LETTER II.
Consequences of the Fall on the Communication between Man and the
Spiritual World Effects of the Flood Wizards of Pharaoh Text in
Exodus against Witches The word Witch is by some said to mean
merely Poisoner Or if in the Holy Text it also means a Divineress, she
must, at any rate, have been a Character very different to be identified
with it The original, Chasaph, said to mean a person who dealt in
Poisons, often a Traffic of those who dealt with familiar Spirits But
different from the European Witch of the Middle Ages Thus a Witch is not
accessary to the Temptation of Job The Witch of the Hebrews probably did
not rank higher than a Divining Woman Yet it was a Crime deserving the
Doom of Death, since it inferred the disowning of Jehovah's Supremacy
Other Texts of Scripture, in like manner, refer to something corresponding
more with a Fortune-teller or Divining Woman than what is now called a
Witch Example of the Witch of Endor Account of her Meeting with Saul
Supposed by some a mere Impostor By others, a Sorceress powerful enough
to raise the Spirit of the Prophet by her own Art Difficulties attending
both Positions A middle Course adopted, supposing that, as in the Case
of Balak, the Almighty had, by Exertion of His Will, substituted Samuel,
or a good Spirit in his Character, for the Deception which the Witch
intended to produce Resumption of the Argument, showing that the Witch
of Endor signified something very different from the modern Ideas of
Witchcraft The Witches mentioned in the New Testament are not less
different from modern Ideas than those of the Books of Moses, nor do they
appear to have possessed the Power ascribed to Magicians Articles of
Faith which we may gather from Scripture on this point That there might
be certain Powers permitted by the Almighty to Inferior, and even Evil
Spirits, is possible; and in some sense the Gods of the Heathens might be
accounted Demons More frequently, and in a general sense, they were but
logs of wood, without sense or power of any kind, and their worship
founded on imposture Opinion that the Oracles were silenced at the
Nativity adopted by Milton Cases of Demoniacs The Incarnate Possessions
probably ceased at the same time as the intervention of Miracles Opinion
of the Catholics Result, that witchcraft, as the Word is interpreted in
the Middle Ages, neither occurs under the Mosaic or Gospel Dispensation
It arose in the Ignorant Period, when the Christians considered the Gods
of the Mahommedan or Heathen Nations as Fiends, and their Priests as
Conjurers or Wizards Instance as to the Saracens, and among the Northern
Europeans yet unconverted The Gods of Mexico and Peru explained on the
same system Also the Powahs of North America Opinion of Mather Gibb,
a supposed Warlock, persecuted by the other Dissenters Conclusion.
WHAT degree of communication might have existed between the human race
and the inhabitants of the other world had our first parents kept the
commands of the Creator, can only be subject of unavailing speculation. We
do not, perhaps, presume too much when we suppose, with Milton, that one
necessary consequence of eating the fruit of that forbidden tree was
removing to a wider distance from celestial essences the beings who,
although originally but a little lower than the angels, had, by their own
crime, forfeited the gift of immortality, and degraded themselves into an
inferior rank of creation.
Some communication between the spiritual world, by the union of those
termed in Scripture sons of God and the daughters of Adam, still
continued after the Fall, though their inter-alliance was not approved of
by the Ruler of mankind. We are given to understand darkly, indeed, but
with as much certainty as we can be entitled to require that the mixture
between the two species of created beings was sinful on the part of both,
and displeasing to the Almighty. It is probable, also, that the extreme
longevity of the antediluvian mortals prevented their feeling sufficiently
that they had brought themselves under the banner of Azrael, the angel of
death, and removed to too great a distance the period between their crime
and its punishment. The date of the avenging Flood gave birth to a race
whose life was gradually shortened, and who, being admitted to slighter
and rarer intimacy with beings who possessed a higher rank in creation,
assumed, as of course, a lower position in the scale. Accordingly, after
this period we hear no more of those unnatural alliances which preceded
the Flood, and are given to understand that mankind, dispersing into
different parts of the world, separated from each other, and began, in
various places, and under separate auspices, to pursue the work of
replenishing the world, which had been imposed upon them as an end of
their creation. In the meantime, while the Deity was pleased to continue
his manifestations to those who were destined to be the fathers of his
elect people, we are made to understand that wicked men it may be by the
assistance of fallen angels were enabled to assert rank with, and
attempt to match, the prophets of the God of Israel. The matter must
remain uncertain whether it was by sorcery or legerdemain that the wizards
of Pharaoh, King of Egypt, contended with Moses, in the face of the prince
and people, changed their rods into serpents, and imitated several of the
plagues denounced against the devoted kingdom. Those powers of the Magi,
however, whether obtained by supernatural communications, or arising from
knowledge of legerdemain and its kindred accomplishments, were openly
exhibited; and who can doubt that though we may be left in some darkness
both respecting the extent of their skill and the source from which it was
drawn we are told all which it can be important for us to know? We
arrive here at the period when the Almighty chose to take upon himself
directly to legislate for his chosen people, without having obtained any
accurate knowledge whether the crime of witchcraft, or the intercourse
between the spiritual world and embodied beings, for evil purposes, either
existed after the Flood, or was visited with any open marks of Divine
displeasure.
But in the law of Moses, dictated by the Divinity himself, was
announced a text, which, as interpreted literally, having been inserted
into the criminal code of all Christian nations, has occasioned much
cruelty and bloodshed, either from its tenor being misunderstood, or that,
being exclusively calculated for the Israelites, it made part of the
judicial Mosaic dispensation, and was abrogated, like the greater part of
that law, by the more benign and clement dispensation of the Gospel.
