"Magical
practitioners were disconnected from the stereotyped role of exorcist
– a role no longer recognised by the Church of England after 1550 –
and one fruitful line of enquiry might examine whether
post-Reformation magicians relied less on confrontation and command
and developed relationships with spirits instead." - Liturgical
Change and Ceremonial Magic by Dr. Francis Young
Young
makes this point to explain that there may be an element of
reformation magic which is distinctly non-Catholic where as most
protestant magic ends up having Catholic roots. Juratus suggests a
shared relationship with the spirits. The magician achieves the
beatific vision and therefore enters into a state similar to the
angels and calls them by the shared virtue of loving creator in whose
presence both he and the angels have stood. In earlier systems we see
a shared status occur in the "Mithras" Liturgy in which the
ceremony confers initiation into magical power by virtue of making
the magician appear to be the same as the gods and spirits into whose
plane he has been elevated. Contemporaneously the Merkavah also used
a system of elevating the magician to the various planes of the
angels and made him acceptable to move amongst them by giving him
words, signs, and songs so that he might praise god in the same
manner the angels of that world did. Therefore he would gain the
powers of that heaven and the ability to call upon its spirits.
Young
could mean that a relationship along the lines of a familiar spirit.
This would be sensible with the relationship between familiar spirits
and witches in later literature because as Young points out, much of
what was ascribed to witches was really a protestant response to
"popish necromancers." The Arbatel is clearly influenced by
the reformation and introduces a close relationship with its spirits
which is echoed in the Rabbi Solomon Key which treats the Olympic
spirits are the familiar spirits of the planets. If we look to the
earlier spirit texts such as the French Livre Des Esperitz we see
spirits described as ruling legions but less readily described as
providing familiars. Many texts we have which from more Catholic
periods like the Heptameron don't seem to stress providing a familiar
spirit. Certainly texts we have providing means for obtaining fairy
familiars (Scott, Book of Oberon, Spells for Binding the Seven Fairy
Sisters, Book of Treasure Spirits etc) fall within the purview of
post-reformation or at least concurrent with reformation English
magic.
So
it's possible if a relationship with the spirits is less a matter of
a theological underpinning of the ability to conjure spirits by way
of relating the magician to the spirit so that some sympathy allows
interaction and more a matter of establishing an ongoing working
relationship based on an introduction this may seem reasonable.
The
problems I see with this view are that we can find pre-protestant
examples of establishing ongoing relationships with spirits, and even
in most post-Reformation examples spirits are still called by
coercive methods based on confrontation and command in order to
initially obtain congress with spirits and then to “bind by oath”
a familiar spirit who has been commanded in lieu of the spirit
originally confronted and commanded. (The Arbatel being of notable
difference from this).
The
Abramelin, which while its provenance and religious context are
debated, there are definite elements linking it to Askenazic Jewish
magic, is clearly based around the idea of achieving familiar
spirits. It dispenses with much of ritual magic but not by means of
asserting popery as in Protestant texts. Further the level of ritual
magic inherent in protestant texts, and likely the elements of image
magic, would be equally condemned by Abraham the Jew as would those
of popish, or Catholic, magic.
Continuing
to earlier forms the Hygromanteia does not seem to focus on providing
familiar spirits, but it still has methods which can be used for
gaining or working with spirits in a manner similar to a familiar
spirit or a helper spirit. Young also notes a shift from demons and
angels, to fairies and the dead in post-Reformation magic, but again
the Hygromanteia provides means for working with both.
The
PGM of course provides examples of receiving helper spirits and
daimons bound to service of the magician. As noted above the
“Mithras” Liturgy which occurs in the texts now known as the PGM
provides an ancient example of magic built around relating the
magician to the hypostatic phase in which the spirits he wishes to
entreat reside.
So
both the idea of creating a sense of similarity between the magician
and the spirits and, as Young notes, authority derived from the
divine status of the magician by way of the divine virtue ascribed
humanity by way of Christ's redemption of Mary and his assignment of
her as mother and of the importance of Christs humanity, can be seen
in earlier Catholic magic and also in pre-Christian or at least early
first millenium magical practices and their related philosophies
(Hermeticism and NeoPlatonism). The idea of working with a familiar
spirit also appears in earlier pre-Reformation magic.
The
idea that liturgical changes and appendant theological reform would
bleed into changes in magic makes sense and creates a ready system
for exploring a major period of history in conjunction with exploring
an important period of magical literature. But it seems like at times
changes may have been small and ideological and impacting appendent
pieces of practice rather than sweepingly major reforms of magical
practice. Young himself notes that many seemingly Protestant examples
of magic are pulled from earlier Catholic magic and magical ideas.
The
reduction of a focus on virginity and purification is interesting
though.
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