The Black Mass combines various elements:
- belief in a pagan deity
stigmatized by Christians as the Devil,
- use of the Mass for material
ends,
- and parodies of orthodox
Christian ritual.
The Black Mass is a magical ceremony and inversion or parody of the Catholic Mass that
was indulged in ostensibly for the purpose of mocking God and
worshipping the devil; a rite that was said to involve human sacrifice
as well as obscenity and blasphemy of horrific proportions. The origin
of the belief in the Black, or Satanic, Mass goes back to medieval
magic and witchcraft, yet no one really knows the early history of
this magical act, for there exists no single reliable, first-hand
description.
A witch who said she was
present described a Black Mass at a sabbath in France in 1594. She
claimed that the ceremony had taken place on St. John's Eve in a field
with about sixty people present. The celebrant wore a long black cloak
devoid of the customary cross, and his assistants were two girls; while a
slice of turnip, black (either stained or putrid), was used instead of
consecrated bread.
Other stories of the Black
Mass include mention of black triangular or hexagonal hosts and a black chalice;
of mocking screams of "Beelzebub! Beelzebub! Beelzebub !" instead of speaking the holy words of consecration;
of wine that may be either urine or blood drunk from a human skull;
or celebrants naked beneath sleeveless vestments decorated in brilliant colours with such subjects as a naked and spreadeagled woman, a rampant pig or bear or goat;
of sacramental wafers (incorporating menstrual blood and semen) being burnt or stabbed, and consecrated wine being poured contemptuously on to the floor;
of missals bound in wolfskin or even human skin;
of feasts on roasted human flesh;
of frenzied sexual orgies and new-born children being crucified alive or baptized in holy oil, strangled and offered as a sacrifice to Satan;
of naked bodies being used as altars;
of young boys' throats being cut to provide blood for the chalice, with prayers to the demons Asmodeus and Astaroth;
of Christian prayers being said backwards;
of black candles made from human fat;
of parts of the Mass being read backwards;
of "Satan" being substituted for "God" and "evil" for "good";
of crosses being tattooed on the soles of the feet so that the symbol of Christ is continually trodden underfoot.
of mocking screams of "Beelzebub! Beelzebub! Beelzebub !" instead of speaking the holy words of consecration;
of wine that may be either urine or blood drunk from a human skull;
or celebrants naked beneath sleeveless vestments decorated in brilliant colours with such subjects as a naked and spreadeagled woman, a rampant pig or bear or goat;
of sacramental wafers (incorporating menstrual blood and semen) being burnt or stabbed, and consecrated wine being poured contemptuously on to the floor;
of missals bound in wolfskin or even human skin;
of feasts on roasted human flesh;
of frenzied sexual orgies and new-born children being crucified alive or baptized in holy oil, strangled and offered as a sacrifice to Satan;
of naked bodies being used as altars;
of young boys' throats being cut to provide blood for the chalice, with prayers to the demons Asmodeus and Astaroth;
of Christian prayers being said backwards;
of black candles made from human fat;
of parts of the Mass being read backwards;
of "Satan" being substituted for "God" and "evil" for "good";
of crosses being tattooed on the soles of the feet so that the symbol of Christ is continually trodden underfoot.
Eric
Maple, a leading authority on witchcraft, goes so far as to assert that
the Black Mass is an illusion, fostered by the press, that never played
any part in witchcraft.
The Abbe Boullan (1824-93), a defrocked Catholic priest who
believed that he was a reincarnation of John the Baptist, is reported to
have celebrated a Black Mass in vestments on which an inverted
cruifix was embroidered, with a pentagram tattooed at the corner of
his left eye (the left being the side of evil). He recommended the
ceremonial sacrifice of a child at the high point of the Mass, and the use
of consecrated hosts being mixed with faeces as a cure for nuns who
complained they were tormented by devils.
The occultist Aleister Crowley
devised Satanic rituals, but the intention appears to have been anti-Christian
rather than criminal.
The Church of Satan has based
its much publicized diabolism upon a rejection of the Christian ethics of
self-denial and humility.
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