The text alluded to is that verse of the twenty-second chapter of
Exodus bearing, men shall not suffer a witch to live. Many learned men
have affirmed that in this remarkable passage the Hebrew word CHASAPH
means nothing more than poisoner, although, like the word veneficus
, by which it is rendered in the Latin version of the Septuagint, other
learned men contend that it hath the meaning of a witch also, and may be
understood as denoting a person who pretended to hurt his or her
neighbours in life, limb, or goods, either by noxious potions, by charms,
or similar mystical means. In this particular the witches of Scripture had
probably some resemblance to those of ancient Europe, who, although their
skill and power might be safely despised, as long as they confined
themselves to their charms and spells, were very apt to eke out their
capacity of mischief by the use of actual poison, so that the epithet of
sorceress and poisoner were almost synonymous. This is known to have been
the case in many of those darker iniquities which bear as their
characteristic something connected with hidden and prohibited arts. Such
was the statement in the indictment of those concerned in the famous
murder of Sir Thomas Overbury, when the arts of Forman and other sorcerers
having been found insufficient to touch the victim's life, practice by
poison was at length successfully resorted to; and numerous similar
instances might be quoted. But supposing that the Hebrew witch proceeded
only by charms, invocations, or such means as might be innoxious, save for
the assistance of demons or familiars, the connexion between the conjurer
and the demon must have been of a very different character under the law
of Moses, from that which was conceived in latter days to constitute
witchcraft. There was no contract of subjection to a diabolic Power, no
infernal stamp or sign of such a fatal league, no revellings of Satan and
his
nags, and no infliction of disease or misfortune upon good men. At
least there is not a word in Scripture authorizing us to believe that such
a system existed. On the contrary, we are told (how far literally, how far
metaphorically, it is not for us to determine) that, when the Enemy of
mankind desired to probe the virtue of Job to the bottom, he applied for
permission to the Supreme Governor of the world, who granted him liberty
to try his faithful servant with a storm of disasters, for the more
brilliant exhibition of the faith which he reposed in his Maker. In all
this, had the scene occurred after the manner of the like events in latter
days, witchcraft, sorceries, and charms would have been introduced,
and the Devil, instead of his own permitted agency, would have employed
his servant the witch as the necessary instrument of the Man of Uzz's
afflictions. In like manner, Satan desired to have Peter, that he might
sift him like wheat. But neither is there here the agency of any sorcerer
or witch. Luke xxii. 31
Supposing the powers of the witch to be limited, in the time of Moses,
to enquiries at some pretended deity or real evil spirit concerning future
events, in what respect, may it be said, did such a crime deserve the
severe punishment of death? To answer this question, we must reflect that
the object of the Mosaic dispensation being to preserve the knowledge of
the True Deity within the breasts of a selected and separated people, the
God of Jacob necessarily showed himself a jealous God to all who, straying
from the path of direct worship of Jehovah, had recourse to other deities,
whether idols or evil spirits, the gods of the neighbouring heathen. The
swerving from their allegiance to the true Divinity, to the extent of
praying to senseless stocks and stones, which could return them no answer,
was, by the Jewish law, an act of rebellion to their own Lord God, and as
such most fit to be punished capitally. Thus the prophets of Baal were
deservedly put to death, not on account of any success which they might
obtain by their intercessions and invocations (which, though enhanced with
all their vehemence, to the extent of cutting and wounding themselves,
proved so utterly unavailing as to incur the ridicule of the prophet), but
because they were guilty of apostasy from the real Deity, while they
worshipped, and encouraged others to worship, the false divinity Baal. The
Hebrew witch, therefore, or she who communicated, or attempted to
communicate, with an evil spirit, was justly punished with death, though
her communication with the spiritual world might either not exist at all,
or be of a nature much less intimate than has been ascribed to the witches
of later days; nor does the existence of this law, against the witches of
the Old Testament sanction, in any respect, the severity of similar
enactments subsequent to the Christian revelation, against a different
class of persons, accused of a very different species of crime.
In another passage, the practices of those persons termed witches in
the Holy Scriptures are again alluded to; and again it is made manifest
that the sorcery or witchcraft of the Old Testament resolves itself into a
trafficking with idols, and asking counsel of false deities; in other
words, into idolatry, which, notwithstanding repeated prohibitions,
examples, and judgments, was still the prevailing crime of the Israelites.
The passage alluded to is in Deuteronomy xviii. 10, 11 There shall not
be found among you anyone that maketh his son or his daughter to pass
through the fire, or that useth divination, or an observer of times, or an
enchanter, or a witch, or a charmer, or a consulter with familiar spirits,
or a wizard, or a necromancer. Similar denunciations occur in the
nineteenth and twentieth chapters of Leviticus. In like manner, it is a
charge against Manasses (2 Chronicles xxxviii.), that he caused his
children to pass through the fire, observed times, used enchantments and
witchcraft, and dealt with familiar spirits and with wizards. These
passages seem to concur with the former, in classing witchcraft among
other desertions of the prophets of the Deity, in order to obtain
responses by the superstitious practices of the pagan nations around them.
To understand the texts otherwise seems to confound the modern system of
witchcraft, with all its unnatural and improbable outrages on common
sense, with the crime of the person who, in classical days, consulted the
oracle of Apollo a capital offence in a Jew, but surely a venial sin in
an ignorant and deluded pagan.
To illustrate the nature of the Hebrew witch and her prohibited
criminal traffic, those who have written on this subject have naturally
dwelt upon the interview between Saul and the Witch of Endor, the only
detailed and particular account of such a transaction which is to be found
in the Bible; a fact, by the way, which proves that the crime of
witchcraft (capitally punished as it was when discovered) was not frequent
among the chosen people, who enjoyed such peculiar manifestations of the
Almighty's presence. The Scriptures seem only to have conveyed to us the
general fact (being what is chiefly edifying) of the interview between the
witch and the King of Israel. They inform us that Saul, disheartened and
discouraged by the general defection of his subjects, and the
consciousness of his own unworthy and ungrateful disobedience, despairing
of obtaining an answer from the offended Deity, who had previously
communicated with him through his prophets, at length resolved, in his
desperation, to go to a divining woman, by which course he involved
himself in the crime of the person whom he thus consulted, against whom
the law denounced death a sentence which had been often executed by Saul
himself on similar offenders. Scripture proceeds to give us the general
information that the king directed the witch to call up the Spirit of
Samuel, and that the female exclaimed that gods had arisen out of the
earth that Saul, more particularly requiring a description of the
apparition (whom, consequently, he did not himself see), she described it
as the figure of an old man with a mantle. In this figure the king
acknowledges the resemblance of Samuel, and sinking on his face, hears
from the apparition, speaking in the character of the prophet, the
melancholy prediction of his own defeat and death.
