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A19406 The triall of vvitch-craft shewing the true and right methode of the discouery: with a confutation of erroneous wayes. By Iohn Cotta, Doctor in Physicke.; Triall of witch-craft Cotta, John, 1575?-1650? 1624 (1624) STC 5836.5; ESTC S116293 114,816 176

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be wonders aboue nature Let vs I say compare them together the one with the other Their exceeding neere neighbour-hood and likenesse no common vnderstanding as they are described truely and liuely can chuse but acknowledge To confound or mistake the one for the other is very easie but yet dangerous and pernicious I will not denie against due testimonies and the free confessions of the Witches themselues that such markes may bee by the Diuell vpon couenant made in way of an hellish sacrament betweene the Diuell and the Witch but where the confession of the Witch her selfe being free from iust exception doeth not appeare nor the Diuell to any spectatours doeth shew himselfe in the act of sucking which hee neuer doeth as my incredulous thoughts perswade my selfe where I say these appeare not to be manifest without fraude there it is requisite and necessary that either wee discharge the Diuell and acquit him of the slander or else discouer it by some other signe or note which may iustly be appropriated vnto the Diuell that his finger or guilt hath beene therein This is reason without which ought bee no perswasion Euery tree is to be knowen by his owne fruit saith our Sauiour Therefore the diuell is to be knowne by the workes and fruites of a Diuell proper and belonging vnto him Trie and discerne the Spirits saith the Scripture whether they be of God or no. And how can they bee discerned if there were not some notes or properties knowne vnto holy discerning mindes whereby they may be discerned It is madnesse therefore to suppose it possible to know that which is done by a Spirit wherein is no euidence impression signe shew or propertie of a Spirit For as a naturall cause cannot bee knowne but by his naturall effect so is it impossible that a spirituall cause should be knowne but by some supernaturall effect For this cause in all places of Scripture where are set forth the outward workes or actions of the Diuell they doe there likewise all appeare to be his in some extraordinary supernaturall note or maner The casting the bodies of the possessed in the Gospel into the middest of the people was a thing extraordinary impossible and vnusuall vnto the voluntary motion of men alone The bringing of fire from Heauen to deuoure so many of Iobs sheepe was in the manner beyond the nature vsuall and ordinary force or custome of fire The carriage of the heards of Swine headlong into the Sea was manifestly beyond the nature of their naturall motion yea against their nature Here may be obiected that the Diuell doeth ordinarily worke and produce things of seeming wonder and strange consequence wherein notwithstanding doeth not appeare any signe or impression of any supernaturall cause or authour as is seene in many things produced in men and issuing from his vsuall tentations of men The answere is that the Diuell doeth worke vpon man two wayes The first is immediately by the temptings and soliciting only of man vnto workes which properly are affected by man himselfe in the vsuall course and power of mans nature The second is immediately by his owne proper action as hee is a Spirit and immediately worketh in himselfe the worke of a Spirit In the first the Diuell is not properly said to worke in himselfe but rather to giue and offer occasion vnto the disposition and affections of man thereby exciting and tempting man vnto that worke which therefore onely carrieth the stampe of a worke proper vnto a man In the second the Diuell worketh immediately himselfe as he is a Spirit and in that worke therefore must necessarily likewise bee seene and appeare the stampe of a Spirit since in the course and order of all things created whatsoeuer the true and immediate cause his immediate true and proper effect is the sole true infallible stampe euidence and proofe thereof The workes therefore which are called or esteemed the Diuels in regard of his tentations and incitations of man vnto foolish wicked and oft wondered mischieuous actions are onely and truely called diuelish as proceeding from the Diuels instigation onely but are not truely or properly or immediately any workes of the Diuell and therefore it is not requisite that in such workes of the Diuell vnproperly called his there should appeare any signes proper vnto the workes of a Spirit or Diuell Since then it is infallible that there can bee no possible discouery of any cause whatsoeuer naturall or supernaturall but by such accidents effects or properties as properly belong or issue from that cause and since proper effects appearing doe onely discouer their causes more cleerely where they appeare more cleere and more obscurely where they doe appeare more obscure and nothing at all where they appeare not all Since I say this is true and neuer to be infringed those supposed Witches markes before they can iustly and truely bee iudged to bee by the Diuell effected or vsed must by some stampe or signe proper to himselfe or to his workes or to his vse or propertie therein be so determined and conuinced to be The wonder indeed of their strange shapes forme and manner is sufficient to amaze such as are not iudiciously read or are vnlearned but the Phisition who knoweth such diseases to bee in nature by that knowledge of their nature knowing likewise that they doe not exceede nature doeth iustly stand apart and diuide himselfe from the vulgar errour and opinion that they are any markes to be appropriate vnto the Diuell And hence appeareth the necessitie of conuincing the forementioned Witches markes to bee supernaturall before vpon their shape or appearance onely it can bee esteemed iust either to impute vnto the Diuell or to call any man into question Before they can bee truely iudged or determined whether supernaturall or no the necessitie of consulting with the learned Phisition is likewise demonstrated Of which wee may yet againe giue another demonstration within the same instance It hath beene sometimes by oath confirmed and deposed that these forementioned markes of Witches haue immediately after they haue beene seene sudainely vanished to bee no more seene The question may bee whether their sudaine disparence after their manifest appearance bee in nature possible vnto such like diseases or no. It is knowne vnto the Phisition that many diseases doe insensibly grow and insensibly also weare and vanish away without any knowledge or notice thereof taken by the diseased This therefore solely can bee no note of a supernaturall marke whatsoeuer passionate ignorants fondly dispute to maintaine their owne wils and preiudicate resolutions I doe grant if those materiall excrescencies doe in a moment vanish away without any precedent preparation or alteration tending thereto or doe in an instant appeare and in the same moment without any mutation or proportion of time instantly vanish then must this bee granted supernaturall Quia nihil fit in momento that is no naturall being hath desinence or being without proportined time beyond which nothing
Art in the administration of high affaires For although in probabilities are no euident certainties yet doe they so farre forth oft-times aduantage and aduance vnto the knowledge of certainety that it is almost equall vnto certainty and doth perswade and settle discreete resolution and disposition in all affaires In this consisteth the height the tope the som of Art and the perfection of all humane knowledge aboue or beyond which no man could euer soar or leuell By this light onely the former mentioned meanes failing is oft times gained much excellence of natural knowledge to man beyond and without which the eye and sight of knowledge in man is sealed vp his vnderstanding darkned and cannot know many hidden things And thus to him that rightly doth meditate and consider it is vndoubtedly cleere and certaine how the Creator and infinite Prince of all principles hath founded the beginning end the power and posse of all knowledge vpon one of the former waies of inuestigation beside which there is no naturall knowledge to be expected Philosophie as yet neuer found other waies vnto that infinite number of all Arts and Sciences so admirably flourishing thorow so many ages of the world For this cause the most excellent prime Philosopher Aristotle reiecteth whatsoeuer cānot be found by Sense or proued by reason as spurious Likewise Ptolomie hath bounded the true