I. ‘QUID SIT MAGUS’: REDISCOVERING MAGIC
AND IDENTIFYING THE MAGICIAN
‘Elijah and Elisha, Honi and Hanina, were magicians, and also was Jesus of Nazareth.
It is endlessly fascinating to watch Christian theologians describe Jesus as miracle worker
rather than magician and then attempt to define the substantive difference between those two.
There is, it would seem from the tendentiousness of such arguments, an ideological need
to protect religion and its miracles from magic and its effects.’
It is endlessly fascinating to watch Christian theologians describe Jesus as miracle worker
rather than magician and then attempt to define the substantive difference between those two.
There is, it would seem from the tendentiousness of such arguments, an ideological need
to protect religion and its miracles from magic and its effects.’
~ John Dominic Crossan, The
Historical Jesus~
The presence of the word ‘magician’ in the subtitle of this study and the hereafter application of the word ‘magic’ throughout demand that the criteria by which we are labelling an act as ‘magic’ and its practitioner as a ‘magician’ is established at the outset. Recent studies in cultural anthropology have concluded that there is no definitive model of ‘magic’ that can be applied, without exception, cross-culturally and throughout history since an all-inclusive and comprehensive title cannot be assigned to phenomena that covers such a vast historical and geographical scale and appears on the surface to vary considerably in observable behaviour and verbal discourse. The difficulty is similar to that experienced by the art historian who attempts to define ‘art’ when presented with an extensive diversity of ‘art forms’ such as books, poetry, music, theatre, dance, film and painting, all of
which are generally classified as ‘art’ but differ significantly in their medium and form of expression.
The futility of various attempts to reach an authoritative definition of ‘magic’ has led some scholars to suggest that we should abandon the term altogether. However, when the determined social anthropologist or theologian believes that a definition can be attempted, there is a tendency to either classify all cultic activity with dubious elements of magical behaviour under the evasive term ‘magico-religious’ or spend such great time and effort establishing the etymology of the word ‘magic’ that there is little room in the rest of the study for its subsequent application to a particular theory. Fortunately, to the relief of the sanity of both myself and the reader, it is not within the scope of this study to establish a ‘catch-all’ term that will encompass all forms of magical practice. Although initial preparation for this study has involved a thorough investigation into the various cultural definitions of magic that have emerged throughout history, it is not my intention to attempt to unite the strands of magical behaviour observed within the rituals of modern pagan groups with Evans-Pritchard’s study of the Azande tribe or I. M. Lewis’ definition of magic in an Asian or South American context. Consideration of the word ‘magic’ within this study will be restricted to popular definitions of magic in circulation within the
first-century Mediterranean world, extending to those cultures and traditions that may have informed and influenced the development of these classifications. More specifically, my concern within the initial stages of this study is to establish a coherent set of characteristics that were typically associated with magical practice within the environment in which the early Christian evangelists situate the ministry of the Jesus of the Gospels. By undertaking a preliminary investigation into the central defining aspects of magic in the ancient world and drawing upon evidence of the typical behaviours associated with magicians operating within a first century environment, the emergent figure of a magician and his activities will identify a set of features that can be correctly associated with magical practices within the particular era under discussion and thereby constitute a working definition of ‘magic’ for the remainder of this study.
II. ANCIENT VS. MODERN: RE-ORIENTATING OUR WORLD VIEW
If the term ‘magic’ had remained a concept that was
disassociated from our current society and one which could be studied within
the particular context of a historical period or civilization with which it had
remained closely associated, then establishing a definition would be a much
simpler business. Modern developments in scientific theory and the rise of
religious scepticism have led many individuals to abandon the belief systems in which ‘magic’ flourished. However,
the word itself has withstood the passing of time and remnants have found their
way into current twenty-first century popular culture. Magic currently bears
little resemblance to its original historical designation since it has been
largely distorted by our modern reinterpretations and now appears in its
contemporary incarnation as a harmless and often comical notion, often
restricted to forms of family entertainment such as the circus, children’s
parties or as exemplified in the flurry of interest surrounding the recent Harry
Potter phenomenon.
