles Gounod.
• Mefistofele, opera by Arrigo Boito.
• Mephisto, novel by Klaus Mann
• The Master and Margarita, novel by Mikhail Bulgakov
• "The Devil and Tom Walker", a short story by Washington Irving
• "The Devil and Daniel Webster", short story based off of the Washington Irving story; by Steven Vincent Benét.
• "Pan Twardowski", poem by Adam Mickiewicz
• "Gimmicks Three", by Isaac Asimov
• "That Hell-Bound Train", by Robert Bloch
• Rosemary's Baby, novel by Ira Levin
• Jack Faust, novel by Michael Swanwick
• Damn Yankees, musical theatre production and film by George Abbott and Stanley Donen
• "The Bet", by Anton Chekhov
• The Lost Kings, by Andrew Reimann
• Memnoch the Devil, by Anne Rice
• Young Goodman Brown, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
• The Portrait of Dorian Grey by Oscar Wilde A man makes a pact with the devil. His portrait shall grow older, but he shall not.
In music
• "Devil Went Down to Georgia" by The Charlie Daniels Band, a song about a fiddle contest b
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  Posted on January 19, 2012 12:36 PM
#12
drecomencer, Prisoner

Contribution: 5 (5 + 0)
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i know u cant read it.it was things happen in the past.
if any of u know how to get rid of it please tell me
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  Posted on January 19, 2012 12:58 PM
#13
Low, The Crystal Warbringer

Contribution: 3,081 (2,905 + 176)
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rurudo66 wrote:

Yes, there is. First you need to find out the demon's name. I suggest searching for the name of a lesser demon, because as an amateur you could get hurt summoning a more powerful one. Next, you need to write that demon's name inside a pentagram. You will also need to find the Chant of Summoning, which can usually be found in arcane, satanic books in your library. Cut your hand and let your blood seep out onto the pentagram while chanting the Chant of Summoning. The demon you seek should then appear to you and you can make a contract with it to do whatever you want it to do.


This is bound to work.. eventually. If it doesn't, you can always get yourself a book of dark arts or a pagan book or something. Oh and one thing, demons are drawn to archaic symbols and places.
  Posted on January 19, 2012 5:46 PM
#14
rurudo66, Hunter of Hanto

Contribution: 1,250 (1,105 + 145)
Joined: April 12, 2010
The thing about bargaining with the devil himself is that he's not gonna wait around for you to live your life before he takes your soul. With a regular demon, you don't have to pledge your soul, just some blood. With more powerful demons, you have to be careful because they will try to kill you. If the demon you summon is more powerful than you, it will be able to kill you, so you have to find some way to gauge your own strength before a summoning.

However, it sounds like you might be haunted by a demon and want to get him out of your house? That's a different matter altogether. See, once a demon has entered our world, it doesn't want to go back. What it wants is to attain physical form, which it can do as it becomes more and more powerful. The demon creates fear in humans and feeds off that negative emotion. As it feeds, it gets more powerful and has more ways to scare you. If you have a demon that is interacting with physical objects(like throwing things around a room) you have a big problem. Once it is powerful enough, it will possess someone and use them as a tool to attain even more power. When they are in possession of someone, they can kill other people and absorb their souls, powering them up much more than when they feed on fear. Very few times in human history has it ever gone this far, and I don't know that there are any times when the demon has actually been able to create its own body. Such an act requires and enormous amount of energy and if it were ever to happen there would be a lot of trouble for us humans. You see, most gates to Hell do not allow physical beings to pass through, but there is one gate somewhere in the world that is currently closed that could do that. If a demon attained its own form and opened that door, the apocalypse would be upon us.

As for getting rid of a demon, you would need a powerful exorcist, one capable of overwhelming the demon and forcing him back through a gate into hell. Once banished back to Hell, a demon could not come back for some time. You will also want the exorcist to check and see if there is a gate in your house and close it if there is. Only one demon can occupy a house at a time, but if one is forced out another can make his way through the gate. Now, the further along your demonic haunting is along, the more powerful an exorcist you will need. Remember this: crosses and holy water only get you so far. They can hurt demons, but a demon is trained to handle pain like that. The real factor is the strength of an exorcist's soul and the strength of the demon in question. You could bring in multiple exorcists to defeat a more powerful demon, but you have to make sure the combined strength of their souls is greater than that of the demon. If you want to kill the demon, forget about it. The only way to do so is on their own turf, in Hell, or with weapons that utilize the power of Holy Light, which cannot be found on Earth. Your best bet is to force the demon back through the gate and then close it.
Epicurus wrote:

Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?

Marcus Aurelius wrote:

Live a good life. If there are gods and they are just, then they will not care how devout you have been, but will welcome you based on the virtues you have lived by. If there are gods, but unjust, then you should not want to worship them. If there are no gods then you will be gone, but will have lived a noble life that will live on in the memories of your loved ones.

  Posted on January 20, 2012 3:25 AM
#15
love-machine, The Stolen Thief

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I would prefer if we can make a deal with God, although wouldnt mind having a pet demon.