f * > w •t ^k H t , . i ': V-^' ^LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.? * . :_• „__ #1 J rXITED STATES OF AMERICA, SPIEITUALISM, SATANIC DELUSION, AND A SIGN OF THE TIMES. BY WILLIABiIeIAMSEY, D.D., PASTOR OF THE CEDAR STREET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, PHILADELPHIA. EDITED WITH A PREFACE, BY H. L. HASTINGS. "The G-od of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly ."—Rom. xvi : 20. ROCHESTER, N. Y. : PUBLISHED BY H. L. HASTINGS, 49 ARCADE GALLERY. 1857. <5 Entered according tc Act of Congress, in the year 1856. by WILLIAM BAMSEY, In the Office of the Clerk of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. J. J. REED^ PRINTER AND STEREOTYPEB, 16 Spruce-St., N. Y. EDITOR'S PREj^ACE. The subject of spiritual agencies, and the investigation of their mysterious operations, is one of deep interest to mankind. From the earliest ages it has afforded ground for superstition, investigation, and speculation. Various as the theories of the present are found to be, they all, or nearly all, have their counterparts in the dim distance of ages past, and within the period covered by historic records, both sacred and profane. The belief in a race of invisible and superhuman agents, who are, more or less intimately concerned in terrestrial affairs, is found in all past ages, and is common alike to the Jews and the Barbarians, to the wise and the unwise, to Christians and to heathen. The subject has always been interesting. It is now increas- ing in interest, from the fact that attention has been called to it, and investigations have been made to a much greater extent than heretofore, especially since '^ Spiritualism " has become the faith of millions, and the amazement of millions more. — The writer had hoped ere this to have presented to the public a statement of the results of his researches on the subject ; he still hopes to do so in due time, if God permit. The subject is ample ; the field wide. The present treatise by a learned and able student and theo- logian, who was for years a missionary to India, and was there conversant with the various oriental forms of supernatural in- fluences, will be found interesting ; and, brief as it is, the writer has seen nothing that meets the requirements of the case so fully as this little treatise. The Bible is made the basis of the argument. Some Spirit- ualists will object to this To such, we will say that the foun- dations upon which that rests are neither known nor assailed as yet, by most who reject it with puny contempt. When they have given years to such investigations as those of Lardener, Keith, Paley, and others ; when they have answered and re- futed the arguments of such men as Leslie and Lyttleton, and countless writers who have studied the subject ; then they may have some claim to speak with a degree of assurance. But IV EDITOR S TREFACE. modest}^ is the truest wisdom of those who, in cavilling at Christianity, '• speak evil of things that they know not of," and whose very cavils are proofs that they know neither the doc- trines of tile Bible, nor the facts upon which its authority rests. Upon a basis — not of sacerdotal authority, but of sound rea- son ; not of mere theory, but of stubborn facts — we rest the foundations of our faith. We do not take the truths of the Bible for granted^ we take them as proved, and proved by a mass of evidence which has accumulated for ages, and which infidels and sceptics have never met, or tried to meet. With this basis, we proceed to test the veracity and reliability of those spi- rits who come to us from their various spheres, and who seek to win our assent to the propositions which they promulgate. In characterizing Spiritualism as " A Satanic Delusion," we would speak not in contempt, but in words of solemn and earnest admonition. We would speak as those who must give an account, and would most affectionately strive to teach those who desire information, the perils that beset their course. In hope that this treatise may commend itself to the candor of an enlightened public, it is now committed to them. That it contains much truth, we doubt not ; that it will subvert or de- stroy the rapidly increasing influence of Spiritualism, we do not expect. But if it shall prevent some from riskiug their eternal well-being in a most perilous path ; if it shall strength- en the faith of any who are perplexed with doubts and waver- ings ; if it shall be a means of recovering any from the snare of the fowler ere it be too late ; if it shall glorify God, exalt and honor His truth, and lead any to prepare and wait for the day of the Church's redemption, when God shall bruise Satan under their feet, then the labor will not have been in vain in the Lord. That it may accomplish some good, and, in the workings of Divine Providence, bring forth some fruit to the good of man and the glory of God, is alike the prayer of the author and the editor. h. l. h. Tr> T^.,„ T> T T.,rnp 1856. SPIEITUALISM A SATANIC DELUSION. CHAPTER I. introduction • The object of the present investigatioD is, to ascertain the character of modern Spiritualism and its significance as a sign of the Times. This subject is one that presents to the mind of the thoughtful reader of the Word of Grod, and the careful ob- server of the workings of Satan in these last days, such a wide field for remark, that we scarcely know where to be- gin, what facts to select, or where to end. It is certain that we are now living in strange and eventful times. There are agencies at work in our world other than can be seen by the eye of man. But this has always been the case. — The facts in reference to the fall of man, and his redemption by Christ, show us most clearly, that there are opposing agencies at work in reference to his present and future state that are outside of himself; and that man is that most im- portent being who concentrates the thoughts of the whole in- visible world upon him. The educational training of some, and the manifest ig- 10 sriRiTUALis^r, a Satanic delusion, norance of others of the truths of the Bible, the only true revelation of the will of God to man, hinder multitudes from admitting, in all their literality and distinctness, the state- ments of the Word of Grod on the subject of Spirit-agency^ In consequence of this, reasonings on this subject, the most- false, puerile, and stupid, often pass at par for sound logic and good scriptural argument, provided they be clothed in the garb of scientific words and technical phraseology, the true meaning of which the people cannot comprehend, and one grand design of which is, in reality, to conceal the ig- norance of the men themselves, who attempt to explain what they do not understand, and who are, though unconscious to themselves, another illustration of the wonderful power of that influence, the very existence of which they so stoutly deny. There are many good men in our midst, highly gifted, and deservedly esteemed for their scientific researches and their patient investigation of the causes of thiogs, who are bold to say that the phenomena of Modern Spiritualism, are mere optical illusions, or juggling tricks, and that all of them can easily be explained upon scientific principles, and are well understood by those who perform them. Yea, more ; boast- ing of their fancied wisdom and knowledge of things beyond their reach, they are not slow to say that to believe in the facts as they exist is a sad proof of a defective education, if not of imbecility of mind. But these persons, with more correctness, might say that the solutions which they and their philosophic expounders give of these latter day won- ders, ascribing them all to mere natural agents, as electricity, magnetism, odic force, and we know not what else, are still more striking illustrations of the very deficiency which they so feelingly lament in the case of others. INTRODUCTION. 1 1 At all events, one thing is certain : those who hold that there is a spiritual agency in connection with these mani- festations, have a cause which is adequate to the production of these effects — yea, and, if need be, of others far more wonderful than any that have as yet been exhibited. They go to the Word of God for a clear and proper solution of all these phenomena, and not to the mysterious workings of some hidden law of nature, nor to the teachings of an Infi- del or Atheistic Philosophy. The writers of the Sacred Scriptures nowhere attempt to prove the existence of God. Moses takes it for granted, and proceeds to state, in the first chapters of Genesis, what God has created. Nor do they attempt to prove the exis- tence of a Spiritual Being, whom they call in the Hebrew, Satan ; which means an opposer, a foe, an enemy. They speak of it as a fact that needs no proof; for the world is full of the evidences of his real, personal existence, and of his mighty power, and unremitted hatred of God and of man. We are fully aware of the fact that the personal existence of Satan is admitted by nearly all those who bear the Chris- tian name. It is at least among the articles of their faith. But by the great majority of professing Christians of the present day, it is so feebly realized, and so superficially re- garded, that their faith is, in a great degree, inoperative, and the fact of his existence, and influence upon the minds of the people, is virtually disbelieved. One striking difference between the experience of Christians, as recorded in the New Testament, and the frequent exhortations of our Lord and his apostles to resist the Devil, and to guard against his wiles, and the experience of Christians of our day, and the exhortations we hear on the subject now, warning us not to be ignorant of his devices, must be manifest to every 12 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. one who will give the subject a mrment's reflection. They felt and acted as if there was a great and mighty adversary for them to oppose ; and they speak of their spiritual con- flicts with him ; but the wisdom and philosophy of our day have looked upon his existence as a myth, or at best, but another name for the wayward disposition of man. This, however, is not the scriptural representation of the matter. The Bible speaks of him as a mighty spirit, once holy, but now fallen through pride ; as the deceiver of man ; as the usurper of the dominion of this world, and as the Prince of this world, and also of the power of the air, and the Spirit that worketh in the children of disobedience. — Through his influence and wiles, our first parents lost the image and the likeness of God in which they were created, and also the dominion over the earth which God had be- stowed on man. Satan deposed man, and took his place. Since then he has not ceased to exert his influence over man ; to enslave his mind by gross superstitions ; to de- base and defile his body by vile afi'ections ; to shut him out of heaven by leaguing him in with himself in opposition to God. 4-CCordingly we find that although the agent, Satan, is the same at all times, yet the mode of his operations dif- fers in difi*erent ages and among difi'erent people, according to the degree of their intellectual culture, or the amount of Scriptural truth and knowledge they niight possess. The debasing and sensual rights of Paganism are well adapted to rivet the chains cf a spiritual bondage upon a people who have given up the knowledge of a true God, and who worship demons in His stead. But in an age like ours, where intellectualism and mammon are the gods to which the masses of the people bow in humble adoration, Satan must suit his wiles to the spirit of the age, and to the INTRODUCTION. 13 character of the people, if he would succeed in leading them to bow down to their gods, in the temple of reason, and to ignore their Creator and the revelation he has given them. Hence it is that no special form of Satanic delusion con- tinues long at one time, or in one place. The Arch-Decei- ver continually varies his wiles. Old forms of spiritual delusion pass away ; but from their seeds other forms spring up, which are just as far from the truth as the former. — Each successive age or generation boasts of its freedom from the follies of the past, and laughs at the ignorance and su- perstition of their fathers, while it is itself the victim of those Satanic delusions which are more in accordance with the circumstances, advanced knowledge, or philosophic spirit of the age. And just as we change our garments and adapt them to the season of the year upon which we may enter, while our nature remains the same — so will it be with these varied exhibitions of Satanic power ; their forms differ, but their essential features are the same ; and these varied manifestations will continue to come and to go, un- til the kingdom of Satan, on earth, be overthrown, the reign of sin be superseded by that of holiness, and the kingdoms of this world become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ. As the sacred writers nowhere attempt to prove the per- sonal existence of Satan, but always take it for granted, (and base their exhortations to resist his power and influ- ence, upon the known fact of his existence and evil charac- ter,) we need not attempt it. Still, we might ask those who deny the personal existence of Satan, and maintain that we are to understand by the term only the evil principle, or the tendency to evil that exists in human nature, how they would explain, on their theory, the history of the fall 14 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELI SIGN. of man, and tlio subsequent temptation of our Lord ? In the ease of Adam, or rather of the woman, (for she was first in the transgression, she being deceived, while " Adam was not deceived" — 1. Tim. ii : 14 — but sinned under- standingly,) there was evidently an influence outside of her- gelf that was brought to bear upon her mind, so that she yielded to it and fell — she was conscious of that fact — and said so : nor is the truth of her statement called in question by the Lord when she, in the honesty of her heart, confess- ed the truth, saying, ''the serpent beguiled me, and I did eat." The statement was admitted, in all its fullness, and upon that statement the Lord proceeds, at once, to pronounce His sentence upon the serpent, and which remains upon it, to the present day, and will till time shall end. The Judge of all the earth certainly does right. And if there were no tempter outside of woman, why should the Lord pro- nounce His curse upon her, and an additional one on a be- ing, distinct from her, if no such being did exist, and if he had not deceived her as she declared he did ? So also, in the case of our Lord. He had no sin. He was holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners. And yet He was tempted for forty days and forty nights in the wilderness of Judea. Demands were made of Him and proposals offered of such a character, as wholly to ex- clude the idea, (if we admit the record in the case to be true,) of these demands and proposals being the mere sug- gestions of our Lord's own mind. The thing is an impos- sibility. To suppose that the whole scene of the tempta- tion as described by the inspired penman was a mere stretch of the imagination of our Lord ; that He thought He was tempted by some one ; that He thought the Tempter brought forth arguments based upon a false application ot INTRODUCTION. 