In this description, though all is told which is necessary to convey to
us an awful moral lesson, yet we are left ignorant of the minutiζ
attending the apparition, which perhaps we ought to accept as a sure sign
that there was no utility in our being made acquainted with them. It is
impossible, for instance, to know with certainty whether Saul was present
when the woman used her conjuration, or whether he himself personally ever
saw the appearance which the Pythoness described to him. It is left still
more doubtful whether anything supernatural was actually evoked, or
whether the Pythoness and her assistant meant to practise a mere
deception, taking their chance to prophesy the defeat and death of the
broken-spirited king as an event which the circumstances in which he was
placed rendered highly probable, since he was surrounded by a superior
army of Philistines, and his character as a soldier rendered it likely
that he would not survive a defeat which must involve the loss of his
kingdom. On the other band, admitting that the apparition had really a
supernatural character, it remains equally uncertain what was its nature
or by what power it was compelled to an appearance, unpleasing, as it
intimated, since the supposed spirit of Samuel asks wherefore he was
disquieted in the grave. Was the power of the witch over the invisible
world so great that, like the Erictho of the heathen poet, she could
disturb the sleep of the just, and especially that of a prophet so
important as Samuel; and are we to suppose that he, upon whom the Spirit
of the Lord was wont to descend, even while he was clothed with frail
mortality, should be subject to be disquieted in his grave at the voice of
a vile witch, and the command of an apostate prince? Did the true Deity
refuse Saul the response of his prophets, and could a witch compel the
actual spirit of Samuel to make answer notwithstanding?
Embarrassed by such difficulties, another course of explanation has
been resorted to, which, freed from some of the objections which attend
the two extreme suppositions, is yet liable to others. It has been
supposed that something took place upon this remarkable occasion similar
to that which disturbed the preconcerted purpose of the prophet Balaam,
and compelled him to exchange his premeditated curses for blessings.
According to this hypothesis, the divining woman of Endor was preparing to
practise upon Saul those tricks of legerdemain or jugglery by which she
imposed upon meaner clients who resorted to her oracle. Or we may conceive
that in those days, when the laws of Nature were frequently suspended by
manifestations of the Divine Power, some degree of juggling might be
permitted between mortals and the spirits of lesser note; in which case we
must suppose that the woman really expected or hoped to call up some
supernatural appearance. But in either case, this second solution of the
story supposes that the will of the Almighty substituted, on that
memorable occasion, for the phantasmagoria intended by the witch, the
spirit of Samuel in his earthly resemblance or, if the reader may think
this more likely, some good being, the messenger of the Divine pleasure,
in the likeness of the departed prophet and, to the surprise of the
Pythoness herself, exchanged the juggling farce of sheer deceit or petty
sorcery which she had intended to produce, for a deep tragedy, capable of
appalling the heart of the hardened tyrant, and furnishing an awful lesson
to future times.
This exposition has the advantage of explaining the surprise expressed
by the witch at the unexpected consequences of her own invocation, while
it removes the objection of supposing the spirit of Samuel subject to her
influence. It does not apply so well to the complaint of Samuel that he
was disquieted, since neither the prophet, nor any good angel
wearing his likeness, could be supposed to complain of an apparition which
took place in obedience to the direct command of the Deity. If, however,
the phrase is understood, not as a murmuring against the pleasure of
Providence, but as a reproach to the prophet's former friend Saul, that
his sins and discontents, which were the ultimate cause of Samuel's
appearance, had withdrawn the prophet for a space from the enjoyment and
repose of Heaven, to review this miserable spot of mortality, guilt,
grief, and misfortune, the words may, according to that interpretation,
wear no stronger sense of complaint than might become the spirit of a just
man made perfect, or any benevolent angel by whom he might be represented.
It may be observed that in Ecclesiasticus (xlvi. 19, 20), the
opinion of Samuel's actual appearance is adopted, since it is said of this
man of God, that after death he prophesied, and showed the king his
latter end.
Leaving the further discussion of this dark and difficult question to
those whose studies have qualified them to give judgment on so obscure a
subject, it so far appears clear that the Witch of Endor, was not a being
such as those believed in by our ancestors, who could transform themselves
and others into the appearance of the lower animals raise and allay
tempests, frequent the company and join the revels of evil spirits, and,
by their counsel and assistance, destroy human lives, and waste the fruits
of the earth, or perform feats of such magnitude as to alter the face of
Nature. The Witch of Endor was a mere fortune-teller, to whom, in despair
of all aid or answer from the Almighty, the unfortunate King of Israel had
recourse in his despair, and by whom, in some way or other, he obtained
the awful certainty of his own defeat and death. She was liable, indeed,
deservedly to the punishment of death for intruding herself upon the task
of the real prophets, by whom the will of God was at that time regularly
made known. But her existence and her crimes can go no length to prove the
possibility that another class of witches, no otherwise resembling her
than as called by the same name, either existed at a more recent period,
or were liable to the same capital punishment, for a very different and
much more doubtful class of offences, which, however odious, are
nevertheless to be proved possible before they can be received as a
criminal charge.
Whatever may be thought of other occasional expressions in the Old
Testament, it cannot be said that, in any part of that sacred volume, a
text occurs indicating the existence of a system of witchcraft, under the
Jewish dispensation, in any respect similar to that against which the
law-books of so many European nations have, till very lately, denounced
punishment; far less under the Christian dispensation a system under
which the emancipation of the human race from the Levitical law was
happily and miraculously per fected. This latter crime is supposed to
infer a compact implying reverence and adoration on the part of the witch
who comes under the fatal bond, and patronage, support, and assistance on
the part of the diabolical patron. Indeed, in the four Gospels, the word,
under any sense, does not occur; although, had the possibility of so
enormous a sin been admitted, it was not likely to escape the warning
censure of the Divine Person who came to take away the sins of the world.
Saint Paul, indeed, mentions the sin of witchcraft, in a cursory manner,
as superior in guilt to that of ingratitude; and in the offences of the
flesh it is ranked immediately after idolatry, which juxtaposition
inclines us to believe that the witchcraft mentioned by the Apostle must
have been analogous to that of the Old Testament, and equivalent to
resorting to the assistance of soothsayers, or similar forbidden arts, to
acquire knowledge of futurity. Sorcerers are also joined with other
criminals, in the Book of Revelations, as excluded from the city of God.
