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Question I
Of those against whom the Power of Witches availeth not at all.
The second main
part of this work deals with the method of procedure adopted by witches for the
performance of their witchcraft; and these are distinguished under eighteen
heads, proceeding from two chief difficulties. The first of these two, dealt
with in the beginning, concerns protective remedies, by which a man is rendered
immune from witchcraft: the second, dealt with at the end, concerns curative
remedies, by which those who are bewitched can be cured. For, as Aristotle says
(Physics, IV), prevention and cure are related to one another, and are,
accidentally, matters of causation. In this way the whole foundation of this
horrible heresy may be made clear.
In the above two divisions, the
following points will be principally emphasized. First, the initiation of
witches, and their profession of sacrilege. Second, the progress of their method
of working, and of their horrible observances. Third, the preventive protections
against their witchcrafts. And because we are now dealing with matters relating
to morals and behaviour, and there is no need for a variety of arguments and
disquisitions, since those matters which now follow under their headings are
sufficiently discussed in the foregoing Questions; therefore we pray God that
the reader will not look for proofs in every case, since it is enough to adduce
examples that have been personally seen or heard, or are accepted at the word of
credible witnesses.
In the first of the points mentioned,
two matters will be chiefly examined: first, the various methods of enticement
adopted by the devil himself; second, the various ways in which witches profess
their heresy. And in the second of the main points, six matters will be examined
in order, relating to the procedure of witchcraft, and its cure. First, the
practices of witches with regard to themselves and their own bodies. Second,
their practices with regard to other men. Third, those relating to beasts.
Fourth, the mischief they do to the fruits of the earth. Fifth, those kinds of
witchcraft which are practised by men only and not by women. Sixth, the question
of removing witchcraft, and how those who are bewitched may be cured. The First
Question, therefore, is divided into eighteen heads, since in so many ways are
their observances varied and multiplied.
It is asked whether a man can be so
blessed by the good Angels that he cannot be bewitched by witches in any of the
ways that follow. And it seems that he cannot, for it has already been proved
that even the blameless and innocent and the just are often afflicted by devils,
as was Job; and many innocent children, as well as countless other just men, are
seen to be bewitched, although not to the same extent as sinners; for they are
not afflicted in the perdition of their souls, but only in their worldly goods
and their bodies. But the contrary is indicated by the confessions of witches,
namely, that they cannot injure everybody, but only those whom they learn,
through the information of devils, to be destitute of Divine help.
Answer. There are three
classes of men blessed by God, whom that detestable race cannot injure with
their witchcraft. And the first are those who administer public justice against
them, or prosecute them in any public official capacity. The second are those
who, according to the traditional and holy rites of the Church, make lawful use
of the power and virtue which the Church by her exorcisms furnishes in the
aspersion of Holy Water, the taking of consecrated salt, the carrying of blessed
candles on the Day of the Purification of Our Lady, of palm leaves upon Palm
Sunday, and men who thus fortify themselves are acting so that the powers of
devils are diminished; and of these we shall speak later. The third class are
those who, in various and infinite ways, are blessed by the Holy Angels.
The reason for this in the first
class will be given and proved by various examples. For since, as S. Paul says,
all power if from God, and a sword for the avenging of the wicked and the
retribution of the good, it is no wonder that devils are kept at bay when
justice is being done to avenge that horrible crime.
To the same effect the Doctors note
that there are five ways in which the devil's power is hindered, either wholly
or in part. First, by a limit fixed by God to his power, as is seen in Job
i and ii. Another example is the case of the man we read of in the Formicarius
of Nider, who had confessed to a judge that he had invoked the devil in order
that he might kill an enemy of his, or do him bodily harm, or strike him dead
with lightning. And he said: "When I had invoked the devil that I might
commit such a deed with his help, he answered me that he was unable to do any of
those things, because the man had good faith and diligently defended himself
with the sign of the cross; and that therefore he could not harm him in his
body, but the most he could do was to destroy an eleventh part of the fruit of
his lands."
