‘Charlie, Charlie’ = Hello Satan, Come In
A game Charlie, Charlie, are you there? went viral on the
internet from 2015 on. The game is simple, one pencil is balanced over
another on a piece of paper, dividing the paper into four squares. Two
are marked 'yes,' two are marked 'no.'
The players, usually youth curious about supernatural phenomena, gather around the paper and summon the devil called Charlie to ask him various Yes-No Questions. "Does John like me?" "Will I get married?" etc. The "game" always starts with the question, "Charlie, Charlie, are you there?"
If the pencil point moves to a "yes" square, the questions begin.
Usually one member of the group is there recording the session to post
on YouTube or Facebook to share the thrills on the worldwide web.
Thrills become a nightmare
A group of girls – between 12 and 15 years of age – had gathered in a
room at their school in the Choco region of Colombia to play the game.
They had done it before and Charlie had come. It was exciting, fun,
harmless, they thought.
Participants invoke a devil that can cause infestations or even possession
This time was different. School authorities found the girls screaming,
writhing, with some even foaming at the mouth in a mass demonic
possession after the game was played. One of the girls later stated
that she could see "Charlie” – a man dressed in black.
The teens were taken from the school to a local medical clinic, where
the screaming and writhing continued. Some of them had to be held down
until they eventually returned to normal. The doctors conducted medical
tests to rule out disease, intoxication or use of hallucinogenic
substances that could have caused the seizures, but no signs of these
were found.
One of the girls affected had no difficulty realizing that the
possession came from the Devil. "You can end up dead playing this game
because it is the work of the Devil,"
she said.
Something similar happened last year with seven girls from the same area who had been playing Charlie Charlie,
the principal of the school said. The game is now banned from the
school, and the parish priest has warned the parents that it is a
dangerous thing to invoke a spirit and should never be done, even in
so-called play.
'Is Charlie a demonic spirit?'
Because of the growing popularity of occult practices among Catholic
youth, priests and exorcists are speaking out to warn youth not to take
the Charlie Charlie Challenge, as it is called.
Fr. Fernando Cerero Ugarte from the Diocese of Coatzacalcos, Mexico,
made a public warning on his Facebook page against such practices. To
the question "Is Charlie, Charlie a dangerous game? " he gave this response:
Tea ground readings & the Ouija board, often presented as innocent fun, in fact open the door to the Devil
"I can warn that these seemingly innocent games are really not.
Curiosity about the spiritual world by invoking beings always involves a
high risk. They say that 'curiosity killed the cat!' and many persons
moved by curiosity can often fall into a situation of demonic influence.
…
"I consider that this is a game of high risk for adults or children.
Anything that pretends to establish communication with the dead, besides
being a sin (invoking spirits), one runs the risk of ending up under an
evil influence. Children and even adolescents fall under this rule and
can receive a greater or lesser degree of evil influence by playing
these kinds of esoteric games.
"Therefore, I advise every Catholics of any age to resist entering into
these games, which can appear innocent, out of spiritual curiosity, for
the Devil does not sleep. He is always looking for open doors to cause
spiritual damage to curious people. Remember that here the problem is
not in the object itself (two pencils) but rather in the intention of
the invocation.
"Parents, you need to teach your children that Charlie, Charlie
or any kind of game of this type – which exists today or can appear
tomorrow – that tries to invoke spirits is a sin and presents a very
real danger of harm to those who engage in them. Today you can start
with Charlie, tomorrow you continue with the Ouija board,
afterwards come worse things. To play with things of the Devil is never
just a fun game."
What are the risks?
Mexican exorcist Fr. Ernesto Maria Caro commented on the risks of divining practices:
"We know that God has decided not to reveal the future. He wants man to
live by faith and confide in Him. However, since time immemorial, men
have been curious about the future and have invoked the dark forces to
know what is to come. The results are always disastrous.
"When we participate in a divining practice, what we are doing is to establish a connection with the demonic world.
"With these practices, the Devil has the possibility to enter our
physical environment. From there he can cause sicknesses, destroy
relationships, affect the sexual life of a person, incite depression,
etc. He can affect our physical world, causing one to hear voices, see
shadows or moving objects, etc.
A Hogswort teacher tells fortunes - sending the wrong message to youth who are fans of Harry Potter
"Anyone who participates, either consciously or unconsciously, in a
divining practice, whether he believes in it or not, leaves himself
opened to establish a relationship with the Devil. If this actually
occurs, you will need a prayer of liberation and, in some cases, have
need of an exorcism.
"Therefore, I want to warn the youth and their parents – everyone – of
the terrible danger that they run by ‘naively’ participating in these
practices.
Charlie Charlie is not a game, it is a door that opens the possibility for the Devil to damage our lives and those of everyone around us.
"Stay away from all such practices: tarot cards, consulting soothsayers,
coffee ground readings, the Ouija board and that terrible threat called
Charlie Charlie. If you do not want the Devil to ruin your life, your health, your family and your happiness, stay away from this."
If you have already participated in this type of game, what should you
do? Fr. Caro warns that if there have been responses – the pencils or
Ouija board has moved – then you can be sure that the Devil entered
through the door and it is very possible that he established a
relationship with you.
Look for a priest, he advises, confess the sin and, if possible, ask him
to make a minor exorcism. Make a solemn profession of faith and
renouncement of the Devil and all his works and promise to never take
part in such games again.
'You are invoking demonic spirits'
When the Charlie Charlie game began to gain in popularity in 2015, the Spanish exorcist José Antonio Fortea warned that those who take the Charlie Charlie Challenge are in fact “invoking demonic spirits.”
“Spirits at the root of the practice will harass some of those who play
the game,” he said. And even though the players won't necessarily be
possessed, the spirit that was invoked “will stay around for a while.”
He also warned that playing this game "will lead to other spirits
entering into even more frequent communication, which can cause the
person to suffer much worse consequences from the Devil."
The Devil exists… whether you believe it or not
In the United States, where the rationalist spirit prevails, many
persons simply laugh off such games and any notion of the Devil's
existence.
St. Michael vanquishes the devils
If you go to Wikipedia to read about the Charlie Charlie Challenge,
it cites articles by religious authorities, psychologists and media
experts who all try to justify the strange behavior of the pencils with
natural explanations.
It is psychological suggestion that causes the pencils to move, the "ideomotor phenomenon," or simply the heavy breathing of players that moves the pencil, but never a demonic spirit.
In his book, Memoirs of an Exorcist: My Life Fighting Satan,
Fr. Gabriele Amorth warns that one of most ignorant positions a Catholic
can take is to doubt the existence of the Devil. Demonic spirits exist
and, indeed, are always prowling the earth seeking the destruction of
souls.
"All this magic, occultism and spiritualism open the doors," he asserts,
based on his long experience as the exorcist of Rome. "And once the
doors are open, the Devil’s hands are free. It’s not that he’s stronger,
it’s that he is free to use his strength."
Participants invoke a devil that can cause infestations or even possession
Tea ground readings & the Ouija board, often presented as innocent fun, in fact open the door to the Devil
A Hogswort teacher tells fortunes - sending the wrong message to youth who are fans of Harry Potter
St. Michael vanquishes the devils