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Question 1 - Chapter IX
How Devils may enter the Human Body and the Head without doing any
Hurt, when they cause such Metamorphosis by Means of Prestidigitation.
Concerning the method of causing
these illusory transmutations it may further be asked: whether the devils are
then inside the bodies and heads of those who are deceived, and whether the
latter are to be considered as possessed by devils; how it can happen without
injury to the inner perceptions and faculties that a mental image is transferred
from one inner faculty to another; and whether or not such work ought to be
considered miraculous.
First we must again refer to a
distinction between such illusory glamours; for sometimes the outer perceptions
only are affected, and sometimes the inner perceptions are deluded and so affect
the outer perceptions.
In the former case the glamour can be
caused without the devils' entering into the outer perceptions, and merely by an
exterior illusion; as when the interposition of some other body, or in some
other way; or when he himself assumes a body and imposes himself on the vision.
But in the latter case it is
necessary that he must first occupy the head and the faculties. And this is
proved by authority and by reason.
And it is not a valid objection to
say that two created spirits cannot be in one and the same place, and that the
soul pervades the whole of the body. For on this question there is the authority
of S. John Damascene, when he says: Where the Angel is, there he operates. And
S. Thomas, in the Second Book of Sentences, dist. 7, art. 5, says: All
Angels, good and bad, by their natural power, which is superior to all bodily
power, are able to transmute our bodies.
And this is clearly true, not only by
reason of the superior nobility of their nature, but because the whole mechanism
of the world and all corporeal creatures are administered by Angels; as S.
Gregory says in the 4th Dialogue: In this visible world nothing can be disposed
except by an invisible creature. Therefore all corporeal matters are governed by
the Angels, who are also called, not only by the Holy Doctors but also by all
the Philosophers, the Powers which move the stars. It is clear also from the
fact that all human bodies are moved by their souls, just as all other matter is
moved by the stars and the Powers which move them. Any who wish may refer to S.
Thomas in the First Part, Quest. 90, art. 1.
From this it is concluded that, since
devils operates there where they are, therefore when they confuse the fancy and
the inner perceptions they are existing in them.
Again, although to enter the soul is
possible only to God Who created it, yet devils can, with God's permission,
enter our bodies; and they an then make impressions on the inner faculties
corresponding to the bodily organs. And by those impressions the organs are
affected in proportion as the inner perceptions are affected in the way which
has been shown: that the devil can draw out some image retained in a faculty
corresponding to one of the senses; as he draws from the memory, which is in the
back part of the head, an image of a horse, and locally moves that phantasm to
the middle part of the head, where are the cells of imaginative power; and
finally to the sense of reason, which is in the front of the head. And he causes
such a sudden change and confusion, that such objects are necessarily thought to
be actual things seen with the eyes. This can be clearly exemplified by the
natural defect in frantic men and other maniacs.
But if it is asked how he can do this
without causing pain in the head, the answer is easy. For in the first place he
does not cause any actual physical change in the organs, but only moves the
mental images. And secondly, he does not effect these changes by injecting any
active quality which would necessarily cause pain, since the devil is himself
without any corporeal quality, and can therefore operate without the use of any
such quality. Thirdly, as has been said, he effects these transmutations only by
a local movement from one organ to another, and not by other movements through
which painful transformations are sometimes caused.
And as for the objection that two
spirits cannot separately exist in the same place, and that, since the soul
exists in the head, how can a devil be there also? It is to be said that the
soul is thought to reside in the centre of the heart, in which it communicates
with all the members by an outpouring of life. An example can be taken from a
spider, which feels in the middle of its web when any part of the web is
touched.
However, S. Augustine says in his
book On the Spirit and Soul, that it is all in all, and all in every part
of the body. Granting that the soul is in the head, still the devil can work
there; for his work is different from the work of the soul. The work of the soul
is in the body, to inform it and fill it with life; so that it exists not merely
locally, but in the whole matter. But the devil works in such a part and such a
place of the body, effecting his changes in respect of the mental images.
Therefore, since there is no confusion between their respective operations, they
can both exist together in the same part of the body.
There is also the question whether
such men are to be considered obsessed or frenzied, that is, possessed of
devils. But this is considered separately; namely, whether it is possible
through the work of witches for a man to be obsessed with a devil, that is, that
the devil should actually and bodily possess him. And this question is specially
discussed in the following chapter, since it has this special difficulty,
namely, whether this can be caused through the operations of witches.
But as to the question whether the
temporal works of witches and devils are to be considered as miracles or of a
miraculous nature; it is to be said that they are so, in so far as they are
beyond the order of created nature as known to us, and are done by creatures
unknown to us. But they are not properly speaking miracles as are those which
are outside the whole of created nature; as are the miracles of God and the
Saints. (See what was written in the First Part of this work, in the Fifth
Question, in the refutation of the third error.)
But there are those who object that
this sort of work must not be considered miracles, but simply works of the
devil; since the purpose of miracles is the strengthening of the Faith, and they
must not be conceded to the adversary of the Faith. And also because the signs
of Antichrist are called lying signs by the Apostle.
First it is to be said that to work
miracles is the gift of freely given grace. And they can be done by bad men and
bad spirits, up to the limits of the power which is in them.