Secondly, it is hindered by the
application of some exterior force, as in the case of Balaam's ass, Numbers
xxii. Thirdly, by some externally performed miracle of power. And there are some
who are blessed with an unique privilege, as will be shown later in the case of
the third class of men who cannot be bewitched. Fourthly, by the good providence
of God, Who disposes each thing severally, and causes a good Angel to stand in
the devil's way, as when Asmodeus killed the seven husbands of the virgin Sara,
but did not kill Tobias.
Fifthly, it is sometimes due to the
caution of the devil himself, for at times he does not wish to do hurt, in order
that worse may follow from it. As, for example, when he could molest the
excommunicated but does not do so, as in the case of the excommunicated
Corinthian (I. Corinthians v), in order that he may weaken the faith of
the Church in the power of such banishment. Therefore we may similarly say that,
even if the administrators of public justice were not protected by Divine power,
yet the devils often of their own accord withdraw their support and guardianship
from witches, either because they fear their conversion, or because they desire
and hasten their damnation.
This fact is proved also by actual
experience. For the aforesaid Doctor affirms that witches have borne witness
that it is a fact of their own experience that, merely because they have been
taken by officials of public justice, they have immediately lost all their power
of witchcraft. For example, a judge named Peter, whom we have mentioned before,
wished his officials to arrest a certain witch called Stadlin; but their hands
were seized with so great a trembling, and such a nauseous stench came into
their nostrils, that they gave up hope of daring to touch the witch. And the
judge commanded them, saying: "You may safely arrest the wretch, for when
he is touched by the hand of public justice, he will lose all the power of his
iniquity." And so the event proved; for he was taken and burned for many
witchcrafts perpetrated by him, which are mentioned here and there in this work
in their appropriate places.
And many more such experiences have
happened to us Inquisitors in the exercise of our inquisitorial office, which
would turn the mind of the reader to wonder if it were expedient to relate them.
But since self-praise is sordid and mean, it is better to pass them over in
silence than to incur the stigma of boastfulness and conceit. But we must except
those which have become so well known that they cannot be concealed.
Not long ago in the town of Ratisbon
the magistrates had condemned a witch to be burned, and were asked why it was
that we Inquisitors were not afflicted like other men with witchcraft. They
answered that witches had often tried to injure them, but could not. And, being
asked the reason for this, they answered that they did not know, unless it was
because the devils had warned them against doing so. For, they said, it would be
impossible to tell how many times they have pestered us by day and by night, now
in the form of apes, not of dogs or goats, disturbing us with their cries and
insults; fetching us from our beds at their blasphemous prayers, so that we have
stood outside the window of their prison, which was so high that no one could
reach it without the longest of ladders; and then they have seemed to stick the
pins with which their head-cloth was fastened violently into their heads. But
praise be to Almighty God, Who in His pity, and for no merit of our own, has
preserved us as unworthy public servants of the justice of the Faith.
The reason in the case of the second
class of men is self-evident. For the exorcisms of the Church are for this very
purpose, and are entirely efficacious remedies for preserving oneself from the
injuries of witches.
But if it is asked in what manner a
man ought to use such protections, we must speak first of those that are used
without the uttering of sacred words, and then of the actual sacred invocations.
For in the first place it is lawful in any decent habitation of men or beasts to
sprinkle Holy Water for the safety and securing of men and beasts, with the
invocation of the Most Holy Trinity and a Paternoster. For it is said in the
Office of Exorcism, that wherever it is sprinkled, all uncleanness is purified,
all harm is repelled, and no pestilent spirit can abide there, etc. For the Lord
saves both man and beast, according to the Prophet, each in his degree.
Secondly, just as the first must
necessarily be sprinkled, so in the case of a Blessed Candle, although it is
more appropriate to light it, the wax of it may with advantage be sprinkled
about dwelling-houses. And thirdly, it is expedient to place or to burn
consecrated herbs in those rooms where they can best be consumed in some
convenient place.
