Word for believing in ghosts

What do you call someone who believes in ghosts and ghost stories?

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tchrist

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asked Jul 6, 2014 at 12:00

vaibhav's user avatar

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There is a word eidolism which means a belief in ghosts; see this Google search.

Though it doesn’t appear in most dictionaries, and may be one of those words that largely exists only as a definition on esoteric word lists, it does appear in some odd books.

But I couldn’t find any actual usage of the corresponding word you’d expect to refer to a believer in ghosts: eidolist.

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tchrist

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answered Jul 6, 2014 at 13:05

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Neil WNeil W

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If you are an adult and take that subject seriously, you may be called a «spiritualist». If you simply believe they exist and fear their possible appearance, you are «superstitious», even though this word is not specific for ghosts and can be used for several other beliefs which are not based on reason or knowledge.

answered Jul 6, 2014 at 13:00

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CentaurusCentaurus

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I think they are also simply called: Ghost-believers:

Of the 1,000 adults interviewed Dec. 17-18, the HuffPost/YouGov poll revealed 45 percent believe in ghosts, or that the spirits of dead people can come back in certain places and situations. When asked if they believe there’s a life after death, 64 percent responded Yes. While 59 percent of adults don’t believe they’ve ever actually seen a ghost, 43 percent also don’t think that ghosts or spirits can harm or interact with living

Ghost-Believers/Non-believers

Do you believe in ghosts? I do. If you do, please join this group.
Are you an non-believer of ghosts and people keep fighting with you saying there are ghosts out there, then I suggest you to join this group also!

answered Jul 6, 2014 at 21:08

2

per Wiktionary.com:


apparitionist (pl. apparitionists)

A believer in apparitions.

Related words & phrases
apparitionism

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answered Jul 6, 2014 at 18:15

Flak DiNenno's user avatar

1

Animism (thus animist) covers this sense also.

  1. The belief in the existence of individual spirits that inhabit natural objects and phenomena.
  2. The belief in the existence of spiritual beings that are separable or separate from bodies.

Wikipedia mentions that:

The belief in manifestations of the spirits of the dead is widespread, dating back to animism or ancestor worship in pre-literate cultures.

Also a definition from «Dictionary of the Social Sciences» edited by Craig Calhoun:

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Note: Animism covers believing in both souls and ghosts.

answered Jul 7, 2014 at 16:38

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ermanenermanen

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Paranormal encounters have been woven into the fabric of the human experience for centuries. Thus, despite the advancement in technology, the belief in ghosts continues to be prevalent in many cultures. 

Such persistent and widespread belief in ghosts can also be attributed to the growing number of people citing personal encounters or having friends or family members recount similar stories of spirit-like beings.

According to a YouGov study in 2021, 41 percent of Americans believe in ghosts.

Therefore, it is hardly surprising that ghost stories dominate television and movies. Their popularity yields high financial returns for the industry. This is a troubling trend as these films and reality shows implicitly endorse the idea of conversing with the dead—reprehensible practice condemned in the Bible. 

What Is a Ghost?

Ghosts are believed to be the souls or spirits of dead people manifesting themselves to individuals capable of sensing their presence. The word ghost in Greek does not mean demon but phantasma, meaning “the disembodied spirit of a dead person.”

Are Ghosts Real?

As Christians, we recognize that beyond the physical world in which we live, there exists a realm not visible to the eye, the realm of the spirit. 

Ghosts do exist. However, whether they are angels from God, ghosts of our departed loved ones, or evil spirits masquerading as ghosts remains a subject of debate.

Comfort for the Bereaved

Christian families who’ve lost loved ones would recount receiving dream visitations from the deceased to say their final goodbyes. In the aftermath of a loss, such a final appearance of the departed provides comfort and solace for those in mourning. 

Many Christians, however, are critical of other believers for acknowledging the final visitation or sighting of their departed relatives. This is not at all surprising. It makes sense for Christians to adopt a critical view of this issue. The Bible explicitly instructs us not to commune with the dead. I completely agree with their stance. However, I would like to provide a slightly different perspective based on personal experience.

Having experienced similar encounters with loved ones who passed on, I was conflicted about whether to acknowledge or shun such visits. Without a doubt, those final goodbyes brought me comfort and peace while in the throes of agonizing grief.

Although I am familiar with the verse in  2 Corinthians 11:14, “And no wonder, for even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light,” I still grapple with the assumption that my dearly departed who came to say their last goodbye were actually demons.

So, in my attempt to justify such visitations, I asserted that the verse directly pertains to false preachers and pastors, not to dead relatives, because this is precisely the group of individuals referred to in the verse.