Art of Astronomie within fatum Physicum within a necessitie in Nature and to distinguish it from superstition wherwith curiositie vsually defileth or intangleth it doth limit it intra conuenientem naturae modum that is within proportion and measure answerable to Reason and Nature For this cause also all true Philosophers haue determined the two onely instruments of all true Arts to bee Reason and experience which Galen doth call the two legges whereupon the Art of Physike doth consist And therefore in the second chapter of his Finitiones medicae he saith Optimus is est Medicus qui omnia in Medicina recta agit ratione that is hee who doth all things in his subiect of Physike according to right rule of reason is the most excellent Physicion From hence also all true Artists haue defined Art to bee Habitus cum ratione factiuus that is a settled habilitie and promptnesse of action and operation according to reason Vpon this ground others haue built other true rules and obseruations concerning true and lawfull Arts. Therefore saith Galen ars non est ex ijs quorum neutiquam est potestas Isagog chap. 5. that is Art is not of such things as cannot be accomplished Which is worthy noting to distinguish prestigious and supposed Arts from true Art To this others likewise haue added another obseruation that is that Art is imployed about such things as are in reason profitable and not vaine So saith Scaliger exercit 37. Sect. 31. Ars non est de rebus inutilibus It is yet further obserued vpon the same ground that true Art doeth not confound or cloud it selfe in mists but reduceth vnto order light and reason things dissipate confused and out of order and reason as Cicero affirmeth Ars res diuulsas dissolutasque conglutinat ratione quadam constringit Vpon the same grounds diuers renowmed common weales haue expelled all false and forged Arts as Necromancy Aeromancy Geomancy with other sortiligous Diuinations Vpon the same reasons diuers Emperors Kings Kingdomes and Lawes haue exploded censured and condemned all such as vnder pretext of the wholesome Arts of Astronomy Mathematikes and the like haue runne into foolish curiosities impostures and deceitfull practises Iustinian the Roman Law-giuer and Emperour his lawes are extant to this purpose Likewise Tiberius his Decrees for the expulsion of counterfeit Mathematicians and Magicians And Vlpian in his booke de Mathematicis Maleficis testifieth the publication of their goods and their inhibition by the Emperours from communion with other Citizens so much as in fire or water And as Reason good Lawes Kingdomes Nations and Common-weales haue distinguished ingenuous liberall true and profitable Artes and Sciences builded vpon reason trueth and vnderstanding from base ignoble vnprofitable needlesse curious and erronious Artes so hath the holy Scripture both iustified sanctified and commended the one and condemned and nominated with rebuke and shame the other The first is euident Exod. 3. verse 1 2 3 4 5 6. where Almightie God doeth testifie concerning the knowledge and skill of workmanship in gold siluer and stone that hee gaue it by his Spirit vnto Bezaleel and Aholiab who were workmen according to knowledge and vnderstanding in that lawfull Art profitable vnto the building of Gods house The second is manifest Actes 19. verse 19. where it is in their due commendations recorded that those who before vsed and practised vaine and curious Arts when they were by the preaching of the Apostles truely conuerted in token of their vndissembled repentance they absolutely renounced and disclaimed their vaine learning and openly burnt their bookes though valued at an high rate and rich price CHAP. II. That no Knowledge can come vnto man in any Art or Science but by Sense or Reason or likely and artificiall coniecture is proued by the Science and Knowledge of Physike in stead of all other Arts and Sciences NOw for the better impression of that which hath beene before said that is that nothing is or can bee detected or is liable vnto mans knowledge which commeth not vnto him by the helpe of Reason the inward or the outward Sense Demonstration Ratiocination or iudicious and prudent Coniectation in reasonable likelihood let vs examine any one particular ingenuous liberall or lawfull Art or Science in stead of many and therein view how by the former mentioned keyes doores and entrances solely are opened the wayes vnto their contemplations study and perfect apprehension And if one Art or Science may bee sufficient herein I thinke it most fit to choose my owne because as to my selfe most prompt so vnto any other not vnprofitable All diseases that happen vnto the body of man are either outward or inward and therefore either seene by the eye and deprehended by the outward Sense or conceiued onely by Reason and the inward Vnderstanding Inward diseases and subiect onely vnto reason and vnderstanding doe sometimes appeare clearely and certainely to reason and vnderstanding sometimes they doe not appeare certaine or by certaine notes or signes but by likely markes onely which are the grounds of artificiall coniecture And as some diseases are apparent to outward sense some euident to inward reason some by artificiall coniecture onely in learned exact search and perquisition pursued vnto their discouery so also are many diseases hidden from all these wayes of inuestigation and therefore remaine as remembrances of mans manifold ignorance in this life and of the secret reseruation of Gods decree and prohibition As then in those diseases which are apparent vnto sight it is blindnesse in a Physicion to make question in those which are euident to
least Witch-craft therefore being a matter both of weight and death cannot according vnto Gods word bee iudged but by testimony of witnesses whatsoeuer is witnessed must necessarily bee subiect to sense since no man can witnesse ought whereof there is not sense From hence then it is ineuitably concluded that the workes of Witches are no other way to bee discerned or iudged but by the common way of discouery by deedes and workes apparent to sense and the testimony thereof Let men then bee perswaded and contented since God hath alotted and allowed vnto the nature and power of man no other way in this onely warranted true way to seeke the discouery to finde the footing path and steppings of Witch-craft as of all other things which by the Decree of God are reuealed vnto man and subiect vnto the knowledge of man It may bee here demanded whether Almighty God doth not extraordinarily and miraculously at some time discouer this so abominable sinne of Witch-craft aswell as by ordinary meanes leaue it vnto discouerie This doubt shall more fitly in more due place be hereafter at large discoursed It hath now beene here manifested that there is or can bee no other ordinary tryall of Witch-craft then that which is common vnto all other detections of trueth and also that all derections subiect vnto the discouerie of man as hath beene before cleared are drawne and deriued either from Sense or Reason or likely probability raised from both Before I doe proceed farther for his more facill vnderstanding I doe admonish the Reader that hee distinguish what is meant by the supernaturall workes namely whatsoeuer is effected in vpon or by any corporall substances or sublunarie bodies which is aboue the nature and power of those bodies or sublun●rie substances They are not supernaturall in regard of those spirituall substances which are the proper agents and vnto whom such workes are no more then naturall but in regard of those bodily substances vpon which in which or by which those spirituall substances doe worke as meerely their patients and being in themselues or owne nature depriued of any such possibilitie CHAP. IIII. Of the workes of Witches and Diuels BEfore wee proceed further to treate concerning matter of Witch-craft according to the former waies of discouery and inuestigation it will be needfull to distinguish who is the true Author cause and immediate workman of the supernaturall workes which by Sorcery and Witch-craft are compassed or brought to passe All created substances indowed with powers and vertue from God their Creator are either bodily or corporall substances or spirituall or mixt and betweene both Bodily and corporall substances are the heauens the celestiall bodies of the Starres of the Sunne of the Moone the bodies of the elements and all elementarie substances from them deriued and composed Spirituall substances are either Angels or Diuels or soules of men after death separated from their bodies Mixed substances partly Spirituall partly bodily are mankinde compounded of a naturall body and vnderstanding soule Hence it commeth