It is essential that both the modern writer and
reader abandon their modern-day preconceptions of ‘magic’ and adopt the Weltanschauung
(‘world-view’), to use Bultmann’s terminology, of the original audience
which may differ considerably from the belief-systems to which they are
accustomed.An appreciation of the ‘life-world’ of the ancients is
hugely significant when addressing the concepts of ‘magic’ and ‘miracle’ since
the value and importance placed upon the interaction between humanity and the
spiritual realm in particular has a direct impact upon how we are to understand
the function of these terms in antiquity. Although both the ancient and modern
world-views recognise a hierarchical structure which locates humanity on the
earth and a supreme being in heaven, the ancient world-view differs from our
own in that it places a greater emphasis on the existence of intermediary
spirits which inhabit the middle region between the divine and man. These
intermediary spirits were an important everyday encounter in the early
centuries and a pervasive awareness of their existence is illustrated by the
emergence of religious texts in the first century which detail the activities
of these spirits and ultimately gave rise to an established structure of
angelology and demonology. Furthermore, the reality of evil spirits was
demonstrated in the common practice of exorcism, a procedure that was even
accredited to Jesus himself by the Gospel authors, and both benevolent and
malevolent spirits were commonly considered to be responsible for a variety of
activities.
Whenever a staunch belief in these angelic and
demonic beings was asserted, it was often accompanied by the magical world-view
which declared that the magician could harness the power of these spirits and
exploit them for personal gain. Consequently, spirit manipulation came to be a
major indicator of magical practice throughout antiquity. This spiritual aspect of the ancient world-view has
enjoyed a revival in our present age due to a resurgence of interest in new age
religions which emphasise the role of angels and other spiritual beings in our
daily life. Although I am confident that many individuals would subscribe to
the preservation of these attitudes to a certain extent within the modern
world-view, particularly since a firm belief in the existence of demons and
angels is upheld by the contemporary Christian religion, I would suggest that
the genuine existence of angels, demons and other spiritual beings is largely
rejected by the mainstream and when such creatures resurface in our present-day
culture they are generally treated with a heavy dose of post-enlightenment
scepticism and often come to form cultural clichés. A collective abandonment of
the existence of these intermediary spirits situated between the divine and man
in our present culture has resulted in the exclusion of these spiritual
intermediaries and contributed towards the gradual degradation of our belief in
the validity of the magical practices in which these spirits were an active and
fundamental feature. This estrangement from the authenticity of magic was
encouraged in the early twentieth-century by a series of socio-anthropological
studies, particularly those conducted by Frazer and his students, which played
a large role in demystifying magic for the modern audience. These studies
scorned magic as a form of ‘bad science’, a misinterpretation of events that
occurred by coincidence or the result of a misguided emotional reaction to
situations beyond early man’s control. Consequently, magic is no longer the
dangerous threat that it would have been to the ancients to whom magic was very real and something to be greatly feared.
The New Testament scholar who has entered into the
world-view of the Gospels in an attempt to give an authentic historical
analysis of a text will most probably find that he or she has, at some point,
inadvertently stumbled across the magical world-view. However, since the
ancient and modern attitudes to spiritual intermediaries and the reality of
‘magic’ appear to differ so considerably, the modern reader of the Gospels who
is unfamiliar with the ancient world-view in which the Gospels were written may
unconsciously disregard elements of the text that would have carried a
significant meaning for the early reader and New Testament scholarship may well
suffer when such issues are ignored.
The miracles are perhaps the most demanding element
of the Gospels for those of us operating under the modern world-view to
comprehend for the simple reason, as observed by Bultmann, that modern man will
naturally seek an explanation for any unusual or apparently miraculous
activity. Within our present study, the problem is two-fold. Not only are we required to concede that the Jesus of the
Gospels was a miracle-worker, but we will transcend this assumption to ask
whether he employed ‘magic’ in order to achieve the various miracles that are
reported in the Gospels. If it is essential when considering issues regarding
‘magic’ or ‘miracle’ that we readjust our particular worldview and situate both
concepts firmly within the spiritual world-view of the environment under
examination, we must therefore presuppose both the existence of spiritual
bodies and the efficacy of healings and exorcisms performed by magicians and
miracle-workers. Therefore an extensive debate concerning the reality of angels
or demons and the authenticity of allegedly miraculous cures is largely
irrelevant for our purpose due to the fact that for a first-century audience
both of these phenomena would have been very real and unquestionable. What we
must seek to discern, however, is the criterion by which magicians were
separated from miracle-workers within the first centuries in order to avoid
imposing our own Western, twenty-first century distorted definitions of ‘magic’
and ‘miracle’ onto the world of the ancient near East.
