HISTORY (MISC./OCCult1 60s) 60s [_Witchcraft_, by Charles Williams, Meridian Books, (1941) 1960;] doesn't mention 'Satanism' at all and defines 'Satan', which it continually terms "the Devil" in purely Christian terms. ------------------------------------------------------------------ [_Witchcraft_, by Pennethorne Hughes_, Penguin Books, (1952) 1965; (var) p. 95-215; within the section 'Initiation' concerning initiation of witches into the coven, from sparse historical records and the works of scholars, inclusive of Margaret Murray(!); most of this seems to be drawn from torture-testimonies, and so constitutes Inquisition-mythos.] It appears that the witch had to be introduced formally before the coven, much as a member for Parliament is in the House. This sponsoring, as well as being a precaution for securing secrecy and trustworthiness, mayhave been continued as a parody of the Christian practice of employing godparents. But security was the important reason for having an introducer, since people from witch families, more particularly men, were often admitted without this precaution. First, the new witch denied the Christian faith and baptism, some- times gratuitouslyemphasizing the sincerety of this by insulting the Virgin Mary (known as the Anomalous Woman), spitting on the Cross, and so on. This was followed by vows to the adopted god, the Devil. As time went on, he was the Christian Devil, but earlier he was more perceptibly the old fertility god, and the witches vowed themselves his not only soul, but body and soul. The process was pantomimed in the custom of the Scottish witches of putting one hand to the crown of the head, and the other on the sole of the foot, and dedicating to the service of the Master all that lay in between the two hands. Professor Murray quotes a case where a pregnant woman excepted the unborn child, and the Devil was very angry.... The actual written covenant was another faily late introduction, as clearly it can have formed no part of the earliest paleolithic practice..... The contract was said to be signed in the novice's own blood, which is possible enough, for as Professor Murray says: 'It seems clear that part of the ceremony of initiation was the cutting of the skin of the candidate to the effusion of blood. This is the early rite, and it seems probable that when the written contract came into vogue the blood was found to be a convenient writing fluid, or was offered to the Devil in the form of a signature.' Blood has always been the most irrevocable medium, and there are many historic examples of its use.... Most witches, of course, were unable to write, but they would make their marks, as did the Somerset witches. Elizabeth Style explained, in 1664, how the Devil 'promised her Mony, and that she should live gallantly, and have the pleasure of the World for Twelve years, if she would with her Blood sign his Paper, which was to give her Soul to him'. Some few pacts with the Devil survive in museums in different parts of the world, and the theme is a favourite one in literature. The term of years which the contractor received before being carried off was not constant, and a fortunate Ann Arydon 'had a lease for fifty yeares of the divill, whereof (in 1673) ten ar expired' but the usual term was much shorter, and often seems to have been seven, with an option of renewal. As is indicated later, some of this may be post- rationalization after the Faustian myth had become known in Great Britain. The ceremony sometimes proceeded with a sacrifice, usually black, and often a hen. The witch bound him or herself in vassalage to the Devil, and undertook to attend the appropriate meetings, make converts, and generally do as instructed. The name being entered into the Black Book or Roll, which was kept by the Master of the Coven or even by the Grand Master of the District, and obeisance having been paid, the witch received a Mark from the Devil. This Mark which the Devil made upon the witch was regarded, when discovered by examiners, as final and irrefutable evidence of guilt. The result was that there was a great l tendency to find these marks when they clearly were not the true witch mark at all, but merely minor deformities or hardenings of the skin which were insensitive.... As well as being the primitive horned god of the fertility cults, the god of the witches, already infected with dualistic ideas and those of later symbolism, was also Dianus or Janus, the two-faced representative of the double side of the god-like nature -- good and evil. He was memories of all the evil powers represented as black -- Pluto, Set, the Northern Loki, Ahriman, the Jewish Satan, and aspects of Siva the Destroyer. He was associated with the local animal cults as well. He was a parody of the Christian representation of the Almighty. He was Pan. He was sometimes mixed with the Eastern conception of the djinn. He was a composite. In the circumstances, it is surprising that a type devil [sic] emerges at all from teh varying traditions and