HISTORY (NEOpagan, 1980s; 83) [_What Witches Do_, by Stewart Ferrar, Phoenix Publishing, (1983) 1989; pp. 23-4.] The gods of the old religion have always become the devils of the new. For a thousand years after Christianity first became a State religion of Byzantium, it coexisted with older beliefs -- at least away from the centres of ecclesiastical power. Many, including priests, followed both. When William who became the Conqueror (and who was himself reputed to be the son of a witch) allowed Harold to leave for England, he made him swear loyalty on two altars, one Christian and one pagan, and this incident, recorded in the Bayeux Tapestry, must have seemed perfectly natural at the time. But when the Church felt powerful enough to impose its monopoly of belief -- the milestone being Pope Innocent VIII's Bull of 1484, condemning witches as heretics -- it could no longer allow the Horned God to be an alternative visualization of universal divinity; he had to be branded as Satan. In the process, Satan's image was transformed just as much as the Horned God's. In the Old Testament, Satan appears as 'the adversary'; not a rebel against God's authority, but a sort of heavenly Public Prosecutor, licensed to draw attention to the debt side of a soul's record (much as the Promoter of the Faith or 'Devil's Advocate' does when the Pope is considering a proposed canonization) or to test man's spiritual stamina (as with Job). Not a very endearing function, but perfectly respectable, and in the New Testament there seems every reason to see the Temptation in the Wildernes in this light, and Jesus's abrupt answer as a condemnation of the offer rather than of the offerer, who was 'only doing his job'. The image of Satan as the Prince of Evil at war with God is mainly post-Biblical creation, and his horns (once a symbol of divinity) an invention of heresy- hunting days. The process was simple and neat. First, equip Satan with horns. Then point to the Horned God of the Witches and say 'Look! The Devil incarnate -- and he has the horns to prove it!' Public belief that witches worshipped the Devil was further reinforced by official witch-trial records. If the defendant spoke of his God, the recorder would substitute the word 'Devil' even in a 'verbatim' report. If at the height of the 'burning time' some witches fell for this propaganda themselves, and felt that while they were being hounded to death in the name of the Christian God, the Devil (equally Christian in fact) was their only friend, we can hardly be surprised. But let us be clear about it. This was an aberration, a human reaction in a period of bigotry and terror. The Horned God is not the Devil, and never has been. If today 'Satanist' covens do exist, they are not witches but a sick fringe, delayed-action victims of a centuries-old Church propaganda in which even intelligent Christians no longer believe. ---------------------------------------------------