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Question II - Chapter II
Remedies prescribed for Those who are Bewitched by the Limitation of the
Generative Power.
Although far more women are
witches than men, as was shown in the First Part of the work, yet men are more
often bewitched than women. And the reason for this lies in the fact that God
allows the devil more power over the venereal act, by which the original sin is
handed down, than over other human actions. In the same way He allows more
witchcraft to be performed by means of serpents, which are more subject to
incantations than other animals, because that was the first instrument of the
devil. And the venereal act can be more readily and easily bewitched in a man
than in a woman, as has been clearly shown. For there are five ways in which the
devil can impede the act of generation, and they are more easily operated
against men.
As far as possible we shall set out
the remedies which can be applies in each separate kind of obstruction; and let
him who is bewitched in this faculty take note to which class of obstruction he
belongs. For there are five classes, according to Peter a Palude in his Fourth
Book, dist. 34, of the trial of this sort of bewitchment.
For the devil, being a spirit, has by
his very nature power, with God's permission, over a bodily creature, especially
to promote or to prevent local motion. So by this power they can prevent the
bodies of men and women from approaching each other; and this either directly or
indirectly. Directly, when they remove one to a distance from another, and do
not allow him to approach the other. Indirectly, when they cause some
obstruction, or when they interpose themselves in an assumed body. So it
happened that a young Pagan who had married an idol, but none the less
contracted a marriage with a girl; but because of this he was unable to copulate
with her, as has been shown above.
Secondly, the devil can inflame a man
towards one woman and render him impotent towards another; and this he can
secretly cause by the application of certain herbs or other matters of which he
well knows the virtue for this purpose.
Thirdly, he can disturb the
apperception of a man or a woman, so that he makes one appear hideous to the
other; for, as has been shown, he can influence the imagination.
Fourthly, he can suppress the vigour
of that member which is necessary for procreation; just as he can deprive any
organ of the power of local motion.
Fifthly, he can prevent the flow of
the semen to the members in which is the motive power, by as it were closing the
seminal duct so that it does not descend to the genital vessels, or does not
ascend again from them, or cannot come forth, or is spent vainly.
But if a man should say: I do not
know by which of these different methods I have been bewitched; all I know is
that I cannot do anything with my wife: he should be answered in this way. If he
is active and able with regard to other women, but not with his wife, then he is
bewitched in the second way; for he can be certified as to the first way, that
he is being deluded by Succubus or Incubus devils. Moreover, if he does not find
his wife repellent, and yet cannot know her, but can know other women, then
again it is the second way; but if he finds her repellent and cannot copulate
with her, then it is the second and the third way. If he does not find her
repellent and wishes to have connexion with her, but has no power in his member,
then it is the fourth way. But if he has power in his member, yet cannot emit
his semen, then it is the fifth way. The method of curing these will be shown
where we consider whether those who live in grace and those who do not are
equally liable to be bewitched in these manners; and we answer that they are
not, with the exception of the fourth manner, and even then very rarely. For
such an affliction can happen to a man living in grace and righteousness; but
the reader must understand that in this case we speak of the conjugal act
between married people; for in any other case they are all liable to
bewitchment; for every venereal act outside wedlock is a mortal sin, and is only
committed by those who are not in a state of grace.
We have, indeed, the authority of the
whole of Scriptural teaching that God allows the devil to afflict sinners more
than the just. For although that most just man, Job, was stricken, yet he was
not so particularly or directly in respect of the procreant function. And it may
be said that, when a married couple are afflicted in this way, either both the
parties or one of them is not living in a state of grace; and this opinion is
substantiated in the Scriptures both by authority and by reason. For the Angel
said to Tobias: The devil receives power against those who are given over to
lust: and he proved it in the slaying of the seven husbands of the virgin Sara.