III. DISENTANGLING THE KNOT OF MAGIC AND RELIGION
Most studies attempting to ascertain how the
ancients defined magic do so by comparing it against its natural foil of
religion. The substantive difference, or similarities,
between the terms ‘magic’ and ‘religion’ is well-trod scholarly ground and it
is not easy to establish a clear distinction since the two concepts are often
difficult to define within themselves. When faced with the seemingly impossible
task of defining one against the other, the individual may feel that he or she
is attempting to juggle with water. While the familiar Frazerian
classifications used to differentiate between magic and religion are still
faithfully defended by some, they have been heavily criticised in recent years
by scholars keen to show that magic and religion cannot be easily divorced from
one another and that ‘magic’ is a largely Western construct imposed upon
cultures that are considered to be uncivilised and irrational.
Those who believe that we cannot dichotomise
between magic and religion tend to appeal to two key arguments. The first proposes that magic and religion are opposing viewpoints of the same activity and the second suggests that the distinction between magic as coercive and religion as petitionary is false as both have elements of the other. We will come to address this second distinction later but since the opinion that magic and religion are opposing viewpoints on the same phenomena can trace its source back to the
etymological origin of the word ‘magic’, then this is an ideal starting point
from which to assess the differences, or lack thereof, between the two.
IV. THE REJECTION OF THE MAGI AND THE CONDEMNATION OF ‘MAGIC’
The word ‘magic’ and its association with all
things supernatural and eclectic emerged from what is essentially a spate of
school-yard name-calling. During the Greco-Persian wars (492 - 449 BC), the Greeks encountered the
exotic and unfamiliar religious rites of the Persian priests known as the magi
or magoi (or singular, magus or magos, the Persian word
for priest). The magi were astrologers, philosophers and diviners and
they are commonly thought to have been the priests of the Zoroaster cult,
although Herodotus in his Histories (440 BC) states that they were one
of the six tribes of the Medes (Herodotus, Histories, I and VII). The Greeks applied the word μάγος or μαγεία to the Persian rituals of the magi as they
differed considerably from their own religious practices and the title μάγος rapidly became synonymous with exotic or unfamiliar behaviour.
Suspicion regarding the unusual rituals of the magi was exacerbated in the
fifth-century BC by both the Greek writer Xanthus of Lydus, who wrote detailing
the suspicious practices of the magi to the Greeks and Heraclitus of Ephesus,
who included the magi in a list of individuals accused of promoting a false
view of the gods.[1] The magi were also denounced by
Pliny who in his Natural History claimed to expose the ‘fraudulent lies
of the magi’ whose ‘art has held complete sway throughout the world for many
ages.’[2]The
general contempt felt towards these individuals is demonstrated within the New
Testament by the character Simon Magus who appears in Acts 8: 9-24 as the
supreme example of a magus (hence his appropriate surname). Justin
Martyr writes that Simon Magus was a magician who performed his miracles with
the help of demons and both the Acts of Peter (Chap. V) and the Clementine
Recognitions contain extensive condemnation of Simon’s activities (Book
II).[3]
In addition, negative opinions
regarding the magi may account for the degree of embarrassment felt by many
ancient writers regarding the suspicious appearance of ‘wise men (μάγοι) from the East’ (Mt. 2:1 ) who are skilled at astronomy in the birth
narrative of the Gospel of Matthew. Although the author of Matthew portrays
these characters in a positive light, some early commentators identified these
individuals as the magi and attempted to account for their presence in the
text. A popular explanation was that Jesus’
birth had converted these magicians and freed them from their immoral practices
and this interpretation was adopted by Ignatius, Augustine, Origen, Justin
Martyr, Irenaeus and Tertullian.[4]
As the Persian magi endured increasing
condemnation, they hastily defended their activities by emphasising their
priestly nature and insisting that although their practices were foreign to
Greek minds, this did not necessarily make them immoral or illegal.