15 the Scriptures to induce Him to yield to hu suggestions ; and, that He thought He answered the Tempter by correct quotations from the Word of God, requires an amount of faith (if faith it may be called,) far surpassing any thing of the kind that is necessary to embrace the simple, truthful narration of the facts as they are. But it happens to bo with such persons as it was with a Brahmin in India, who said to me once, ^' Sahib, a little truth is hard, but a big lie is easy to be believed." It is just so ; and we doubt not, that the father of lies assists them in their monstrous credulity as well as in their unreasonable unbelief. We admit the fact, then, in all its fullness, that there is such a being as Satan, and we fully believe all the state- ments that the Sacred Scriptures give of him, and of his workings in our world. Our Lord calls him " the Prince of this world," and the " god of this world ;" and he is. That he will, ere long, be deposed, and his usurped power will be taken from him, and he be cast out of this world, are facts clearly made known to us in the Word of God. He knows well that the kingdoms of this world will be taken from him, and that it will be done by Him who is ^* the seed of the woman." Hence it was that Satan offer- ed to deliver up to our Lord the kingdoms of the world, which he then held, and still holds by usurpation, if He, the Messiah, would but fall down and do him honor, or thank him for them, or even accept them from his hand. We give Satan full credit for honesty in this case. Let him have his due. We believe he would have done just as he said he would do. He had the kingdoms of the world. He has them yet.* And he, doubtless, would have deliv- * For Satan to offer that which lie could not bestow, and over 16 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. ered tlicm to our Lord, and would have laid down the usurped sceptre of power over earth, if he could, by that act, have acquired a greater glory, and a more exalted sway. And who, in the matters of trade, and of seeking after the wealth and the honors of this world, would not part with the less for the sake of the greater ? So with Satan. The honor received from man, or from a world of men, would be as naught when compared with honor and obeisance from ^' the Son of man." Most cheerfully would he have parted with all this world for one act of obeisance from our Lord. But, that he must not have. Satan was foiled in his deep-laid scheme for the final and eternal ruin of all the human race. No compromise in the case can be made with the Son of man, the rightful heir to earth, and all upon it. Satan will not resign his usurped authority and power on earth of his own free will, nor can the Son of man lay aside the glory and the dignity of His exalted nature and office, to enter upon any efforts of negociation with Satan for the redemption of the world from his power. On the contrary, He will in due time, lay hold on the usurp- er, bind him in chains, and cast him out of the govern- ments of this world for ever. Satan is fully aware of this fact. He knew when our Lord was upon the earth, that that was not the time for wMch he had no power, would be no temptation even to marbj much less to Christ, who of course knew the facts in the case. — But Christ was really tempted — therefore Satan had something of value to offer to him, namely, the kingdoms of the world and their glory. Christ was tempted in all points like as we are, and do we not see in the allurements of worldly ambition that seduce the heart from right and godliness, this same temptation of the adver- sary 7 We are not ignorant of his devices.— Ed. INTRODUCTION. 1 7 his dethronement. But the time is now at hand. This he knows ; and hence it is that he is making special efforts, in various ways, throughout the whole world, to retain his pos- session of the earth to the last moment, and to ruin for time and eternity all he can, before he himself shall be cast out, and be shut up in the bottomless pit for the thousand years. Paganism and the gross forms of heathen idolatry, are not adapted to our present enlightened and social state. — The scenes of iniquity that have been witnessed in the pub- lic assembly, or in the secret chambers of heathen temples, in days past, would be too much at present for the eye of the refined of our day. But similar scenes may be witness- ed, doubtless, even now, by those who are privileged to en- ter within the gates that shut them out •from the vulgar gaze. It only needs another name : the name of ^' Love," or " Love" made " free," and the sanction of laws which Satan himself has helped to frame, to give currency and popularity to any forms of iniquity that have ever yet found favor in the eyes of a world at enmity with God. Some can be led as the willing slaves of their lusts. For these there is a lure in the shape of Socialism, Free-love-ism, and Mormonism, that last form of political iniquity that has been enthroned in our land, and which if it receives not the sanction of this mighty nation, is permitted to grow unmo- lested, and to flourish in our midst, under the fostering care of Satan himself But, there are others, whose instinctive horror of bodily defilement would separate them forever from those, who *^ corrupt themselves in those things which, as brute beasts, they know naturally" (Jude 10). These Satan must secure by other means. Reason is their god. To them, the rev- elations of the Most High are, at least, but enigmatical 18 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION, hints of things they cannot comprehend. For the god of this world hath blinded their minds', lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine in- to their hearts, and give them the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, 2 Cor. iv. 4-6. They must hare certain knowledge, and such a knowledge of secret and future things, as God, in His infinite wisdom, withholds from man ; for he would have man ^^ walk by faith, not by sight," 2 Cor. v. 7. But, what God withholds, Satan offers to impart. They would lift the veil that hides the unseen world from them, and seek to know from those who inhabit it, the things which God has hidden from them, and purposes they shall not know. The knowledge of Sa- tan is not like oiTrs. We can know nothing of the invisible world from our own observation. Satan can and does. — The invisible world is all untrodden ground to us. To him it is all known and familiar. He, doubtless, does and can know facts, and reveal them too, which it would gratify the curiosity of our nature to know. Facts, long since trans- pired, even before the birth of any now on earth, are not blotted out of the memory of Satan, who, we may suppose, retains all the knowledge he has ever had of our world for the past 6000 years. These facts he may communicate to man, (and none can prove that he cannot) ; and these facts being found to-be true, the door is now opened wide for the full belief of any number, or any kind of real or supposed facts that Satan may see fit to communicate. The reality of one truth will pave the way for many falsehoods, all of which may be believed with equal faith. In this way, Satan will satisfy the minds of multitudes of the philosophically wise. And as they judge they can find that knowledge in and through his communications which they cannot INTRODltCTICN. 19 obtain from the Word of God, the result is easily foreseen. They will reject the revelation which God has given them, as a work behind the age, and not meeting the demands of the times. If this be not so with those who now believe in the revelations that God has made to them in His Word, they will superadd to it these supposed revelations of facts by Satan, and thus will they virtually set aside the Word of God entirely as a rule of life. As it is certainly revealed to us, that Satan will be cast out from this world, and as his efforts will be made untir- ingly to retain his hold upon the minds of the people, we may reasonably look for some special manifestations of his power and delusive workings before that event. These manifestations and miraculous workings will be so apparent to all those, who are savingly enlightened by the Spirit of God, that they will not fail to perceive, in due time, that they are of Satanic origin. '' They that trust in the Lord shall be," in these times of coming trial, " as Mount Zion which cannot be removed, but abideth forever," Ps. cxxv. 1. While those who may trust to their own fallible reasoning and the desires of their hearts, will be as the chaff before the wind, or as the stubble before the flame. By multitudes of Christians in our day, and of Christian ministers also, the study of the prophecies of God's Word is either neglected, or condemned. What God declares to be " a light that shineth in a dark place, until the day dawn and the Day-Star arise" (2 Peter i. 19), they, in their pre- sumption have declared to be impenetrable obscurity. — Hence the utter misapprehension which so extensively pre- vails in the Church at the present time, as to the character and design and end of this dispensation. Peace, prosperity and stability are confidently predicted and fondly anticipa- 20 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. ted by tlic men of our progressive times , "whereas conflict and destruction are distinctly foretold by the prophets of the Lord. And so intense is this deception, that, by ma- ny, the very workings of Satan are confounded with or taken for the operations of God's Spirit. They look for a coming glory and a brighter age for this world ; but it is not such as God predicts. They raise their superstructure, Babel-like, out of material which God purposes to destroy. There is a future glory in reserve for this world. But, it is not to be effected by the wisdom of man, the progressive development of the age, nor by a careful observance and study of the mere laws of nature. It will be the work of the Spirit and power of the Lord. CHAPTER 11. THE CASE STATED. That we may the better understand the nature of these spiritual manifestations, which now exist in our world, and which will continue to increase, though they will, doubt- less, be varied in their form, until Satan himself, the grand originator of them all, shall be cast out of this world, it may be well to take a brief survey of his operations, in our world, from the fall of man to the present time. " To the law and to the testimony," the revealed will of God, let us then go for the true light that we need on this subject. If we speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in us. — Is. viii : 20. The opinions of Pagan, of Jewish, and of Christian writers on this subject, are not without their value. But our object is to look at this whole subject in the light which the inspired Word of Grod throws upon it. Taking then, in our hand, the inspired volume, the Word bi God, *'as a lamp to our path, and a light to our feet," let us enter the garden of Eden. There we find nature smiling in her garments of glory, as she was first robed by the hand of her all-wise and bountiful Creator. Creatures, formed by the Divine Word, and exhibiting at the same time, the wisdom, the goodness, and the power of God, dwelt in peace and harmony with each other. There was no ferocity in any nature. There was no enmity in 22 SriRlTUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION any heart. Man, created in the image of God^ and accord ing to His likeness, with his beloved and sinle&s companion by his side, the progenitor of the race of man on the earth, stood up in all the Godlike dignity of his nature, the install- ed king over earth and all the creatures that dwelt upon it. How long this primeval state of purity, of blessedness and of peace remained, we know not. On this point the Word of God sheds no light. "We simply know the fact that man'was sinless, and that he felL Before the creation of man, a rebellion against the au- thority of God, broke out among the angels in the heavenly world. Satan led the way. Insolence, pride, ambition, a being puffed up (as the Greek word tiiphotheis^ 1 Tim. ii. 16, signifies), in consequence, probably, of some exalted honor conferred upon him by his Creator, led to his sin. Multi- tudes must have united with him in his schemes and plans of rebellion against God, whatever they may have been. — But in their plans they failed. They lost the glory that they formerly possessed, and henceforth they were deprived of the favor of God, and were shut out from all communion with God, and with the holy angels. On the particular sin of Satan, and the precise time when he first transgress- ed, the Bible reveals nothing positive, and hence we cannot know with certainty, what it was, or when it took place. — The only thing we do know, is that it was before the fall of man, and that Satan was instrumental in that fall. This must satisfy us now. There is a great ana important fact here, which it may be well to consider a moment. It is one of those mysteries which we cannot now fully comprehend, but we may here- after. The fact is this : Although Satan and his angels are shut out from all communion and fellowship with God THE CASE STATED. 