Now it happened in the city of
Spires, in the same year that this book was begun, that a certain devout woman
held conversation with a suspected witch, and, after the manner of women, they
used abusive words to each other. But in the night she wished to put her little
suckling child in its cradle, and remembered her encounter that day with the
suspected witch. So, fearing some danger to the child, she placed consecrated
herbs under it, sprinkled it with Holy Water, put a little Blessed Salt to its
lips, signed it with the Sign of the Cross, and diligently secured the cradle.
About the middle of the night she heard the child crying, and, as women do,
wished to embrace the child, and life the cradle on to her bed. She lifted the
candle, indeed, but could not embrace the child, because he was not there. The
poor woman, in terror, and bitterly weeping for the loss of her child, lit a
light, and found the child in a corner under a chair, crying but unhurt.
In this it may be seen what virtue
there is in the exorcisms of the Church against the snares of the devil. It is
manifest that Almighty God, in His mercy and wisdom which extend from end to
end, watches over the deeds of those wicked men; and that he gently directs the
witchcraft of devils, so that when they try to diminish and weaken the Faith,
they on the contrary strengthen it and make it more firmly rooted in the hearts
of many. For the faithful may derive much profit from these evils; when, by
reason of devils' works, the faith is made strong, God's mercy is seen, and His
power manifested, and men are led into His keeping and to the reverence of
Christ's Passion, and are enlightened by the ceremonies of the Church.
There lived in a town of Wiesenthal a
certain Mayor who was bewitched with the most terrible pains and bodily
contortions; and he discovered, not by means of other witches, but from his own
experience, how that witchcraft had been practised on him. For he said he was in
the habit of fortifying himself every Sunday with Blessed Salt and Holy Water,
but that he had neglected to do so on one occasion owing to the celebration of
somebody's marriage; and on that same day he was bewitched.
In Ratisbon a man was being tempted
by the devil in the form of a woman to copulate, and became greatly disturbed
when the devil would not desist. But it came into the poor man's mind that he
ought to defend himself by taking Blessed Salt, as he had heard in a sermon. So,
he took some Blessed Salt on entering the bath-room; and the woman looked
fiercely at him, and, cursing whatever devil had taught him to do this, suddenly
disappeared. For the devil can, with God's permission, present himself either in
the form of a witch, or by possessing the body of an actual witch.
There were also three companions
walking along a road, and two of them were struck by lightning. The third was
terrified, when he heard voices speaking in the air, "Let us strike him
too." But another voice answered, "We cannot, for to-day he has heard
the words 'The Word was made Flesh.'" And he understood that he had been
saved because he had that day heard Mass, and, at the end of the Mass, the
Gospel of S. John: In the beginning was the Word, etc.
Also sacred words bound to the body
are marvellously protective, if seven conditions for their use are observed. But
these will be mentioned in the last Question of this Second Part, where we speak
of curative, as here we speak of preventive measures. And those sacred words
help not only to protect, but also to cure those who are bewitched.
But the surest protection for places,
men, or animals are the words of the triumphal title of our Saviour, if they be
written in four places in the form of a cross: IESUS † NAZARENUS † REX †
IUDAEORUM †. There may also be added the name of MARY and of the Evangelists,
or the words of S. John: The Word was made Flesh.
But the third class of men which
cannot be hurt by witches is the most remarkable; for they are protected by a
special Angelic guardianship, both within and without. Within, by the inpouring
of grace; without, by the virtue of the stars, that is, by the protection of the
Powers which move the stars. And this class is divided into two sections of the
Elect: for some are protected against all sorts of witchcrafts, so that they can
be hurt in no way; and others are particularly rendered chaste by the good
Angels with regard to the generative functions, just as evil spirits by their
witchcrafts inflame the lusts of certain wicked men towards one woman, while
they make them cold towards another.
And their interior and exterior
protection, by grace and by the influence of the stars, is explained as follows.
For though it is God Himself Who pours grace into our souls, and no other
creature has so great power as to do this (as it is said: The Lord will give
grace and glory); yet, when God wished to bestow some especial grace, He does so
in a dispositive way through the agency of a good Angel, as S. Thomas teaches us
in a certain place in the Third Book of Sentences.
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