Daemonologie
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Narrated by:
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Dean Delp
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By:
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King James I
Daemonologie
In Forme of a Dialogie
Divided into three Books
Published in 1597
By King James I
In 1597, a series of witch trials were held in Scotland which resulted in about 200 executions.
The Scottish King James VI (who became James I of England in 1603) took a great interest in the trials and was inspired to write Daemonologie, a text in which the detection and classification of acts of sorcery and the resulting judicial processes are discussed in the form of a Socratic dialogue.
In an appendix, entitled News From Scotland, the author discusses the case of John Fian, who was executed for witchcraft in 1591.
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If you want something perfectly flawlessly doctrinal of the Christian faith, read his translation of the Bible.
The book immediately destroyed my absolute doubt in something, and i was very impressed at such a feat. It said that necromancers and magicians are the masters of their devil. But then it pointed out that a demon would willingly bare this, for the price of the person’s eternal soul. And it said that this is demon’s main desire. Thus i was immediately convinced of what i thought absurd beyond consideration fractions of seconds earlier.
The appendix of the news of Witch-Hunts in Scotland has _some_ value to it. Nonetheless, these Protestants hadn’t yet flushed out all their Dark Age Popery out of their system. And thus a wretched remnant of torture, like unto the Catholic-as-Babel Inquisition remained in their justice system. It is even mentioned as a given. And the witches’ resistance to confess their witchery, rather than the torture used to extract such a confession, is condemned & gawked at in this appendix. There was also No mention whatsoever of binding or exorcising the witches’ devils. Catholicists are absolutely horrible at exorcisms, which ought to be a rather painless moment. Again, these wonderful Protestants who were used mightily by God, still had terribly wicked Romanist ways about them, in the Witch-Hunts. You might likely wish to finish the main body of this book, and skip its appendix.
Insights i got nowhere else.
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The book reviewed gives us an insight into its founder.
The man himself
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