23 and the holy angels, still, they are not wholly debarred from all communication with heaven and holy beings. The testimony of the Bible is clear on this point, though Chris- tians may seldom think of it, or if they do, may reject it without much thought. Twice in the book of Job, viz : chap. i. 6, and ii. 1, we are told that there was a day when the sons of God, the holy angels, came to present them- selves before the Lord, and Satan came also among them to present himself before the Lord. While there, the Lord spoke to him and asked him, ^^ From whence comest thou ?" To which Satan replied, '^ From going to and fro in the earth, and walking up and down in it." Or, as the Septua- gint renders it — '' Having gone round the earth, and hav- ing walked over all that is under heaven, I am come hither." In 1 Kings xxii. 19, Micah, the prophet, saw the Lord sitting upon his throne, and all the host of heaven standing before Him, on His right hand and on His left. ^' And the Lord said, who shall persuade Ahab that he may go up and fall at Ramoth-Grilead ? And one said on this manner, and another said on that manner. And there came forth a spir- it, and stood before the Lord, and said, I will persuade him. And the Lord said unto him, wherewith ? And he said, I will go forth and will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets. And He said, thou shalt persuade him, and prevail also ; go forth and do so." We would merely re- mark here, that God in scriptural language, is often said to do what he permits to be done. Again, Zechariah, the prophet, chap. iii. 1, ^^ saw Joshua, the High Priest, standing before the angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at His right hand to resist him. And the Lord said to Satan, the Lord reVike thee, 0, Satan." In Jude, verse 9, we read that " Michael, the Archangel, 24 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC BELUSHON. wlien contending with the devil, he disputed about the body of Moses, durst not bring against him a railing accusation, (or, as the Greek might be read, did not pass judgment up- on him for blasphemy, but referred the case to the Lord,) saying, the Lord rebuke thee." Again, in Rev. xii, the same thing is brought to our view. There we are told that there is to be a war in heaven — Mi- chael and his angels fighting against Satan and his angels. And the Dragon and his angels were cast out of heaven. — Their place was found no more in heaven. Satan, who de- ceived the whole world, was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him. Then it is, after Satan's complete expulsion from all access to the heavenly beings, and from his long held empire in the air, that we hear the heavenly hosts, who never sinned against God, and the ran- somed Church from earth, proclaiming with a loud voice in heaven, ^^ now is come salvation and strength, and the king- dom of our God and the power of His Christ ; for the Ac- cuser of our brethren is cast down, who accused them be- fore God day and night. Then there is rejoicing in heaven by the angels, and the ransomed Church; but there is woe to the inhabiters of the earth and of the sea, for the Devil is come down to the earth, having great wrath, for he hath but a.short time then to remain upon it. Now, without attempting to enter into any critical ex- amination, or extended explanation of these passages already quoted, we learn from them several important facts, some of which we will here state, We learn, 1. That Satan, and it may be evil spirits, are not wholly debarred from all communicatian with God, and the holy angels. It does not appear that they have anv intercourse THE CASE STATED. 25 with them further than their coming in conflict with them and opposing them. 2. That God still uses these evil spirits, as the instru- ments in His hands of punishing those who may reject his counsels, and that when they are permitted to afflict the good, it is never done unless God intends to bring out of the affliction a greater good to the afflicted, and glory to His own great name. 3. That these evil spirits may take possession of men in the flesh, and control them as the lying spirit took posses- sion of the Prophets of Ahab, and thus deceived him, if God permit them to do so. 4. That the power of these evil spirits will be more won- derfully displayed, and their rage against God and against His people and the inhabitants of our world, will be more malignant, immediately preceding the Millennial dispensa- tion of the church, than they have ever yet shewn them- selves to be. The reason of this seems to be that they will, then, have only men in the flesh to operate upon, and that, too, only for a short time before their final expulsion from the earth. They will be no more permitted to accuse the saints of the Lord before him. These remarks may open up a new train of thought to many readers of the Bible, and one which they may not have hitherto been disposed to look at, or to examine. — But it is time that God's people, yea, and the men of the world, in these latter days, should think more seriously on this subject. Satan has mighty power, and he will exert that power more and more as the day of his binding draws nigh. He will deceive all who dwell upon the earth to their final undoing if they flee not to Christ, as their only refuge. The exhortation of our Lord comes, thereforCj 2 26 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. with great force to every one, '^ Watch ye, therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand be- fore the Son of man." — Luke xxi : 36. But, to return from this digression to our first parents in the garden of Eden. Satan, failing in the object of his rebellion in heaven, came to earth and plotted the ruin of man. His plan was laid with consummate skill, and sad, indeed, to the world has been its success. Without entering now into any critical examination of the history of the fall of man, b}^ the super-human wisdom of Satan, the facts themselves are plain enough for any one's comprehension. In carrying out his malicious design, Satan, took possession of the body of an animal called the Nachash ; in our version, the ser- pent. This animal was more subtle than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made. He selected the very best instrument that was to be found, for the accom- plishment of his Satanic purposes. The animal either had the gift of speech originally from God, or when Satan took possession of its body, he spoke with an audible voice to the woman, and held a conversation with her through the medium of the animal. Her innocence of heart and purity of mind, or her ignorance, at that time, of the peculiar character of the animal, in its natural state, does not ap- pear to have excited in her the least degree of surprise in hearing the animal speak to her, apparently, in a human voice, and in a language that she could understand. Some of the ancient Eabbins maintained that the Nachash, which was more wise or artful than every wild beast (micol chayath) of the field, was a creature of reason and under- standing, and that it was formed like a human being, and THE CASE STATED. 27 not as a reptile, or snake, which the wateis produced. — Moses arranges all the animals on earth in three classes, ?iz. : the Chayath^ the wild beasts ; the Behaimath^ the tame beasts ; and the Remesh^ the creeping things. As the Nachash was more wise, prudent or crafty (Heb. gna- room) than all of the animals, they conclude that the ani- mal used was one of the ape tribe, a species of baboon. — The whole narrative accords better, they judge, with an animal of that description than with a mere reptile. And even now, in its degraded condition, it seems like a more fitting instrument for Satan than a mere reptile. But, leaving the particular nature and form of the animal out of the question for the present, all agree that Satan, in this plan of deception, concealed himself, and worked through the instrumentality of the Nachash^ whatever the animal may have been. From this inspired narrative we learn the following facts, viz : 1. That Satan did take possession of the body of an animal and kept it as long as he chose. 2. That he did so control the animal thus possessed by him as to make it, for the time being, lose the distinctive character which belonged to it, and to assume, in appear- ance, at least, that which belongs to another being. 3. That he did make an innocent and unfallen human being imagine that she held converse with an animal, while she actually was holding a conversation with -Satan him- self. If he did so then, we are certainly justified in the con- clusion that he can do so still, if God should permit him to exert his power in that way. For we have no reason 28 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. to believe that Satan lias less power, or craft, or malice now than he had then. In the history of Job we have another inspired account of the power of Satan and of his hatred towards the good of the human race, and of his intense desire to do evil be- yond what we may suppose he is ordinarily engaged in do- ing. From this account we learn the following additional facts, viz : 1. That Satan prompts men to acts of robbery and mur- der. He stirred up the evil passions of the Sab cans, and caused them to attack the servants of Job as they were peacefully ploughing in their field. They slew all the ser- vants but one, and carried away the oxen and the asses. 2. He caused fire to fall from heaven, or rather he con- trolled the electricity which is in the clouds, causing the lightning to smite the servants who tended the sheep in the field, and killed all the sheep and all the men except one, who escaped to tell the sad news. Not only were the men and animals killed, but they were actually burned up. This is an effect which is never produced by the mere stroke of lightning in our days ; or, if it be, it is exceed- ingly rare. 3. After exciting the Chaldeans to carry off the camels, and to kill the servants who attended them, he raised a storm in the wilderness that blew down the house in which the ten children of Job were assembled, and slew them all, and all the attendants on that occasion, except one, who was left to communicate the fact. 4. He laid his hand upon the body of Job, and smote him with a sore disease, so that, in the anguish of his soul, he longed for death to be freed from the bodily sufferings he then endured. His flesh became loathsome to himself. THE CASE STATF.T). 29 His soul was scared with dreams, and terrified by visions and frightful appearance of horrid and unearthly things, so that he preferred strangling and death to life. From this history v/e learn that, if God permit, Satan has power to control the winds and the electric fluid so as to overthrow dwellings, destroy property to any conceivable amount; to take away the lives of men, and of animals; to afflict the bodies of men with horrible diseases ; to ter- rify the mind by the presentation to the imagination and to the eye of horrid and revolting sights ; and to disturb the hours of sleep by harassing the mind with terrifying dreams, thus making life a burden, and forcing the unhappy sufferer to long for death, so as to be free from such tor- ment. It also gives us an idea of the belief of Job as re- gards the influence of these things upon man after death. It is evident that he looked upon death as a guarantee • that he would be freed from the influence of Satan's power forever. But if death gave him no release, why should he long for it ? Satan is still the Prince of this world, and the Prince of the power of the air, and he still works in the hearts of the children of -disobedience. Not to occupy the attention of the reader any longer with the instances of Satan's power, as recorded in the Old Testament, we pass to those of the New Testament. Here we have a true and faithful record also of some of the won- derful workings of Satan. It is not our design to cite all these cases as given us by the inspired writers, though that might be profitable, but only a few as mere specimens of the whole, to show that the same mind originates them all, though the manifestations may be different. To any one, who is willing to receive the plain and unvarnished statements of the sacred writers, there can be no difficulty 30 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. in accounting for ail these wonders. Indeed, it requires no small amount of false reasoning to adduce even a plausi- ble argument to sliow that the direct agency of Satan was not emploj-ed in their production. Many suppose that the possessions in old times, were confined entirely to the Jewish people, and in a great de- gree to the times of our Lord. But this, certainly, is not the fact. They were found among the Gentiles also. The young woman, who had the spirit of Python (divination) as stated by Luke, Acts xvi : 1 1-20, was a Gentile. She was a Greek, and resided at Philippi, in Macedonia. We are sadly mistaken if we think that Satan has nothing to do with any body but the Jews. He has as warm friends, and as faithful servants, and as devout followers among the Gentiles as he ever had among the Jews. We do not think that the Gentiles need yield the palm to the Jews for fidelity to the cause of Satan. They certainly have nothing to lose in this respect, in comparison with their brethren. As to the demoniacs being more abundant in the days of our Lord's incarnation, than at any other time before, or after it, cannot be proved, though the learned Joseph Mede, in his sermon on John x : 20, suggests that it was so. (See his works, p. 28. Ed. 1772.) The frequent ac- counts we have in the gospels of the doings of evil spirits, during the time of our Lord's ministry in Judea, is not owing to the fact, that they were any more busy in de- ceiving the souls of men, and in injuring their bodies then than in former times ; but, it is owing to the fact, that we have there more recorded instances of the power of our Lord so signally displayed, in casting them out of men, women and children, than before, thus proving to the Jews, EXISTENCE OF SATAN. 31 as well as to the Gentiles, tliat He was the true Messiah, the seed of the woman, and the promised King of Israel. We have no reason to believe that Satan does not now possess the souls and bodies of men in our world just as much as ever he did. God certainly is no better pleased with the corrupt workings of the human heart now than ever he was. And it will be a difficult thing to prove that the heart of the world, which is still at '^ enmity with Grod," is any more in love with holiness and purity and the glory of the Lord, than it was eighteen hundred years ago. Had we inspired information on this subject, we would, doubt- less, find that multitudes of persons are now under the direct teachings and control of Satan and of evil spirits ; and, that their conduct, which is in open violation of the laws of Grod, and of all the decencies and proprieties of life, and which is put down to the score of eccentricity of char- acter, where ignorance, brutality, or native depravity of heart, should be accredited to Satan, the master spirit that rules and controls his wretched subjects at his will. SATAN. Satan is a personal existence and not a mere principle. He is an angelic being whom God created good as He did all things. But he sinned against God, and was cast down from the high position he once occupied. It would seem that pride was his sin. — I Tim. iii. 6. But, how sinful feeling could first enter a holy heart we may never find out. The fact we do know. Satan did sin. What his name was before his sin we know not. This is his name since. The word Satan means an adversary, an opposer. It is never found in the plural number, so that the sacred wri- 32 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. tcrs acknowledge but one Being of that name. He is styled by our Lord ^^ The Prmce of this world," (John xii : 3) ; by the Apostle, '' The Prince of the power of the air," (Ep. ii : 2) ; and by the Jews, ^^ The Prince of the demons," (Matt, ix : 34). The Septuagint translate the word Satan hy the word Diaholos^ which means an Ac- cuser^ a Slanderer. He is also called in the New Testa- ment by a variety of names, indicative of his character and conduct, as Accuser, Destroyer, Liar, Murderer, &c. Nor is it any slander to say that he justly deserves them all. The sacred writers and our Lord say there is a Devil, and but one. But, it is becoming the fashion now to deny his personal existence, to think that our Lord and the Apostles only spoke in accordance with the silly notions of those of their day, who supposed there was a being call- ed Satan or the Devil, and that they themselves did not really believe in his existence. This is surely a progres- sive age — in unbelief of the word of Grod, at least, what- ever else may stand still. But the very fact that the per- sonal existence of Satan is denied by so many in our day, by many professing Christians, and a few who bear the name of ministers of Christ, as well as by those who deny the Word of God entirely, is to our mind one of the strong- est proofs of the personal existence of such an Arch-De- ceiver. This is one of what the Apostle calls ^' ta lathe ton Satana, the depths of Satan," (Eev. ii: 24). We can fully endorse the language of Dr. A. Clarke, who, speaking on the denial of Satan's existence, says : " Satan knows well that they who deny his being will not be afraid of his power and influence ; will not watch against his wiles and devices ; will not pray to God for deliverance from the SATAN AND DEMONS. 