And with these occasional notices, which indicate that there was a
transgression so called, but leave us ignorant of its exact nature, the
writers upon witchcraft attempt to wring out of the New Testament proofs
of a crime in itself so disgustingly improbable. Neither do the exploits
of Elymas, called the Sorcerer, or Simon, called Magus or the Magician,
entitle them to rank above the class of impostors who assumed a character
to which they had no real title, and put their own mystical and ridiculous
pretensions to supernatural power in competition with those who had been
conferred on purpose to diffuse the gospel, and facilitate its reception
by the exhibition of genuine miracles. It is clear that, from his
presumptuous and profane proposal to acquire, by purchase, a portion of
those powers which were directly derived from inspiration, Simon Magus
displayed a degree of profane and brutal ignorance inconsistent with his
possessing even the intelligence of a skilful impostor; and it is plain
that a leagued vassal of hell should we pronounce him such would have
better known his own rank and condition, compared to that of the apostles,
than to have made such a fruitless and unavailing proposal, by which he
could only expose his own impudence and ignorance.
With this observation we may conclude our brief remarks upon
witchcraft , as the word occurs in the Scripture; and it now only
remains to mention the nature of the demonology , which, as
gathered from the sacred volumes, every Christian believer is bound to
receive as a thing declared and proved to be true.
And in the first place, no man can read the Bible, or call himself a
Christian, without believing that, during the course of time comprehended
by the Divine writers, the Deity, to confirm the faith of the Jews, and to
overcome and confound the pride of the heathens, wrought in the land many
great miracles, using either good spirits, the instruments of his
pleasure, or fallen angels, the permitted agents of such evil as it was
his will should be inflicted upon, or suffered by, the children of men.
This proposition comprehends, of course, the acknowledgment of the truth
of miracles during this early period, by which the ordinary laws of nature
were occasionally suspended, and recognises the existence in the spiritual
world of the two grand divisions of angels and devils, severally
exercising their powers according to the commission or permission of the
Ruler of the universe.
Secondly, wise men have thought and argued that the idols of the
heathen were actually fiends, or, rather, that these enemies of mankind
had power to assume the shape and appearance of those feeble deities, and
to give a certain degree of countenance to the faith of the worshippers,
by working seeming miracles, and returning, by their priests or their
oracles, responses which palter'd in a double sense" with the deluded
persons who consulted them. Most of the fathers of the Christian Church
have intimated such an opinion. This doctrine has the advantage of
affording, to a certain extent, a confirmation of many miracles related in
pagan or classical history, which are thus ascribed to the agency of evil
spirits. It corresponds also with the texts of Scripture which declare
that the gods of the heathen are all devils and evil spirits; and the
idols of Egypt are classed, as in Isaiah, chap. xix. ver. 2, with
charmers, those who have familiar spirits, and with, wizards. But whatever
license it may be supposed was permitted to the evil spirits of that
period and although, undoubtedly, men owned the sway of deities who
were, in fact, but personifications of certain evil passions of humanity,
as, for example, in their sacrifices to Venus, to Bacchus, to Mars, &c.,
and therefore might be said, in one sense, to worship evil spirits we
cannot, in reason, suppose that every one, or the thousandth part of the
innumerable idols worshipped among the heathen, was endowed with
supernatural power; it is clear that the greater number fell under the
description applied to them in another passage of Scripture, in which the
part of the tree burned in the fire for domestic purposes is treated as of
the same power and estimation as that carved into an image, and preferred
for Gentile homage. This striking passage, in which
6o
the impotence of the senseless block, and the brutish ignorance of the
worshipper, whose object of adoration is the work of his own hands, occurs
in the 44th chapter of the prophecies of Isaiah, verse 10 et seq .
The precise words of the text, as well as common sense, forbid us to
believe that the images so constructed by common artisans became the
habitation or resting-place of demons, or possessed any manifestation of
strength or power, whether through demoniacal influence or otherwise. The
whole system of doubt, delusion, and trick exhibited by the oracles,
savours of the mean juggling of impostors, rather than the audacious
intervention of demons. Whatever degree of power the false gods of
heathendom, or devils in their name, might be permitted occasionally to
exert, was unquestionably under the general restraint and limitation of
providence; and though, on the one hand, we cannot deny the possibility of
such permission being granted in cases unknown to us, it is certain, on
the other, that the Scriptures mention no one specific instance of such
influence expressly recommended to our belief.
Thirdly, as the backsliders among the Jews repeatedly fell off to the
worship of the idols of the neighbouring heathens, so they also resorted
to the use of charms and enchantments, founded on a superstitious
perversion of their own Levitical ritual, in which they endeavoured by
Sortilege, by Teraphim, by observation of augury, or the flight of birds,
which they called Nahas , by the means of Urim and Thummim, to find
as it were a byroad to the secrets of futurity. But for the same reason
that withholds us from delivering any opinion upon the degree to which the
devil and his angels might be allowed to countenance the impositions of
the heathen priesthood, it is impossible for us conclusively to pronounce
what effect might be permitted by supreme Providence to the ministry of
such evil spirits as presided over, and, so far as they had liberty,
directed, these sinful enquiries among the Jews themselves. We are indeed
assured from the sacred writings, that the promise of the Deity to his
chosen people, if they conducted themselves agreeably to the law which he
had given, was, that the communication with the invisible world would be
enlarged, so that in the fulness of his time he would pour out his spirit
upon all flesh, when their sons and daughters should prophesy, their old
men see visions, and their young men dream dreams. Such were the promises
delivered to the Israelites by Joel, Ezekiel, and other holy seers, of
which St. Peter, in the second chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, hails
the fulfilment in the mission of our Saviour. And on the other hand, it is
no less evident that the Almighty, to punish the disobedience of the Jews,
abandoned them to their own fallacious desires, and suffered them to be
deceived by the lying oracles, to which, in flagrant violation of his
commands, they had recourse. Of this the punishment arising from the Deity
abandoning Ahab to his own devices, and suffering him to be deceived by a
lying spirit, forms a striking instance.