A Different Perspective on Ghosts

Dr. Michael Heiser, an American theologian with the same dissenting perspective on ghosts, came to my attention.

Note: Dr. Michael Heiser is an American Old Testament scholar and Christian author. His area of expertise and study focuses primarily on the Bible’s depiction of the spiritual realm and the relevance of such interpretations in the modern world. 

He believes that ghosts are not demons but are a “disembodied spirit of a dead person.”

He supported his belief with the incident where Jesus walked on water in front of His apostles in Matthew 14:26.

Dr. Michael Heiser said:

«Seeing Jesus walking on water, the disciples were terrified. As they stood in horror, they cried out, “It’s a ghost!” The Greek word for “ghost” here is phantasma. Using a Greek-English dictionary or Strong’s number search will reveal that this is not the Greek word for «demon» in the New Testament. The disciples had a category for «the disembodied spirit of a dead person” (a ghost). They didn’t just think in demonic terms.”

Thoughts on the Matter:

Having heard many stories of people leaving their bodies on the verge of death, seeing their own souls as they floated in mid-air,  shouldn’t our dead relatives be able to experience the same? Upon exiting their bodies, these people who had near-death experiences were not transformed into demons. In fact, once they were resuscitated and revived, their faith in God grew. Many became more faithful and devoted to God than they had ever been in the past.              

House Haunted by Ghosts?

There is a widely held view that ghosts haunt the houses they once inhabited because they have unresolved issues to settle.

There is no truth to this notion, as the following verse affirms:

“And the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.” (Ecclesiastes 12:7 ESV)

Therefore, the spirits that haunt houses are demonic entities, not the ghosts of those who once lived there.

My Personal Encounter with a Deceased Loved One

When I was 12 years old, my grandfather passed away from a serious illness. I remember crying a bucket of tears during the funeral. But the night following the burial, while deep in sleep, I suddenly found myself awake. Whether in the body or out of the body, I cannot tell. Everything was so real. 

I saw my grandfather standing outside, staring back at me. Next to him was a young boy happily dribbling a ball. I did not have a single ounce of fear. There was a sense of calm and peace as I watched the scene unfold before my eyes. 

The very next day, I told my grief-stricken grandma about my dream. Delighted and curious, she asked me to describe the boy I saw with Grandpa. I told her the child looked familiar to me [but could not figure out at the time who he was]. He appeared to be between the ages of five and six and wore a white shirt and blue shorts. He was also sporting the same haircut as that of a military soldier.

Hearing my description of the boy, my grandma’s face lit up. Even though her eyes were visibly moistened with tears, her smiling face radiated joy as she gazed at me in awe. 

It was my young cousin, Aldwin, who died from an appendix infection at the young age of six. My relatives said he was painfully shy and a loner. In the corner, he would play alone while our cousins gathered happily nearby. For that reason, my grandpa often played ball with him to keep him entertained. 

I was around seven when he died. In retrospect, I recall seeing him in passing, once in a while, during family gatherings. But I never had the chance to interact with him. The two of us have reclusive personalities. He was just as aloof as I was.

In light of my grief, my grandfather must have shown himself to reassure me that he is in a better place and is not alone. He’s in the company of a beloved and adored grandson.

A Word of Caution: Should We Communicate With Our Dead Loved Ones?

Even though I don’t consider the ghosts of dead relatives to be demons, that doesn’t mean I advocate conversing with them. The Bible is clear on this matter:

“Do not turn to mediums or necromancers; do not seek them out, and so make yourselves unclean by them: I am the Lord your God.» (Leviticus 19:31 ESV)

«And when they say to you, ‘Inquire of the mediums and the necromancers who chirp and mutter,’ should not a people inquire of their God? Should they inquire of the dead on behalf of the living? To the teaching and to the testimony! If they will not speak according to this word, it is because they have no dawn.» (Isaiah 8:19-20 ESV)

“And no wonder, for even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light.” (2 Corinthians 11:14)

«Let no one be found among you who sacrifices their son or daughter in the fire, who practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages in witchcraft, or casts spells, or who is a medium or spiritist or who consults the dead.» (Deuteronomy 18:10-11, NIV) 

We are forbidden from communing with the dead. When they appear to us, they would not talk. They would just let you understand that they’re okay and move on. They would not linger any longer than necessary. Otherwise, they are not the actual ghosts of departed loved ones but demonic creatures bent on deceiving and harming you.

Does the Bible Support a Belief in Ghosts?

The Bible indicates the reality of ghosts in its pages. Even the apostles mentioned the term “phantasma,” which means ghost in English.

