The integration of spiritual and psychiatric frameworks for understanding human suffering represents a significant gap in both theological scholarship and clinical practice. This mixed-methods study investigated Psychopossession theory—a theoretical model proposing systematic comorbidity between placement on the Spectrum of Possession by Evil (SPE) and diagnosable psychiatric conditions including Antisocial Personality Disorder, Borderline Personality Disorder, Narcissistic Personality Disorder, Substance Use Disorders, Dissociative Disorders, Psychotic Disorders, and Trauma-Related Disorders. Drawing upon biblical testimony, patristic and medieval demonology, contemporary philosophical reflection on evil, and current psychiatric research, this study developed and validated the Psychopossession Assessment Protocol (PAP)—a 112-item instrument measuring spiritual affliction across seven domains. The research employed a convergent parallel mixed-methods design, collecting quantitative data from 450 participants across clinical (n = 150), pastoral counseling (n = 150), and community (n = 150) samples, supplemented by qualitative interviews with 20 experienced pastoral counselors. Results demonstrated excellent psychometric properties for the PAP (α = .94; CFI = .96; RMSEA = .039), significant correlations between SPE placement and all target psychiatric conditions (r = .39–.56, p < .001), and bidirectional predictive relationships wherein SPE placement predicted psychiatric symptom severity (R² = .441) and psychiatric symptoms predicted SPE placement (R² = .478). Group comparisons confirmed that clinical participants demonstrated significantly higher SPE placement than pastoral and community samples. Qualitative findings validated quantitative results, with pastoral counselors describing observed comorbidity patterns and integrated intervention approaches. These findings support Psychopossession theory as an empirically validated framework for understanding the spiritual-psychiatric interface, offering implications for clinical practice, pastoral counseling, and church ministry while maintaining psychiatric and spiritual explanations as complementary rather than competing. Keywords: psychopossession, demonic possession, spectrum of possession by evil, spiritual warfare, psychiatric comorbidity, dissociative disorders, personality disorders, pastoral counseling, deliverance ministry, Christian psychology
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Laszlo Pokorny Dr. Laszlo Pokorny
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Fujitsu (United Kingdom)
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Laszlo Pokorny Dr. Laszlo Pokorny (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/695d854b3483e917927a45b1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18145030
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