Fourthly, and on the other hand, abstaining with reverence from
accounting ourselves judges of the actions of Omnipotence, we may safely
conclude that it was not his pleasure to employ in the execution of his
judgments the consequences of any such species of league or compact
betwixt devils and deluded mortals, as that denounced in the laws of our
own ancestors under the name of witchcraft . What has been
translated by that word seems little more than the art of a medicator of
poisons, combined with that of a Pythoness or false prophetess; a crime,
however, of a capital nature, by the Levitical law, since, in the first
capacity, it implied great enmity to mankind, and in the second, direct
treason to the divine Legislator. The book of Tobit contains, indeed, a
passage resembling more an incident in an Arabian tale or Gothic romance,
than a part of inspired writing. In this, the fumes produced by broiling
the liver of a certain fish are described as having power to drive away an
evil genius who guards the nuptial chamber of an Assyrian princess, and
who has strangled seven bridegrooms in succession, as they approached the
nuptial couch. But the romantic and fabulous strain of this legend has
induced the fathers of all Protestant churches to deny it a place amongst
the writings sanctioned by divine origin, and we may therefore be excused
from entering into discussion on such imperfect evidence.
Lastly, in considering the incalculable change which took place upon
the Advent of our Saviour and the announcement of his law, we may observe
that, according to many wise and learned men, his mere appearance upon
earth, without awaiting the fulfilment of his mission, operated as an act
of banishment of such heathen deities as had hitherto been suffered to
deliver oracles, and ape in some degree the attributes of the Deity.
Milton has, in the Paradise Lost, it may be upon conviction of its
truth, embraced the theory which identifies the followers of Satan with
the gods of the heathen; and, in a tone of poetry almost unequalled, even
in his own splendid writings, be thus describes, in one of his earlier
pieces, the departure of these pretended deities on the eve of the blessed
Nativity:
The oracles are dumb,
No voice or hideous hum Runs through the arched roof in words deceiving;
Apollo from his shrine Can no more divine, With hollow shriek the steep of
Delphos leaving; No nightly trance or breathed spell Inspires the
pale-eyed priests from the prophetic cell. The lonely mountains o'er,
And the resounding shore, A voice of weeping heard and loud lament; From
haunted spring and dale, Edged with poplar pale, The parting Genius is
with sighing sent; With flower-inwoven tresses torn, The Nymphs in
twilight shade of tangled thickets mourn. In consecrated earth, And on
the holy hearth, The Lars and Lemures moan with midnight plaint; In urns
and altars round, A drear and dying sound Affrights the Flamens at their
service quaint; And the chill marble seems to sweat, While each, peculiar
Power foregoes his wonted seat. Peor and Baalim Forsake their temples
dim, With that twice-battered god of Palestine; And mooned Ashtaroth,
Heaven's queen and mother both, Now sits not girt with tapers' holy shine;
The Lybic Hammon'shrinks his horn; In vain the Tyrian maids their wounded
Thammuz mourn. And sullen Moloch, fled, Hath left in shaddws dread His
burning idol all of darkest hue; In vain with cymbals ring, They call the
grisly king, In dismal dance about the furnace blue; The brutish gods of
Nile as fast,
Isis and Orus, and the Dog Anubis, haste.
The quotation is a long one, but it is scarcely possible to shorten
what is so beautiful and interesting a description of the heathen deities,
whether in the classic personifications of Greece, the horrible shapes
worshipped by mere barbarians, or the hieroglyphical enormities of the
Egyptian Mythology. The idea of identifying the pagan deities, especially
the most distinguished of them, with the manifestation of demoniac power,
and concluding that the descent of our Saviour struck them with silence,
so nobly expressed in the poetry of Milton, is not certainly to be lightly
rejected. It has been asserted, in simple prose, by authorities of no mean
weight; nor does there appear anything inconsistent in the faith of those
who, believing that, in the elder time, fiends and demons were permitted
an enlarged degree of power in uttering predictions, may also give credit
to the proposition, that at the Divine Advent that power was restrained,
the oracles silenced, and those demons who had aped the Divinity of the
place were driven from their abode on earth, honoured as it was by a guest
so awful.
It must be noticed, however, that this great event had not the same
effect on that peculiar class of fiends who were permitted to vex mortals
by the alienation of their minds, and the abuse of their persons, in the
case of what is called Demoniacal possession. In what exact sense we
should understand this word possession it is impossible to
discover; but we feel it impossible to doubt (notwithstanding learned
authorities to the contrary) that it was a dreadful disorder, of a kind
not merely natural; and may be pretty well assured that it was suffered to
continue after the Incarnation, because the miracles effected by our
Saviour and his apostles, in curing those tormented in this way, afforded
the most direct proofs of his divine mission, even out of the very mouths
of those ejected fiends, the most malignant enemies of a power to which
they dared not refuse homage and obedience. And here is an additional
proof that witchcraft, in its ordinary and popular sense, was unknown at
that period; although cases of possession are repeatedly mentioned in the
Gospels and Acts of the Apostles, yet in no one instance do the devils
ejected mention a witch or sorcerer, or plead the commands of such a
person, as the cause of occupying or tormenting the victim; whereas, in
a great proportion of those melancholy cases of witchcraft with which the
records of later times abound, the stress of the evidence is rested on the
declaration of the possessed, or the demon within him, that some old man
or woman in the neighbourhood had compelled the fiend to be the instrument
of evil.
It must also be admitted that in another most remarkable respect, the
power of the Enemy of mankind was rather enlarged than bridled or
restrained, in consequence of the Saviour coming upon earth. It is
indisputable that, in order that Jesus might have his share in every
species of delusion and persecution which the fallen race of Adam is heir
to, he personally suffered the temptation in the wilderness at the hand of
Satan, whom, without resorting to his divine power, he drove, confuted,
silenced, and shamed, from his presence. But it appears, that although
Satan was allowed, upon this memorable occasion, to come on earth with
great power, the permission was given expressly because his time was
short.