33 Evil One ; will not expect him to be trampled down under their feet if he has no existence ; and, consequently, they will become an easy and unopposing prey to the enemy of their souls. By leading men to disbelieve and deny his existence, he throws them off their guard. He is then their complete master, and they are led captive by him at his will. It is well known that among all those who make any profession of religion, those who deny the existence of the Devil, are they who pray little or none at all ; and are, apparently, as careless about the existence of God as they are about the being of the Devil. Duty to God is with them out of the question, for those who do not pray especially in private^ (and I never knew a devil-denier who did), have no religion of any kind (except the form) what- ever pretensions they may choose to make." One of the most striking proofs of the personal exist- ence of Satan, which our times afford us, is found in the fact, that he has so influenced the minds of multitudes in reference to his existence and doings, as to make them be- lieve that he does not exist ; and that the hosts of Demons or Evil Spirits, over whom Satan presides as Prince, are only the phantacies of the brain, some halucination of mind. Could we have a stronger proof of the existence of a mind so mighty as to produce such results ? Surely we have need to pray ^'Deliver us from the Evil One, apo tou po- nerouy Matt, vi : 13. The word Daimon^ in the New Testament, is usually rendered by one word Devil. But this is evidently im- proper, as it would lead us to believe that there are many devils, whereas there is and can be but one. And surely one is enough for any world ; yea, one too many. Daimon in the New Testament always means an evil spirit, who is 34 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. under Satan's control; a Demon. Ere long Satan will be cast out from tliis world, and with him all the host of de- mons, or evil spirits, who fell with him and who are under his control ; then we shall have neither devil nor demon here. NE^V TESTAMENT POSSESSIONS. In the gospels by Matt, viii : 28-33, Mark v : 1-16, and Luke viii : 26-36, we have a detailed account of two men who met our Lord when he came into the country of the Gergesenes, which lay on the east of the sea of Tiberias, in the land of Palestine. They were possessed with demons, daimonizomenoi. They had left the society of their friends and their homes, and took up their abode in the tombs. — These tombs {mnemaia) are very abundant in some parts of the Eastern world to this day. They are houses built over the graves of distinguished or wealthy persons by the governments of which they were honored members, or by their relatives. They are of different sizes and shapes. — Some of them are built square, others round, and from ten to thirty feet high. The most of those that are yet to be found in India were built by the Mohammedans. They are now used as dwellings or as stopping-places for travel- ers, being fitted up for these purposes. But formerly, no one dwelt in them — the friends of the deceased only visit- ing them occasionally as places of prayer. I have often lodged in these tombs while on missionary tours. We found them comfortable lodgings ; and to those who are fond of retirement, they afford an agreeable resting-place. These men who met our Lord had been lodging in these tombs. They were exceedingly fierce ; so much so that it was dangerous for any person to pass by the place where they were. The people of the country had often bound THE DEMON'.ACS — A LEGION. 35 them with chains and fetters of ordinary strength, but they broke their chains, tore off all their clothing, and escaped, " being driven by the demon into the wilderness or desert places." Not only would they injure others^ but they also injured themselves, cutting themselves with stones. No human power could subdue them. When they saw our Lord comicg towards them they recognized him at once, and cried out in a loud voice, '^ Jesus, thou Son of God most High, what have we to do with thee? Art thou come hither to torment us before the time ? We adjure thee by God that thou torment us not." And Jesus asked him, saying, " What is thy name ?" And he said, ^' Legion ;" for many demons had entered into him. They then besought our Lord that he would not cast them out into the bottomless pit or abyss — eis ton ahysson. — Luke viii : 31 ; Rev. xx : 3. (The same Greek work is used in both these places) ; but that he would permit them to enter into the swine, some two thousand in number, that were feeding near the mountains a good way off. Our Lord commanded them to come out of the men, and giving them permissioD, they entered the swine, and so alarmed them that they all ran violently down a steep place into the sea, and were drowned. The men who kept the swine, when they saw what had happened to them, were alarmed, and fled into the city, telling everybody they met what had happened. Tn consequence of this news, the people, excited by curiosity, went out to see what had transpired. And when the people of the city saw the poor demoniac sittiog at the feet of Jesus, ch thed with proper garments that had been furnished him, and in the possession of his right mind, they felt afraid. But when the people of the country round about came and learned from those who had wit- So SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. nessed the scene, tlicy felt differently. They were also taken with great fear, but their covetousness got the better of their benevolence. They thought only of the swine; and if Jesus would let all the demons enter them, the hope of their gains would be gone. Hence, they besought him most earnestly to depart, and leave them the demons and their swine. I doubt if they ever prayed so fervently before. Jesus heard their prayers, and left the country. — But the people of the city felt differently, for the demoniacs, at least one of them, was sent back to his own home by our Lord, with the commission to show to the people what great things God had done for him. He did so ; and the people of the town who knew the poor possessed man, re- ioiced with him in his deliverance. And when they heard that our Lord was about to return to the country, the people went out to meet him, and received him gladly. Such dis- plays of the power of God now in saving sinners, would in many cases meet with similar treatment. There are multi- tudes now who would greatly prefer that Jesus should de- part from their midst, rather than have him cast the evil spirits out of their neighbors, if by his doing so they should lose any of their swine or any of their unlawful gains. It is a blessed truth that all are not so. In the gospel of Mark i : 23-26, we have an account of a man who was in the synagogue of the Jews in Caper- naum, and who had an unclean spirit in him. (So these evil spirits do go to church sometimes.) When our Lord en- tered and began to expound the Word of God to the peo- ple, the man, or the spirit in him, cried out, saying, " Let us alone. What have we to do with thee^ thou Jesus of Nazareth? Art thou come to destroy us ? I know thee who thou art — the Holy One of God.'' " And Jesus A SPIPwIT OF INFIRMITT. 37 rebuked him, saying, Hold thy peace, and come out of him. And when the unclean spirit had torn him, and cried with a loud voice, he came out of him. The people were amazed, and said. What thing is this ? What new doctrine is this ? for with authority He commandeth even the un- clean spirits, and they do obey him." The Evangelist Luke, who was a physician also, records the case of a woman, a Jewess, who had been bowed down by what he calls a spirit of infirmity {pneuma astheneias,) This was a different kind of spirit from those who were called '^ unclean," or '^ dumb," or merely evil, though they all were evil. The mode by which this spirit afflicted her was, probably, by curving her spine. Such was the effect of his power on her, that she could not lift herself up for the space of eighteen years ! When our Lord saw her, he called her to him and said to her, ^' Woman, thou art loosed from thine infirmity !" And He laid hands on her, and she was made straight immediately, and glorified Grod. When the hypocritical ruler of the synagogue saw what had been done, he answered with indignation because the woman had been healed on the Sabbath day. Hypocrites are always great sticklers for forms and ceremonies, but pay very little regard to the soul and spirit of true reli- gion. Our Lord reproved this hypocrite, telling him that if he himself would, as an act of mercy, on the Sabbath loose his ox or his ass, and lead the animal to a watering place where it might slake its thirst and save its life, so ought this daughter of Atraham, whom Satan had bound for eighteen years^ be loosed from her bond on the Sabbath day.- — Luke xiii : ] 1-17. All that we say, at present, in reference to this case, is that it argues little for Luke's medical knowledge if he SPIRITUALITY, A SATANIC DELUSION. mistook the case and tlic nature of the disease ; and as little for the veracity of our Lord if that disease and in- firmity had not been produced by an evil spirit. The hinder is one thing and the bond is another ; they cannot be the same. There is but one case more of those recorded in the New Testament that I would refer to at present, and that is the case of that good woman, Mary Magdalene. The Evange- list Mark says that our Lord, after his resurrection, " ap- peared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had cast seven demons." — Mark xvi : 9. They were demons, not diseases. It is clear from this declaration that she had been greatly afflicted by evil spirits. Why this number took possession of her, the Bible does not say, and hence we do not know. There is, probably, no woman whose name is recorded in the Sacred Scriptures, whose character has been more slandered than that of Mary of Magdala. There seems to have been a special effort made to make her char- acter so surpassingly vile, that the contrast in her conver- sion might be so much the greater, and that Grod thereby might get the greater glory. But the opinion that she was possessed by seven demons " on account of her wicked- ness," as Ambrose and Jansenius affirm, is without the least foundation in truth. She was no more to be blamed for being possessed by seven demons, than the man was out of whom a legion (five thousand) were cast, or the child who was possessed by but one. Jerome speaks favorably of her character and standing before her conversion. The probability is that she was a lady of great respectability and wealth in Galilee before her conversion, and that after it she was, next to the mbth-er of Jesus, the most highly MODERN MANIFESTATIONS. 39 favored of women, for slie was the first herald of s. risen Eedeemer. Andricomius says that '' Magdalum was the castle of Mary Magdalene, where she was born and where she was healed." But it is the fashion for Protestants and Romanists to defame her character, and they will do it. — But surely it is bad enough to have her afflicted by seven real demons without being reproached for what she could not help, and charged with being what she was not. It is a pity that so many Christians allow themselves so easily to fall into sentiments based upon the loose remark of some old father in the church, who was probably no better than he ought to be in the very things he charges upon the in- nocent. When will the day come when the dogmas of men will be wholly set aside, and the Word of the Lord alone shall be the basis of thought and feeling, of word and of act ? Lord; hasten the blissful day ! MODERN MANIFESTATIONS. We enter now upon a most interesting part of our sub- ject, viz; the consideration of spirit manifestations, as they are now witnessed in this land or in others. And here we must rely, in a great degree, upon the eyes and ears of others ; for we have ourselves seen but few, comparatively speaking, of the many things that these spirits have done, and are yet doing in the midst of us. We have no dispo- sition to call in question any of the facts which have been carefully and properly reported. Nor do we think that those who affirm that they have witnessed the phenomena which they describe, are mistaken, and that their senses of seeing, hearing and feeling have all deceived them. We cannot believe that they would affirm for truths, what they know to be false. It cannot be ; for many of these witnes- 40 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. ses are persons of undoubted veracity. They are men who would scorn to tell a lie on any account ; and surely they could have no motive arising from worldly gain or appro- bation to do so. They are men of good sense, of sound and sane minds. Men of good judgment ; men who can dis- criminate, as well as any others, between the true and the false ; men who are in no way inferior to those around them, and whose testimony in a court of justice, on all subjects of which they have any personal knowledge, would be ta- ken without the least hesitation. All this we say because we believe it. Among those who have witnessed these phe- nomena, are men in all the walks of life ; men of science and of learning, physicians, judges, ministers, merchants, men of business in all the avocations of life, sober and sedate, as well as those who are of more excitable or enthusiastic tem- perament of mind. Surely, it cannot be that all these per- sons have been deceived as to all they have seen and heard. If the whole has been a mere trick, and if all these persons have been led to acknowledge phantasies for facts, then the wonder is a greater one still than that concerning which they testify. There are, no doubt, many who, for the sake of gain, en- deavor to impose upon the more credulous among the people, by base imitations of these phenomena. But the cheat can easily be detected by those who seek for the truth in the case. And the very fact itself that some attempt to imitate these wonders, proves that they are realities in the true sense of the word. Among those who claim a no higher character than that of mere mimics in these matters, we apprehend that there are none whose name or standing in society, would entitle them to any respect from others, while they have none from themselves. They are soon among the MANIFESTATIONS IN INDIA. 