However, we are commanded not to interact with ghosts of our loved ones, even in dreams.

Final Thoughts

For those who found solace in seeing the presence of their recently deceased relatives in their dreams, there’s nothing to fear. Welcome that final goodbye without attempting to commune with them. Otherwise, the enemy may exploit your vulnerability. He may tempt you to commune with the dead, causing you to fall into sin and disobey God’s commands.

And as we mourn the loss of a loved one, we can take comfort in knowing that we will be reunited with them one day.

“And God will wipe away every tear from their eyes; there shall be no more death, nor sorrow, nor crying. There shall be no more pain, for the former things have passed away.” (Revelation 21:4 NKJV)

Photo Credit: ©Syarafina Yusof/Unsplash

At the Orpheum Theatre in downtown Phoenix, people have reported ghosts in the building for many years. (Photo by Ally Carr/Cronkite News)

A mixed group of skeptics and believers recently toured the Orpheum Theatre to learn about the ghosts that haunt the building. (Photo by Ally Carr/Cronkite News)

Researcher Gary Schwartz at the University of Arizona uses lasers and mediums to try and detect physical evidence that spirits exist and can communicate with the living. (Photo by Ally Carr/Cronkite News)

Gary Schwartz, director of the laboratory for advances in consciousness and health at the University of Arizona,
has been looking into the existence of ghosts for 18 years. (Photo by Ally Carr/Cronkite News)

A group tours the Orpheum Theatre and learns about the people and ghosts that flavor the building’s 87-year history. (Photo by Ally Carr/Cronkite News)

TUCSON – One stormy day in November two years ago, water streaked across the second floor windows of the Orpheum Theatre in downtown Phoenix. A security guard snapped a photo with her phone.

When she looked at it, the picture contained the image of a ghostly Native American woman with no makeup and bad teeth, said Patty Dunlap, the volunteer coordinator for the city of Phoenix’s convention center department, which owns and operates the theater.

“I could tell that she had died a violent death in that picture just from looking at it,” Dunlap said. “It was very, very scary. That’s the one thing that made me kind of a believer of the ghost stories. I always thought it was kind of phooey … but I just really did not believe it until I saw that picture.”

When it comes to believing in ghosts, Dunlap is not alone. Thirty two percent of Americans believe in ghosts, according to a 2005 Gallup poll. A more recent Huffington Post/YouGov poll indicated that 45 percent of American adults believe that spirits of dead people can come back.

A mixed group of skeptics and believers recently toured the theater to learn about the ghosts that haunt the building.

‘Belief’ or fact?

“I don’t like the word ‘belief’ because people can believe anything, and very often our beliefs are not true,” said Gary Schwartz, director of the laboratory for advances in consciousness and health at the University of Arizona. “It is not a belief of mine now, that spirits are real. It’s a conclusion that I have come to based on so much evidence that I can no longer, with integrity, dismiss the evidence as untrue.”

Schwartz has been looking into the existence of ghosts for 18 years. He started by testing the authenticity of mediums, people who claim to speak to the deceased. Schwartz studied to be a fake medium himself.

“I am a pretty good fake medium,” he said. “Consequently, I could design research that invalidated the tricks.”

In controlled experiments, Schwartz said he could validate a genuine medium if he or she could provide information about the spirit they were talking to, including intimate details the medium could not research ahead of time. A close family member or friend of the deceased person checked the information.

“Based on the evidence, and I did many experiments … the conclusion I was forced to was, yes, some mediums are real,” he said. “And once you know that some mediums are real, they’re not all fakes and not all frauds, and you can’t explain it by any of our standard conventional ways, you then have to accept the data and follow it where it takes you.”

His research, funded by private entities, led him to the conclusion that ghosts are real, and some people can communicate with them.

Schwartz’s next step was detecting spirits. Since some mediums reported physically seeing spirits, Schwartz hypothesized that they could detect spirits using photons.

In an article published in Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing, Schwartz concluded that it was possible to measure the presence of spirit by an increase in photons in an otherwise black box when a spirit appeared inside the box.

He’s now trying to identify spirits using a method astronomers use to see planets around distant stars. The only way to detect the planets is when they pass in front of the star, blocking its light. In the same way, Schwartz hopes to detect spirits by having them pass their hands through a beam of light. When the spirits’ photons block the light, he can detect the presence of ghosts. So far, he said, the technology is only 70 percent accurate, which is statistically significant but will require further testing.

What about ghosts in real life? According to the Huffington Post/YouGov poll, 28 percent of adults reported having seen or been in the presence of ghosts.