to passe that man by his vnderstanding Spirit doth together with Angels Spirits and Diuels participate and vnderstand many things as the Scripture reuealed the History and Creation of the whole world many truths of God the grounds of Reason the principles of Nature many generall rules and obseruations and infinite particular obiects of many things past present and to come But for that this vnderstanding Soule is depressed and imprisoned in this life by the body by the passions diseases and manifold incumbrances thereof and cannot extend or inlarge it selfe further vnto any portion of knowledge then thorow the narrow windowes closures parts and organs of the body therefore must necessarily the knowledge of man be much inferiour vnto that measure of knowledge which Spirits being of a more subtill essence and free from the burden and incumbrance of an earthly tabernacle or prison doe in a more large extent inioy As is said of the difference of knowledge in Spirits beyond the power and nature of man so may be said from the same reason of the difference of the workes of spirits farre inlarging and extending their vertue and power beyond the power and force of men The workes of men are confined within the power and nature of these sublunarie bodies vnto which they are annexed and tyed The workes of Spirits are limited to no corporall substance or body but spaciously compasse the whole and vniuersall body of the sublunary or inferiour world as the Diuell doth witnesse of himselfe Iob 1. verse 7. and are not tied vnto any particular place but rule generally therin and in all places by the permission of God as is euident Eph. 2. ver 2. where the Diuell is called the Prince that ruleth in the ayre euen the Spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience and likewise Ephes 6. verse 12. where he is called the Prince of darknesse of this world From these vndoubted grounds it is necessarily inferred that both all knowledge exceeding the knowledge of man must needs issue from the knowledge of Spirits and also that all workes exceeding and transcendent aboue the power and nature of corporall substances must necessarily be the force of Spirits It may now be demaunded how the workes of good Spirits shall be knowne and distinguished from the workes of euill Spirits and diuels since both their workes proceede from the same nature substance and spirituall essence common vnto them both This shall appeare by the consideration of the orders and sorts of good Spirits expressed in holy Scripture and their properties besides which all other are necessarily euill and therefore diuels like vnto whom likewise by iust consequent must be their workes the one reciprocally discouering the other All good Spirits are either Angels and Messengers of God specially sent with his holy embassage to speciall holy men for speciall holy ends as was the Seraphin sent vnto Isaiah the 6. Chapter verse 6. and as were the Angels vnto the Shepheards when our Sauiour was borne or as were the Angels which were sent vnto the Patriarches of olde or els tutelar Angels ordinarily commanded to guide protect and defend the Elect and chosen children of God as is manifest both by the testimony of our Sauiour Math. 18. verse 10. See that you despise not saith our blessed Sauiour one of these little ones For I say vnto you that in heauen their Angels alway behold the face of my Father which is in heauen And by that Text also Heb. 1. vers 14. Are they not all ministring Spirits saith the Apostle speaking of Angels sent forth to minister for their sakes who shall be heires of saluation Beside these orders of good and holy Spirits neither hath the holy Scripture neither hath the light of reason or nature or obseruation knowne or discouered any other All the workes likewise and employments of these good Spirits are all and euer obserued to be like themselues holy good freely seruing and ministring
vnto the expresse will knowne and vndoubted pleasure of Almighty God as is certainly confirmed Psal 103. verse 20. Praise ye the Lord saith the Psalmist ye his Angels that excell in power that doe his commandements in obeying the voyce of his word All workes therefore or effects issuing from Spirits that cannot bee proued and manifested to be first commanded by God secondly tending folely to the execution of his will and thirdly are not contained in one of the foure first mentioned offices and administrations of Spirits they are all certainely and assuredly to be suspected as workes of diuels and euill spirits whom God doth permit as saith S. Augustine in his 3. Booke de Trinitate to bring to passe such workes of theirs partly to deceiue those wicked which God in iudgement hath giuen ouer to be deceiued of diuels partly to quicken and stirre vp the godly and holy man and to trie and proue him thereby as hee did his faithfull seruant Iob. Now for a more distinct cleerenesse and light vnto the proofe of these suspected workes of diuels it is very profitable necessary and pertinent that we consider their kinds which are two The first kinde is of such supernaturall workes as are done by the diuell solely and simply to his owne ends or vse without any reference or respect to any contract or couenant with man The second kinde is of such transcendent workes as are done with a respect or reference vnto some contract or couenant with man In the first the diuell is solely an Agent for himselfe without the consent or knowledge of man In the second the supernaturall and transcendent workes are truly essentially and immediately from the diuels also because out of the reach or power of any command of man simply yet therein man hath a property and interest by couenant and contract and deriuation thereof from the diuell which is truely and solely Sorcerie and Witch-craft for since supernaturall workes are onely proper to a Spirit and aboue the nature and power of man they cannot truely and properly bee esteemed his and therefore it is not the supernaturall work it selfe but mans contract and combination therein with the diuell his consent and allowance thereof that doth make it his and him a Witch a Sorcerer which is a contracter with the diuell Now let vs proceed to consider how these supernaturall workes in the former seuerall kindes are or may be detected some by Reason some by Sense CHAP. V. The workes of the Diuell by himselfe solely wrought without the association of man IT is not destitute of easie proofe that there are many supernaturall workes of the diuell manifest to sense wherein man doth not participate in knowledge contract or consent with him Did not the Diuell in the body of a Serpent miraculously reason dispute speake and conferre with Eua Gen. 3 Was not his speech and voice vndoubtedly manifestly perceptibly and truly heard and sounding in her eares There then was no man as yet borne that could combine with the diuell in this supernaturall worke or that could then be found a Witch Likewise was not the diuels carriage of the body of our Sauiour and setting it vpon a pinacle of the Temple manifest to the eye Was not the fire which the diuell brought downe from heauen in so miraculous manner and in so extraordinary power to deuoure so many thousands of Jobs sheepe truly visible The Messenger escaping to bring the tydings doth witnesse it Was not the power of the diuell seene at such time as in the Gospell he carryed whole herds of swine headlong into the Sea Was not the Diuell seene to rend and teare the bodies of men by him possessed in an extraordinarie and supernaturall manner and sort Marke the first Luke 4. Math. 17. Marke the ninth Was not the very voice of a Spirit heard and distinguished when the diuell in so fearefull and maruellous manner cryed out in the possessed Math. 8. Mark 5. Luke 8 Did not the people behold the miraculous force of the diuell casting the possessed into the middest of them Luke 4. verse 33 34 35 Did not the people heare and behold a foule Spirit crying aloud and in an admirable power and manner comming out of the possessed Marke 1.24 25 26 27 All these were workes supernaturall of the diuell and manifest to outward sense yet no mention no suspicion no reason of mention or suspicion of a Witch or Sorcerer wherein therefore the diuel alone was sole Agent But it may be obiected that these examples out of the holy Scriptures are recorded as things specially seene or noted in some speciall ages and times which after-times and other ages doe not or cannot affoord The contrary is manifest by the faithfull histories and true reports of Ethnicke writers who liuing in distant ages doe not differ in the true consent and harmony of the same report concerning the same things as they haue succeeded