The indulgence which was then granted to him in a case so unique and
peculiar soon passed over and was utterly restrained. It is evident that,
after the lapse of the period during which it pleased the Almighty to
establish His own Church by miraculous displays of power, it could not
consist with his kindness and wisdom to leave the enemy in the possession
of the privilege of deluding men by imaginary miracles calculated for the
perversion of that faith which real miracles were no longer present to
support. There would, we presume to say, be a shocking inconsistency in
supposing that false and deceitful prophecies and portents should be
freely circulated by any demoniacal influence, deceiving men's bodily
organs, abusing their minds, and perverting their faith, while the true
religion was left by its great Author devoid of every supernatural sign
and token which, in the time of its Founder and His immediate disciples,
attested and celebrated their inappreciable mission. Such a permission on
the part of the Supreme Being would be (to speak under the deepest
reverence) an abandonment of His chosen people, ransomed at such a price,
to the snares of an enemy from whom the worst evils were to be
apprehended. Nor would it consist with the remarkable promise in holy
writ, that God will not suffer His people to be tempted above what they
are able to bear. I Cor. x. 13. The Fathers of the Faith
are not strictly agreed at what period the miraculous power was withdrawn
from the Church; but few Protestants are disposed to bring it down beneath
the accession of Constantine, when the Christian religion was fully
established in supremacy. The Roman Catholics, indeed, boldly affirm that
the power of miraculous interference with the course of Nature is still in
being; but the enlightened even of this faith, though they dare not deny a
fundamental tenet of their church, will hardly assent to any particular
case, without nearly the same evidence which might conquer the incredulity
of their neighbours the Protestants. It is alike inconsistent with the
common sense of either that fiends should be permitted to work marvels
which are no longer exhibited on the part of Heaven, or in behalf of
religion.
It will be observed that we have not been anxious to decide upon the
limits of probability on this question. It is not necessary for us to
ascertain in what degree the power of Satan was at liberty to display
itself during the Jewish dispensation, or down to what precise period in
the history of the Christian Church cures of demoniacal possession or
similar displays of miraculous power may have occurred. We have avoided
controversy on that head, because it com-prehends questions not more
doubtful than unedifying. Little benefit could arise from attaining the
exact knowledge of the manner in which the apostate Jews practised
unlawful charms or auguries. After their conquest and dispersion they were
remarked among the Romans for such superstitious practices; and the like,
for what we know, may continue to linger among the benighted wanderers of
their race at the present day. But all these things are extraneous to our
enquiry, the purpose of which was to discover whether any real evidence
could be derived from sacred history to prove the early existence of that
branch of demonology which has been the object, in comparatively modern
times, of criminal prosecution and capital punishment. We have already
alluded to this as the contract of witchcraft, in which, as the term was
understood in the Middle Ages, the demon and the witch or wizard combined
their various powers of doing harm to inflict calamities upon the person
and property, the fortune and the fame, of innocent human beings, imposing
the most horrible diseases, and death itself, as marks of their slightest
ill-will; transforming their own persons and those of others at their
pleasure; raising tempests to ravage the crops of their enemies, or
carryiug them home to their own garners 3 annihilating or transferring to
their own dairies the produce of herds; spreading pestilence among cattle,
infecting and blighting children; and, in a word, doing more evil than the
heart of man might be supposed capable of conceiving, by means far beyond
mere human power to accomplish. If it could be supposed that such
unnatural leagues existed, and that there were wretches wicked enough,
merely for the gratification of malignant spite or the enjoyment of some
beastly revelry, to become the wretched slaves of infernal spirits, most
just and equitable would be those laws which cut them off from the midst
of every Christian commonwealth. But it is still more just and equitable,
before punishment be inflicted for any crime, to prove that there is a
possibility of that crime being committed. We have therefore advanced an
important step in our enquiry when we have ascertained that the witch
of the Old Testament was not capable of anything beyond the administration
of baleful drugs or the practising of paltry imposture; in other words,
that she did not hold the character ascribed to a modern sorceress. We
have thus removed out of the argument the startling objection that, in
denying the existence of witchcraft, we deny the possibility of a crime
which was declared capital in the Mosaic law, and are left at full liberty
to adopt the opinion, that the more modern system of witchcraft was a
part, and by no means the least gross, of that mass of errors which
appeared among the members of the Christian Church when their religion,
becoming gradually corrupted by the devices of
men and the barbarism of those nations among whom it was spread showed,
a light indeed, but one deeply tinged with the remains of that very pagan
ignorance which its Divine Founder came to dispel.
We will, in a future part of this enquiry, endeavour to show that many
of the particular articles of the popular belief respecting magic and
witchcraft were derived from the opinions which the ancient heathens
entertained as part of their religion. To recommend them, however, they
had principles lying deep in the human mind and heart of all times; the
tendency to belief in supernatural agencies is natural, and indeed seems
connected with and deduced from the invaluable conviction of the certainty
of a future state. Moreover, it is very possible that particular stories
of this class may have seemed undeniable in the dark ages, though our
better instructed period can explain them in a satisfactory manner by the
excited temperament of spectators, or the influence of delusions produced
by derangement of the intellect or imperfect reports of the external
senses. They obtained, however, universal faith and credit; and the
churchmen, either from craft or from ignorance, favoured the progress of a
belief which certainly contributed in a most powerful manner to extend
their own authority over the human mind.
To pass from the pagans of antiquity the Mahommedans, though their
profession of faith is exclusively unitarian, were accounted worshippers
of evil spirits, who were supposed to aid them in their continual warfare
against the Christians, or to protect and defend them in the Holy Land,
where their abode gave so much scandal and offence to the devout. Romance,
and even history, combined in representing all who were out of the pale of
the Church as the personal vassals of Satan, who played his deceptions
openly amongst them; and Mahound, Termagaunt, and Apollo were, in
the opinion of the Western Crusaders, only so many names of the arch-fiend
and his principal angels. The most enormous fictions spread abroad and
believed through Christendom attested the fact, that there were open
displays of supernatural aid afforded by the evil spirits to the Turks and
Saracens; and fictitious reports were not less liberal in assigning to the
Christians extraordinary means of defence through the direct protection of
blessed saints and angels, or of holy men yet in the flesh, but already
anticipating the privileges proper to a state of beatitude and glory, and
possessing the power to work miracles.
