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Question 1 - Chapter XI
Of the Method by which they can Inflict Every Sort of Infirmity,
generally Ills of the Graver Kind.
But there is no bodily infirmity,
not even leprosy or epilepsy, which cannot be caused by witches, with God's
permission. And this is proved by the fact that no sort of infirmity is excepted
by the Doctors. For a careful consideration of what has already been written
concerning the power of devils and the wickedness of witches will show that this
statement offers no difficulty. Nider also deals with this subject both in his Book
of Precepts and in his Formicarius, where he asks: Whether witches
can actually injure men by their witchcraft. And the question makes no exception
of any infirmity, however incurable. And he there answers that they can do so,
and proceeds to ask in what way and by what means.
And as to the first, he answers, as
has been shown in the First Question of the First Part of this treatise. And it
is proved also by S. Isidore where he describes the operations of witches (Etym.
8, cap. 9), and says that they are called witches on account of the magnitude of
their crimes; for they disturb the elements by raising up storms with the help
of devils, they confuse the minds of men in the ways already mentioned, by
either entirely obstructing or gravely impeding the use of their reason. He adds
also that without the use of any poison, but by the mere virulence of their
incantations, they can deprive men of their lives.
It is proved also by S. Thomas in the
Second Book of Sentences, dist. 7 and 8, and in Book IV, dist. 34, and in
general all the Theologians write that witches can with the help of the devil
bring harm upon men and their affairs in all the ways in which the devil alone
can injure or deceive, namely, in their affairs, their reputation, their body,
their reason, and their life; which means that those injuries which are caused
by the devil without any witch, can also be caused by a witch; and even more
readily so, on account of the greater offence which is given to the Divine
Majesty, as has been shown above.
In Job i and ii is found a
clear case of the injury in temporal affairs. The injury to reputation is shown
in the history of the Blessed Jerome, that the devil transformed himself into
the appearance of S. Silvanus, Bishop of Nazareth, a friend of S. Jerome. And
this devil approached a noble woman by night in her bed and began first to
provoke and entice her with lewd words, and then invited her to perform the
sinful act. And when she called out, the devil in the form of the saintly Bishop
hid under the woman's bed, and being sought for and found there, he in lickerish
language declared lyingly that he was the Bishop Silvanus. On the morrow
therefore, when the devil had disappeared, the holy man was scandalously
defamed; but his good name was cleared when the devil confessed at the tomb of
S. Jerome that he had done this in an assumed body.
The injury to the body is shown in
the case of the Blessed Job, who was stricken by the devil with terrible sores,
which are explained as a form of leprosy. And Sigisbert and Vincent of Beauvais
(Spec. Hist. XXV, 37) both tell that in the time of the Emperor Louis II,
in the diocese of Mainz, a certain devil began to thrown stones and to beat at
the houses as if with a hammer. And then by public statements, and secret
insinuations, he spread discord ad troubled the minds of many. Then he excited
the anger of all against one man, whose lodging, where he was resting, he set on
fire, and said that they were all suffering for his sins. So at last that man
had to find his lodging in the fields. And when the priests were saying a litany
on this account, the devil stoned many of the people with stones till he hurt
them to bleeding; and sometimes he would desist, and sometimes rage; and this
continued for three years, until all the houses there were burned down.
Exampled of the injury to the use of
the reason, and of the tormenting of the inner perceptions, are seen in those
possessed and frenzied men of whom the Gospels tell. And as for death, and that
they deprive some of their lives, it is proved in Tobias vi, in the case
of the seven husbands of the virgin Sara, who were killed because of their
lecherous lust and unbridled desired for the virgin Sara, of whom they were not
worthy to be the husbands. Therefore it is concluded that both by themselves,
and all the more with the help of witches, devils can injure men in every way
without exception.
But if it is asked whether injuries
of this sort are to be ascribed rather to devils than to witches, it is answered
that, when the devils cause injuries by their own direct action, then they are
principally to be ascribed to them. But when they work through the agency of
witches for the disparagement and offending of God and the perdition of souls,
knowing that by this means God is made more angry and allows them greater power
of doing evil; and because they do indeed perpetuate countless witchcrafts which
the devil would not be allowed to bring upon men if he wished to injure men
alone by himself, but are permitted, in the just and hidden purpose of God,
through the agency of witches, on account of their perfidy and abjuration of the
Catholic Faith; therefore such injuries are justly ascribed to witches
secondarily, however much the devil may be the principal actor.
Therefore when a woman dips a twig in
water and sprinkles the water in the air to make it rain, although she does not
herself cause the rain, and could not be blamed on that account, yet, because
she has entered into a pact with the devil by which she can do this as a witch,
although it is the devil who causes the rain, she herself nevertheless
deservedly bears the blame, because she is an infidel and does the devil's work,
surrendering herself to his service.
So also when a witch makes a waxen
image or some such thing in order to bewitch somebody; or when an image of
someone appears by pouring molten lead into water, and some injury is done upon
the image, such as piercing it or hurting it in any other way, when it is the
bewitched man who is in imagination being hurt; although the injury is actually
done to the image by some witch or some other man, and the devil in the same
manner invisibly injures the bewitched man, yet it is deservedly ascribed to the
witch. For, without her, God would never allow the devil to inflict the injury,
nor would the devil on his own account try to injure the man.
But because it has been said that in
the matter of their good name the devils can injure men on the own account and
without the co-operation of witches, there may arise a doubt whether the devils
cannot also defame honest women so that they are reputed to be witches, when
they appear in their likeness to bewitch someone; from which it would happen
that such a woman would be defamed without cause.