41 things that were. They even fall beneath contempt. They soon are out of mind. But that persons of hitherto-known respectability of char- acter, of amiable dispositions, of moral worth, and of a godly life, and the firm believers in the truths of revelation, sl^ould suddenly rise up and proclaim to the world that things were done through them by a power outside of them- selves, and in opposition to their own choice or will in the case, while at the same time, they attempted to practice deception upon the community, whose ears and eyes and senses were all awake to expose the cheat, if it be a cheat, and then demand of us faith in the reality of the things done, is asking of us a larger amount of faith than would be necessary to believe all the ghost-stories that have ever been published to the world since there was a pen to record them till now. Making all due allowance, then, for those who will lie, yet there are so many persons, both old and young, who cannot be deceived themselves, and who cannot possibly be attempting to deceive others, and who testify in the honesty of their hearts, to things they have heard and seen, we hesitate not to admit fully and freely the reality of all, each and every fact they state. The facts themselves however are one thing ; the true explanation of thenl is an- other, and a very different thing. We seek the truth, and if we find it, we shall not fear to proclaim it; for ^^ Truth is mighty, and must prevail." A SCENE IN INDIA. There are a few things which have come under our own observation, in connection with this subject, which we would now state. As to the facts themselves, we know 42 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. that we were not deceived. Our explanation of them we shall give hereafter. On the evening of Feb. 9th, 1834, about 6 o'clock, while standing in the door of Mr. Ropers' house in AuruDgabad, India, I saw a crowd of people going towards a small Hindoo temple, which was in sight, and near at hand. On enquiry, I found that they were going to offer up two lambs in sacrifice to the god Vetal, the king of the demons, or in other words, to the Devil. In company with Mr. Roper and another gentleman, we followed the crowd. There were some forty persons in all, including the women and children. It was a family sacrifice, and was to be offered in fulfillment of a vow. A few persons playing on instru- ments of music, such as are used on these occasions, led the way. Then followed two men bringing the lambs for sacrifice. The one was carried on the shoulders of one of the men : the other was led. Both of them were decorated with garlands of flowers. After these followed a person, carrying the sacred fire, and next in order the families concerned. When they arrived at the temple, which was a small building, some twelve or fifteen feet square, the people bowed down before the idol, which was within and opposite the door, and then walked round the temple twice. A lamp was then lit from the sacred fire and placed in the temple immediately before the idol. The person who officiated on this occasion was a priestess, with a wild look, disheveled hair, and with garments that needed washing. Her dress was the usual dress of the Hindoo women in that part of the country, viz., theckolee^ or body dress, a kind of spencer, the sleeves reaching only to the elbows , and tlie loogurda^ a garment wrapped round the v/aist and ex ten dine below the knee. On the left sleeve MANIFESTATIONS IN INDIA. 43 of her dress, small patches of red flannel had been sewed to represent the small-pox, which she professed to be able to cure. She was assisted by a man, the counter-part of herself in appearance. The priestess then marked the fore- heads of all the people with red paint, such as was on the idol. Having washed her hands in clean water, she took a handful of the small branches of the kurdoonimh^ the bitter-lime-tree, and tied them together in the form of a broom. This she held in her hand while her assistant poured upon it a vessel full of water. While engaged in washing these branches she continued to mutter something in a low and rapid tone of voice, which no one could dis- tinctly hear, and to which no one seemed to pay any at- tention. This being over, she ordered her assistant to wash the head and forelegs of one of the lambs with water, into which she had thrown some salt and some of those bitter leaves. The head of the lamb was next marked with the red paint. Some of the bitter leaves and salt were given it to eat, but it refused them. Its mouth was open- ed and some of the salt and water and another fluid, (but what I could not learn,) were forced down its throat. This seemed to stupify the animal, so that being let loose, it staggered about among the people. After a few minutes, one of the company gave it a gentle tap on the side of the head, which caused it to turn its face towards the door of the temple. As soon as this was done, the sacrificer seized it, threw it forcibly on its left side, the head being towards the door, and immediately cut off its head and the right leg at the knee. These were moved up and down before the idol, and then placed before the door of the temple. When the lamb had ceased to move, it was dragged to one side, where it was left. All this time the priestess stood 44 SPirdTUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. by and was muttering something to herself. She now stepped forward to the blood, holding the little bundle of branches over it in her hand, and while the sacrificer pour- ed water on it, she sopped it in the water and the blood, and proceeded to sprinkle all the people in the blood of the sacrifice, having first sprinkled the idol and the door- posts of the temple. When she came to us, as we stood at the end of the semi-circle of the crowd, she stopped and frowned, as if considering whether to sprinkle us or not. Then going to the door of the temple, she stood gazing in upon the idol, and while she continued her muttering, the brush dropped from her hand. She started back, and in a frantic-like manner began to jump and scream and pull her hair. On a sudden she was seized with trembling through her whole body — her arms were extended — her, mouth was wide open, and her eyes rolled from side to side. Again she jumped, and groaned, and raved, and screamed, and finally was thrown back full length as if lifeless to the ground. Her fall was broken by two of the women pre- sent, who sprang forward and broke her fall, which, if they had not done, it seems to me, it would have knocked her own or some other spirit out of her, and brought her to her senses ; or, at least, must have injured her much. After lying on the ground stretched out for some time ap- parently lifeless and stiff, she began to move, rose up slow- ly and gradually, and resumed her former appearance. She then addressed the people and told them that the god had accepted their sacrifice. This being ended, one of the company paid her a i^^ jpice (a small copper coin less than the value of our cent,) for her services ; the musicians struck up their music ; the company formed in a line and returned back to their homes. MANIFESTATIONS IN INDIA. 45 FindiDg the old l,ady pretty calm in mind, and looking intently at the money she had just received, I approached her, and began to enquire about the sacrifice and the meaning of what I had witnessed. But, whether she thought that our design was to injure her, or in some way to molest her, we know not ; she kept silent ; and when urged to speak, she began to whine, and pretended to be afraid of us, as perhaps she was. Gaining no informa- tion from her, we left her. From the assistant we merely learned the additional fact that, while the god was pleased with the honor conferred on it, so were they with what they had received, two lambs and some money. I need hardly say that the whole scene interested me ex- ceedingly at the time. The fact that the lambs were with- out hlemish ; that they were brought to the door of the temple (their tabernacle) ; that salt and bitter herbs were used ; that the head and foreleg were ivaved before the idol ; that the idol, the doorposts of the temple, and the people, were sprinkled with the hlood of the sacrifice ; and that the lambs were left for the use of the priestess, and the atten- dants on the temple — all tended to show that sacrifices, as they now exist among the Hindoos, must have had their origin in imitation of those appointed by the Lord and practiced by Israel. But in reference to this whole matter, and especially the ravings and the contortions and convulsions of the possess- ed, I would say, that the universal opinion of the people is, that they are wholly involuntary on their part. Their idea is that the god, which they say dwells in or near the idol, and to which the sacrifice is ofi'ered, and which, as in the present case, comes out of the idol and takes possession of the woman, through her speaks to the people, giving them 46 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. the information tliey may need. The Hindoos fully believe that the god which is a demon or evil spirit, does take pos- session of the bodies of individuals. Whatever the person may do in that state of frenzy, is considered as the act of the god, and not of the person possessed. That the Devil does now, at times, possess people, is the firm faith of all the Mohammedan population. The Hindoos believe that the same effects are produced by their Rackshus^ or evil spirits. The priests have their fixed rules, by which they profess to determine the question whether the possession be a real one or not. If it be real, according to their rules, then the per- son thus possessed, may be worshipped for the time being as the god itself. They do oftentimes worship the Devil They pray to him, they ask him to take possession of them. And is it unreasonable to suppose that their prayers in this matter may be answered ? That there is any trick on the part of these possessed ones, seems to be impossible. The natives who look on give them credit for honesty, at least, in the matter; and those who are Christians, who have wit- nessed them, so far as I have known their views, agree in the fact that they are veritable possessions. Probably every missionary in India has witnessed something of the same kind. The reader will find a short and interesting article on the subject in Rev. Dr. Allen's work on ^'India, Ancient and Modern," p. 384. In conversing recently with a missionary from India, he mentioned two instances of demoniacal possessions which came under his own observation. One was that of a boy in one of the schools at Bombay. While the missionary was in the school, and giving instruction to the youth as- sembled, one of the lads was seized and thrown down upon the floor : he began to groan, and foam at the mouth, and HINDOO CHILDREN AND CONVERTS. 47 was thrown about in a most singular manner. The mis- sionary went towards him to raise him up. The boys cried out, " Bhootagrust, Sahib ;" that is, '' He is possessed." After some time, they carried him home. One of the Hindoo converts, before her conversion, had been grievously tormented by the demons. After she had become a Christian, and had united herself to the church, one of her acquaintance asked her if the ^' Bhoots," the de- mons, troubled her now. She replied, ^' I believe now in Je- sus, and they don't come near me any more." Now, whatever others may think on the subject, one thing is certain, she really believed that she had been, and that, too, for years tormented by demons ; and it is presumed that she should know; but after she had embraced the truth, as it is in Christ, and placed her hopes and trust in Him, the evil spirits left her. We have her views of her own case. Was she mistaken ? Are we sure she was not right as to what had been the matter with her ? As to the boys in the school, they had no doubt of the fact that their young companion was possessed by a demon. We state these cases merely to show what the opinion of the people is on this subject. Others may attribute it all to' the effect of imagination, or to simple disease. But can they prove that that disordered imagination, or that disease by which the person may be afflicted, is not itself the pro- duction of an evil spirit ? But of this we will speak again. It is evident from the statements of travelers from the various parts of the heathen world, that the belief in spirits, distinct from man in the flesh, is, generally speak- ing, prevalent amoDg the people. Not only do the people believe that they do exist, but these spirits can also take possession of the bodies of men. There may be, and doubt- 43 SFIKITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. less is, much superstition connected with the faith of the people on these subjects; but still, their faith has its foundation in truth. The Old and New Testament writero speak of the existence of such evil spirits and influences, and we have no reason to think that they have yet been wholly expelled from the abodes of men. The Rev. Joseph Wolff, the missionary to the Jews, and ' of world-wide fame, in his published account of .his travels through Bokhara, AffghanistaD, and India, gives us the views of the people of Cashmere and others on the subject, and also his own. He was charged by Lieut. Burnes with having cast a demon out of some godless Mohammedan somewhere near Cabool, and this was considered proof positive that the honored missionary was insane. When Mr. Wolff was with me in Philadelphia, I asked him par- ticularly abou.t the matter. The account he gave me was substantially this : He said that one evening while sitting in a tent with some Mohammedans and others, and dis- cussing subjects in reference to the character of Jesus of Nazareth, and the plan of salvation by him, a Mohamme- dan cried out and iaterrupted their conversation by such •Linear thly gr.oanings, and language; and actions, that_ being fully convinced that he was possessed by an evil spirit, Mr. W. turned to him, and fixing his eyes upon him, said, '' In the name of the Lord Jesus of Nazareth, the Messiah, I command thee to be silent !" and immediately the man was silent. He became calm, and continued so during the remainder of the interview. Others may form their own opinion of the matter, but the united opinion of Mr. W. and the company with him v/as, that the m.an was a demo- niac, and just such as we read of in the New Testament. — V/e may be mistaken, but we think it will be found that WITCHCRAFT. 