Nevertheless the title ‘magus’ rapidly came to be a term of abuse in the
ancient world and an allegation of magical practice was made whenever a ritual
was foreign or unfamiliar to the observer or was simply considered to be
performed with deviant or evil intent. In addition to a general mistrust of
strange customs or ritual, those subject to suspicion within a community, such
as strangers, foreigners, or those with psychological or physical
abnormalities, were particularly susceptible to malicious charges of magic. A general distrust of exotic practices extended to
cultures whose religious rites and customs were considered to be strange and
suspicious. With its use of hieroglyphs and mummification, Egypt was a prime
target for an association with magic in the ancient world[5] and many prominent Greek
philosophers, such as Pythagoras and Plato, were thought to have acquired their
skills while studying in Egypt.[6] It is
unsurprising, then, that the first sorcerers encountered in the Old Testament
are ‘the magicians of Egypt' (Exod. 7:11, 22).
The tension between the two distinctly dissimilar
interpretations of the term ‘magus’ in the ancient world had serious
consequences for the individual to whom the title was applied. Once the
defendant had been identified as a ‘magus’ he was generally considered to be a
charlatan who was involved in corruption and immoral activities. However, his followers
would defend himself by claiming that he was essentially a decent, moral
individual who had been subjected to malicious propaganda from other cultures.
The difficulty of establishing a clear distinction was made increasingly
difficult by certain individuals, such as Philo, who used the term ‘magus’
interchangeably to refer to both priest and magician. Although the blurring of
this distinction made everyday life increasingly problematic for those wishing
to distance themselves from magical activity, it also provided a great
advantage for magicians seeking to legitimise their operations. For example,
the Platonist Apuleius of Madaura (125-180 AD) famously exploited this
etymological confusion in his Apologia sive de Magia. When accused of
practicing magic, Apuleius simply asked his accusers ‘quid sit magus’[7] and presented three definitions
of a magus: a priest, a teacher of magical arts and the more ‘vulgar’
definition of someone who by the use of spells can get what he wants from the
gods.[8]
Deciding which miracle-working groups or
individuals fitted into the categories of religion or magic was largely
determined by the socio-political preferences of the observer and whether the
act that they were witnessing was consistent with or foreign to their own
personal religious experiences. While people experiencing misfortune in the
ancient world appealed to their gods to protect them from hostile supernatural
forces and considered these appeals to be religious acts, similar appeals
carried out by neighbours could be viewed as magical attempts to manipulate or
control supernatural spirits for personal gain. This ‘we-say-you-say’ attitude
extended to prominent miracle-workers in the ancient world and their opponents
and followers often engaged in bitter disputes to acquit or condemn their
opposing heroes.
Although the activities of both rival parties may
be identical, the practitioner operating within a dominant, official and
approved context would often lay claim to divine approval on his activities and
condemn the socially deviant outsider as
teaching a corruption of religion and colluding with demonic influences. Due
to its association with demonic and malign forces, magic was deeply
entangled with polemics in the ancient world and a charge of magic reared its
ugly head wherever there were competitions for power, volatile social
situations or the need to scapegoat a mysterious outsider. Individuals who did
not fall into the social, religious and political norms of the time were often
accused of practising magic and suffered severely under legal penalties that
were established to eradicate such activities.
Laws prohibiting the practice of magic grew in severity throughout the
ancient world and whether the behaviour of an individual was deemed to be religious
or magical was often a matter of life or death. The Hebrew Bible contains a
clear set of laws prohibiting the practice of magic; Leviticus 19:26 forbids
augury and witchcraft, and Deuteronomy 18:10-11 outlaws divination,
soothsaying, augury, sorcery, mediums, wizards and necromancers.
In addition to prohibition under
Jewish law, the practice of magic was a criminal offence under Roman law during
Jesus’ lifetime and strict laws ensured that the magician would be severely
reprimanded or even executed if his activities were discovered. The ancient
Roman legislation known as the Laws of the Twelve Tables (composed in the
fifth-century BC) formed an important foundation for all subsequent Roman law
and laid down penalties against those who use magical incantations. For
example, Table VIII forbids the singing or chanting of evil spells (malum
Carmen incantare and (malum) Carmen occentare (condere) and
prohibits the charming away of crops or another’s crops (fruges incantare,
fruges excantare and segetem pellicere). The tablets were
destroyed by invading Gauls in 390 BC and consequently the original text of
these laws has been lost. However, our knowledge of these laws survives through
brief quotations provided in later juridical documents and the writings of
other authors (Ancient sources for quotations from the Twelve Tables include
Aulus, Cicero, Festus, Gaius, Gellius, Paulus, Pliny the Elder and Ulpian. As certain individuals suspected of magic, such as Simon Magus (Acts 8:9), were
allowed to roam freely then we must assume that these laws were not
consistently upheld. However, since there was a widespread suspicion that magic
acted as a disguise for various political groups who could undermine the
authority of Roman or Jewish leaders, if a magician became exceptionally
popular or involved himself with subversive politics, particularly within the
Hellenistic world, then he would be swiftly dealt with and punished
accordingly.