In answering this we must premise a
few remarks. First, it has been said that the devil can do nothing without the
Divine permission, as is shown in the First Part of this work in the last
Question. It has also been shown that God does not allow so great power of evil
against the just and those who live in grace, as against sinners; and as the
devils have more power against sinners (see the text: When a strong man armed,
etc.) so they are permitted by God to afflict them more than the just. Finally,
although they can, with God's permission, injure the just in their affairs,
their reputation, and their bodily health, yet, because they know that this
power is granted them chiefly for the increase of the merits of the just, they
are the less eager to injure them.
Therefore it can be said that in this
difficulty there are several points to be considered. First, the Divine
permission. Secondly, the man who is thought to be righteous, for they who are
so reputed are not always actually in a state of grace. Thirdly, the crime of
which an innocent man would be suspected; for that crime in its very origin
exceeds all the crimes of the world. Therefore it is to be said that it is
granted that, with God's permission, an innocent person, whether or not he is in
a state of grace, may be injured in his affairs to this particular crime and the
gravity of the accusation (for we have often quoted S. Isidore's saying that
they are called witches from the magnitude of their crimes), it can be said that
for an innocent person to be defamed by the devil in a way that has been
suggested does not seem at all possible, for many reasons.
In the first place, it is one thing
to be defamed in respect of vices which are committed without any expressed or
tacit contract with the devil, such as theft, robbery, or fornication; but quite
another matter to be defamed in respect of vices which it is impossible to
accuse a man of having perpetrated unless he has entered upon an expressed
contract with the devil; and such are the works of witches, which cannot be laid
at their door unless it is by the power of devils that they bewitch men, animals
and the fruits of the earth. Therefore, although the devil can blacken men's
reputations in respect of other vices, yet it does not seem possible for him to
do so in respect of this vice which cannot be perpetrated without his
co-operation.
Besides, it has never hitherto been
known to have happened that an innocent person has been defamed by the devil to
such an extent that he was condemned to death for this particular crime.
Furthermore, when a person is only under suspicion, he suffers no punishment
except that which the Canon prescribes for his purgation, as will be shown in
the Third Part of this work in the second method of sentencing witches.
And it is set down there that, if
such a man fails in his purgation, he is to be considered guilty, but that he
should be solemnly adjured before the punishment due to his sin is proceeded
with and enforced. But here we are dealing with actual events; and it has never
yet been known that an innocent person has been punished on suspicion of
witchcraft, and there is no doubt that God will never permit such a thing to
happen.
Besides, He does not suffer the
innocent who are under Angelic protection to be suspected of smaller crimes,
such as robbery and such things; then all the more will He preserve those who
are under that protection from suspicion of the crime of witchcraft.
And it is no valid objection to quote
the legend of S. Germanius, when devils assumed the bodies of other women and
sat down at table and slept with the husbands, deluding the latter into the
belief that those women were in their own bodies eating and drinking with them,
as we have mentioned before. For the women in this case are not to be held
guiltless. For in the Canon (Episcopi 26. q. 2) such women are condemned
for thinking that they are really and actually transported, when they are so
only in imagination; although, as we have shown above, they are at times bodily
transported by devils.
But our present proposition is that
they can, with God's permission, cause all other infirmities, with no exception;
and it is to be concluded from what we have said that this is so. For no
exception is made by the Doctors, and there is no reason why there should be
any, since, as we have often said, the natural power of devils is superior to
all corporeal power. And we have found in our experience that this is true. For
although greater difficulty may be felt in believing that witches are able to
cause leprosy or epilepsy, since these diseases arise from some long-standing
physical predisposition or defect, none the less it has sometimes been found
that even these have been caused by witchcraft. For in the diocese of Basel, in
the district of Alsace and Lorraine, a certain honest labourer spoke roughly to
a certain quarrelsome woman, and she angrily threatened him that she would soon
avenge herself on him. He took little notice of her; but on the same night he
felt a pustule grow upon his neck, and he rubbed it a little, and found his
whole face and neck puffed up and swollen, and a horrible form of leprosy
appeared all over his body. He immediately went to his friends for advice, and
told them of the woman's threat, and said that he would stake his life on the
suspicion that this had been done to him by the magic art of that same witch. In
short, the woman was taken, questioned, and confessed her crimes. But when the
judge asked her particularly about the reason for it, and how she had done it,
she answered: "When that man used abusive words to me, I was angry and went
home; and my familiar began to ask the reason for my ill humour. I told him, and
begged him to avenge me on the man. And he asked what I wanted him to do to him;
and I answered that I wished he would always have a swollen face. And the devil
went away and afflicted the man even beyond my asking; for I had not hoped that
he would infect him with such sore leprosy." And so the woman was burned.
And in the diocese of Constance,
between Breisach and Freiburg, there is a leprous woman (unless she has paid the
debt of all flesh within these two years) who used to tell to many people how
the same thing had happened to her by reason of a similar quarrel which took
place between her and another woman. For one night when she went out of the
house to do something in front of the door, a warm wind came from the house of
the other woman, which was opposite, and suddenly struck her face; and from that
time she had been afflicted with the leprosy which she now suffered.
And lastly, in the same diocese, in
the territory of the Black Forest, a witch was being lifted by a gaoler on to
the pile of wood prepared for her burning, and she said: "I will pay
you"; and blew into his face. And he was at once afflicted with a horrible
leprosy all over his body, and did not survive many days. For the sake of
brevity, the fearful crimes of this witch, and many more instances could be
recounted, are omitted. For we have often found that certain people have been
visited with epilepsy or the falling sickness by means of eggs which have been
buried with dead bodies, especially the dead bodies of witches, together with
other ceremonies of which we cannot speak, particularly when these eggs have
been given to a person either in food or drink.
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