in their seuerall ages It is not incredible but certain vnto any common Reader what diuers authors of approued faith and credit in seuerall ages haue written how the diuell not onely out of the bodies and seuerall parts a part of the bodies of men haue vttered words and spoken with the voice of men euen as in the Gospell he did out of the possessed but also out of trees caues of earth images statues The first is euident by the generall report from one succeeding age vnto another concerning the Pythons Pythonici 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ventriloqui and the like The second was neuer hid many hundreth of yeares for many ages long before the birth of our blessed Sauiour as is apparent by the famous Oracle of Delphos the Oake of Dedona the Statue of Memnon Petrus Gregorius Tholosanus in his Syntagma iuris reciteth this history concerning certaine statues at Alexandria that they did fall vnto the ground sudainly and with an audible voice declared the death of Mauricius the Emperour euen at the same moment and point of time when he was then slaine at Rome As the Diuell doth shew himselfe by voices and sounds in trees caues statues and the like so doth he in diuers other outward shapes and formes of other creatures Thus he appeared vnto Eua and spake vnto her in the shape of a Serpent aforesaid Of his appearance in diuers other formes likewise are many Testimonies Neither doe Philosophers differ or doubt herein Aristotle in his Metaphysickes hath these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is substances are called simple bodies as water earth fire and the like and things compounded thereof as liuing creatures and spirits which is so farre forth to be vnderstood of spirits as they were in assumed shapes visible Orpheus doth number sixe kinds of these visible diuels or spirits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is Spirits inhabiting the heauenly regions Spirits ruling in the ayre in the water in the fire in the earth and vnder the earth The Spirits
maleficio hominis libero voluntas quam Diabolus non potest cogere sed persuadere tantum aut terrere That is in Witch-craft necessarily the will or consent of man must concurre with the Diuels worke for the Diuell cannot force or compell the will of man but perswadeth it onely or affrighteth it And againe hee faith that whosoeuer doeth pretend to doe those things which are aboue the power and reach of man by any naturall causes which causes are allowed no such effects either in nature or in Gods word or by any ordinance of of his Church that man doeth closely or tacitly inuocate the Diuell Quoties inquit quis contendit illud fac●re per causas naturales quae nec virtute sua naturali neque ex diuina aut Ecclesiastica possunt illud facere Tacitè in vocatur Daemon Tuccia also a vestall Virgin is reported by mumbling of a certaine prayer to keepe water within a siue or a riddle as witnesseth not onely Pliny but euen Tertullian Camerarius maketh mention of a man who armed onely with certaine charmes would vndertake to receiue vpon his body without harme bullets or shot out of the fiery Cannon He maketh also mention of another who would vndertake to lay his hand vpon the mouth of the like instrument euen when the fire was alreadie giuen and thereby cause the flame appearing in the mouth thereof together with the shot there to stay The like is reported by Ianus Iacobus Boissardus concerning a Germane Count in his booke de Diuinatione It is related vpon good record that Decius Actius the Augur was able to report vnto Tar●inius the Romane King the very particular which he intended prepared in his most secret designes It is written of the Enthusiastes or Prophetesses of Diana in Castab●la a towne of Cilicia that they would walke vsually voluntarily with naked bare feet vpon hot burning coales without any hurt or alteration by the fire It is recorded concerning Pythagoras that hee would by certaine secret words compell a feeding Oxe Bullocke or the like immediately to stand still and forbeare his meat Others report of him that he would command wild beasts and Birds Beares and Eagles to come vnto him to grow tame to follow him It is credibly reported of the same Pythagoras that hee was at once by seuerall parties seene in the very same point of time both in the Citie of Tharium and the towne of Metapontum Apollonius likewise was translated as it were in the twinkling of an eye or in the space of a word speaking from Smyrna vnto Ephesus as some Histories report That the power by which these things were done was more then humane no Reason can doubt That also the voluntary accession of those mens disposing or apting themselues vnto these workes doeth prooue their consent and by consent in consequence of reason societie with a Spirit who can doubt And for this cause Binsfieldius termeth it a tacit contract as is aforesaid But here by the way is iust occasion offered vnto a question namely whether a Spirit or Diuell can cause or bring to passe that the same true body at once may bee really in two distant places as it seemeth by this history of Pythagoras The answere hereto must needes in reason bee negatiue because it is impossible in nature and in the ordinary vnchangeable course of all things by God created that one indiuiduall and continued substance or entire thing should be wholly diuided from it selfe and yet be it selfe or possibly be twice or bee in two places and yet bee but one and the selfe same thing We must therefore rather here thinke that the diuell is a Iuggler presenting the liuely shape and pourt●aiture of Pythagoras in one place and thereto haply by his supernaturall power adding a counterfait liuelihood of speech and gesture while the true substance is certainely and truly seen in another place That these like practises are vsuall with the diuell is apparent in many other kinds beside Did hee not vndertake Math. 4. verse 8. vnto wisdome it selfe but blessed Sauiour to shew vnto him all the Kingdomes of the earth a thing so farre out of his reach and compasse but only by a lying and iugling vision If this he doeth vnto the Sonne of God how shall the silly sonnes of sinfull men escape It is written by some Authors that the diuell hath perswaded some foolish Sorcerers and Witches that hee hath changed their bodies and substances into Carts Asses Birds and other creatures which really and indeed without illusion if it be not presumption to reason with the Diuell is impossible vnto him to doe For there can bee no reall or true matamorphosing of one substance or nature into another but either by creation or generation The one is the sole immediate hand of God communicable to no creature because there cannot be two Creators the other is natural the finger-worke and power of God in nature and proper to the nature of liuing animate creatures not to Angels or Spirits Againe creation is the worke of an infinite power and therefore of God alone because there can be but one Infinite whose nature containing all things and contained of nothing can admit no equall no second no other The Diuell then cannot create That likewise he cannot cause these transmutations by generation is as plaine and euident because a true and reall generation hath many precedent alterations and by little and little in space of time groweth vnto the perfection of that kinde vnto which it doth tend or is begotten but these seeming transmutations by the Diuell of the substances of Men into Cactes and the like are swift and sodaine in a moment and without preparation and therefore are no true but seeming and iuggling transmutations Here ●ay be againe obiected that the Diuell is able to worke aboue the power of Nature and therefore beside and aboue the naturall course of generation hee is able to make these reall transmutations It is answered though the diuell indeed as a Spirit may doe and doth many things aboue and beyond the course of some particular natures yet doth hee not nor is able to rule or command ouer generall Nature or infringe or alter her inuiolable decrees in the perpetuall and neuer-interrupted order of all generations neither is he generally Master of vniuersall Nature but Nature Master and Commaunder of him For Nature is nothing els but the ordinary power of God in all things created among which the Diuell being a creature is contained and therefore subiect to that vniuersall power For this cause although aboue the power of our particular nature the Diuell as a Spirit doth many things which in respect of our nature are supernaturall yet in respect of the power of Nature in vniuersall they are but naturall vnto himselfe and other Spirits who also are a kinde of creature contained within the generall nature of things created Opposite therefore contraries against or aboue the