the theological morasses. When he does so it is as man, woman, or animal.... This chapter has dealt with the historic devil as revealed in the witch trials. But the witches themselves sometimes, and their opponents almost always, mixed him with something else. It has been shown throughout that the mystical tradition of the Devil as the other nature of God, the dark force of evil, took on a name and a personality early in human thought. Wherever opposition to Christianity, or indeed to any orthodox religion, was found, therefore, the Devil was recognized. And so the Devil of the witches, the sulphurous masked human or or nearly animal figure of hair, wax, and horn, was given the name of the theological concept. He became, famliiarly, Old Nick. He bcame, more terrifically and powerfully, Lucifer, Beelzebub, Satan, Apollyon, Asmodeus, Abaddon, the Prince of Darkness, and the Foul Fiend himself. He had been so from the earliest times, for we are told that, after the initiate to the Eleusinian mysteries had passed his various ordeals, had seen and touched the Holy Things, and was qualified, the final and awful secret was vouchsafed to him. At a flying pace a priest brushed by him, and breathed into his ear the ultimate mystery: 'Osiris is a Black God.' This is the historical reconstruction of the nursery devil who has for centuries been employed to frighten children. So it was with sixteenth-century Reginal Scot, who complains, 'In our childhood our mother's maids have so terrified us with an ugly devil having horns on his head, fire in his mouth, a tail in his breech, eyes like a bison, fangs like a dog, skin like a nigger, a voice roaring like a lion, whereby we start and are afraid when we hear one call "Boh".' Now it was with the cry of 'Boh catch him' that my grand- mother used to tease me as a child as the beginning of the twentieth-century. Poor dear, she was very old, and worn out by begetting nineteen children, including one set of triplets and two of twins, but even when in her right mind she probably never knew that Boh was the name for the Devil. Yet it was.... ...whilst defiance of the Church and organized worship of the Devil were the offence against society, it was individual acts of malevolence which led to the majority of the accusations [of witchcraft]. These acts and practices went on long afer the organized cult had decayed. The darker and more sophisticated activities of the adepts -- thaumaturgic and goetic matic -- were the pursuits of the intellectual. Rites of criminal curiosity, rationalized perversion, mathematical magic, the evocation of evil spirits, talismans, and aspects of astrology derived from the Egyptian mysteries, the Kabbalah, Pythagoras, and the aristocratic stream of diabolism. There were not refinements argueed, except by implication, against the ordinary witch -- the member of the decaying group enemy of Christianity. Against the witch, or those mistaken as witches, the accusations were mainly of natural magic, venefic magic, spell-casting, fire or storm raising, lycanthropy, and the keeping of familiars.... [re: period of history -- 300s CE] Constantine, in adopting Christianity, limited the legitimate use of magic, and ordered the severe punishment of those 'charming the minds of modest persons to the practice of debauchery'. He had no objection, however, to the prevention by magic of premature rains, or to white magic generally, and made careful distinction between theurgic and goetic practices -- as the later Church did not. Julian 'the Apostate' was accused by clerical historians of being a necromancer, and certainly did extend toleration and interest to all kinds of arts.... ...although magic was claimed, the grave offence was still clearly that of political conspiracy. Magicians, astrologers, and mathematicians were individually feared and proscribed, and their books burned. The sophisticated, gnostic side of the ritual was relentlessly if intermittently opposed: but a cult of Devil worshippers was still undetected -- if only because the Devil himself was as yet so ill-defined.... While consolidating, [the Church's] approach to witchcraft was extremely tentative, and the punishments were comparatively tame. Some idea of a pact with the Devil was formulated in A.D. 306, and the Council of Ancyra, in A.D. 314, forbade witchcraft as a branch of pharmacy, demanding a few years' penance from any found guilty of it.... There was a steady decline [in Europe] in humanity which was not arrested until the thirteenth century -- with the exception of the period of the Carolingian renaissance, during which, incidentally, torture was for the time abolished. Yet whilst popes and emperors disputed authority in the decaying cities of Rome and Germany, and peasants everywhere obeyed the whim of a local overlord and the Sunday rule of a foreign priest, the fathers of the Church gradually forged their faith, determined doctrine, and defined the Evil One.... ---------------------------------------------------------------