Baptism
baptism
A spiritual rite of transformation, rebirth, initiation, and Exorcism. In the Christian tradition, baptism protects a soul against evil and the snares of the Devil. In Possession cases, a DemonIAC who is exorcised must be rebaptized.
Christian baptism is performed with water, in keeping with the tradition established by Jesus’ baptism in the river Jordan by John the Baptist. In Catholicism, holy water is sprinkled on the forehead. In some Protestant denominations, baptism is done by complete immersion in water.
Baptisms are part of many magical rituals and may include other elements as well. Baptism by fire and baptism by Blood symbolize intense purging and purification; blood also is redemptive, symbolizing the blood shed by Christ on the cross.
In DELIVERANCE ministry, baptism is essential in order to receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit for discernment of spirits and healing.
Demonic Baptism
During the witch hunts of the Inquisition, the Devil was believed to administer a sacrilegious baptism to his followers, usually at a Sabbat, and as part of an infernal Pact. The witches renounced their Christian faith and then adopted a grotesque new name to symbolize their new identity. Isobel Gowdie, a Scottish witch tried in 1662, said that witches were baptized in their own blood and took names such as “Able-and-Stout,” “Over-the-dike-with-it,” “Raise-the-wind,” “Pickle-nearest-the-wind,” “Batterthemdown-Maggy,” and “Blow-Kate.”
According to confessions made by accused witches, children were baptized by the Devil along with adults. Louis Gaufridi, who was executed for his role in the AIXENPROVENCE PossessionS of Ursuline nuns in 1611, confessed to witnessing baptisms at sabbats. He stated: I confess that baptism is administered at the Sabbat, and that every sorcerer, devoting himself to the Devil, binds himself by a particular vow that he will have all his children baptized at the Sabbat, if this may by any possible means be effected. Every child who is thus baptized at the Sabbat receives a name, wholly differing from his own name. I confess that at this baptism water, sulphur and salt are employed: the sulphur renders the recipient the Devil’s slave while salt confirms his baptism in the Devil’s service. I confess that the form and intention are to baptize in the name of Lucifer, Belzebuth and other Demons making the sign of the cross beginning backwards and then tracing from the feet and ending at the head.
Such accounts of sabbats and baptisms have been discredited as fables that witnesses were forced to confess to by torture.
FURTHER READING:
- MacNutt, Francis. Deliverance from Evil Spirits: A Practical Manual. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Chosen Books, 1995.
- Summers, Montague. The History of Witchcraft and Demonology. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1926.
The Encyclopedia of Demons and Demonology – Written by Rosemary Ellen Guiley – Copyright © 2009 by Visionary Living, Inc.
Baptism is aSymbol of an Initiation or death and rebirth, especially of a spiritual nature. Baptisms also may represent becoming aware of one’s own “dirt” and removal of projections of the Shadow. Baptisms are featured in some magical Rituals of initiation to a new state of consciousness, power, and being.
Baptisms have different meanings according to the elements:
• Baptism by water represents an immersion in the unconscious and emotions. This is a cleansing and dissolving process. In myth, baptism by water is the creation of a new personality on a higher plane. In alchemy, it is dissolution: a rejuvenation of spirit, energy, and viewpoint that transcends the ego. (See Bath.)
• Baptism by wind (air) represents a blowing away of chaff; air represents the involvement of the intellect.
• Baptism by fire represents a purging or burning away of what is no longer needed.
Baptism by blood is comparable to baptism by fire since both blood and fire are symbols of intense purging. Blood has the additional dimension of redemption, as seen in Christ’s sacrifice of his own blood in order to redeem humanity. Psychologically, baptisms by either fire or blood refer to the ordeal of enduring intense affect that taxes the ego. Successfully enduring this ordeal results in a refinement.
The Encyclopedia of Magic and Alchemy Written byRosemary Ellen Guiley Copyright © 2006 by Visionary Living, Inc.