Cassian, in his Collation of the
Fathers, quotes S. Antony as saying that the devil can in no way enter our
mind or body unless he has first deprived it of all holy thoughts and made it
empty and bare of spiritual contemplation. These words should not be applies to
an evil affliction over the whole of the body, for when Job was so afflicted he
was not denuded of Divine grace; but they have particular reference to a
particular infirmity inflicted upon the body for some sin. And the infirmity we
are considering can only be due to the sin of incontinence. For, as we have
said, God allows the devil more power over that act than over other human acts,
because of its natural nastiness, and because by it the first sin was handed
down to posterity. Therefore when people joined in matrimony have for some sin
been deprived of Divine help, God allows them to be bewitched chiefly in their
procreant functions.
But if it is asked of what sort are
those sins, it can be said, according to S. Jerome, that even in a state of
matrimony it is possible to commit the sin of incontinence in various ways. See
the text: He who loves his wife to excess is an adulterer. And they who love in
this way are more liable to be bewitched after the manner we have said.
The remedies of the Church, then, are
twofold: one applicable in the public court, the other in the tribunal of the
confessional. As for the first, when it has been publicly found that the
impotence is due to witchcraft, then it must be distinguished whether it is
temporary or permanent. If it is only temporary, it does not annul the marriage.
And it is assumed to be temporary if, within the space of three years, by using
every possible expedient of the Sacraments of the Church and other remedies, a
cure can be caused. But if, after that time, they cannot be cured by any remedy,
then it is assumed to be permanent.
Now the disability either precedes
both the contract and the consummation of marriage; and in this case it impedes
the contract: or it follows the contract but precedes the consummation; and in
this case it annuls the contract. For men are very often bewitched in this way
because they have cast off their former mistresses, who, hoping that they were
to be married and being disappointed, so bewitch the men that they cannot
copulate with another woman. And in such a case, according to the opinion of
many, the marriage already contracted is annulled, unless, like Our Blessed Lady
and S. Joseph they are willing to live together in holy continence. This opinion
is supported by the Canon where it says (23, q. I) that a marriage is confirmed
by the carnal act. And a little later it says that impotence before such
confirmation dissolves the ties of marriage.
Or else the disability follows the
consummation of a marriage, and then it does not dissolve the bonds of
matrimony. Much more to this effect is noted by the Doctors, where in various
writings they treat of the obstruction due to witchcraft; but since it is not
precisely relevant to the present inquiry, it is here omitted.
But some may find it difficult to
understand how this function can be obstructed in respect of one woman but not
of another. S. Bonaventura answers that this may be because some witch has
persuaded the devil to effect this only with respect to one woman, or because
God will not allow the obstruction to apply save to some particular woman. The
judgement of God in this matter is a mystery, as in the case of the wife of
Tobias. But how the devil procures this disability is plainly shown by what has
already been said. And S. Bonaventura says that he obstructs the procreant
function, not intrinsically by harming the organ, but extrinsically by impeding
its use; and it is an artificial, not a natural impediment; and so he an cause
it to apply to one woman and not to another. Or else he takes away all desire
for one or another woman; and this he does by his own power, or else by means of
some herb or stone or some occult creature. And in this he is in substantial
agreement with Peter a Palude.
The ecclesiastical remedy in the
tribunal of God is set forth in the Canon where it says: If with the permission
of the just and secret judgement of God, through the arts of sorceresses and
witches and the preparation of the devil, men are bewitched in their procreant
function, they are to be urged to make clean confession to God and His priest of
all their sins with a contrite heart and a humble spirit; and to make
satisfaction to God with many tears and large offerings and prayers and fasting.
From these words it is clear that
such afflictions are only on account of sin, and occur only to those who do not
live in a state of grace. It proceeds to tell how the ministers of the Church
can effect a cure by means of exorcisms and the other protections and cures
provided by the Church. In this way, with the help of God, Abraham cured by his
prayers Abimelech and his house.
In conclusion we may say that there
are five remedies which may lawfully be applied to those who are bewitched in
this way: namely, a pilgrimage to some holy and venerable shrine; true
confession of their sins with contrition; the plentiful use of the sign of the
Cross and devout prayer; lawful exorcism by solemn words, the nature of which
will be explained later; and lastly, a remedy can be effected by prudently
approaching the witch, as was shown in the case of the Count who for three years
was unable to cohabit carnally with a virgin whom he had married.
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