49 the most of our Christian missionaries who have labored for any length of time in any part of the heathen world, have witnessed such scenes as correspond very well with the scriptural account of demoniacal possessions. And if they are not in reality demoniacal possessions, which the people themselves believe they are, it will be difficult to account for them on any other theory. \7 I T C H C R A F T . Since the entrance of the Evil One into our world, the evidences of his power and evil workings are abundant. — In every land you find them. They are in every age, and among all nations. None are exempt. Our own country has not escaped. Satan does not need the assistance of steam power to transport himself or his angels from one land to another. He visited America long before the in- troduction of machinery, by which our sluggish bodies may be carried from place to place. He is the Prince of the power of the air — and although not omnipresent nor om- niscient, yet he has agencies constantly at work, so that his influence is felt, and constantly too, throughout the world. There are but few in our country now v>^ho have not read or heard something of the cruel hunt after witches and wizards (or, in the improved language of the present day, mediums) in England, Scotland, Sweden, and America, from the year 1640 down to 1692, or later, and of the sad results of that movement, both here and there. After two hundred years have rolled away, we of this day may sup- pose that we understand these matters better than the learned of that day. Perhaps we do. But after all, can we give a satisfactory solution of those sad operations 50 SriRlTUALlSM, A SATANIC DELUSION, without rcferriDg them, at least in some degree, to somethiog more than mere wild imaginings or unrestrained fanati- cism? Wc are astonished now to see the names of the great men of that age, in all those countries and here also, judges, governors, jurors, ministers, and people, learned and influential, all uniting in condemning to death, hang- ing, drowning, and torturing men, but especially helpless women and children, because the people believed that they were under the influence of Satan ; and some of them, to save their lives, by confession, declared they were. It is truly sad to think of the cold-blooded and deliberate mur- ders that were then committed under the sanction of law, and for the honor, as they thought, of the religion of Jesus, that proclaims peace and good will to men. We fully be- lieve the testimony of Scripture in reference to the wicked- ness of the heart of man by nature. But bad as the human heart is, we do not believe that it is so bad as to act, as we know it did during that reign of witch-terror, without aid and assistance from without — even from Satan himself. We doubt not that many of those unhappy victims were under Satanic influence, and that too, like the poor demoniacs of old, without any will or wash of their own. But we also believe, and have fully as much evidence, if not more in the case, that the judges and jurors, the ministers and the people, who engaged in that unrighteous work of con- demning and executing so many of their fellow-beings, were themselves under the direct influence of the Devil. — They had the power in their own hands ; and hence, they saved their own lives. Satan raised the storm, and kept it up and controlled it so as to accomplish the object he had in view, namely, the ruin of many, and the bringing a reproach upon the religion of Christ, through WITCHCRAFT. 5| its professed adherents, whom he himself had possessed. If there be guiltiness in the matter, and no doubt there is, we judge it is not to be chargeable so much to those who were involuntarily the subjects of those delusions as to those who lent themselves, as the willing servants of Satan, for the time being, in persecuting and killing those who needed rather their prayers and their sympathies, and es- pecially deliverance from the power of the Devil by the grace of God. At the present time, we have in this country the mani- festations of Satanic influence, which are neither '-'• few nor far between." They may be arranged under two general classes, viz. : 1. Those which are more immediately connected with the moving of material objects ; and~ 2. Those which exhibit a mind in connection with them, I.. A controlling them. As to the first of these — viz., the movements of material objects — we have published accounts of them, which, if particular cases be necessary, are sufficient to satisfy any reasonable mind of their reality ; for we have them in any reasonable quantity and variety. Having already stated that we have no reason to call in question the truth of many of these published accounts, as to the facts themselves, we hesitate not to refer to them as faots. As to the explanation of those facts, we express no opinion here : we reserve that for another place. Taking then the statements which are given us by mul- titudes of individuals over their own signitures, and whose testimony we do not venture to question, we have the move- ment of tables by persons laying their hands upon them, and rappings, and noises in any conceivable quantity. So 52 SriRlTUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. far as wc learii, the mode of operation is this. A few si^ at a table, one of whom must be a medium ; that is, if we understand the term, a connecting link between the visible and invisible ; and one, through whom the invisible agent may work. They lay their hands upon it ; they sit in silence, and in due time the table begins to move. At first the table was spoken to as an intelligent being, and asked sundry questions, according to the fancy of the ques- tioner. These would be answered by tilting up and down. One tilt is no ; two are doubtful, and three are yes. The table was then asked to stand on one foot, and it would do so ; to walk about, and to answer all sorts of questions. All of which, whether the answers were right or wrong, seemed to please the operators, and the spectators much Afterwards the questions were put, and are now put, when these things are done, to the invisible agent who, it is said, moves the table. The form now is — " "Will the spirit tell us ;" or, if a name be given, ^' Will M. or N. answer our question ?" So that now the intercourse is held between the livicg, and the invisible, through a mere table. It was said at first, by nearly all, and by many yet, that all this is the efi'ect of electricity, or of the operation of one of the minds present. But here is a table on which no hands are laid. It is requested to rise, or the spirits are requested to raise it up for the gratification of those present. It does rise, and does remain suspended in the air. No hand touches it ; no trick has done it. But it is done. Here, so far as human eyes can see, the laws of gravitation are suspended, or in some way overcome, so that the table does remain suspended in the air. Does electricity or magnetism also do that ? What law of niiture is there, so far as we know TABLE TirPiNG. 53 tliem by the observance of which any one, or any number of men can, by the mere force of their will, order a table to rise and remain suspended in the air, and it will obey them ? But, this is not alL Not only are tables moved, and other portions of matter lifted up, and moved about and are broken to pieces ; persons are lifted up without any visible agency, and are carried bodily from one room to another, and from place to place : persons unskilled in music, even little children, have played well and skillfully on instruments of music without having learned a note, and the instruments themselves have played while no hand touched them ; hands have appeared writing on walls ; they have been felt ; some of them apparently warm and others cold to the touch ; persons have been seized and shaken, and their garments torn ; they have been tossed about ; the form of bodies known to be long dead have been made to appear ; secrets have been revealed and facts have been made known, which were beyond the reach of man to find out : friends have been represented as coming back from the invisible world, and holding converse with the living, some times speaking words of comfort, and at others words of warning, in many eases words of truth, and in others words of falsehood. A friend of mine in whose eye-sight and statements I have every confidence, states the following facts among others. One day happening to pass by the door of a friend, he called him to him ; after the usual salutations of the day, the following conversation in substance passed between them — *^ Have you witnessed any of these table- tippings which 54 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. are talked about so mucli ?" (they had just begun to be known in Philadelphia then.) ^' We know but little about them," he replied. " We can turn the tables in our house — our little daugh- ter can do it easily ; but we can't do it without her : come in and see." They went in, and in due timo were seated in an upper room. The father, mother, and little daughter, some fourteen years of age, sat by the little table. Their hands were laid upon it. All looked on. After a few minutes, sure enough the table tipped up. The father then asked, how many persons are there in the room ; how many windows are there to the room : a coin was held out in the closed hand ' — the kind and date were asked, also the several ages of the persons present ; to all these the answers were correct. It was then suggested, perhaps the little girl can write also. A pencil was placed in her hand, and soon it began to move. Several questions were asked her, and answers were given which seemed to gratify the father and interest him very much. Finally the question was put, "who moves her hand ?" Immediately, in large distinct letters, she wrote the word " S^I^-^*" When she lifted up her pencil and saw the word she had written, she dropped the pencil, and a shudder passed over her that shook her whole frame. She evidently felt afraid, and her parents were silent. They looked amazed. At length the father said, ^^I guess we had better stop now." That ended the in- terview. But, the conclusion that our friend drew from what he saw was, that there must have been a mind dif- ferent from any one then present, controlling her hand, for no one had suggested that name, and surely the little girl A MANIFESTATION. 55 herself had not intended to write the word. What led her to do it? That is the question. On another occasion, the same friend was walking down one of our streets, and seeing a small second hand book- store, he stepped in to look at the odd volumes that were there. He saw among them a work on Spiritualism, which led him to make a remark on the subject of the book. This led to a conversati'jn with the bookseller on the sub- ject. In the course of conversation, he said there was a lady then in his house, who did some strange things. He immediately left the store and called her. She came into the store and sat down on a chair near the counter. He gave her an alphabetical card. She laid it down before her, and placed her hands upon it. Her eyes soon closed. She then bandaged her eyes, and reversed the card. He asked her sundry questions. Her hand immediately was shaken violently, and she rapidly spelled out an answer to each question, by placing the fore finger upon each let- ter in regular order. After the experiments were over, the lady was asked what she thought about the whole matter. She replied, that she did not know what to think about it. The influence came upon her suddenly'-, about a year ago — her hand is moved against her will, and she has no knowledge of what she has spelled out, or the meaning of any thing done unless it be told her by those who may witness it. Our frTend was perfectly satisfied that the lady, (who is married and a mother), was honest in all that she said. She makes no gain by it. The whole thing is strange to her, she cannot account for it, and only when among her friends, does she now submit to have her hand moved for the gratification of othe' s. He is of the opinion that there 56 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. is a mind different from hers, that controls her hand on these occasions. We would mention but one more case which our friend witnessed. It was this : In company with another friend, he went to see a person who it is said becomes entranced (we think that is the term used.) Having entered the house, they were conducted to an upper room where the lady and her mother were. A small table was brought out and placed in the middle of the room, and she and they sat near it. She laid her hands upon it, and then asked if there were any spirits present. The answer was. Yes. — ' Are they good ? Yes. To what sphere do you belong ? The sixth. Will you take possession of the medium ? Yes. How soon ? In three minutes. All now was quiet. In a minute's time her eyes closed , her arms began to twitch ; her whole body began to be agitated ; her face was contorted ; she moaned, and a pe- culiar sensation was produced about the neck and throat, as if swallowing something ; her hands became perfectly rio:id, and her arms were stretched out. In three minutes' time her muscles relaxed ; she was again calm and com- posed, and spake out, saying, ^' I am happy." It was asked, " Who are you ?" ^' I am Sarah J. I lived in Ohio, and died six years ago. I was a member of the church ; I lived a Christian life ; I am progressing rapid- ly." To various questions proposed to her, she said she believed in Jesus as she did while on earth, bu! in many things her views were changed. There was punishment there for the bad, but all might make an atonement for their sins by suffering ; and dl would finally enter higher and happier spheres. Some were a long time in getting out of the lower ones, which were places of torment. She said A POSSESSION. 