In the light of these stringent laws prohibiting
the practice of magic, the loyal followers of miracle-workers were faced with a
problem; how to convince the populace that their miracle-worker derived his
powers from authorised, approved sources. Even if a clear distinction between
magic and religion did not originally exist in the ancient world, there were
certainly many individuals busy constructing a distinction in order to avoid
persecution and it is these points of contention that separate the behaviours
typically associated with the magician from that of the miracle-worker. Certain groups and individuals proposed definitions
of ‘magic’ that were undoubtedly weak attempts to redefine the word in order to
allow them to continue with activities that were otherwise strictly forbidden.
For example, the rabbinic leaders in early Judaism were fully aware that their
ritual techniques suggested to observers that they had control over
supernatural powers and that this practice was explicitly condemned by the Hebrew bible. Therefore, in order to guard their activities against a charge of magic, the
Rabbis simply reinvented a definition of magic that allowed them to indulge in
their rituals while still condemning the practice of magic by the outsider. The
Sanhedrin stated that performing magic is punishable, while simply appearing
to perform magic, or creating an illusion of magic, is not an offence (bSanh.
67-68). Furthermore, the Sanhedrin claimed that any act which benefited others
could not be considered to be magic (bSanh. 67b) and finally, in order to
eradicate any suspicions regarding their activities, they added that anyone
wishing to join them must be able to perform magic (bSanh. 17).
Miracle-workers seeking to distance themselves from
a charge of magic would often establish a set of characteristics that were
typically associated with magical practice in order to demonstrate that their
behaviour differed from that of the magician. Although the definitions of magic
that were popular in the first centuries may well have derived from these
attempts by miracle-workers to entangle their own operations from a charge of
magic, three key indicators of magical practice reoccur through antiquity which
appear to be crucial factors in how the early magicians defined themselves.
These three points of separation are as follows:
These three key areas, which we will now address in
greater detail below, demonstrate that certain forms of ‘magical’ behaviour
were deliberately fostered by the magician himself rather than imposed upon him
by the disapproving and suspicious society in which he operates. Therefore,
although the original magi-cians may have been innocent priests who were
the unfortunate victims of malicious gossip, contemporary scholarship must
appreciate that the word ‘magic’ has since been applied to individuals who
clearly exhibit behaviour that is contrary to the pious and prayer-like nature
of these Persian figures. We should not readily assume that the confusion
surrounding the term magi-cians from
practicing anything contrary to the central principles of religion.
V. THE SELF-IMPOSED, ANTI-SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR OF THE
MAGICIAN
The first point upon which ancient magic appears to
define itself is in its inclination towards secretive and private
behaviour. We have previously considered that magicians were forced to remain
solitary and secretive figures within a society as they were subjected to
torment and persecution by the dominant religious and socio-political movements
of the time. However, this theory is turned on its head by evidence which
reveals that in many cases the magicians of the ancient world deliberately
isolated themselves from mainstream religion and exhibited anti-social, deviant
behaviour entirely through personal choice. While the religious individual is
content to participate in public worship en masse, the magician is often
identified by his rejection of conventional religious activities and his
tendency to carry out his activities away from public speculation.
The motivations driving a magician to maintain
secrecy concerning his operations are commonly accounted for by four main
theories. First is the Durkeheimian theory which assumes that whereas the
religious person engages in continual acts of devotion focusing on long-term
aims that benefit the community as a whole, the magician aims to achieve
specific goals for the immediate needs of the individual and therefore he has
no need of a communal worship group. A second possible explanation is that
commitment to an established belief system is difficult for the magician since
if his spell fails to work he will modify his technique and alter the names of
the gods that he is addressing in order to discover a more effective way of
achieving instant success. Thus the efficacy of the method takes precedence over loyalty to a
specific deity and this is evident in the numerous combinations of names of
Jewish, Christian, Egyptian, Greek divinities found within the magical papyri.
A third possibility is that secrecy was imperative to the magician in order to
conceal magical techniques or incantations which, if heard by others, would
evidently incur a charge of magic and risk the ensuing legal penalties.
