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Question II
If it be in Accordance with the Catholic Faith to maintain that in
Order to bring about some Effect of Magic, the Devil must intimately co-operate
with the Witch, or whether one without the other, that is to say, the Devil
without the Witch, or conversely, could produce such an Effect.
If it be in
accordance with the Catholic Faith to maintain that in order to bring about some
effect of magic, the devil must intimately co-operate with the witch, or whether
one without the other, that is to say, the devil without the witch, or
conversely, could produce such an effect.
And the first argument is this: That
the devil can bring about an effect of magic without the co-operation of any
witch. So S. Augustine holds. All things which visibly happen so that they can
be seen, may (it is believed) be the work of the inferior powers of the air. But
bodily ills and ailments are certainly not invisible, nay rather, they are
evident to the senses, therefore they can be brought about by devils. Moreover,
we learn from the Holy Scriptures of the disasters which fell upon Job, how fire
fell from heaven and striking the sheep and the servants consumed them, and how
a violent wind threw down the four corners of a house so that it fell upon his
children and slew them all. The devil by himself without the co-operation of any
witches, but merely by God's permission alone, was able to bring about all these
disasters. Therefore he can certainly do many things which are often ascribed to
the work of witches.
And this is obvious from the account
of the seven husbands of the maiden Sara, whom a devil killed. Moreover,
whatever a superior power is able to do, it is able to do without reference to a
power superior to it, and a superior power can all the more work without
reference to an inferior power. But an inferior power can cause hailstorms and
bring about diseases without the help of a power greater than itself. For
Blessed Albertus Magnus in his work De passionibus aeris says that rotten
sage, if used as he explains, and thrown into running water, will arouse most
fearful tempests and storms.
Moreover, it may be said that the
devil makes use of a witch, not because he has need of any such agent, but
because he is seeking the perdition of the witch. We may refer to what Aristotle
says in the 3rd book of his Ethics. Evil is a voluntary act which is
proved by the fact that nobody performs an unjust action, and a man who commits
a rape does this for the sake of pleasure, not merely doing evil for evil's
sake. Yet the law punishes those who have done evil as if they had acted merely
for the sake of doing evil. Therefore if the devil works by means of a witch he
is merely employing an instrument; and since an instrument depends upon the will
of the person who employs it and does not act of its own free will, therefore
the guilt of the action ought not to be laid to the charge of the witch, and in
consequence she should not be punished.
But an opposite
opinion holds that the devil cannot so easily and readily do harm by himself to
mankind, as he can harm them through the instrumentality of witches, although
they are his servants. In the first place we may consider the act of generation.
But for every act which has an effect upon another some kind of contact must be
established, and because the devil, who is a spirit, can have no such actual
contact with a human body, since there is nothing common of this kind between
them, therefore he uses some human instruments, and upon these he bestows the
power of hurting by bodily touch. And many hold this to be proven by the text,
and the gloss upon the text, in the 3rd chapter of S. Paul's Epistle to the Galatians:
O senseless Galatians, who hath bewitched you that you should not obey the
truth? And the gloss upon this passage refers to those who have singularly fiery
and baleful eyes, who by a mere look can harm others, especially young children.
And Avicenna also bears this out, Naturalism, Book 3, c. the last, when
he says; "Very often the soul may have as much influence upon the body of
another to the same extent as it has upon its own body, for such is the
influence of the eyes of anyone who by his glance attracts and fascinates
another." And the same opinion is maintained by Al-Gazali in the 5th book
and 10th c. of his Physics. Avicenna also suggests, although he does not
put this opinion forward as irrefutable, that the power of the imagination can
actually change or seem to change extraneous bodies, in cases where the power of
the imagination is too unrestrained; and hence we father that the power of the
imagination is not to be considered as distinct from a man's other sensible
powers, since it is common to them all, but to some extent it includes all those
other powers. And this is true, because such a power of the imagination can
change adjacent bodies, as, for example, when a man is able to walk along some
narrow beam which is stretched down the middle of a street. But yet if this beam
were suspended over deep water he would not dare to walk along it, because his
imagination would most strongly impress upon his mind the idea of falling, and
therefore his body and the power of his limbs would not obey his imagination,
and they would not obey the contrary thereto, that is to say, walking directly
and without hesitation. This change may be compared to the influence exercised
by the eyes of a person who has such influence, and so a mental change is
brought about although there is not any actual and bodily change.
Moreover, if it be argued that such a
change is cause by a living body owing to the influence of the mind upon some
other living body, this answer may be given. In the presence of a murderer blood
flows from the wounds in the corpse of the person he has slain. Therefore
without any mental powers bodies can produce wonderful effects, and so a living
man if he pass by near the corpse of a murdered man, although he may not be
aware of the dead body, is often seized with fear.
Again, there are some things in
nature which have certain hidden powers, the reason for which man does not know;
such, for example, is the lodestone, which attracts steel and many other such
things, which S. Augustine mentions in the 20th book Of the City of God.
