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Dark Matters

Podcast de Stratias Ministries

inglés

Historia y religión

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Dark Matters examines documented encounters with malevolent spiritual beings across history—drawing from ancient texts, monastic writings, court records, pastoral diaries, and modern case files. Hosted by Dr. Luke Bray, the series offers immersive, narrative, but fully non-fiction accounts that trace how the Church has understood and resisted the demonic from antiquity to the modern age. For more resources from Stratias Ministries visit https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters

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9 episodios

episode The Drummer of Tedworth - A 1660s Poltergeist with Legal Records artwork

The Drummer of Tedworth - A 1660s Poltergeist with Legal Records

The Drummer of Tedworth — A 1660s Poltergeist with Legal Records What happens when a poltergeist case is preserved not by folklore but by courts, clergy, and early scientists? In Restoration-era England, as the nation struggled to recover from civil war and regicide, a quiet household in Tedworth became the site of one of the most rigorously documented supernatural disturbances in European history. After a wandering drummer was arrested and his instrument confiscated, the home of magistrate John Mompesson erupted into rhythmic knockings, violent bed-shaking, and physical disturbances that responded to prayer, reacted to Scripture, and displayed a chilling intelligence—yet never spoke a word. In this episode of Dark Matters, Dr. Luke Bray examines the Drummer of Tedworth through legal records, clerical testimony, and early scientific inquiry. Drawing on firsthand accounts preserved by ministers, judges, and members of the Royal Society, the episode explores why Tedworth was treated not as ghostly folklore, but as evidence of an active unseen world—one that became a flashpoint in the growing conflict between Christian supernaturalism and emerging rationalism. In this episode, you’ll explore: •          Why the Tedworth disturbances were treated as a legal and theological case, not a folk tale •          How clergy distinguished demonic poltergeist activity from witchcraft and ghost belief •          Why the phenomenon’s silence—communicating only through sound and force—enhanced its credibility •          How Scripture readings provoked patterned responses from the unseen intelligence •          Why the case drew serious attention from judges and early members of the Royal Society •          What Tedworth reveals about spiritual warfare that targets places rather than people   Further Investigation: •          Saducismus Triumphatus — Joseph Glanvill •          Religion and the Decline of Magic — Keith Thomas •          The Decline of Magic: Britain in the Enlightenment — Michael Hunter   This episode is part of the ongoing research and teaching work of Stratias Ministries, dedicated to biblical theology, historical clarity, and serious engagement with the Church’s long encounter with the unseen.   Learn more at https://www.stratiasministries.org [https://www.stratiasministries.org/]Explore the full Dark Matters series at https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters [https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters]   Note: This episode approaches the Drummer of Tedworth as a historical, legal, and theological case study. It is not intended as devotional material or as a guide for spiritual practice.

17 de abr de 2026 - 30 min
episode Evagrius and the Logismoi — When Demons Became Thoughts artwork

Evagrius and the Logismoi — When Demons Became Thoughts

Evagrius and the Logismoi — When Demons Became Thoughts What if spiritual warfare is not first fought in dramatic encounters—but in the quiet movements of the mind?   In the late fourth century, Evagrius Ponticus withdrew from the intellectual centers of the Christian world into the Egyptian desert, convinced that the most dangerous battles were not external but interior. There, among the desert fathers, he developed one of the most influential frameworks in Christian history for understanding temptation, discernment, and demonic influence—not as spectacle, but as thought.   In this episode of Dark Matters, Dr. Luke Bray explores Evagrius’ teaching on the logismoi—the intrusive thought-patterns through which demonic intelligences sought to unsettle the soul. Drawing from Evagrius’ own writings and the lived experience of the desert monks, this episode traces how early Christianity understood thoughts as spiritually charged movements, shaped by memory, desire, bodily weakness, and unseen suggestion.   In this episode, you’ll explore: •          Why Evagrius believed not every thought originates from the self •          How the eight logismoi map predictable patterns of spiritual attack •          The role of attention, imagination, and memory in demonic provocation •          Why discernment—not confrontation—was considered the highest spiritual virtue   Further Investigation (HDC-Optimized): •          Praktikos and Chapters on Prayer — Evagrius Ponticus •          The Eight Evil Thoughts — Evagrius Ponticus •          Evagrius Ponticus: The Praktikos & Chapters on Prayer — Robert E. Sinkewicz (translator & commentator)   This episode is part of the ongoing research and teaching work of Stratias Ministries, dedicated to biblical theology, historical clarity, and spiritual formation.   Learn more at https://www.stratiasministries.org [https://www.stratiasministries.org/], and explore the full Dark Matters series at https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters [https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters].   Note: This episode approaches Evagrius’ writings as historical and theological sources within early Christian demonology and ascetic practice. It is not intended as devotional material or a guide for spiritual or therapeutic practice.