Finally, secrecy may have been maintained by the magician in order to imbue his
activities with a general air of mystery and thereby make his knowledge
attractive to potential initiates.
Although the
private and secretive nature of the magician implied to his audience that he
was engaging in deviant behaviour, most often the magician was willing to
impose this suspicion upon himself and risk speculation in order to conceal his
activities from the authorities or even feed his own ego by implying that his
knowledge was too exclusive to be shared publicly.
VI. THE COMBINATION OF NATURAL AND SPIRITUAL MAGIC WITHIN THE
GREEK MAGICAL PAPYRI
A failure to recognise the variety of different
methods incorporated into the operations of the single magician in antiquity
has been responsible for a great deal of confusion in countless studies of
ancient magic. The presence of an address directed towards a spiritual being in
a magical text has led many a scholar to follow Frazer’s misguided assumption
that the text in question cannot be describing a magical ritual as such
procedures require the application of technique alone and disregard any need
for spiritual aid. As a result, magic is often classified as the employment of
physical technique and religion is defined as an appeal to the spiritual power
of the gods and an inaccurate distinction is proposed on this basis. Although
this distinction is often vehemently defended in anthropological
thought, it is very difficult to apply this theory to the magical texts which
comprise the larger part of our understanding of magical ritual in the ancient
Hellenistic world.
Since spells detailing the technical application of
materials exist alongside lengthy petitions to gods in the Greek magical
papyri, I would urge the student of ancient magic to appreciate that although
the precise use of physical techniques may on occasion suggest that spiritual
elements are not present in certain magical rituals, it is incorrect to
conclude that spirits or gods are absent from all magical ritual and
propose a dissimilarity with religion on this basis alone. Whenever spiritual
bodies can be discerned within a magical text they are most often addressed
with a strong element of manipulation and magical intent, therefore the
presence of a spiritual being is entirely consistent, rather than incompatible,
with magical practice. To highlight these two parallel forms of magical
methodologies it is useful to distinguish between natural magic, in
which the magician uses techniques that are applied independently of
supernatural aid, and spiritual magic, which exploits the gods and
inferior supernatural powers. However it is essential that both methods are
recognised as equally fundamental aspects of ancient magic.
VII. NATURAL MAGIC: PERSONAL POWER AND THE IMPORTANCE OF
TECHNIQUE
Miracle workers in the early centuries attempted to
distance themselves from a charge of magic by emphasising their dependence on
prayer, underlining the role of God’s will in their wonderworking and accusing
the magicians of sidelining the will of God by using techniques that were
effective ex opere operato. The magician’s occasional reliance upon
physical technique, rather than spiritual petition, is demonstrated by the
numerous magical texts from antiquity which require the operator to possess
knowledge of a specific procedure and/or materials which must be applied
precisely in order to produce an automatically successful result. Many spells
in the Greek magical papyri instruct the magician to carry out the instructions
of the rite precisely; if it is performed correctly then instantaneous results
are guaranteed but if the procedure is carried out improperly then the act will
be unsuccessful. Furthermore, as the intermediary presence of a deity or
powerful spiritual being is not required, the performer’s standing with God is
unimportant and anyone who masters the instructions described within a magical
text can potentially recreate the outcome. A staunch confidence in the
immediate effectiveness of a procedure was therefore considered to be a major
indicator of magical practice and the immediacy of results ensured that many
magicians throughout history generated a monetary profit from selling their
services, especially those who had cleverly restricted the exclusiveness of
their services by maintaining secrecy regarding their precise techniques. Since
a major catalyst for the successful completion of the procedure was the
performer’s ability to employ his various techniques correctly, the magician
would often exhibit a tendency to amass knowledge of techniques from various sources
in an attempt to swell his repertoire of successful methods.
The absence of a supernatural influence within these procedures raises an important question for the study of natural magic; what is the power-source behind these operations if it is not spiritual? An answer to this question was proposed by anthropologists in the first quarter of the twentieth-century who had observed that the magical techniques of certain cultures were evidently effective by the will of the magician alone and independently of any spiritual intervention. Studies revealed that these techniques were successful due to an impersonal and natural power thought to reside within the physical environment or even within the magician himself and this power-source was classified as mana. We will explore the origins and applications of mana later, however the presence of this impersonal, in-dwelling type of energy within ancient magic demonstrates that the source of the magician’s ability to perform magic was not inevitably drawn from the spiritual or godly realm, but also from his skilful employment of natural energies.