The experience is often the same: You feel a chill down your spine, and the hair on the back of your neck stands on end. You have this strange feeling that someone is standing behind you, but when you turn, there is nothing there. Maybe you see a shadowy form flee from the room.

“Whenever a person has that experience, we can’t tell from the experience per say whether it’s genuine or not, without getting some other corroborating evidence that validates that experience,” Schwartz said. “So sometimes those experiences are not spirit related, they just happen, or they’re wishful thinking, or we get frightened and it’s nothing. But on other occasions, those experiences are actually reflecting moments when we detect the presence of an invisible spirit. And the challenge is for us to be able to discern which are the valid experiences and which ones are not.”

Paranormal attraction

Back at the Orpheum Theatre, people have reported ghosts in the building for many years. The money made from the tours will go to help preserve the theater.

Joe Atredies, who runs the Phoenix Ghost Tours, works with the Friends of the Orpheum Theatre to tease through the history of the building and the reports of the paranormal activities.

“Here at the Orpheum, a lot of the staff and crew have known about a specific ghost that’s very popular and very well known. … Her name is Maddie. The truth is, we actually don’t know who Maddie is,” he said.

And they don’t believe she’s the only ghost there.

The historic theater may be home to several ghostly personalities, including a ghost cat that enjoys playing with computer mice, he said.

“There’s times that something that’s happened, that sounds a little weird but it could be easily explained by other things,” Atredies said. “I do my very best to actually disqualify that it might be something else. Because I think some of the best ghost stories are real ghost stories.”

Atredies didn’t always believe in the paranormal.

“I always knew there was something weird about it, but most of the time I realized it could be explained away,” he said. “It was that 10 percent of the time that I couldn’t find another explanation, and the least craziest one would be ghosts.”

“Sometimes you just gotta say, ‘I’ve seen dead people,’” he said.

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Fox


Halloween is a time to celebrate ghosts, vampires, and everything supernatural.

But if you truly believe in ghosts, you’re not alone.

According to a Gallup survey from 2005, about three out of four Americans harbor at least one paranormal belief. More than a third of people surveyed also said they believed in ghosts or spirits returning from the dead. Another 37% reported believing in haunted houses, and a whopping 41% in extrasensory perception (ESP).

But just what makes us susceptible to these beliefs, despite an utter lack of evidence that they’re real?

It’s how our brains are wired

Part of the reason many of us believe in ghosts simply comes down to the way our brains work, Barry Markovsky, a sociologist at the University of South Carolina, told Business Insider.

The human mind seeks patterns to make sense of ambiguous information. «Ghosts are almost always seen under ambiguous circumstances — such as in poor lighting, or when we’re just waking up or falling asleep, when our senses are not at their peak function,» Markovsky said.

People who believe in ghosts are often in situations where they’re expecting to see them, such as in a «haunted» house, Markovsky added. In other words, if you’re looking for something, you’re more likely to find it.

«Humans are hardwired to seek out explanations for what happens around us,» Radford adds.

It’s related to belief in life after death

A wide variety of supernatural beliefs exist in different cultures, but ghosts are by far the most common one, Benjamin Radford, deputy editor of Skeptical Inquirer magazine and author of «Scientific Paranormal Investigation: How to Solve Unexplained Mysteries,» told Business Insider.

Part of the reason for this is that believing in ghosts may be related to a belief in the afterlife, a tenet of most major religions. Believing in the supernatural also has its roots in our desire to have control over our world, Radford explained. After all, a world where random things happen is a scary one.

Another Gallup poll found that in sub-Saharan Africa, more than half of people surveyed believed in witchcraft, and those who did tended to rate themselves as less happy than nonbelievers. And a 2008 study found that lonely people are more likely to believe in the supernatural.

Some seek the thrill of it

ghostbusters


Of course, another reason people believe in ghosts is the same reason that people like to watch scary movies or play Bloody Mary in girls’ bathrooms: for the thrill of it.

There’s a word for buying into these scary stories: legend-tripping. Basically, people do this because they know they’re not in any real danger, Radford said.

But there’s a contradiction at the heart of our belief in ghosts. One the one hand, there’s the idea that ghosts are scary and wish to do us harm, but on the other, there are people who go looking for ghosts.

Many ghost hunters see themselves as «traffic cops for the afterlife,» Radford said. Instead of believing ghosts to be evil, they think of them as spirits that have simply gotten lost on the way to the hereafter.

As Radford put it, «If you’re genuinely terrified of ghosts and think they could kill you, why the [heck] would you go looking for them?»