26 de mar de 2026 - 27 min
episode Quedlinburg — The Possessed Maiden of the 10th Century artwork

Quedlinburg — The Possessed Maiden of the 10th Century

Quedlinburg — The Possessed Maiden of the 10th Century What did possession look like before spectacle, before witch trials, and before modern categories of psychology?   In the late tenth century, the imperial monastery of Quedlinburg stood at the heart of the Ottonian renewal—a place of disciplined prayer, political influence, and theological seriousness. It was here that medieval chroniclers record the disturbing case of a young woman afflicted by a presence that mocked Scripture, recoiled from mercy, and resisted the liturgy of the Church. Her story, preserved across multiple early sources, offers one of the clearest windows into how the medieval Christian world understood spiritual affliction and deliverance.   In this episode of Dark Matters, Dr. Luke Bray examines the Quedlinburg possession as a historical and theological case study, situating it within tenth-century monastic life, early medieval discernment, and the Church’s sacramental worldview. Far from sensational, the account reveals a restrained, communal response to the unseen—one rooted not in force or ritual technique, but in prayer, humility, and worship.   In this episode, you’ll explore: •          How medieval Christianity distinguished illness from demonic affliction •          Why mimicry of Scripture and aversion to mercy signaled intrusive spiritual agency •          The role of liturgy and the Eucharist in early medieval deliverance practices •          How Quedlinburg’s account reflects a pre-modern understanding of authority, holiness, and restraint   Further Investigation: •   The History of the Ottonians — Widukind of Corvey •   Dialogues — Gregory the Great •   Demonology and the Devil in the Middle Ages —Jeffrey Burton Russell   This episode is part of the ongoing research and teaching work of Stratias Ministries, dedicated to biblical theology, historical clarity, and spiritual formation.   Learn more at https://www.stratiasministries.org [https://www.stratiasministries.org/], and explore the full Dark Matters series at https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters [https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters].   Note: This episode approaches the Quedlinburg account as a historical and theological case study rooted in medieval Christian sources. It is not intended as devotional material or a guide for spiritual or ritual practice.

12 de mar de 2026 - 27 min
episode The Bell Witch — America’s Foundational Demonic Haunting artwork

The Bell Witch — America’s Foundational Demonic Haunting

What if America’s most famous “haunting” is not merely folklore—but an early national memory of spiritual conflict on the frontier?   In the early nineteenth century, the Bell family homestead in northern Tennessee became the center of a disturbing and persistent phenomenon—one that began with subtle sounds in the night and escalated into intelligible speech, physical assaults, and a sustained targeting of the household’s patriarch. Reported by family members, neighbors, and later chroniclers, the Bell Witch case remains one of the most debated supernatural episodes in American history—not because the story is simple, but because it resists every simple category.   In this episode of Dark Matters, Dr. Luke Bray examines the Bell Witch as a historical and theological case study, tracing how a frontier disturbance developed into an apparent intelligent presence marked by mimicry, malice, and moral intent. Moving beyond campfire retellings, this episode explores why the case took root so deeply in the American imagination—and how its patterns echo older Christian descriptions of personal, hostile spiritual agency.   In this episode, you’ll explore: •           Why the Bell Witch case became America’s first widely shared “demonological memory” •           How the phenomenon’s shift from disturbance to speech changes the nature of the account •           Why John Bell became the central target—and what that pattern suggests historically and theologically •           How revival-era frontier religion and folk belief created a uniquely American setting for spiritual fear and interpretation   Further Investigation: •           An Authenticated History of the Bell Witch — M. V. Ingram (1894) •           The Bell Witch — Brent Monahan •           Haunted Halls of America — Troy Taylor •           A History of Witchcraft and Demonology — Montague Summers   This episode is part of the ongoing research and teaching work of Stratias Ministries, dedicated to biblical theology, historical clarity, and spiritual formation.   Learn more at https://www.stratiasministries.org [https://www.stratiasministries.org/], and explore the full Dark Matters series at https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters [https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters].   Note: This episode approaches the Bell Witch account as a historical and theological case study. It is not intended as devotional material or a guide for spiritual practice.

26 de feb de 2026 - 27 min
episode Loudun — Possession, Power, and Politics in 17th-Century France artwork

Loudun — Possession, Power, and Politics in 17th-Century France

Loudun — Possession, Power, and Politics in 17th-Century France What happens when claims of possession collide with ambition, fear, and the machinery of political power?   In seventeenth-century France, the provincial town of Loudun became the unlikely center of one of Europe’s most infamous possession cases. What began as disturbing reports within a convent of Ursuline nuns soon spiraled into public exorcisms, legal proceedings, and the execution of a priest—set against the backdrop of post–Wars of Religion France and Cardinal Richelieu’s consolidation of royal authority.   In this episode of Dark Matters, Dr. Luke Bray examines the Loudun possessions as a case study in the volatile convergence of spiritual belief, communal psychology, and state power. Moving beyond sensational retellings, the episode explores how demonological frameworks, ecclesiastical authority, and political expediency combined to transform reported possession into a national spectacle—one that still unsettles historians, theologians, and scholars of religion.   In this episode, you’ll explore: •           How early modern demonology shaped the interpretation of possession and affliction •           Why communal possession challenged traditional categories of spiritual discernment •           How the accusations against Urbain Grandier became entangled with local and national politics •           What the Loudun affair reveals about the dangers at the intersection of belief, fear, and institutional power   Further Investigation: •           The Devils of Loudun — Aldous Huxley •           A History of Witchcraft and Demonology — Montague Summers •           The Possession at Loudun — Michel de Certeau   This episode is part of the ongoing research and teaching work of Stratias Ministries, dedicated to biblical theology, historical clarity, and spiritual formation. Learn more at https://www.stratiasministries.org [https://www.stratiasministries.org/], and explore the full Dark Matters series at https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters [https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters].   Note: This episode approaches the Loudun case as a historical, theological, and sociopolitical study. It is not intended as devotional material or a guide for spiritual or ritual practice.

12 de feb de 2026 - 18 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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