To show the extreme grossness of these legends, we may give an example
from the romance of Richard Coeur de Lion, premising at the same time
that, like other romances, it was written in what the author designed to
be the Style of true history, and was addressed to hearers and readers,
not as a tale of fiction, but a real narrative of facts, so that the
legend is a proof of what the age esteemed credible and were disposed to
believe as much as if had been extracted from a graver chronicle,
The renowned Saladin, it is said, had dispatched an embassy to King
Richard, with the present of a colt recommended as a gallant warhorse,
challenging Coeur de Lion to meet him in single combat between the armies,
for the purpose of deciding at once their pretensions to the land of
Palestine, and the theological question whether the God of the Christians,
or Jupiter, the deity of the Saracens, should be the future object of
adoration by the subjects of both monarchs. Now, under this seemingly
chivalrous defiance was concealed a most unknightly stratagem, and which
we may at the same time call a very clumsy trick for the devil to be
concerned in. A Saracen clerk had conjured two devils into a mare and her
colt, with the instruction, that whenever the mare neighed, the foal,
which was a brute of uncommon size, should kneel down to suck his dam. The
enchanted foal was sent to King Richard in the belief that the foal,
obeying the signal of its dam as usual, the Soldan who mounted the mare
might get an easy advantage over him.
But the English king was warned by an angel in a dream of the intended
stratagem, and the colt was, by the celestial mandate, previously to the
combat, conjured in the holy name to be obedient to his rider during the
encounter. The fiend-horse intimated his submission by drooping his head,
but his word was not entirely credited. His ears were stopped with wax. In
this condition, Richard, armed at all points and with various marks of his
religious faith displayed on his weapons, rode forth to meet Saladin, and
the Soldan, confident of his stratagem, encountered him boldly. The mare
neighed till she shook the ground for miles around; but the sucking devil,
whom the wax prevented from hearing the summons, could not obey the
signal. Saladin was dismounted, and narrowly escaped death, while his army
were cut to pieces by the Christians. It is but an awkward tale of wonder
where a demon is worsted by a trick which could hardly have cheated a
common horse-jockey; but by such legends our ancestors were amused and
interested, till their belief respecting the demons of the Holy Land seems
to have been not very far different from that expressed in the title of
Ben Jonson's play, The Devil is an Ass.
One of the earliest maps ever published, which appeared at Rome in the
sixteenth century, intimates a similar belief in the connexion of the
heathen nations of the north of Europe with the demons of the spiritual
world. In Esthonia, Lithuania, Courland, and such districts, the chart,
for want, it may be supposed, of an accurate account of the country,
exhibits rude cuts of the fur-clad natives paying homage at the shrines of
demons, who make themselves, visibly present to them; while at other
places they are displayed as doing battle with the Teutonic knights, or
other military associations formed for the conversion or expulsion of the
heathens in these parts. Amid the pagans, armed with scimitars and dressed
in caftans, the fiends are painted as assisting them, pourtrayed in all
the modern horrors of the cloven foot, or, as the Germans term it, horse's
foot, bat wings, saucer eyes, locks like serpents, and tail like a dragon.
These attributes, it may be cursorily noticed, themselves intimate the
connexion of modern demonology with the mythology of the ancients. The
cloven foot is the attribute of Pan to whose talents for inspiring
terror we owe the word panic the snaky tresses are borrowed from
the shield of Minerva, and the dragon train alone seems to be connected
with the Scriptural history.
*
Other heathen nations, whose creeds could not have directly contributed
to the system of demonology, because their manners and even their very
existence was unknown when it was adopted, were nevertheless involved, so
soon as Europeans became acquainted with them, in the same charge of
witchcraft and worship of demons brought by the Christians of the Middle
Ages against the heathens of northern Europe and the Mahommedans of the
East. We learn from the information of a Portuguese voyager that even the
native Christians (called those of St. Thomas), whom the discoverers found
in India when they first arrived there, fell under suspicion of diabolical
practices. It was almost in vain that the priests of one of their chapels
produced to the Portuguese officers and soldiers a holy image, and called
on them, as good Christians, to adore the Blessed Virgin. The sculptor had
been so little acquainted with his art, and the hideous form which he had
produced resembled an inhabitant of the infernal regions so much more than
Our Lady of Grace, that one of the European officers, while, like his
companions, he dropped on his
knees, added the loud protest, that if the image represented the Devil,
he paid his homage to the Holy Virgin.
In South America the Spaniards justified the unrelenting cruelties
exercised on the unhappy natives by reiterating in all their accounts of
the countries which they discovered and conquered, that the Indians, in
their idol worship, were favoured by the demons with a direct intercourse,
and that their priests inculcated doctrines and rites the foulest and most
abhorrent to Christian ears. The great snake-god of Mexico, and other
idols worshipped with human sacrifices and bathed in the gore of their
prisoners, gave but too much probability to this accusation; and if the
images themselves were not actually tenanted by evil spirits, the worship
which the Mexicans paid to them was founded upon such deadly cruelty and
dark superstition as might easily be believed to have been breathed into
mortals by the agency of hell.
Even in North America, the first settlers in New England and other
parts of that immense continent uniformly agreed that they detected among
the inhabitants traces of an intimate connexion with Satan. It is scarce
necessary to remark that this opinion was founded exclusively upon the
tricks practised by the native powahs, or cunning men, to raise themselves
to influence among the chiefs, and to obtain esteem with the people,
which, possessed as they were professionally of some skill in jugglery and
the knowledge of some medical herbs and secrets, the understanding of the
colonists was unable to trace to their real source legerdemain and
imposture. By the account, however, of the Reverend Cotton Mather, in his
Magnalia , book vi.,
* he does not ascribe to these Indian conjurers any skill greatly
superior to a maker of almanacks or common fortuneteller. They, says
the Doctor, universally acknowledged and worshipped many gods, and
therefore highly esteemed and reverenced their priests, powahs, or
wizards, who were esteemed as having immediate converse with the gods. To
them, therefore, they addressed themselves in all difficult cases: yet
could not all that desired that dignity, as they esteemed it, obtain
familiarity with the infernal spirits. Nor were all powahs alike
successful in their addresses; but they became such, either by immediate
revelation, or in the use of certain rites and ceremonies, which tradition
had left as conducing to that end. In so much, that parents, out of zeal,
often dedicated their children to the gods, and educated them accordingly,
observing a certain diet, debarring sleep, &c.: yet of the many designed,
but few obtained their desire. Supposing that where the practice of
witchcraft has been highly esteemed, there must be given the plainest
demonstration of mortals having familiarity with infernal spirits, I am
willing to let my reader know, that, not many years since, here died one
of the powahs, who never pretended to astrological knowledge, yet could
precisely. inform such who desired his assistance, from whence goods
stolen from them were gone, and whither carried, with many things of the
like nature; nor was he ever known to endeavour to conceal his knowledge
to be immediately from a god subservient to him that the English
worship. This powah, being by an Englishman worthy of credit (who
lately informed me of the same), desired to advise him who had taken
certain goods which had been stolen, having formerly been an eye-witness
of his ability, the powah, after a little pausing, demanded why he
requested that from him, since himself served another God? that therefore
he could not help him; but added, 'If you can believe that my god may
help you, I will try what I can do ;' which diverted the man from
further enquiry. I must a little digress, and tell my reader, that this
powah's wife was accounted a godly woman, and lived in the practice and
profession of the Christian religion, not only by the approbation, but
encouragement of her husband. She constantly prayed in the family, and
attended the public worship on the Lord's days He declared that he could
not blame her, for that she served a god that was above his; but that as
to himself, his god's continued kindness obliged him not to forsake his
service. It appears, from the above and similar passages, that Dr. Cotton
Mather, an honest and devout, but sufficiently credulous man, had mistaken
the purpose of the tolerant powah. The latter only desired to elude the
necessity of his practices being brought under the observant eye of an
European, while he found an ingenious apology in the admitted superiority
which he naturally conceded to the Deity of a people, advanced, as he
might well conceive, so far above his own in power and attainments, as
might reasonably infer a corresponding superiority in the nature and
objects of their worship.
