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Question 1 - Chapter XIII
How Witch Midwives commit most Horrid Crimes when they either Kill
Children or Offer them to Devils in most Accursed Wise.
We must not omit to mention the
injuries done to children by witch midwives, first by killing them, and secondly
by blasphemously offering them to devils. In the diocese of Strasburg and in the
town of Zabern there is an honest woman very devoted to the Blessed Virgin MARY,
who tells the following experience of hers to all the guests that come to the
tavern which she keeps, known by the sign of the Black Eagle.
I was, she says, pregnant by my
lawful husband, now dead, and as my time approached, a certain midwife
importuned me to engage her to assist at the birth of my child. But I knew her
bad reputation, and although I had decided to engage another woman, pretended
with conciliatory words to agree to her request. But when the pains came upon
me, and I had brought in another midwife, the first one was very angry, and
hardly a week later came into my room one night with two other women, and
approached the bed where I was lying. And when I tried to call my husband, who
was sleeping in another room, all the use was taken away from my limbs and
tongue, so that except for seeing and hearing I could not move a muscle. And the
witch, standing between the other two, said: "See! this vile woman, who
would not take me for her midwife, shall not win through unpunished." The
other two standing be her pleaded for me, saying: "She has never harmed any
of us." But the witch added: "Because she has offended me I am going
to put something into her entrails; but, to please you, she shall not feel any
pain for half a year, but after that time she shall be tortured enough." So
she came up and touched my belly with her hands; and it seemed to me that she
took out my entrails, and put in something which, however, I could not see. And
when they had gone away, and I had recovered my power of speech, I called my
husband as soon as possible, and told him what had happened. But he put it down
to pregnancy, and said: "You pregnant women are always suffering from
fancies and delusions." And when he would by no means believe me, I
replied: "I have been given six months' grace, and if, after that time, no
torment comes to me, I shall believe you."
She related this to her son, a cleric
who was then Archdeacon of the district, and who came to visit her on the same
day. And what happened? When exactly six months had passed, such a terrible pain
came into her belly that she could not help disturbing everybody with her cries
day and night. And because, as has been said, she was most devout to the Virgin,
the Queen of Mercy, she fasted with bread and water every Saturday, so that she
believed that she was delivered by Her intercession. For one day, when she
wanted to perform an action of nature, all those unclean things fell from her
body; and she called her husband and son, and said: "Are those fancies? Did
I not say that after a half a year the truth would be known? Or who ever saw me
ear thorns, bones, and even bits of wood?" For there were brambles as long
as a palm, as well as a quantity of other things.
Moreover (as was said in the First
Part of the work), it was shown by the confession of the servant, who was
brought to judgement at Breisach, that the greatest injuries to the Faith as
regards the heresy of witches are done by midwives; and this is made clearer
than daylight itself by the confessions of some who were afterwards burned.
For in the diocese of Basel at the
town of Dann, a witch who was burned confessed that she had killed more than
forty children, by sticking a needle through the crowns of their heads into
their brains, as they came out from the womb.
Finally, another woman in the diocese
of Strasburg confessed that she had killed more children than she could count.
And she was caught in this way. She had been called from one town to another to
act as midwife to a certain woman, and, having performed her office, was going
back home. But as she went out of the town gate, the arm of a newly born child
fell out of the cloak she had wrapped around her, in whose folds the arm had
been concealed. This was seen by those who were sitting in the gateway, and when
she had gone on, they picked up from the ground what they took to be a piece of
meat; but when they looked more closely and saw that it was not a piece of meat,
but recognized it by its fingers as a child's arm, they reported it to the
magistrates, and it was found that a child had died before baptism, lacking an
arm. So the witch was taken and questioned, and confessed the crime, and that
she had, as has been said, killed more children than she could count.
Now the reason for such practices is
as follows: It is to be presumed that witches are compelled to do such things at
the command of evil spirits, and sometimes against their own wills. For the
devil knows that, because of the pain of loss, or original sin, such children
are debarred from entering the Kingdom of Heaven. And by this means the Last
Judgement is delayed, when the devils will be condemned to eternal torture;
since the number of the elect os more slowly completed, on the fulfilment of
which the world will be consumed. And also, as has already been shown, witches
are taught by the devil to confect from the limbs of such children an unguent
which is very useful for their spells.
But in order to bring so great a sin
into utter detestation, we must not pass over in silence the following horrible
crime. For when they do not kill the child, they blasphemously offer it to the
devil in this manner. As soon as the child is born, the midwife, if the mother
herself is not a witch, carries it out of the room on the pretext of warming it,
raises it up, and offers it to the Prince of Devils, that is Lucifer, and to all
the devils. And this is done by the kitchen fire.
A certain man relates that he noticed
that his wife, when her time came to give birth, against the usual custom of
women in childbirth, did not allow any woman to approach the bed except her own
daughter, who acted as midwife. Wishing to know the reason for this, he hid
himself in the house and saw the whole order of the sacrilege and dedication to
the devil, as it has been described. He saw also, as it seemed to him, that
without any human support, but by the power of the devil, the child was climbing
up the chain by which the cooking-pots were suspended. In great consternation
both at the terrible words of the invocation of the devils, and at the other
iniquitous ceremonies, he strongly insisted that the child should be baptized
immediately. While it was being carried to the next village, where there was a
church, and when they had to cross a bridge over a certain river, he drew his
sword and ran at his daughter, who was carrying the child, saying in the hearing
of two others who were with them: "You shall not carry the child over the
bridge; for either it must cross the bridge by itself, or you shall be drowned
in the river." The daughter was terrified and, together with the other
women in company, asked him if he were in his right mind (for he had hidden what
had happened from all the others except the two men who were with him). Then he
answered: "You vile drab, by your magic arts you made the child climb the
chain in the kitchen; now make it cross the bridge with no on carrying it, or I
shall drown you in the river." And so, being compelled, she put the child
down on the bridge, and invoked the devil by her art; and suddenly the child was
seen on the other side of the bridge. And when the child had been baptized, and
he had returned home, since he now had witnesses to convict his daughter of
witchcraft (for he could not prove the former crime of the oblation to the
devil, inasmuch as he had been the only witness of the sacrilegious ritual), he
accused bother daughter and mother before the judge after their period of
purgation; and they were both burned, and the crime of midwives of making that
sacrilegious offering was discovered.
