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Question XXV
The Sixth Kind of Sentence, in the Case of one who is Gravely Suspect
The sixth method of bringing to a
conclusion a process on behalf of the faith is used when the person accused of
heresy, after a careful examination of the merits of the process in consultation
with learned lawyers, is found to be gravely suspected of heresy. And this is
when the accused is not convicted of heresy by her own confession or by the
evidence of the facts or by the legitimate productions of witnesses, but there
are indications, not only light or even strong, but very strong and grave, which
render her gravely suspected of the said heresy, and by reason of which she must
be judged as one gravely suspected of the said heresy.
And for a clearer understanding of
this, we shall give examples both of a case of simple heresy and of the heresy
of witches. For the case would fall under this head in simple heresy if the
accused were not lawfully found convicted by his own confession, etc. as above,
but for something which he had said or done. As, for example, he may have been
summoned in a case not concerning the faith, and have been sentenced to
excommunication; and if he should continue obstinate in excommunication for a
year or more, he would come under a light suspicion of heresy; for such
behaviour is not without some suspicion of heresy. But if he should then be
summoned on a charge concerning the faith, and should not appear but
contumaciously refuse to appear, and therefore be excommunicated, then he would
be strongly suspected of heresy; for then the light suspicion would become a
strong one. And if he remained obstinate in that excommunication for a year,
then he would be gravely suspected of heresy; for then the strong suspicion
would become a grave one, against which no defence is admitted. And from that
time such a person would be condemned as a heretic, as is shown by the Canon, c.
cum contumacia, lib. 6.
An example of a grave suspicion in
the heresy of witches would be when the accused has said or done anything which
is practised by witches when they wish to bewitch anyone. And it commonly
happens that they are constrained to manifest themselves by threatening words,
by deeds, by a look or a touch, and this is for three reasons. First that their
sins may be aggravated and more manifest to the their Judges; secondly, that
they may be the more easily seduce the simple; and thirdly, that God may be the
more offended and they may be granted more power of injuring men. Therefore a
witch must be gravely suspected when, after she has used such threatening words
as "I will soon make you feel," or the like, some injury has befallen
the person so threatened or his cattle. For then she is not to be considered as
lightly suspected, as was the case with those who are familiar with witches, or
those who wish to provoke someone to inordinate love. See above where we deal
with the three degrees of suspicion, light, strong, and grave.
Now we must consider what procedure
is to be observed in such a case. For in the case of one gravely suspected of
simple heresy, the following is the procedure. Although he may not in actual
truth be a heretic, since there may not be any error in his understanding, or if
there is, he may not cling obstinately to it in his will: nevertheless he is to
be condemned as a heretic because of the said grave suspicion, against which no
proof is admitted.
Such a heretic is condemned in this
manner. If he refuses to return and abjure his heresy and give fitting
satisfaction, he is delivered to the secular Court to be punished. But if he is
willing and consents, he abjures his heresy and is imprisoned for life. And the
same holds good in the case of one gravely suspected of the heresy of witches.
But although the same method in the
main is to be observed in the case of one gravely suspected of the heresy of
witches, there are some differences. It is to be noted that, if the witch
maintains her denial, or claims that she uttered those words not with the
implied intention but in a vehement and womanish passion; then the Judge has not
sufficient warrant to sentence her to the flames, in spite of the grave
suspicion. Therefore he must place her in prison, and cause inquiry to be made
by proclamation whether she has been known to have done the like before. And if
it is found that this is so, he must inquire whether she was then publicly
defamed in respect of that heresy; and from this he can proceed further so that,
before all else, she may be exposed to an interrogation under the question and
torture. And then, if she shows signs of such heresy, or of the taciturnity of
witches; as that she should be unable to shed tears, or remain insensible under
torture and quickly recover her strength afterwards; then he may proceed with
the various precautions which we have already explained where we dealt with such
cases.
And in case all should fail, then let
him take note that, if she has perpetrated the like before, she is not to be
altogether released, but must be sent to the squalor of prison for a year, and
be tortured, and be examined very often, especially on the more Holy Days. But
if, in addition to this, she has been defamed, then the Judge may proceed in the
manner already shown in the case of simple heresy, and condemn her to the fire,
especially if there is a multitude of witnesses and she had often been detected
in similar or other deeds of witchcraft. But if he wishes to be merciful, he may
set her a canonical purgation, that she should find twenty or thirty sponsors,
sentencing her in such a way that, if she should fail in her purgation, she
shall be condemned to the fire as convicted. And the Judge can proceed in such a
manner.
And if she should purge herself, then
the Judge must sentence her to an abjuration of all heresy, on pain of the
punishment for backsliders, together with the perpetual penance, in the
following manner. The preparations for the abjuration will be the same as were
explained in the fourth and fifth methods of concluding a process on behalf of
the faith.