generall power of Nature he can doe nothing Therefore to conclud this point he cannot be able to commaund or compasse any generation aboue the power of Nature whose power is more vniuersall and greater then his We will then hence conclude that aboue and beyond the vniuersall Nature and course of all generation hee cannot make a true transmutation of the substance of any one creature into another It was before prooued that it is impossible for him to doe it by creation It is here manifest that he cannot doe it by any course of true generation There can be no real transmutation of one substance into another without either a creation or generation Wee will therefore conclude with the saying of Saint Augustine de Ciuitate Dei lib. 18. cap. 18. Nec sane Daemones naturas creant sed specie tenus quae à De● cr●ata sunt commutant vt videantur esse quae non sunt that is diuels cannot create any nature or substance but in iuggling shew or seeming onely whereby with false shaddowes and outward induced shapes couering those things which are created of God by these commutations they cause them to seeme that which they are not indeed Concerning other manifest iugglings and illusions of the Diuell diuers authors haue giuen diuers examples but that which aboue all the rest doth most palpably detect him herein is a history related by Ioannes Baptista Porta in his second booke De Magia naturali He there witnesseth that vpon the Diuels suggestion a Witch beleeued firmely and perswaded her selfe that all the night she had rid in the ayre ouer diuers great Mountaines and met inconuenticles of other Sorceresses when the same night the mentioned Authour himselfe with others had watched and seene her all that imagined time of her transuection in the ayre to be within her chamber profoundly sleeping yea had smitten her made her flesh blue with strokes and could not a wake her nor perswade her afterward when shee was a waked that they had so vsed her or at all had either seene or beheld her Thus preualent was the iuggling power of the Diuell S. Austine de Ciuitate Dei lib. 18. doth deliuer an History concerning the father of one Praestantius who lying in a deep traunce so profoundly that no meanes could awake him did dreame as when he awaked he did report that hee was transformed into an Asse and carried bagges or burdens of come into a campe of Souldiers At the same time in the same manner such a like Asse as hee in dreame imagined himselfe did bring such burdens into the same campe From these examples may bee iustly drawne a plaine demonstration of the Diuels palpable iuggling and illusion which also may serue for confirmation together with the reasons before annexed vnto my former answer concerning the Diuels seeming or deceitfull presentation of the reall body of Pythagoras in two distant places at once in the same point of time And from all these conioined and conferred may be truely inferred and collected that the Diuell as hee doth many supernaturall workes really so he doth many other by illusion and beguiling the imagination These his iugglings notwithstanding are things also supernaturall and tricks onely possible to Spirits and impossible to man For it is impossible to man to frame so liuely a seeming presence of man in one place that it shall not bee discerned otherwise then the very same true presence real substance which is really in another place as also to fasten such dreames as were before mentioned vpon men and according to those dreames to cause the things dreamed by the witnesse and testimony of other beholders to bee brought to passe in so liuely likenesse and similitude as cannot bee discerned and discouered otherwise then the very same that they were in dreame likewise beleeued From hence it doth also follow very necessarily that what man soeuer shall vndertake these supernaturall iuglings which are onely possible in the power of Spirits of the Diuell alone is thereby as truely conuinced to bee a Witch or Sorcerer as he that vndertaketh any of the former reall supernaturall workes or any other of the like kinde because they are both and all alike proper onely to the diuell and wherein man can haue no property or power but by and through him Let vs now then againe returne vnto the Diuels reall supernaturall performances and workes vnto Sorcerers from whence by the way of answer vnto the former doubt concerning Pythagoras his supposed realty of being at once in two places we haue hitherto onely digressed It is written as a thing vsuall vnto many famous Magicians Sorcerers and Witches vnto the view and sight of some admitted spectators to raise resemblances of the dead which seemeth a thing vndoubted by the Witch of Endor raising Samuel the Prophet vnto Saul the King before mentioned In this kinde those famous and renowned Witches Medea and Circe in old and ancient times are reported to excell Hence among the Heathen had Necromancie the reason of the name and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is diuination by calling vp or raising the dead Later times haue not been behinde former times in the record of the like but to adde reason to inforce the truth of report herein I will answer an obiection which may bee made Whether in these apparitions there be onely illusion and imagination or some thing truely and really visible vnto the outward sense As touching the reall raising of the dead it is impossible vnto the limited power of the Diuell either in the substance of body or soule to reduce or bring the dead back into this world or life or sense againe because in death by the vnchangeable and vnalterable decree of God in his holy Writ the body returneth into dust from whence it came and the Soule to God who gaue it Notwithstanding since the outward shape and figure and proportion of any substance and not the substance it selfe or creature is the true and naturall obiect of the eye according to the Philosopher who truely saith Res non videntur sed rerum species that is the substances or things themselues are not offered nor come vnto the sight but only their shape and outward figure as also for that common sense and experience doe teach vs that it is a thing absurd and impossible that all those bodies and substances which in infinite number wee dayly see and behold really and materially in their corporall substances and dimensions should be contained in the small body of the eye for these causes I say it is possible according to reason that the Diuell in these supposed apparitions of the bodies and substances of dead men may present true reall and naturall obiects certaine and assured vnto the eye and sight if hee can onely present thereto the outward liuely pourtraitures and shapes of the substances or bodies though the bodies themselues be away That the Diuell can doe this is no doubt For if
wanteth so much true iudgement as to distinguish when he doth see a certaine true obiect offered vnto his sight from without and when he is incountred onely with a resemblance thereof from within his fancie and imagination is diseased in body or minde or both and therefore is no competent Iudge or witnesse in these or any other weighty affaires For that is in health of body and in the outward organes and instruments of sense and sound in his reason iudgement and vnderstanding though sometime the fogge and mist of deceiued sense or fancy ouershadow the brightnesse of true and vndeceiued reason for a short time in him yet it cannot so perpetually eclipse it but it wil recouer his light and true splendor againe and truth will shine more excellently in the end out of that darknesse This is very liuely seene in the example of S. Peter Acts 12. verse 10.12 who at first did thinke he had onely seene the Angell which God sent vnto him to deliuer him out of bonds in a dreame or vision but when afterward he was come to himselfe and his true sense and reason hee then perfectly discerned and knew that he was rea●y deliuered out of prison by an Angel of God If men could not certainly discerne betweene that which they doe really see and that they falsely imagine in visions dreames and fancie then were the life of man most miserable there could be no certainty of truth no excelling in knowledge or vnderstanding All men should be a like vnable to distinguish whether we liue in dreames onely or in wakeful deed But the certaine knowledge which God hath giuen vnto mankinde in so infinite kindes and measures doth prooue the eminence of reason and vnderstanding aboue the intanglements and depression of sense and fancie There remaineth as yet another doubt which is how those things which before were mentioned