Wherefore the miracles wrought by the
good can be distinguished from those wrought by the wicked in at least three
ways. First, the signs which are given by the good are done by Divine power in
such matters as are beyond the capacity of their own natural power, such as
raising the dead, and things of that sort, which the devils are not able to
accomplish in truth, but only by an illusion: so Simon Magus moved the head of a
dead man; but such manifestations cannot last long. Secondly, they can be
distinguished by their utility; for the miracles of the good are of a useful
nature, as the healing of sickness, and such things. But the miracles done by
witches are concerned with harmful and idle things; as when they fly in the air,
or benumb the limbs of men, or such things. And S. Peter assigns this difference
in the Itinerarium of Clement.
The third difference relates to the
Faith. For the miracles of the good are ordained for the edification of the
Faith and of good living; whereas the miracles of the wicked are manifestly
detrimental to the Faith and to righteousness.
They are distinguished also by the
way in which they are done. For the good do miracles in a pious and reverent
invocation of the Divine Name. But witches and wicked men work them by certain
ravings and invocations of devils.
And there is no difficulty in the
fact that the Apostle called the works of the devil and Antichrist lying
wonders; for the marvels so done by Divine permission are true in some respects
and false in others. They are true in so far as they are within the limits of
the devil's power. But they are false when he appears to do things which are
beyond his power, such as raising the dead, or making the blind to see. For when
he appears to do the former, he either enters into the dead body or else removes
it, and himself takes its place in an assumed aerial body; and in the latter
case he takes away the sight by a glamour, and then suddenly restores it by
taking away the disability he has caused, not by bringing light to the inner
perceptions, as is told in the legend of Bartholomew. Indeed all the marvellous
works of Antichrist and of witches can be said to be lying signs, insasmuch as
their only purpose is to deceive. See S. Thomas, dist. 8, de Uirtute Daemonum.
We may also quote here the
distinction which is drawn in the Compendium of Theological Truth between a
wonder and a miracle. For in a miracle four conditions are required: that it
should be done by God; that it should be beyond the existing order of nature;
thirdly, that it should be manifest; and fourthly, that it should be for the
corroboration of the Faith. But since the works of witches fail to fulfil at
least the first and last conditions, therefore they may be called wonderful
works, but nor miracles.
It can also be argued in this way.
Although witches' works can in a sense be said to be miraculous, yet some
miracles are supernatural, some unnatural, and some preternatural. And they are
supernatural when they can be compared with nothing in nature, or in natural
power, as when a virgin gives birth. They are unnatural when they are against
the normal course of nature but do not overstep the limits of nature, such as
causing the blind to see. And they are preternatural when they are done in a
manner parallel to that of nature, as when rods are changed into serpents; for
this can be done naturally also, through long putrefaction on account of seminal
reasons; and thus the works of magicians may be said to be marvellous.
It is expedient to recount an actual
example, and then to explain it step by step. There is a town in the diocese of
Strasburg, the name of which it is charitable and honourable to withhold, in
which a workman was one day chopping some wood to burn in his house. A large cat
suddenly appeared and began to attack him, and when he was driving it off,
another even larger one came and attacked him with the first more fiercely. And
when he again tried to drive them away, behold, three of them together attacked
him, jumping up at his face, and biting and scratching his legs. In great fright
and, as he said, more panic-stricken than he had ever been, he crossed himself
and, leaving his work, fell upon the cats, which were swarming over the wood and
again leaping at his face and throat, and with difficulty drove them away by
beating one on the head, another on the legs, and another on the back. After the
space of an hour, while he was again engaged upon his task, two servants of the
town magistrates came and took him as a malefactor and led him into the presence
of the bailiff or judge. And the judge, looking at him from a distance, and
refusing to hear him, ordered him to be thrown into the deepest dungeon of a
certain tower or prison, where those who were under sentence of death were
placed. The man cried out, and for three days bitterly complained to the prison
guards that he should suffer in that way, when he was conscious of no crime; but
the more the guards tried to procure him a hearing, the more furious the judge
became, expressing in the strongest terms his indignation that so great a
malefactor had not yet acknowledged his crime, but dared to proclaim his
innocence when the evidence of the facts proved his horrible crime. But although
these could not prevail upon him, yet the judge was induced by the advice of the
other magistrates to grant the man a hearing. So when he was brought out of
prison into the presence of the judge, and the judge refused to look at him, the
poor man threw himself before the knees of the other magistrates, pleading that
he might know the reason for his misfortune; and the judge broke into these
words: You most wicked of men, how can you not acknowledge your crime? At such a
time on such a day you beat three respected matrons of this town, so that they
lie in their beds unable to rise or to move. The poor man cast his mind back to
the events of that day and that hour, and said: Never in all my life have I
struck or beaten a woman, and I can prove by credible witnesses that at that
time on that day I was busy chopping wood; and an hour afterwards your servants
found me still engaged on that task. Then the judge again exclaimed in a fury:
See how he tries to conceal his crime! The women are bewailing their blows, they
exhibit the marks, and publicly testify that he struck them. Then the poor man
considered more closely on that even, and said: I remember that I struck some
creatures at that time, but they were not women. The magistrates in astonishment
asked him to relate what sort of creatures he had struck; and he told, to their
great amazement, all that had happened, as we have related it. So, understanding
that it was the work of the devil, they released the poor man and let him go
away unharmed, telling him not to speak of this matter to anyone. But it could
not be hidden from those devout persons present who were zealous for the Faith.
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