57 she saw the wicked a great way off ; they were quarreling with each other, and some evil one was taunting them. She felt happy in being able to come back and tell to others her joy and her peace. She had but a short time to stay ; she must go. A pause ensued, the twitching again returned, and a slight moan or two was heard, and she opened her eyes. On inquiring if she knew what she had been speaking about, she said. No ; she had no knowledge of it whatever. She felt no pain from the spasms or the proce^js of the pos- session. Shortly after the influence came upon her again, and she passed through a similar process. Finally, while sitting calmly with her hands on the table, she asked if there were any spirits present who would take possession of her. The table gave three violent raps. Her mother, who sat by, said, '' That's a bad spirit;" and seemed unwilling that her daughter should be made the subject of its control. — But she wished it. Immediately she was most violently shaken, and gave several deep groans, and her features were much contorted ; her whole countenance was changed. In a moment more she spoke out : '' Oh, cursed passion ! He provoked me to do it !'' " Who are you ?" ^' I am the murderer of Parkman. Oh, oh! I did it;" and she shuddered all over. " What did you do it for ?" '^ He kept asking me for the money." '^ Did you hate him ?" '' No; I had no intention of doing it until he came and asked me again for it. Oh, oh ! I killed him." ^' Where did you strike him ?" '^ Oh, here," laying her hand on the back part of her head. ^' Oh, oh !" and she gave a deep groan. " What did you do with him ?" ^' I dissected him— oh ! I did." '' Are you sorry for it now ?" ^' Oh, oh ! I can't repent — I can't." ''Is there then no hope for you ?" — 58 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. '^ I have just heard that there is ; but the time is so far off before I shall begin to progress. Oh, I can't repent. — Oh, oh !" and then she became violent. She pounded the table with her fists and knuckles, so that, fearing she might break some of her bones, our friend interposed his arm, so that she might spend her strength on it. But that not being very pleasant, he drew his arm back, and pulled away the table from her. She rose and caught hold of it, pulling it back, and pounded it more fui'iously, and -^3 rapidly as her hands could well move. All the time L r features were distorted, and the very picture of rage and despair. There seemed to be no stopping or calming her. All became somewhat alarmed. Her mother also seemed so. She arose and caught hold of her daughter, and spol--? out aloud — " In the name of the Lord, I beseech you to leave her 1" In a moment she sat down. She groaned once or twice, and then opened her eyes, and looked round and asked what was the matter. She seemed to be bewil- dered. When told what had happened, she said she thought that some bad spirit had had possession of her, but slie had no knowledge of what had transpired. '' But did yon not hurt your hands by pounding so hard ?'' ^^ No," slie replied. '' But did I not hurt you ?" '^ Yes, but not much. We wished," he said, ^' to save you from being injured." Having seen enough at that time, she was requested not to permit any more of the spirits to take possession of her ii she could prevent it. Astonished at what he saw, after a few minutes' conversation with the family he came awaj. He learned, however, from the young woman, that accoi.:.- ing to her accoiTr;t her father died many years ago, a wicked man; that aftt i some years in the invisible world, r." ;'. THE PHENOMENA AT DAVENPORt's. 59 after suffering a great deal, he obtained permission (from whom she did not say) to come back to this world and naake a medium of his daughter. By doing so he had done a good act, and that helped him to make some pro- gress towards being better and happier. This is the account sh ' gave of the matter ; but she does not attempt to explain or account for the influence that came upon her some two years ago. She professes to feel as yet no injury from the agitations and shakings she has to pass through. When asked if she really thought that the spirits that took possession of her were what they pro- fessed to be — viz., the spirits of departed human beings, her father's spirit among them — she said she thought so, but was not certain ; still, that seemed to be her belief of the matter. ' As to the above account, we can have no doubt of the reality of the events themselves, for our friend saw them, and could not be mistaken. Indeed, there are so many eye and ear witnesses to so many of these phenomena, that it is vain to deny the things +Iiemselves. But here is another iv. jount, and with this we shall con- clude this part of the subject. We cut it, a few weeks ago, out of one of the papers of the day. The statement is as follows : the phenomena at Davenport's. "We have on various occasions alluded to the mysterious and inexplicable manifestations at the above locality on Maine street, which are being daily and nightly developed, and of a character to startle the most intelligent minds in this or any other community. That these demonstrations partake of more than mere ':.uman agency, we are inclined I CO SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. to think any reasoning mind, after fairly looking into the matter, and bringing all ordinary and extraordinary talent to bear upon it, and failing to elucidate, will be obliged to acknowledge, we cannot for a moment doubt ; but of the character of the cause which doe& produce phenomena so pe- culiar, it is not our province to speculate upon. It would appear that mind, the concentrated mental force present at certain times, will either in the one case help to produce certain effects, or in other cases serve to destroy them. Also, that the atmosphere at times is favor- able or unfavorable, and other influences operating for or against the demonstration of a new and most mysterious principle, the germ of which is now beginning to manifest itself. Night after night, and daily, also, can be heard a voice, which speaks with, to say the least, human strength, and conveying ideas often of more than ordinary human sagacity. This intelligence can be communicated with when one is alone with the single medium, a boy of some twelve years old, whose hands are held, at which time the air is filled with noises, and sounds partaking of voices, whis- tlings, fingering of the strings of violins, guitars, &c. Last evening, with a number of respectable and perfect- ly sensible observers, we witnessed all of the above demon- strations, and a few more of even greater mystery. Lights of a character resembling shooting stars, or the rapid pas- sage of lightning, filled the room for several minutes. This phenomena is, we are told, often observed when human and atmospheric influence permit ; but a still more unaccount- able demonstration was given of this superhuman power. There were two mediums at the table, the eldest a lad of sixteen, we should judge. This boy was lifted, chair and all, to the ceiling, a distance of some twelve feet, at least, WONDERS AT BUFFALO. 61 and struck heavily there, indenting the plastering, and marking the chair with the whitewash. A request was made to the invisible agent who controls and converses with them, to do it again, and permit the boy to mark the ceiling with red chalk. After the company satisfied themselves that, by placing a chair on the table, and standing up in it, the boy could not reach the ceiling within several feet, the lights are put out, and immediately a heavy body, like dropping a hundred weight upon the floor, was felt to have come down ; the light was produced, and a red chalk line on the ceiling showed where the boy had been. Perhaps some rational explanation can be given of hu- man agency in all this ; if so, we should like to get hold of it. We feel that ordinary principles known to man, will not admit of it ; but what is it ? There we will leave the subject." — Buffalo Republican, The question now arises, in view of all these and of other facts that might be stated, and which the reader may find in the published books of the spiritualists, and which receive their full approbation; what is the proper explana- tion of them ? Are they all mere tricks, or are they natu- ral phenomena, or are they supernatural ? And if so, what kind of agency produces them ? CHAPTER III. THE THEORIES. Admitting tlien all the facts that have hitherto been re- ported in connection with these various forms of spiritual manifestations, to be veritable facts, the question arises, how are they to be explained ? Every effect must have an adequate cause. This is common sense and sound phi- losophy. There is a cause for all these effects. What i? that cause ? TRICKERY. To this question it is answered by some, the whole thing is a trick; a mere matter of deception, and of lies on the part of those who are the actors, or mediums, in the case. It is a plan to gain money or notoriety. To such remarks, so unguarded, and so devoid of trut^i, we reply, those who make them know not what manner of spirit they are of: they know not what they say, nor whereof they affirm. In all probability they are made by those who have never carefully examined the subject, and who think the shortest way and the best to treat any and every delusion by which souls may be ruined, for time and for eternity, is by a sneer and by assumed contempt. Vv^c have heard such arguments from the pulpit, against spiri- tualism, and can only say, that, if wshape of points and accents, but the text itself remains pure. It is so also in the Greek original. God has pre- served it. Let us rejoice in this. Let any man, then, take the Word of the Lord, and with the best translation he can get of the original text, and with the teachings of God's spirit let him seek to know the will of God, and he will not be disappointed. He will know the truth. The Bible most clearly reveals to us the fact that the kingdoms of this world will, ere long, become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, Eev. xi : 15; that Satan will be bound for a thousand years, Eev. xx : 1-4; that SATANIC POWER SIGNS OF THE TIMES. Ill angels will again visit our earth in forms visible to men, John i : 51 ; that this whole world will come into the pos- session of God's people, and will be ruled by them under the special control of our Lord himself, Dan. vii : 27; Rev. V : 10; and that the whole government of earth, as now managed by the men of this world, will pass away, and that Satan's usurped dominion on earth will forever cease. Everything in the signs of the times, and in the unfolding of the prophecies, shows us that the millennial glory of the Church, and of the world is not far distant. God will not introduce that glorious dispensation without some signal displays of His power and grace. Satan, from his knowledge of the Scriptures, and from what he sees of God's plans now maturing, plainly perceives that the day of his overthrow is nigh at hand. He has now but a short time ; and hence his special effort to keep the world of sin- ners still under his power. He is deceiving them by his false miracles, and by his pretended revelations from God, through the professed spirits of the departed, so that when our Lord shall manifest His miraculous power and won- derful workings again on the earth, the people will be dis- posed to attribute His divine workings and revelations to the same source whence these present manifestations spring. Thus will Satan continue to deceive the people. They will not take the warning that God may give them, and hence will not be prepared for the glories that are to be revealed in that day. Among the signs of the times of our Lord's near ap- proach, these Satanic delusions are not the least important. And while they exhibit to us another of Satan's plans to ruin the souls of men, they show us also how great is this power over man. Who would have thought that, from the 112 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. Email beginuiDgs, in this country, of these manifestations in New York, in 1847, they would have spread all over our land, and in less than ten years would have led two millions of the people to reject Christ and his atonement, and to believe that they can, through these mediums, hold communion with the spirits of the departed, and get from them that satisfactory information concerning the future which the Bible withholds from us. But this is not all. The Spirit of God expressly declares '^ that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to se- ducing spirits and teachings of demons.'^ 1 Tim. iv : 2. They will speak lies in hypocrisy. The}^ will forbid to marry, and encourage vices of the most revolting nature, though spoken of by winning names. And such will be the power of these Satanic delusions, that all, save the elect of God, shall be deceived by them. It really seems as if these things are all being rapidly fulfilled in our day. The people would not have Jesus to reign over them, and now he is permitting them to believe a lie, the grand lie of Satan, that Jesus is not the Saviour of sinners, and that he has made no atonement for the sins of men. Years ago, we said, while speaking on prophetic subjects, that Satan would not surrender his hold on this world without a struoffrle, and that his efforts to deceive the world, CO J 1 and to hinder the work of the Church of Christ, would be increased more and more in proportion as we approached the millennial dispensation of the Church, when Satan shall be bound and cast out of this world. And every day's ex- perience convinces us more and more of the truth of this statement. Indeed, the Scriptures assure us that, " as it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man ; or so shall the coming of the Son of man SPIRITUALISM ISOT NEW. 113 be." Luke xvii : 26 ; Matt, xxiv: 37. The idea seems to be that there will be great wickedness in the world, and a great falling away from the faith in the Church. We do not suppose that any of those who are savingly united to Christ will perish-— but the Church, in its organized capa- city, will greatly depart from the faith and the zeal of the apostles, so that half of the virgins will be wise, and half foolish; but all will be asleep. Matt, xxv: 1-13. All this seems to be hastening to its accomplishment. And while the Gospel is in the act of being preached, in alL the world, for a witness unto all nations, and while it is gathering out of this world a people for God's name, (Acts XV : 13-17), Satan will, of course, make corres- ponding efforts to oppose it. His plans of opposing the progress of the Church of Christ, in this world, may all be reduced to two, viz : 1. Corrupting the Word of Grod ; or, in some way neutralizing its power upon the hearts of the people ; and 2. Dividing and distracting the Church, so that, instead of making a united and vigorous and per- severing effort to spread the Gospel, the news of salvation to the ends of the earth, her efforts are spent more than is needful, in the affairs of this life, or in contending against each other. SPIRITUALISM NOT NE^V. I. Spiritualism then, as a system, as now understood, is nothing new. It is only old error in a new form, and adapted to the refinement and the intellectualism of the age. Let any man read the history of the Church in the first and second centuries of the Christian Era in connec- tion with the New Testament statements, and he will find there all the errors, or the germs of them, that have been 114 SriRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. used by Satan to harass tlie Church of God. The devil has no new plans in opposing the cause of Christ. He has used them all before. To us they may be new. We have to fight over again the battles the apostles and the Church, in past ages, have fought. Our weapons are the same that they had : and our foe is the same, and his plans and de- vices are the same. With the politician, in this land, Satan sounds the alarm of " Union of Church and State !" And hence, to save the State from being injured by the little religion that the Church can get incorporated into her laws, the effort is made to heathenize the people, by excludiog from the popu- lar education the Word of God altogether. No man, no set of men can vote to legislate the Word of the Living God out from the system of instruction that is adopted for the education of our youth, without his being under the direct influence of the devil. The man may not be conscious of the fact, any more than the mediums of the present day are, but that does not alter the case. The vote is cast to shut out God and his law from the youthful mind, that, in due time, is to control the affairs of the State, when the present voters shall be dead. " The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul ; the testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple. The statutes of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart ; the commandment of the Lord is pure, (clear) en- lightening the eyes. The fear of the Lord is clean (pure), enduring for ever ; the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.'