to be spirituall and supernaturall can be subiect in reason vnto outward sense or be knowne thereby howsoeuer by the former examples it doth so seeme It is true that a Spirit and a Spirituall worke simply in it selfe in the owne nature and substance cannot be seene by any bodily eyes or be deprehended by any outward sense Notwithstanding as they doe mixe themselues with bodily * substances which are subiect to sense by accident Spirits and spirituall operations are certainly tryed and discouered euen vnto sense For how is it possible that a Spirit should mixe it selfe in corporall things but the discrepant nature thereof and mighty difference must produce and beget some great apparent alteration which alteration being beyond the wonted nature of the one doth prooue another superiour nature in the other For illustration hereof let vs borrow an instance from one of the forenamed manifest Sorceries Water is turned into blood by a Spirituall power The eye doth manifestly see the water and as apparently after see the blood and is a true and vndeceiued witnesse of both Reason and common sense doe know the transmutation to proceede from an inuisible power which appearing in visible bodies is by them apart seene and doth detect an inuisible Author because an immediate effect manifested to sense doth necessarily in nature prooue the immediate cause though hidden and vnknowne to sense That inuisible and spirituall things may by those things which are visible and bodily be conceiued and discerned the holy Scripture doth witnesse in these words of Saint Paul Rom. 1.20 The inuisible things of God saith he are seene by the visible things or by his workes in the creation of the world which are visible It may be here demanded since it is the propertie of the Diuell in his seeming miraculous contriuements and actions though a limited and finite obiect creature of God yet to indeauour to counterfeit and imitate the most high and mightiest workes of wonder of the infinite Creator thereby to magnifie deifie and equall himselfe vnto God in vnbeleeuing and seduced hearts Since I say this is his property how shall the fraile vnderstanding and capacitie of man distinguish the maruailes of the diuell so liuely resembled thereto from the true miracles and truly miraculous workes of God that thereby with more facility and lesse confusion industrious mindes may discouer the proper workes and acts of the Diuell and his associates Enchaunters Witches and Sorcerers First the true miracles of God being transcendent aboue all created power and the immediate effects only of a creating vertue Almighty God for his sole good will and pleasure doth vsually and euer dispense by the hands and through the administration of holy men Prophets and Apostles manifestly called of God Secondly the end and scope of Gods miracles directly and mainely ayme and are bent at the glory of God and the benefit of his people not vnto any priuate end any particular vaine end tending to satisfaction of priuate lusts and curiositie For this cause the holy Apostles vsed the gift of miracles not vnto any other ends then vnto the confirmation of that holy Gospel which they preached and published from God neither did they therein ascribe ought vnto their own praise or glory but solely vnto the praise and glory of God and the good of his Church That this was their true end and ought to be the scope and end of all that receiue the power of miracles from God Saint Paul doth witnesse and teach 1. Cor. chap. 12. verse 4 5 6 7. Now there are saith he diuersities of gifts but the same Spirit and there are diuersities of administrations but the same Lord and there are diuersities of operations but God is the same which worketh all in all But the manifestation of the Spirit is giuen to euery man to profit withall It is from hence manifest that if any miracles proceede from God as Author they are dispensed by men sanctified by God and who can and are able to prooue and iustifie their warrant from God as also that these men of God doe solely professe and bend them vnto the glory of God and the weale of his Church This then is the square and infallible rule by which all miracles doe stand or fall and are approoued either to be of God or conuinced to be of Diuels Let vs then conclude this point with that excellent and diuine saying of Theophilact vpon the 9. chap. of S. Luke Praedicatio miraculis miracula praedicatione sanciuntur Multi enim saepe miracula ediderunt per Daemones sed ecrum doctrina non erat sana quamobrem earum miracula non extiterunt a Deo That is the word of God doth establish and confirme the truth of miracles and miracles ratifie and confirme the authoritie and truth of the word For many haue done miracles by the power of the Diuell but their doctrine was corrupt and not found and therefore their miracles were not of God Wheresoeuer therefore miracles or supernaturall workes shall dare to shew their heads not contained within those limits or compasse that is neither prooued
seruants good and holy men of some things to come for their owne priuate and retired reformation information or better preparation not for prophane or trifling ends or vses but that any prophecies or reuelations can be of God that are obscurely whispred or cast abroad for such vses by any vnwarranted or prophane Authors without any manifest warrant Commission or authoritie from God in the vpright iudgement of all men that truely worship and feare the true God the God of hostes is much irreligion and prophane credulitie to auouch or affirme Nay it is altogether contrary and contradictory and therefore impossible to God his miraculous reuelations visions and prophecies ordinarily or commonly to serue or waite vpon the ordinary ends or vses of priuate men since all true miracles and miraculous reuelations are euer in their proper nature and true end solely attendant vpon God his immediate command and Word vnto his extraordinary workes To make it therefore ordinary or a thing common or of customary practice to foretell or giue prediction of things to come must necessarily proceede from the Diuell since the gift of true prophesie and the Spirit of true reuelation is not subiected to the common or vsuall intentions of men neither can profit or commodity or sale bee made thereof by men at their pleasure as is not vnwonted with all the disciples of Simon Magus Sorcerers and Witches in their markets and fayres made of their prophecies and reuelations If then these whispered reuelations cannot bee of God then are they necessarily of the Diuell If they proceed from the Diuell then by an ineuitable conclusion those men are his instruments or organs by whom or through whom they originally flowe or are deriued vnto men and published It may be yet further obiected that in men possessed by the Diuell as were those●men in the Gospel whose bodies the Diuell did really rend and teare in whom hee did roare and crie out whom hee cast into the middest of the people It may be I say obiected that in those possessed and the like there may be reuealed many things hidden from men without the imputation or iust opinion of Witch-craft or Sorcerie in them That this may bee is manifest in the Gospel where the Diuell in the possessed vttered wordes of knowledge then hidden from men but by extraordinary reuelation when hee acknowledged our Sauiour to bee Iesus the Sonne of the liuing God This could not in any possibilitie of mans reason bee knowne vnto the possessed because it was then but in part reuealed vnto the Disciples themselues who were as yet but learners themselues and Scholers of that Diuinitie neither had the naturall man or the world as yet so much as tasted or sauoured any notice thereof The like may bee obiected concerning those that are obsessed I call them obsessed in whose bodies outwardly appearing no extraordinarie signes or tokens of the Diuels corporall presidence or residence in them as was in the possessed manifest yet are their mindes vnderstanding wils and reason palpably obserued to bee besieged captiued and inchanted by an extraordinary and more then naturall or rather an infernall inuasion of the Diuels illusions for the magnifying and aduancing whereof the Diuell doth oft-times mixe and temper them with some rare and wonderfull reuelations by or through the obsessed deliuered From these obiections both concerning the possessed and also the obsessed doeth issue a necessary sequell that prophecies and reuelations are not alwayes inseparable testimonies of a Witch It is truely hereto answered that solely and simply reuelations are not sufficient euidences or conuictions of a Witch or Sorcerer but with difference and distinction Supernaturall reuelations