Note that in all the following
methods of pronouncing sentence, when the Judge wishes to proceed in a merciful
manner he can act in the way we have already explained. But since secular Judges
use their own various methods, proceeding with rigour but not always with
equity, no fixed rule or method can be given for them as it can for an
ecclesiastical Judge, who can receive the abjuration and impose a perpetual
penance in the following manner:
I, N., of such a place in such a
Diocese, standing in person before you my venerable Lords the Bishop of such
city and Judges, having touched with my hands the Holy Gospel placed before me,
swear that I believe in my heart and profess with my lips the Holy Catholic and
Apostolic Faith which the Holy Roman Church holds, professes, believes, preaches
and teaches. And consequently I abjure all heresy, and renounce and revoke all
who raise themselves against the Holy Roman and Apostolic Church, of whatever
sect or error they be. Also I swear and promise that I shall never henceforward
do, say, or cause to be done such and such (naming them) which I have done and
said, and for which, in my guilt, you hold me gravely suspected of the said
heresy. Also I swear and promise that I will perform every penance which you
wish to impose upon me for the said crimes to the best of my strength, and that
I will not omit any part of it, so help me God and the Holy Gospel. And if
(which God forbid) I should hereafter act in contravention of this abjuration, I
here and now bind and oblige myself to suffer the due punishments for
backsliders, however sever they may be.
Let the Notary take care to set it
down that the said abjuration was made by one gravely suspected of heresy, so
that if she should be proved to have relapsed, she should then be judged
accordingly and delivered up to the secular Court.
After this let the Bishop absolve her
from the sentence of excommunication which she has incurred as one gravely
suspected of heresy. For when a heretic returns to the faith and abjures his
heresy, he is to be released from the sentence of excommunication which is
passed on all heretics. Similarly, such a one as we are considering was
condemned as a heretic, as we have said; but after she has abjured her heresy
she is to be released from excommunication; and after this absolution she is to
be sentenced in the following manner:
We N., Bishop of such city, and, if
he is present, Judge in the territory of such Lord, seeing that you N., of such
a place in such a Diocese, have been accused before us of such and such touching
the faith (naming them), and that we have proceeded to inform ourselves
concerning them as justice demanded by a careful examination of the merits of
the process and of all that has been done and said in the present case, have
found that you have committed such and such (naming them). Wherefore, and not
without reason holding you gravely suspected of such heresy (naming it), we have
caused you as one so suspected publicly to abjure all heresy in general, as the
canonical sanctions bid us. And since according to those same canonical
institutions all such are to be condemned as heretics, but you holding to wiser
counsel and returning to the bosom of our Holy Mother the Church have abjured,
as we have said, all vile heresy, therefore we absolve you from the sentence of
excommunication by which you were deservedly bound as one hateful to the Church
of God. And if with true heart and faith unfeigned you have returned to the
unity of the Church, you shall be reckoned from henceforth among the penitent,
and as from now are received back into the merciful bosom of the Holy Church.
But since it would be most scandalous to pass over with connivent eyes and leave
unpunished your offences against God and your injuries to men, for it is a
graver matter to offend the Divine Majesty than a human monarch, and that your
crimes may not be an incentive for other sinners, and that you may become more
careful in the future and less prone to commit again the aforesaid crimes, and
may suffer the less punishment in the next world: We the aforesaid Bishop and
Judge, having availed ourselves of the wise and considered advice of learned men
in this matter, sitting in tribunal as Judges judging, having before our eyes
only God and the irrefragable truth of the Holy Faith, with the Holy Gospels
placed before us that our judgement may proceed as from the countenance of God
and our eyes see with equity, sentence and condemn, or rather impose penance in
the following manner upon you N., appearing in person before us on the day and
at the hour which was before assigned to you. First, you shall put on over all
the garments which you wear a grey-blue garment after the manner of a monk's
scapulary, made without a hood either before or behind, and having upon it
crosses of yellow cloth three palms long and two palms wide, and you shall wear
this garment over all others for such a length of time (setting a period of one
or two years, more or less as the guilt of the person demands), And in the said
garment and crosses you shall stand in the door of such a church at such a time
for so long, or on the four major Feasts of the Glorious Virgin, or in such and
such cities in the doors of such and such churches; and we sentence and condemn
you for life, or for such a period, to such a prison. (Let this be set down as
seems most to the honour of the faith, and according to the greater or less
guilt and obstinacy of the accused.) And we expressly, and in the sure knowledge
that it is so ordained by canonical institution, reserve to ourselves the right
to mitigate the said penance, to increase it, change it, or remove it, in whole
or in part, as often as seems good to us. This sentence was given, etc.
And when this has been read, it shall
at once be duly put into execution, and she shall be clothed with the aforesaid
garment with the crosses as has been said.
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