Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Of the Impiety of the Magic Art, Which is Dependent on the Assistance of Malign Spirits. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 19.—Of the Impiety of the
Magic Art, Which is Dependent on the Assistance of Malign
Spirits.
Moreover, against those magic arts,
concerning which some men, exceedingly wretched and exceedingly
impious, delight to boast, may not public opinion itself be brought
forward as a witness? For why are those arts so severely punished
by the laws, if they are the works of deities who ought to be
worshipped? Shall it be said that the Christians have
or
dained those laws by which magic arts are punished?
With what other meaning, except that these sorceries are without
doubt pernicious to the human race, did the most illustrious poet
say,
“By heaven, I swear, and your
dear life,
Unwillingly these arms I
wield,
And take, to meet the coming
strife,
Enchantment’s sword and
shield.”315
315 Virgil, Æn. 4. 492,
493. |
And that also which he says in
another place concerning magic arts,
“I’ve seen him to another place
transport the standing corn,”316
has reference to the fact that the fruits of
one field are said to be transferred to another by these arts which
this pestiferous and accursed doctrine teaches. Does not Cicero
inform us that, among the laws of the Twelve Tables, that is, the
most ancient laws of the Romans, there was a law written which
appointed a punishment to be inflicted on him who should do this?317
317 Pliny (Hist. Nat. xxviii.
2) and others quote the law as running: Qui fruges incantasit,
qui malum carmen incantasit…neu alienam segetem
pelexeris. | Lastly,
was it before Christian judges that Apuleius himself was accused of
magic arts?318
318 Before Claudius, the prefect of
Africa, a heathen. | Had he
known these arts to be divine and pious, and congruous with the
works of divine power, he ought not only to have confessed, but
also to have professed them, rather blaming the laws by which these
things were prohibited and pronounced worthy of condemnation, while
they ought to have been held worthy of admiration and respect.
For by so doing, either he would have persuaded the judges to adopt
his own opinion, or, if they had shown their partiality for unjust
laws, and condemned him to death notwithstanding his praising and
commending such things, the demons would have bestowed on his soul
such rewards as he deserved, who, in order to proclaim and set
forth their divine works, had not feared the loss of his human
life. As our martyrs, when that religion was charged on them as a
crime, by which they knew they were made safe and most glorious
throughout eternity, did not choose, by denying it, to escape
temporal punishments, but rather by confessing, professing, and
proclaiming it, by enduring all things for it with fidelity and
fortitude, and by dying for it with pious calmness, put to shame
the law by which that religion was prohibited, and caused its
revocation. But there is extant a most copious and eloquent
oration of this Platonic philosopher, in which he defends himself
against the charge of practising these arts, affirming that he is
wholly a stranger to them, and only wishing to show his innocence
by denying such things as cannot be innocently committed. But all
the miracles of the magicians, who he thinks are justly deserving
of condemnation, are performed according to the teaching and by the
power of demons. Why, then, does he think that they ought to be
honored? For he asserts that they are necessary, in order to
present our prayers to the gods, and yet their works are such as we
must shun if we wish our prayers to reach the true God. Again, I
ask, what kind of prayers of men does he suppose are presented to
the good gods by the demons? If magical prayers, they will have
none such; if lawful prayers, they will not receive them through
such beings. But if a sinner who is penitent pour out prayers,
especially if he has committed any crime of sorcery, does he
receive pardon through the intercession of those demons by whose
instigation and help he has fallen into the sin he mourns? or do
the demons themselves, in order that they may merit pardon for the
penitent, first become penitents because they have deceived them?
This no one ever said concerning the demons; for had this been the
case, they would never have dared to seek for themselves divine
honors. For how should they do so who desired by penitence to
obtain the grace of pardon; seeing that such detestable pride could
not exist along with a humility worthy of pardon?E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|