vnrequiredly transfused and transferred by the Diuell doe not prooue the persons in whom they are found to bee their owne free or desirous Agents in consent therein but rather properly and truely the Diuels Patients and therefore it cannot be their guilt but his intrusion vsurpation and insidiation but supernaturall reuelations in which any man shall knowingly and delibrately consult with or inquire at a knowne Spirit and inioying the free libertie of his will not depraued or corrupted by illusions or diseases shall with consent or allowance thereof entertaine commerce conference or assistance of Spirits vnto that purpose such reuelations I say wheresoeuer truely and duely detected doe demonstratiuely and infallibly point on a Witch or Sorcerer by what way soeuer hee doe practise with the Diuell whether by coniuration spels or other Magicke rites or by vulgar trading with him by familiar speech and expresse contract as is most vsuall with vulgar and vnlearned Witches It is not the different manner of contracting or couenanting with the Diuell that maketh a new or a different species of a Witch for by what name soeuer in what manner soeuer any man doeth contract with the Diuell hee is a Witch or Sorcerer saith Binsfeldius and inuocateth the Diuell Although therefore the possessed or obsessed are iustly acquite in their reuelations and prophecies because transmitted or sent vnrequired and vnknowingly vnto them yet cannot the Witch or Sorcerer bee any thing at all aduantaged or cleared in his reuelations which are euer detected to bee both by him affected as is prooued by his mercinarie sale thereof and also are fore-thought and premeditate as is euident by his promised and couenanted vndertaking thereof according to conditions or agreement That we may make this point yet more cleere let vs yet farther examine and consider what Witch-craft is These are the expresse wordes of Binsfeldius a Papist Diuine in his tract de Confessionibus Sagarum Veneficorum Vt fiat maleficium haec tria concurrant necesse est inquit Deus permittens secundo Diaboli potestas tertio hominis malefici voluntas libere consentiens That is vnto Witch-craft three things necessarily concurre first God permitting secondly the Diuell working thirdly man thereto consenting or yeelding his free-will Vnto the very same purpose saith a learned Protestant Diuine our countriman Perkins in his description of Witch-craft including the worke or assistance of the Diuell the permission of God and a wicked art freely practised by man and chap. 5. of his discourse of Witch-craft hee pronounceth also him a Witch whosoeuer wittingly or willingly consenteth to vse the aide or assistance of the Diuell in the working of wonders aboue the ordinary course of nature I name these two Diuines onely because in this particular they seeme to mee to haue best satisfied and by the common consent both of Papist and Protestant Diuines the trueth doeth more vncontrouersedly appeare Catholike and firme most other learned men that I haue seene on both parts hauing generally or for the most part comparatiuely beene defectiue Scaliger in his booke de Sabtilitate consenteth with them both exercit 347. where speaking of the impossibilitie of one man hurting another meerely by bare wordes hee hath these wordes There is a greater power then wordes saith hee namely the Diuell doeth the
mans iust endeuour and duty of their discouery yet doth he not totally or altogether herein subiect or captiuate or abridge mans power or possibility of preualence euen against all the power and force of Diuels as oft-times our dullest senses cannot choose but witnesse Could the Diuell or their owne craft whatsoeuer deliuer the Sorcerers from destruction out of the hands of Saul who iustly destroyed them all out of the land of Israel 1. Sam. 18. verse 9. or out of the hands of Iosias who according to lawe tooke away or abolished all that had familiar Spirits and Southsayers 2. Kings chap. 23. verse 24 The extirpation of these Southsayers by those Princes was commended of God and by his Lawe commanded Leuit. 20.27 The same Lawe of God commaundeth that no man be iudged or put to death but by the mouth of two witnesses from whence it is necessarily collected that the workes of Sorcery are not alwayes hidden but oft-times so open that they may be manifestly noted otherwise how could they be testified which vnto their condemnation the Lawe doth euer presuppose and necessarily commaund Neither is this Lawe of God any thing discrepant from the commom equity of all lawes or from reason it selfe first for that many workes of Sorcery doe immediately in their first view manifest themselues to the sense as is euident by the miraculous workes of the Enchaunters of Egypt practised in the sight of Pharaoh King of Egypt Secondly for that many workes are apparent manifestly to Reason in which though the sense cannot immediately discerne or take notice of their quality and authour yet by necessary inference and euidence of reason they are certainly and demonstratiuely prooued to issue from the power and force of Spirits and Diuels as hath beene formerly declared concerning both workes and also diuinations prophecies and reuelations hidden from all curiosity and possibility of man Thirdly for that circumstances and presumptions doe with good and likely reason call into question and iustly charge with suspicion as hath beene instanced concerning the performers and practisers of ceremonious rites superstitious gestures actions and manners vsuall vnto Witches and Sorcerers Since then as is before prooued Almighty God doth inioyne a necessity of testimonies vnto all condemnations and iudgements of death whatsoeuer and testimony doth alwaies necessarily include a manifestation of whatsoeuer is testified either to sense or reason or both it followeth as a necessary conclusion vnto all that hath bin said that from things either manifest to sense or euident to reason issueth wholly and solely not onely the reasonable and likely way of detection of Witches but the very true way by God himselfe in all true reason intended and commanded And from this way it is both by multitudes of examples by experience and reason manifest that neither Witches nor the Diuell himselfe is altogether able to hide or defend their guilt Diligence therefore herein duely and carefully exercising it selfe certainely shall not nor can prooue the Lawe of God vaine nor the owne endeuour frustrate or voide although haply difficulties and impediments may somtimes interrupt as in all other cases and affaires is vsuall Thus hath beene made manifest how Witch-craft is discouerable by sense and euident by reason likewise that it is no more inscrutable or hidden from detection in the inquisition thereof by signes of presumption probable and likely coniecture or suspicion then all other intricate or hidden subiects or obiects of the vnderstanding whatsoeuer For although presumptions are alone no sufficient proofe yet doe they yeeld matter and occasion of diligent and iudicious inquisition which is the reasonable way and due method of vpright proceeding and the common hopefull and warranted path vnto all detections in all other cases of doubt and difficulty whatsoeuer wherein I see no cause or reason why iudicious wary and wise practise and proofe weighing and pressing circumstances into the bone and marrow should not equally in case of Witch-craft as in all other cases of iudgement and inquisitions though not euer because that exceedes the nature of presumption equally I say and as oft should not confound the guilty and chase and winde out as faire an issue Certainely if men would more industriously exercise their sharper wits exquisite sense and awaked iudgements according vnto the former reasonable religious and iudicious wayes exempt from the burthen and incumbrance of blinde superstitions traditionary and imaginary inuentions and customes no doubt but experience would yeeld and bring forth in short time a much more rich increase of satisfaction and more happy detection in iudiciall proceedings It is true that in the case of Witch-craft many things are very difficult hidden and infolded in mists and clouds ouershadowing our reason and best vnderstanding Notwithstanding why should men be more impatient or deiected that in matters of Witch-craft many things are oft hidden from our knowledge and discouery when the same darkenesse obscurity difficulty and doubtfulnesse is a thing ordinary in many other subiects beside as necessary vnto vs and concerning which it may be no lesse truely said that in this life of mortality much more is that which is vnknowne then that which is knowne and reuealed vnto vs. Hence is that