A recent local story here made
national news when a self-proclaimed psychic was indicted for bilking her “clients”
out of over a million dollars, after promising to remove curses for them. I have often driven by her house, located off
Rt. 29 North of Charlottesville, with its prominent sign advertising “psychic readings.”
That story brought to mind a section I recently read from Augustine’s On Christian Doctrine (Book II, Section
XX), in which the theologian describes early Christianity’s opposition to “superstitious
things” instituted by men, including “prognostications,” “magical arts,” “books
of haruspicy and augery,” the wearing of amulets, “enchantments,” “secret
signs,” and other occult acts.
Augustine proceeds to list a number of superstitious
practices common in his context (4-5th century Roman North Africa),
including:
Wearing rings hung on the top of each ear and little ostrich
bone rings on the fingers for good luck;
Telling a person with hiccups to cure his condition by holding
his left thumb in his right hand;
It’s bad luck “if a limb trembles, or if a stone, dog, or
child comes between friends, walking arm in arm [he notes that some on these occasions
have been known to slug a small child with his fist and to strike dogs as well,
though some dogs have bitten the attacker back!];
Kicking a stone can destroy a friendship;
It’s good luck to step on the threshold if you leave your
house by the front door;
If you sneeze when putting on your shoes in the morning you
should go back to bed;
If you stumble when leaving your house, you should go back
home;
If mice gnaw on your clothes it is an omen of future ill [He
cites an anecdote from Cato who when consulted by a man worried that mice has
gnawed on his shoes replied there was nothing strange about that, “but that it
would be strange indeed if the shoes had gnawed the mice”!].
Before we laugh at the ancients we should consider those today
who carry a rabbit’s foot or who avoid stepping on cracks, having a black cat
cross their path, or walking under ladders (though the latter has a practical
dimension).
Augustine is describing how the rise of Christianity brought
the rise of reasonable thinking and liberation from slavish superstition and
occult practices. Of course, this was
evident even in the time of the apostles when the converts at Ephesus got rid
of their books of “curious arts” (Acts 19:18-19).
The formula is simple:
more Christianity leads to less superstition; Less Christianity leads to
more superstition. As we enter what some
demographers are calling a “post-Christian” society, we must wonder if this
will mean more superstition and less reason.
JTR
1 comment:
Some years ago, a woman I knew was patronizing a fortune teller. When she related some very surprising facts to me that the fortune teller had told her about, I asked where the fortune teller got her power. Her answer?
"From the devil. She'll tell you that right away if you ask. The devil gives her that power."
I never visited that fortune teller, or any other. Nor do I play with Ouija boards or other such devices. The Lord forbids it, and it's a good way to get into serious trouble.
Nice post about superstitions, by the way.
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