From another narrative we are entitled to infer that the European
wizard was held superior to the native sorcerer of North America. Among
the numberless extravagances of the Scottish Dissenters of the 17th
century, now canonized in a lump by those who view them in the general
light of enemies to Prelacy, was a certain ship-master, called, from his
size, Meikle John Gibb. This man, a person called Jamie, and one or two
other men, besides twenty or thirty females who adhered to them, went the
wildest lengths of enthusiasm. Gibb headed a party, who followed him into
the moorlands, and at the Ford Moss, between Airth and Stirling, burned
their Bibles, as an act of solemn adherence to their new faith. They were
apprehended inconsequence, and committed to prison; and the rest of the
Dissenters, however differently they were affected by the persecution of
Government, when it applied to themselves, were nevertheless much offended
that these poor mad people were not brought to capital punishment for
their blasphemous extravagances; and imputed it as a fresh crime to the
Duke of York that, though he could not be often accused of toleration, he
considered the discipline of the house of correction as more likely to
bring the unfortunate Gibbites to their senses than the more dignified
severities of a public trial and the gallows. The Cameronians, however,
did their best to correct this scandalous lenity. As Meikle John Gibb, who
was their comrade in captivity, used to disturb their worship in jail by
his maniac howling, two of them took turn about to hold him down by force,
and silence him by a napkin thrust into his mouth. This mode of quieting
the unlucky heretic, though sufficiently emphatic, being deemed
ineffectual or inconvenient, George Jackson, a Cameronian, who afterwards
suffered at the gallows, dashed the maniac with his feet and hands against
the wall, and beat him so severely that the Test were afraid that he had
killed him outright. After which specimen of fraternal chastisement, the
lunatic, to avoid the repetition of the discipline, whenever the prisoners
began worship, ran behind the door, and there, with his own napkin crammed
into his mouth, sat howling like a chastised cur. But on being finally
transported to America, John Gibb, we are assured, was much admired by the
heathen for his familiar converse with the devil bodily, and offering
sacrifices to him. He died there, says Walker, about the year 1720.*
We Must necessarily infer that the pretensions of the natives to
supernatural communication could not be of a high class, since we find
them honouring this poor madman as their superior; and, in general, that
the magic, or powahing, of the North American Indians was not of a nature
to be much apprehended by the British colonists, since the natives
themselves gave honour and precedence to those Europeans who came among
them with the character of possessing intercourse with the spirits whom
they themselves professed to worship.
Notwithstanding this inferiority on the part of the powahs, it occurred
to the settlers that the heathen Indians and Roman Catholic Frenchmen were
particularly favoured by the demons, who sometimes adopted their
appearance, and showed themselves in their likeness, to the great
annoyance of the colonists. Thus, in the year 1692, a party of real or
imaginary French and Indians exhibited themselves
occasionally to the colonists of the town of Gloucester, in the county
of Essex, New England, alarmed the country around very greatly, skirmished
repeatedly with the English, and caused the raising of two regiments, and
the dispatching a strong reinforcement to the assistance of the
settlement. But as these visitants, by whom they were plagued more than a
fortnight, though they exchanged fire with the settlers, never killed or
scalped any one, the English became convinced that they were not real
Indians and Frenchmen, but that the devil and his agents had assumed such
an appearance, although seemingly not enabled effectually to support it,
for the molestation of the colony.
*
It appears, then, that the ideas of superstition which the more
ignorant converts to the Christian faith borrowed from the wreck of the
classic mythology, were so rooted in the minds of their successors, that
these found corroboration of their faith in demonology in the practice of
every pagan nation whose destiny it was to encounter them as enemies, and
that as well within the limits of Europe as in every other part of the
globe to which their arms were carried. In a word, it may be safely laid
down, that the commonly received doctrine of demonology, presenting the
same general outlines, though varied according to the fancy of particular
nations, existed through all Europe. It seems to have been founded
originally on feelings incident to the human heart, or diseases to which
the human frame is liable to have been largely augmented by what classic
superstitions survived the ruins of paganism-and to have received new
contributions from the opinions collected among the barbarous nations,
whether of the east or of the west. It is now necessary to enter more
minutely into the question, and endeavour to trace from what especial
sources the people of the Middle Ages derived those notions which
gradually assumed the shape of a regular system of demonology.
* The chart
alluded to is one of the facsimiles of an ancient planisphere,
engraved in bronze about the end of the 15th century, and called the
Borgian Table, from its possessor, Cardinal Stephen Borgia, end preserved
in his museum at Veletri. * On Remarkable Mercies of Divine
Providence. * See Patrick Walker's Biographia Presbyteriana, vol. ii.
p. 23; also God's judgment upon Persecutors, and Wodrow's History,
upon the article John Gibb.
* Magnalia, book vii. article xviii. The fact is also alleged in the
Life of Sir William Phipps. |