VIII. SPIRITUAL MAGIC: THE COERCIVE WILL VS. THE SUPPLICATORY
PRAYER
Whenever a spiritual agency was considered to be the power-source behind
an individual’s magical operations, his opponents would predictably declare
that this underlying power was demonic or that the magician had somehow coerced
his god into performing impossible acts at his request. Most often this latter
allegation was well-founded since the magician’s impersonal relationship with
the gods and his expectation of immediate results ensured that a demanding and
coercive tone was typically employed by magicians practicing spiritual magic in
the ancient world. The fear and obedience with which the gods responded to a magician’s
incantations is evident in Lucan’s portrait of the witch Erichtho - a typical
example of the coercive behaviour of the magician and the subsequent fearful
response from the gods. In his description of the witch’s ritual, Lucan states
that ‘no sooner had she stated her demands than the gods granted them, for fear
of being subjected to a second spell’[11] Threatening the gods is particularly associated
with ancient Egyptian magical practice and in his study of ancient Egyptian
magic, E. A. Wallis Budge states: ‘the object of Egyptian magic was to endow man with
the means of compelling both friendly and hostile powers…even God Himself, to do what he
wishes, whether they were willing or not.’[12]
In view of this defensive emphasis on prayer and
the miracle-workers’ forthright condemnation of manipulative magical
techniques, a distinction is proposed by some, notably by James Frazer, between
the religious man who accepts that his fate is at the mercy of spiritual powers
that are beyond his persuasion and henceforth supplicates the divine through
respectful prayers in order to request the god’s compliance in undertaking a
task, and the magician who believes that the will of the gods can be
manipulated by adopting coercive, demanding behaviour and engaging in
protracted speeches, most often employing threats, to force the gods to perform
a task or even work under his command. Certainly this is the most controversial
case for a distinction between religion and magic and it has been heavily
criticised by scholars keen to demonstrate that certain magical texts contain
prayer-like imprecations and religious texts occasionally veer towards a coercive
nature.
In defence of a distinction between prayer and
incantation, others suggest that the presence of isolated prayer forms or
sentences of a subservient nature in a spell do not necessarily indicate that
the overall intention of the spell was supplicatory. This is due to the fact
that although both forms of address may share the same verbal channels to
communicate with supernatural forces, they remain clearly separated on the
basis of the performer’s intention, i.e. whether the performer is placing
him/herself at God’s mercy and allowing that deity the discretion to do as it
chooses, or whether he or she is expecting to receive immediate results and
seeking to restrict the manoeuvrability and autonomy that God has in performing
the act.
To judge whether a spoken address to a god is
essentially a prayer or incantation, the words themselves must be separated
from the intent behind them, much in the same way that Jewish prayer
distinguishes between keva, the spoken words, and kavanah, the
intention or emotion underlying the words. We must appreciate that although the
line of communication may be opened up in the same way, the message may be
different. For example, consider the image of two people playing a piano. The first plays ragtime and the second plays a
Chopin nocturne. The instrument that is played and the printed notation that is
read are similar, but it is the pianist’s intention to utilise a
specific technique of musical genre that determines the difference in the
resulting sounds. Certain texts within the Greek magical papyri which appear to
incorporate prayer-like imprecations to the gods often betray the magician’s
underlying intent to coerce the god or further his own personal power.
For example, two lines in a bowl divination in PGM IV. 198-199 begin by
suggesting a prayer-like approach:
‘O grant me power, I beg, and give to me
This favour - ’
However the immediately subsequent lines reveal
that this initially submissive address conceals the underlying intention of the
magician to persuade the god to grant the magician the ability to call on the
gods whenever he wills:
‘- so that, whensoe’r I tell
One of the gods to come, he is seen coming/
The reader of the magical texts produced in
antiquity must be aware that not only do these texts demonstrate a high degree
of syncretism by combining the names of numerous gods from various religious
traditions, but there is also an extensive variety of speech styles and manners
of address that have been incorporated into the texts in a bid to determine
which forms of incantation are more effective. The overall portrait of the
magician which emerges, from the study of Hellenistic magic in particular, is
of an individual scrabbling around on the religious and magical scrapheap of
various cultures for the mention of materials, techniques or the names of gods
that will add power to his spell. Therefore,
these seemingly prayer-like elements may have been incorporated into the text
by individuals who considered a subtle approach to manipulating their gods to
be more effective than the clearly coercive language otherwise used to achieve
their goals, much like a child learns that she can smile at her mother to get
sweets rather than throw a tantrum. This is precisely why it is necessary to
refer to spirit manipulation rather than spirit control when
examining the treatment of gods or spirits within ancient magic.