^ Ps. xix : 7-10. If this be so, then any one can readily perceive why Satan should so perseveringly oppose the introduction of God's word into the soul. Educate the mind without the truth of God, THE WORKING OF SATAN. 115 and you educate it for evil here and for woe hereafter. If the Word of the Lord by God's Spirit converts the soul, then it makes inroads upon the kingdom of Satan in this world, and hence this fierce and continued opposition. See the sad effects of this exclusion of the Word of God from the minds of the youth, as they are exhibited this day, in the faith, the lives and the hopes of eight hundred millions of the human race. Oh ! see the deep, deep moral night that hangs yet over them. Science and civilization, and the arts combined, can never dispel that darkness. No- thing can do it but the Word of God, blessed by His Spirit to the enlightenment and salvation of the soul. And this Word Satan would still keep from man. But, when he cannot keep the Word of the Lord from a free circulation, as it is in this and in all Protestant lands, then his plan is to corrupt, or pervert its meaning, so that being mixed up with error, its power upon the soul is lost, and it becomes an useless weapon in the hands of him who would do battle against Satan. In the first century, and before the apostles were dead, the Gnostics arose, who de- nied that the books of the Old Testament were of Divine authority. They held that marriage ought to be discour- aged, and that Christ was not a Divine person. The Nicholaitans were united to the Gnostics in their heresies, and were remarkable for their unbridled licen- tiousness. Their deeds were such as God hated. Rev. ii : 6. The Cerinthians, too, denied the Divinity of Christ, among other things. And in the second century, the doctrine of Christ's Di- vine nature was denied, in addition to the other errors already mentioned ; and Jesus was looked upon only as a man. 116 SriRITUALISM, A SATAN. C DELUSION. So that we have there the same errors that are now em- bodied under the name of Spiritualism. That there are some who seem favorably inclined to this form of Satanic delusion, and who think that in reality it is, in some de- gree, a new revelation from God, and that they really do hold intercourse with the spirits of their departed friends, we doubt not. They are good people whom Satan is en- deavoring to lead astray. And if he cannot draw them away from their faith in the Word of the Lord, he will lead them to sin, as did Saul, in consulting with familiar spirits, instead of seeking light alone from God, and from His Word. THE WITCH OF ENDOR. Satan made Saul believe that he did in reality talk with Samuel. But he was deceived in this thing. Being forsaken of God, and knowing not what to do, he went, in open viola- tion of God's command, to consult with evil spirits, and to get if possible, from them, the information that God with- held from him. This history is full of instruction to all of our day ; and especially does it give a lesson of warning to those who are led away by the delusions of Satan now. The history is found at length in 1 Samuel xxviii. — Bishop Patrick, Dr. Clarke, and others, hold that the spirit of Samuel did really appear, and that this was done, not through the power or magical arts of tbe woman, but con- trary to her expectation, by the permission of God. But there is no necessity for supposing that the spirit of Sam- uel did actually appear. If Satan can transform himself into the appearance of an angel of light, so can he assume the appearance of any of the saints of the Lord. That Satan does, at will, assume different forms for the purpose THE WITCH OF ENDOR. 117 of deception, is apparent from the Bible. These appari- tions are not confined to one age or plac-e. They occur whenever it suits Satan's purposes to take a shape or form that will aid him in his plans of deceit. It seerns impro- bable, for the following reasons, that the spirit of Samuel did really appear. Because, 1. God refused to answer Saul by prophets, or by Urim, or by dreams, when he personally enquired of him. 1 Sam. xxviii : 6. Why then should he send Samuel from the spirit world, at the wish or conjurations of a witch, to do what he had just before refused to do ? 2. Saul paid the spectre religious worship. He bowed his face to the ground and worshiped him. (Heb. vayish- tahoo, Vulg. adoravit.) This adoration Samuel neither could nor would receive, Kev. xxii : 8, 9 ; but Satan him- self could and did. 3. He pretends to have been disquieted by Saul and the witch's power. This is putting the saints of the Lord, after their departure from this world, in the power of mor- tals on the earth. 4. She represents the spirit of Samuel as coming up out of the ground. This accords exactly with Is. xxix : 4, which informs us that familiar spirits thus appear, and their voices issue from the ground. ^' And thou shalt be brought down and shalt speak out of the ground, and thy speech shall be low out of the dust, and thy voice shall be as of one that hath a familiar spirit, out of the ground, and thy speech shall whisper out of the dust." 5. The spirit of the Lord had left Saul, and an evil spi- rit had taken hold of him, and doubtless was still with him, and now appeared to him, dressed up like Samuel when on the earth. — 1 Sam. xvi; 14, 118 SriRITUAL^M, A SATANIC DELUSION. G. The prediction of Saul's death was true as to tlie fact^ but not as to the time ; for it was not the next day that Saul died. But if the Hebrew word machar^ rendered *^ to-morrowj" means merely future time, then this is only what Satan might judge would be the case. 7. Saul was cut off from life for two things. The first was for disobeying God in the matter of Amelek, v. 18. — The second was for asking counsel from one who had a fa- miliar spirit, (1. Chron. x: 13.) It appears impossible, then, that Samuel should be sent by the Lord, at the re- quest of a witch, and thus sanction a wickedness for which Saul was killed. 8. The prediction that Saul and his sons should die on to-morrow, or soon, was true only in part. Three of Saul's sons were slain, (xxxi : 2,) but his two other sons, Armoni and Mephibosheth, lived, and were long after hanged by the Gibeonites, 2 Sam. xxi : 9, if we get the correct idea from this history. Not to multiply reasons which might be offered, we con- clude that Satan himself appeared in this case, and not one of his angels, as on ordinary occasions. ' And this would be sufficient to terrify the woman herself, and to ac- count for all that had happened. II. Satan's other plan is to distract the Church, or to divide her into fragments, and, if possible, array each sepa- rate family of the household of faith against the others.- — The different denominations of Christians now on the face of the earth, are a proof of Satan's power. While we hold the great doctrines of the Gospel, yet his influence is such as to mate God's people contend more earnestly for a form of faith than for the faith itself, and to spend more time and effort in defending a rite in the Church than would be TENDENCIES — SATANIC WISDOM. 119 needful to save many from the power of Satan. And even in the matter of Spiritualism as now developed, we doubt not but he will lead many in the Church to hand over their brethren bodily into the hands of Satan, rather than to make prayerful and faithful efforts to save them from the fowler's snare. That Spiritualism, as it is now de- veloped in our midst, is a device of Satan to oppose, in anticipation, the coming and kingdom of our Lord, we cannot doubt. Our efforts should be, in love, to save, not destroy ; to compassionate, not condemn those who may be possessed by Satan. And if the Church of Christ, at first, had the power to cast out demons, why may she not do so yet ? Some kinds of demons can be dispossessed only by prayer and fasting. If God's people would seek from Him the faith they need, they may not only keep themselves out of the power of these evil spirits, but may cast them out of those who are now possessed. So saith our Lord; and so we believe. — Mark xvi : 17, 18. CONCLUSION. Not to extend these remarks any farther, we would say to any who have not thought it labor lost to read these pages, to put no confidence in the revelations that may be made by Satan and his angels through those whom he has employed as mediums. If they should at any time accord with the truth, that is only designed by him to win the confidence of the deceived, so that Satan may the more easily deceive them to their final undoing. The awful language of the apostle Paul, in 2 Thess. ii : 11, 12, is not without its solemn significancy at the present time, — *' For this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie ; that they all might be damned 120 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. wlio believe not tlie truth, but had pleasure in unright- eousness/' ""Resist the Devil and he will flee from 3'Ou," is both the command and the promise of the Lord. " Have no fel- lowship with these unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them. Put on the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil ; for we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against princi- palities and powers ; against the rulers of the darkness of this world ; against wicked spirits in the heavenly places, 671 tois epouraniois,''^ — Eph. vi: 11, 12. "We quote, as very appropriate, at the close of these re- marks, the language of one who had been a warm advocate of Spiritualism, and who wrote and published much in its favor, but who, having seen the delusion in its right light, sends forth his warning voice to those who are yet led cap- tive by Satan unto his will. He says : '' Now, after a long and constant watchfulness, seeing for months and years its progress and its practical work- ings upon its devotees, its believers, and its mediums, we are compelled to speak our honest conviction, which is, that the manifestations coming through the acknowledged mediums, who are designated as rapping, tipping, writing, and entranced mediums, have a baneful influence upoii believers, and create discord and confusion ; that the gene- rality of these teachings inculcate false ideas, approve of selfish, individual acts, and endorse theories and principles which, when carried out, debase and make men little better than the brute. These are among the fruits of moderd Spiritualism, and we do not hesitate to say that we believe if these manifestations are continued to be received, and to be as little understood as they are, and have been since A WAP^NING VOICE. 121 they made their appearance at Rochester, and mortals are to be deceived by their false, fascinating, and snake-like charmiDg powers which go with them, the day will come when the world will require the appearance of another Sa- viour [not another, but the Saviour himself] to redeem the world from its departing from Christ^s warnings." Again he adds — '^ Seeing, as we have, the gradual pro- gress it makes with its believers, particularly its mediums, from lives of morality to those of sensuality and immora- lity^ gradually, and cautiously undermining the founda- tion of good principles, we look back with amazement to the radical change which a few months will bring about in individuals, for its tendency is to approve and endorse each individual act and character, however good or bad these acts may be." He concludes by saying — ^^ Wc desire to send forth our warning voice, and if our humble position, as the head of a public journal, our known advocacy of Spiritualism, our experience, and the conspicuous part we have played among its believers, the honesty and the fearlessness with which we have defended the subject, will weigh anything in our favor, we desire that our opinions may be received, and those who are moving passively down the rushing rapids to destruction, should pause, ere it be too late, and save themselves from the blasting influence which those manifestations are causing." — J, F. V/hitney^ Ed. N, Y, Fathjinder, Here is a warning voice from a gentleman of whom we have no knowledge further than what we obtain from these brief extracts from his paper. But it is a warning most seasonable, kind, and true. May it be fully heeded. And may Grod give grace to those who are now deceived by the 122 SPIRITUALISM, A SATANIC DELUSION. adversary, so that tliey may acknowledge the truth as it is in Christ Jesus, and that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the devil. 2 Tim. ii : 26. To all we would say — identify yourselves with the cause of Christ — love him and his cause sincerely. — Serve him faithfully. Rely for salvation on his atonement alone. — Walk by faith, and lead a holy life, and in the end you will triumph over Satan and all your spiritual foes. Then will you be able to sing the victor's song of ^^ Glory to God and to the Lamb :" and to shout aloud with a grate- ful heart, " thanks be to God who giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ." And in the language of the apostle we would say — ^' Yet I would have you wise unto that which is good, and simple [akeraious^ blameless) in that which is evil. And the God of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you. Amen." Rom. xvi : 19-20. &v.^^;-!w '^*'.^.^v\v^,, ctrv,v-^i^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ^ 022 204 292 6