ancient saying of the Philosopher Hoc tantum scio quòd nihil scio that is so few are those things which are demonstratiuely truely and certainely knowne that they are nothing in comparison of the infinite number and multitude of such things as are either onely probable or obscure or inscrutable For to deny that God hath giuen vnto man a great measure of knowledge in many things were not onely grosse darknesse and blindnesse but great ingratitude yea impiety Neuerthelesse it were also as great fatuity not to see or acknowledge that God hath mixed this knowledge with much intricate difficulty and ambiguity which notwithstanding he doth in his wisedome more or lesse reueale distribute and dispense in seuerall measures vnto seuerall men according to their seuerall cares studies indefatigable paines and more industrious indeauour in seeking and inquiring it in defect whereof more commonly then either in Gods decreed restraint or natures abnuence mens desires and labours are so often annihilate CHAP. XIII The confutation of diuers erroneous wayes vnto the discouery of Witches vulgarly receiued and approoued AS true religion doth truely teach the true worship of God in that true manner which he requireth and commandeth so superstition in an vnapt measure or manner doth offer vp and sacrifice her vaine foolish zeale or feare Vnto her therefore her sacrifice thus doth Almighty God reply Who required this at your hands I hate and abhorre your Sabboths and your new Moones Isa 12.13 The heathen Oratour could say Religio continetur cultu pio Deorum True religion consisteth in the holy and true worship of God Vnto the aduancing of the worship of the true God the extirpation of Witches and Witch-craft because it is the most abominable kinde of Idolatry
immediately from God himselfe nor mediately by him reuealed in his writ word of truth they are iustly to be suspected to issue from the enemies of God the Diuell and euill Spirits and therefore their Authors ought to be accomptant therein vnto Iustice and all religious Ministers and seruants of God and Iustice in the most strict and seuere extent of Law And thus much concerning the manifestation of the supernaturall workes of Witches and Sorcerers vnto or through the outward Sense CHAP. VII The workes of the Diuell or Witches manifest to Reason or consequence of Reason and how detected ALl doubts being cleared it hath vndoubtedly appeared how supernaturall and spirituall workes are apparent to sense It now followeth to declare how likewise they are euident to Reason or necessary to consequence of Reason Those things are said to be proper obiects of Reason and vnderstanding which being remote from the immediate view or notice of the outward senses are grounded vpon vniuersall and intellectuall knowne positions propositions and certaine vndoubted generall notions by necessary collections or raciocinations That we may build the foundation of this our Reason or Raciocination vpon the infallible truth of Gods holy Word which shall neuer be shaken let vs for the detection of Witches and Sorcerers by reason and consequence of reason syllogise directly and immediately from God himselfe Thus saith Almighty God Isaiah chap. 8. verse 19. And when they shall say vnto you Enquire of those that haue a Spirit of Diuination and at the South-sayers which murmure and whisper should not a people enquire of their God Vnder this interrogatiue should not a people inquire of their God is vnderstood this affirmatiue A people should enquire of no other Spirit but of their God alone From this holy text and writ reason doth assume and collect necessarily and truly First that many things are hidden from the knowledge of man which are reuealed vnto the science and knowledge of Spirits Otherwise neither would man aske or enquire of Spirits as hath beene vsuall in all ages neither should God haue occasion here to forbid the enquiring at Spirits That the ignorance also of man in things knowne to Spirits is the true first and originall motiue or reason for enquiring at Spirits is very plaine by the words of King Saul 1. Sam. 28.15 God is departed from me saith he vnto the vision of Samuel raised by the Diuell and answereth me no more neither by Prophets neither by dreames therefore haue I called thee that thou maist tell mee what I should doe Here is a manifest grant of knowledge in Spirits aboue men Secondly reason doth hence collect that all Spirits that doe suffer themselues to be enquired at are euill Spirits and therefore Diuels because Almighty God hath here expressely forbidden the enquiring at any other Spirit beside himselfe and therefore good and holy Spirits will not nor can not disobey the commandement of God nor countenance or assist men in so doing Thirdly reason doeth necessarily hence conclude that such men as are enquired at for reuelations of things hidden from the skill and possibilitie of knowledge in man are Sorcerers Witches and South-sayers if promising and performing according thereto really and yet not warranted by God his word nor assisted by nature The consequence and inference of this reason is iust for that to promise those things or to vndertake those things which are out of their own knowledge and solely and properly in the knowledge of Spirits and Diuels doeth manifestly proue in the performance their interest societie and contract with Spirits and Diuels which is Sorcery and Witch-craft It may bee here obiected that there are some men who affect to bee resorted vnto and to bee enquired at in things supposed hidden from the knowledge of man and to be reputed able vnto such Reuelations though haply they practise to deceiue vnder the colour of pretence of such abilitie It is iustly hereto answered that this their presumption ought to be seuerely enquired into whether it doe taste of ought that is diabolicall of the Diuell or supernaturall and if nothing so doe yet in this Grand cause of God himselfe the religious iealousie of the prudent Magistrate ought to punish their presumption which dare affect to vndertake the name or note of a sinne so odious and abominable vnto Almightie God Let vs for better impression againe repeate and iterate those things which were collected out of the propounded text First that there is knowledge in Spirits of things hidden and separated from the knowledge of man Secondly that such Spirits as are enquired at and doe reueale such knowledge vnto man are Diuels Thirdly that men which doe practise to be enquired at for such supposed Reuelations ought not onely to be iustly suspected and inquired into but that if they be found therewithall to know and reueale those things which are indeed and really aboue and beyond the knowledge of man and are properly and onely in the power of Spirits that then this doth infallibly prooue their interest power and societie with Diuels which is certaine and assured Sorcery and Witch-craft And thus hath reason drawne a demonstration out of the booke of God of a certaine Witch and manifest Sorcerer Let vs now exercise our selues in the consideration examination and tryall of some particulars herein It is said of Apollonius that he foretold the day the houre of the day the moment of the houre wherein Coccius Nerra the Emperour should die long before the time and being in farre distant places remooued from him It is reported of the same Apollonius that being consulted by one who for that purpose came vnto him how he might grow rich Apollonius appointed him to buy a certaine field or ground and to be carefull in tilling and plowing thereof which after he had done a while he found in the end a great treasure and so became rich It is written of the same Apollonius also He made knowne vnto Titus Vespatian the time and manner of his death enquiring it at his hands These things with many other the like Ianus Iacobus Boissardus relateth in the life of Apollonius Who hath not heard of the name and mention of that famous and renowmed British Wizard Merlin and of his high and great esteeme among Princes for his prophesies Vnto his fore-sight and predictions from many foregoing ages the successes and euents of diuers Princes affaires in their seuerall raignes haue beene vsually by diuers times and histories referred For this cause Master Camden in the description of Caermarden-shire doth terme him the Tages of the Britans Speede in his tractate of the ancient Inhabitants of great Britane as also of the life of Aurelius Ambrosius and of the raigne of King John and of Henry the fourth doth out of Malmesbury and others recite diuers accidents and euents in seuerall succeeding ages vnto his oraculous and miraculous illuminations ascribed to haue beene fores●ene foretold and knowne If there be