And so women in
order to bring about changes in the bodies of others sometimes make use of
certain things, which exceed our knowledge, but this is without any aid from the
devil. And because these remedies are mysterious we must not therefore ascribe
them to the power of the devil as we should ascribe evil spells wrought by
witches.
Moreover, witches use certain images
and other strange periapts, which they are wont to place under the lintels of
the doors of houses, or in those meadows where flocks are herding, or even where
men congregate, and thus they cast spells over their victims, who have oft-times
been known to die. But because such extraordinary effects can proceed from these
images it would appear that the influence of these images is in proportion to
the influence of the stars over human bodies, for as natural bodies are
influenced by heavenly bodies, so may artificial bodies likewise be thus
influenced. But natural bodies may find the benefit of certain secret but good
influences. Therefore artificial bodies may receive such influence. Hence it is
plain that those who perform works of healing may well perform them by means of
such good influences, and this has no connexion at all with any evil power.
Moreover, it would
seem that most extraordinary and miraculous events come to pass by the working
of the power of nature. For wonderful and terrible and amazing things happen
owing to natural forces. And this S. Gregory points out in his Second
Dialogue. The Saints perform miracles, sometimes by a prayer, sometimes by
their power alone. There are examples of each; S. Peter by praying raised to
life Tabitha, who was dead. By rebuking Ananias and Sapphira, who were telling a
lie, he slew the without any prayer. Therefore a man by his mental influence can
change a material body into another, or he can change such a body from health to
sickness and conversely.
Moreover, the human body is nobler
than any other body, but because of the passions of the mind the human body
changes and becomes hot or cold, as is the case with angry men or men who are
afraid: and so even greater change takes place with regard to the effects of
sickness and death, which by their power can greatly change a material body.
But certain objections must be
allowed. The influence of the mind cannot make an impression upon any form
except by the intervention of some agent, as we have said above. And these are
the words of S. Augustine in the book which we have already quoted: It is
incredible that the angels who fell from Heaven should be obedient to any
material things, for the obey God only. And much less can a man of his natural
power bring about extraordinary and evil effects. The answer must be made, there
are even to-day many who err greatly on this point, making excuses for witches
and laying the whole blame upon the craft of the devil, or ascribing the changes
that they work to some natural alteration. These errors may be easily made
clear. First, by the description of witches which S. Isidore gives in his Etymologiae,
c. 9: Witches are so called on account of the blackness of their guilt, that is
to say, their deeds are more evil than those of any other malefactors. He
continues: They stir up and confound the elements by the aid of the devil, and
arouse terrible hailstorms and tempests. Moreover, he says they distract the
minds of men, driving them to madness, insane hatred, and inordinate lusts.
Again, he continues, by the terrible influence of their spells alone, as it were
by a draught of poison, they can destroy life.
And the words of S. Augustine in his
book on The City of God are very much to the point, for he tells us who
magicians and witches really are. Magicians, who are commonly called witches,
are thus termed on account of the magnitude of their evil deeds. These are they
who by the permission of God disturb the elements, who drive to distraction the
minds of men, such as have lost their trust in God, and by the terrible power of
their evil spells, without any actual draught or poison, kill human beings. As
Lucan says: A mind which has not been corrupted by any noxious drink perishes
forspoken by some evil charm. For having summoned devils to their aid they
actually dare to heap harms upon mankind, and even to destroy their enemies by
their evil spells. And it is certain that in operations of this kind the witch
works in close conjunction with the devil. Secondly, punishments are of four
kinds: beneficial, hurtful, wrought by witchcraft, and natural. Beneficial
punishments are meted out by the ministry of good Angels, just as hurtful
punishments proceed from evil spirits. Moses smote Egypt with ten plagues by the
ministry of good Angels, and the magicians were only able to perform three of
these miracles by the aid of the devil. And the pestilence which fell upon the
people for three days because of the sin of David who numbered the people, and
the 72,000 men who were slain in one night in the army of Sennacherib, were
miracles wrought by the Angels of God, that is, by good Angels who feared God
and knew that they were carrying out His commands.
Destructive harm, however, is wrought
by the medium of bad angels, at whose hands the children of Israel in the desert
were often afflicted. And those harms which are simply evil and nothing more are
brought about by the devil, who works through the medium of sorcerers and
witches. There are also natural harms which in some manner depend upon the
conjunction of heavenly bodies, such as dearth, drought, tempests, and similar
effects of nature.
It is obvious that
there is a vast difference between all these causes, circumstances, and
happenings. For Job was afflicted by the devil with a harmful disease, but this
is nothing to the purpose. And if anybody who is too clever and over-curious
asks how it was that Job was afflicted with this disease by the devil without
the aid of some sorcerer or witch, let him know that he is merely beating the
air and not informing himself as to the real truth. For in the time of Job there
were no sorcerers and witches, and such abominations were not yet practised. But
the providence of God wished that by the example of Job the power of the devil
even over good men might be manifested, so that we might learn to be on our
guard against Satan, and, moreover, by the example of this holy patriarch the
glory of God shines abroad, since nothing happens save what is permitted by God.
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