Of course, movies and TV shows about ghost-hunting, which are often presented with very little skepticism, aren’t helpful.

It’s all good fun, but as Radford said, «Don’t believe everything you see on TV!»

This question was posed on the CHK message board recently. It is my hope that this article will be helpful if you are searching for answers to this question.

We live in an area where superstition, belief in ghosts and spirits abound and it has always been important for us to teach our children what God’s Word says about these topics. We’ve done a lot of studying and prayed for long hours about how to teach them, and now I am just so pleased that our efforts might help you, too.

Many Christians will say that they have ‘seen a ghost’ or ‘felt a presence’ but they have a hard time fitting those experiences in with their Christianity. So its not an unusual thing for Christians to wonder about this topic.

God lets us know in His Word that there certainly are spirits in this world. You are probably aware of all the many references to spirits in the Bible that aren’t talking about the spirit of men. Here are just a few:
“For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” (Eph. 6:12).

“That evening they brought to him many who were oppressed by demons, and he cast out the spirits with a word and healed all who were sick.” (Matthew 8:16)

“Now the Spirit expressly says that in later times some will depart from the faith by devoting themselves to deceitful spirits and teachings of demons…” (1 Tim. 4:1)

What this whole topic boils down to is this…. What happens to people after they die?

Without getting into a lengthy discussion, lets say for the moment that people who have rejected Jesus Christ go to hell and people who have accepted the atoning sacrifice of Jesus and been forgiven go to heaven.

Scripture teaches that when we leave this life…… life continues either with Jesus or not with Jesus. Once we are in the place we have chosen by our acceptance or rejection of Jesus, we are there. We don’t go in and out of heaven or hell. There is no scripture that suggests that we do.

You can see that one’s concept of what happens after death has direct bearing on what happens to one’s spirit. We believe that the Bible teaches this concept:
“Yes, we are of good courage, and we would rather be away from the body and at home with the Lord.”
2 Cor 5:8

The Bible explicitly forbids that we attempt contact with spirits that pretend to be spirits of the dead :

“There shall not be found among you anyone who burns his son or his daughter as an offering, anyone who practices divination or tells fortunes or interprets omens, or a sorcerer or a charmer or a medium or a necromancer or one who inquires of the dead, for whoever does these things is an abomination to the Lord.” (Deuteronomy 18:11).

The Bible states that the dead do not have contact with the living (Luke 16:19-31). Therefore, if one has contact with or ‘sees’ or experiences a paranormal being, you can be sure its not great aunt Mary. Rather, it is a spirit pretending to be great aunt Mary. And this is why we are warned NOT to have contact with people who claim to contact the dead. We are actually contacting fallen angels, unclean spirits or demons. These are deceitful spirits under the control of the father of lies, satan.
Even though it is tempting to think that a spirit or ghosts is harmless, remember what they really are and remember that:

“…even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light.”
(2 Cor 11:14)

The book of Isaiah calls these spirits ‘familiar spirits’. They are familiar with facts about deceased people and use those facts to draw other living people deep into paranormal activity and away from their relationship with God. They use signs and wonders, miracles, to draw people into experimenting with other forms of the occult like ouija boards, tarot cards, fortune telling, astrology and seances. Many times people are seeking contact with a deceased loved one and will use all these tools to find that loved one. And when they do, they are opening themselves up to influence by satan and his demons.

“In their case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God.” (2 Corinthians 4:4)

From experience, I can assure you that even Christians can sometimes become blinded and deceived if they are not walking in the Light as they should be.

In conjunction with the first question about ghosts, there was another question about Saul and the witch of Endor:

The scripture in question is in 1 Samuel 28.

King Saul goes to consult a medium. The problem though is that God’s law forbids contact with mediums (under penalty of death) and King Saul’s own laws have condemned it and had made all mediums leave his land. So obviously, he knew he was doing something wrong and he could be killed for it.

How does this apply to us?

What we know for sure:
If it were possible to contact the dead, it would be wrong to do so according to God’s Word. It is a radical offense to God to do so.

There are two ways of looking at this scripture:

#1 – Certainly God had the power to raise Samuel’s spirit from the place of the OT dead, but it would be against everything His Word teaches.
It is evident that satan made both the witch and King Saul believe that it was actually Samuel speaking.

#2 – God allowed the actual spirit of Samuel to appear and speak to Saul. This was a one -time occurrence used by God to carry out His will.

Comments are now closed on this post but if you would like to email me and ask a question you may.
sylvia @ christianhomekeeper.org leave out the spaces.

There is a follow-up post to this article about Ghosts here.

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