The Exorcist Who Tested Carlo Acutis’s Tomb And Lost His Certainty-mdue - Chainityai

The Exorcist Who Tested Carlo Acutis’s Tomb And Lost His Certainty-mdue

Father Emilio Ríos Castellanos did not arrive in Assisi as a pilgrim. He arrived as an investigator, a priest trained to distrust his own emotions when the supernatural was involved.

For 28 years, his work had been to separate belief from evidence. He had performed more than 3,400 documented interventions in 12 countries and had learned the danger of naming something too quickly.

His father, a doctor in Seville, had taught him that discipline before faith did not weaken faith. It protected it. When Emilio entered seminary at 23, that warning followed him.

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‘If you are going to believe in miracles,’ his father told him, ‘learn first to distinguish them from collective illusion.’ Emilio never forgot it. He built his priesthood around that sentence.

Between 1995 and 1998, he trained in Rome under Father Gabriele Amorth. He learned temperature patterns, object reactions, diagnostic prayers, and the cold patience required when frightened people wanted certainty faster than truth.

By 2019, Father Emilio had a system. There were archived cases, categories, records, and margins for doubt. He had faced men and women whose voices changed in rooms that seemed to lose heat.

Then came Assisi.

The reports began quietly: pilgrims touching the tomb of Carlo Acutis and describing heat in their palms. Photographs showing unusual light. Devotees speaking of presence with the soft vocabulary Emilio distrusted.

One message caught him differently. A French priest wrote that the presence reminded him of a demonic intervention, but inverted. The word stayed with Emilio long after he closed the letter.

Carlo Acutis was already known across the Catholic world. Born on May 3, 1991, in London to Italian parents, he had died on October 12, 2006, from fulminant M3 leukemia at 15.

He had loved the Eucharist with unusual intensity and had created an exhibition documenting more than 160 Eucharistic miracles. To many young Catholics, he seemed modern, brilliant, and strangely near.

To Father Emilio, devotion was not proof. A preserved body could mean holiness, science, preparation, error, or something darker. His task was not to admire the story. His task was to test it.

Permission came with conditions. He could examine the tomb discreetly, disturb no pilgrims, and deliver a confidential report to the diocese. He traveled with Father Benedeto Marini and Dr. Salvatore Ferretti.

Marini had assisted him for 15 years and kept records with almost forensic precision. Ferretti, 51, was an agnostic biophysicist from the University of Perugia who trusted instruments more than saints.

They arrived in Assisi on October 2, 2019. The air smelled of wet stone and cypress. At 6 p.m., Emilio’s phone showed 12ºC outside. The town felt quiet enough to hear itself breathe.

At dinner, Ferretti calibrated instruments on the table while the waiter pretended not to stare. Marini sorted pages. Emilio reviewed the facts of Carlo’s life like a man checking locks before a storm.

The next morning, October 3, they entered the Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli at 7 a.m. The first pilgrims would not arrive until 9. They had exactly two hours.

The tomb stood in a side chapel. Carlo’s body lay behind glass, dressed in casual clothes, white Nike shoes visible, his face serene. Photographs had not prepared Emilio for the dissonance of seeing him.

The boy looked asleep.

Ferretti began with temperature. At 7:12, the glass measured 16.3ºC. Ambient air was 16ºC. At 7:22, the result was identical. Marini wrote the numbers down without comment.

Then came the electromagnetic baseline. Ferretti’s three-axis magnetometer showed 47.2 microteslas, consistent with the expected field in Assisi. No cables, no hidden equipment, no irregular source.

Everything was normal until Emilio placed his palm on the glass.

He pulled away almost immediately. His training told him glass in that room should feel cool. His hand had felt something dry, even, and warm.

He ordered a reading at the exact spot. The thermometer still showed 16.3ºC. The instrument denied his skin. Emilio wrote the sensation off as subjective, not scientific, and tried to continue.

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