Is Serpent Handling Spiritual or Religious? Can being bitten by a deadly snake make you Spiritual, Religious or both?

Can Serpent-Handling Preachers Charm Snakes?

They say they can defy the deadly odds. But are they just lucky sometimes?

By Eric Niiler
Wed May 30, 2012 06:21 PM ET

THE GIST

A 44-year--old preacher died from a deadly snake bite in a ceremony.
Snake-handlers adherents cite Mark 16:17-18 as the reason for their practice.
Snake handlers scour the hills of southern Appalachia to collect poisonous rattlesnakes.

A snake-handling preacher, who refused treatment until it was too late, died after being bitten during a religious service in a remote state park in West Virginia last weekend.

The Rev. Mark Wolford, 44, lived with poisonous snakes in his Bluefield, W. Va. home, according to a recent Washington Post profile.

Snake-handlers have been charming us (and perhaps saving souls) for years, but can they really do it or are they just lucky?

Experts say there’s no sure way to tell when a venomous serpent like the timber rattlesnake -- the kind that probably killed Wolford -- will strike. Nor is it easy to tell whether you’ll get a harmless “dry bite," or a deadly injection of toxins that can kill a full-grown human within hours.

“It is not always easy to predict their behavior,” said Matthew Evans, a biologist at the National Zoo in Washington, DC, who runs the Reptile Discovery Center. “But you are trained to know the signs when a snake is stressed out or threatened.”

According to the Washington Post, Wolford was performing a service for about 25 people at Panther State Forest in McDowell County on Sunday morning. During his sermon, he laid the rattlesnake on the ground and it struck his thigh. Family members took him home to recover, but his condition worsened. He was pronounced dead upon arrival at nearby hospital on Sunday afternoon.

Wolford was part of a tradition of snake-handling at so-called "sign churches," a small sect of Pentacostalism that follows a Biblical passage from the Book of Mark 16:18 which reads: "They shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover." Some believers also drink poisons during as strychnine or gasoline in accordance with the five signs. Serpent-handling began in the Church of God around 1910 and is practiced by about 2,000 people throughout parts of West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama. It is illegal in all states except West Virginia. But experts say the practice is declining.

“When you see it done, you cannot believe your eyes,” said the Rev. Bill Leonard, a professor of church history and religion at Wake Forest University and a scholar of snake-handling congregations.

“They know what the dangers are and they play gospel roulette by doing this, “Leonard told Discovery News. “They pick up the serpents in all kinds of ways, often more than one in their hands.”Leonard estimates between 75 and 100 people have died over the past century of snake handling. He says families who belong to these congregations believe their faith will keep them alive, that’s why they don’t have snake venom anti-toxins available should something go wrong.

How Stuff Works: How To Scare Away a Rattlesnake

“When it happens, there’s almost a naivete about this and it hits them very hard,” Leonard said. “On the one hand they are affirming their faith, but when it goes badly, they are often stunned by it.”

Snake handlers like Wolford scour the hills of southern Appalachia to collect poisonous rattlesnakes, copperheads and water moccasins, sometimes bartering with nearby congregations to get enough animals for their ceremonies, according to Ralph Hood, professor of the psychology of religion at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.

“Serpent handlers are very cautious except in church,” Hood said. “Many believe that God anoints them and have a distinct feeling and they can handle the snake without being bit.”

That may be, but most professionals like the National Zoo’s Evans say snakes are unpredictable. That’s why they use hooks to pick them up and clean their cages or administer medicines. Evans says timber rattlesnakes -- relatively common throughout parts of the Eastern United States -- are more deadly than other species of rattlesnakes because they produce two separate poisons. A hematoxin kills cells upon contact, causing swelling and blackening of nearby tissue and, in effect, starting the digestive process for the snake. That compound sometimes turns a victim’s fingers into lumps of broken-down flesh. The snake also produces a separate neurotoxin that can paralyze the lungs.

Wolford likely knew the risks from performing his religious faith. His father -- also a serpent-handling preacher -- died from a rattlesnake bite when Wolford was 15 years old

Source: http://news.discovery.com/human/snake-handler-wolford-120530.html

See Also - Did Weird Christian Rituals and Faith Healing Kill Mack Wolford in May 2012? http://orange-papers.org/forum/node/1594

JR Harris's picture

Voodoo Religion – The History

Voodoo is a religion that was brought to the Western coasts by slaves from Africa. It is believed to have started in Haiti in 1724 as a snake cult that worshipped many spirits pertaining to daily life experiences. The practices were intermingled with many Catholic rituals and saints. It was first brought to the Louisiana area in 1804 by Cuban plantation owners who were displaced by revolution and brought their slaves with them.

Voodoo is spelled several ways: vodun, vaudin, voudoun, vodou, and vaudoux. It is an ancient religion practiced by 80 million people worldwide and is growing in numbers. With voodoo’s countless deities, demonic possessions, animal sacrifices (human sacrifices in the Petro -- black magic form of voodoo); voodoo practitioners cannot understand why their religion is so misunderstood.

Voodoo rituals are elaborate, steeped in secret languages, spirit possessed dancing, and special diets eaten by the voodoo priests and priestesses. The ancestral dead are thought to walk among the living during the hooded dances. Touching the dancer during this spirit possessed trance is believed to be dangerous enough to kill the offender.

Talismans are bought and sold as fetishes. These could be statues representing voodoo gods, dried animal heads, or other body parts. They are sold for medicine and for the spiritual powers that these fetishes are believed to hold. The dark side of voodoo is used by participants to summon evil spirits and cast hexing spells upon adversaries.

Read more:http://www.allabouttheoccult.org/voodoo-religion.htm

See also - Spiritual? Religious? Vodou, also spelled Voodoo, Voudou, Vodun, or French Vaudou? http://orange-papers.org/forum/node/1791

"Tradition 10 - Alcoholics Anonymous has no opinion on outside issues; hence the AA name ought never be drawn into public controversy." Please follow orders from the Interchurch Center if you are an AA member and don't comment.

Orange's picture

RE:

A 44-year--old preacher died from a deadly snake bite in a ceremony.

See? Snake-handling can make you very, very spiritual, if the snakes are poisonous enough.

alkieanon's picture

Put it on the fear inventory. LOL!