But here the doubt arises: to what
end or purpose is the sacrilegious offering of children, and how does it benefit
the devils? To this it can be said that the devils do this for three reasons,
which serve three most wicked purposes. The first reason arises from their
pride, which always increases; as it is said: "They that hate Thee have
lifted up the head." For they try as far as possible to conform with divine
rites and ceremonies. Secondly, they can more easily deceive men under the mask
of an outwardly seeming pious action. For in the same way they entice young
virgins and boys into their power; for though they might solicit such by means
of evil and corrupt men, yet they rather deceive them by magic mirrors and
reflections seen in witches' finger-nails, and lure them on in the belief that
they love chastity, whereas they hate it. For the devil hates above all the
Blessed Virgin, because she bruised his head. Just so in this oblation of
children they deceive the minds of witches into the vice of infidelity under the
appearance of a virtuous acts. And the third reason is, that the perfidy of
witches may grow, to the devils' own gain, when they have witches dedicated to
them from their very cradles.
And this sacrilege affects the child
in three ways. In the first place, visible offerings to God are made of visible
things, such as wine of bread or the fruits of the earth, as a sign of honour
and subjection to Him, as it is said in Ecclesiasticus xxv: Thou shalt
not appear empty before the Lord. And such offerings cannot and must not
afterwards be put to profane uses. Therefore the holy Father, S. John Damascene,
says: The oblations which are offered in church belong only to the priests, but
not that they should divert them to their own uses, but that they should
faithfully distribute them, partly in the observance of divine worship, and
partly for the use of the poor. From this it follows that a child who has been
offered to the devil in sign of subjection and homage to him cannot possibly be
dedicated by Catholics to a holy life, in worthy and fruitful service to God for
the benefit of himself and others.
For who can say that the sins of the
mothers and of other do not redound in punishment upon the children? Perhaps
someone will quote that saying of the prophet: "The sons shall not bear the
iniquity of the father." But there is that other passage in Exodus
xx: I am a jealous God, visiting the sins of the father upon the children unto
the third and fourth generation. Now the meaning of these two sayings is as
follows. The first speaks of spiritual punishment in the judgement of Heaven or
God, and not in the judgement of men. And this is the punishment of the soul,
such as loss or the forfeiture of glory, or the punishment of pain, that is, of
the torment of eternal fire. And with such punishments no one is punished except
for his own sin, either inherited as original sin or committed as actual sin.
The second text speaks of those who
imitate the sins of their father, as Gratian has explained (I, q. 4, etc.); and
there he gives other explanations as to how the judgement of God inflicts other
punishments on a man, not only for his own sins which he has committed, or which
he might commit (but is prevented by punishment from committing), but also for
the sins of others.
And it cannot be argued that when a
man is punished without cause, and without sin, which should be the cause of
punishment. For according to the rule of law, no one must be punished without
sin, unless there is some cause of punishment. And we can say that there is
always a most just cause, though it may not be known to us: see S. Augustine,
XXIV, 4. And if we cannot in the result penetrate the depth of God's judgement,
yet we know that what He has said is true, and what He has done is just.
But there is this distinction to be
observed in innocent children who are offered to devils not by their mothers
when they are witches, but by midwives who, as we have said, secretly take from
the embrace and the womb of an honest mother. Such children are not so cut off
from grace that they must necessarily become prone to such crimes; but it is
piously to be believed that they may rather cultivate their mothers' virtues.
The second result to the children of
this sacrilege is as follows. When a man offers himself as a sacrifice to God,
he recognizes God as his Beginning and his End; and this sacrifice is more
worthy than all the external sacrifices which he makes, having its beginning in
his creation and its end in his glorification, as it is said: A sacrifice to God
is an afflicted spirit, etc. In the same way, when a witch offers a child to the
devils, she commends it body and soul to him as its beginning and its end in
eternal damnation; wherefore not without some miracle can the child be set free
from the payment of so great a debt.
And we read often in history of
children whom their mothers, in some passion or mental disturbance, have
unthinkingly offered to the devil from the very womb, and how it is only with
the very greatest difficulty that they can, when they have grown to adult age,
be delivered from that bondage which the devil has, with God's permission,
usurped to himself. And of this the Book of Examples, Most Blessed Virgin
MARY, affords many illustrations; a notable instance being that of the man
whom the Supreme Pontiff was unable to deliver from the torments of the devil,
but at last he was sent to a holy man living in the East, and finally with great
difficulty was delivered from his bondage through the intercession of the Most
Glorious Virgin Herself.
And if God so severely punishes even
such a thoughtless, I will not say sacrifice, but commendation used angrily by a
mother when her husband, after copulating with her, says, I hope a child will
come of it; and she answers, May the child go to the devil! How much greater
must be the punishment when the Divine Majesty is offended in the way we have
described!
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