Due to the negativity that the term ‘magician’
carried in the ancient world, it was almost invariably a third person
designation applied by one’s enemies and therefore we should not expect to find
the title as a means of self-identification. On the contrary, when determining
whether a miracle-worker was considered to be a magician it is useful to
examine the materials produced by his opponents since,
although these writings may be tainted by polemical discourse, they may also
include valuable information that was not recorded by his followers for fear of
humiliation or persecution...
Extract from Helen Ingram (2007) Dragging Down Heaven: Jesus as Magician and Manipulator of Spirits in the Gospels, PhD, The University of Birmingham, UK.
Extract from Helen Ingram (2007) Dragging Down Heaven: Jesus as Magician and Manipulator of Spirits in the Gospels, PhD, The University of Birmingham, UK.
[1][22] Xanthus: See Diogenes Laertes, Lives 1.2.
Xanthus accuses the magi of practicing incest (see frag. 28, reproduced in C.
Müller (ed.), Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum I (Paris, 1841-51)).
Heraclitus associated the magi with ‘night-wanderers, bacchants, Lenaeans,
mystery-initiates.’ (Clement of Alexandria, Protrepticus 22.2).
[2][23] Pliny, Nat. Hist. 30.1. However Pliny is heavily criticised for his inconsistent views on magic. For example, he condemns the use of magic but advocates the use of bizarre healing methods and admits that magic contains ‘shadows of the truth.’ (Nat. Hist. 30.6).
[2][23] Pliny, Nat. Hist. 30.1. However Pliny is heavily criticised for his inconsistent views on magic. For example, he condemns the use of magic but advocates the use of bizarre healing methods and admits that magic contains ‘shadows of the truth.’ (Nat. Hist. 30.6).
[3][24] Justin Martyr, 1 Apol. 26.2.
[4][25] Ignatius accounts for Jesus’ triumph over the
activities of the magi as follows: ‘a star shone forth in the heaven above
every other star…every sorcery and every spell was dissolved’ (Ignatius, Eph.
19. 3). See also Augustine, Sermons 20. 3-4; Origen, Con. Cels.
1.60; Justin, Dial. 78.1,7, 9; Irenaeus, Adv. Haer. 3. 9. 2;
Tertullian, De Idol 9.
[5][30] Origen declares that Egypt contains many
practitioners of magic (Con. Cels. 1.22, 28, 38, 68).
[6][31] Pythagoras was considered to have acquired the
ability to predict the future, heal the sick, command the weather while in
Egypt (See Diogenes Laertius, Life of Pythagoras III). Similarly, Plato studied mathematics in Egypt following
the death of Socrates. Indeed the word ‘mathematicus’ is usually translated as
‘astrologer’. For example, the Latin word mathematicus is used in this
sense by St. Augustine in Book 2 of De Genesi ad litteram: ‘Quapropter
bono christiano, sive mathematici, sive quilibet impie divinantium, maxime
dicentes vera, cavendi sunt, ne consortio daemoniorum irretiant.’ According to
the Oxford English Dictionary, the translation of mathematicus as atrologer
remained in popular usage until the early 18th century.
[7][32] Apuleius, Apology 25. 10.
[8][33] Apuleius, Apology 25, 26.
[11][62] Lucan, Pharsalia 6. 527-528.
[12][65] E. A. Wallis Budge, Egyptian Magic (New
York: Bell, 1991) p. xiii.
[13][67] Philostratus, Life of Apollonius, iv. 44.
[14][72] The combination of subservient prayer and an
underlying persuasive request is also present in PGM III 107: ‘Hearken to me as
I pray to you, that you may perform the NN [deed], because I invoke you by your
names’.
Concerning the motivations driving secrecy, there's also another occasional explanation. We can postulate that for the magician efficiency of the magic act was linked to outside people not knowing it being performed, in term maybe of what we could nowaday call a sort of "psychological process" of self intoxication. From this point of view, the efficiency itself of the act would have to do with secrecy.
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