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This article deals with the concept of sexuality in Christian demonology. This article is about the issues and phenomena pertaining to human sexual function and behavior. ...
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The sexuality of demons
To Sumerians, Babylonians, Assyrians, and Jews there were male and female demons (Jewish demons were mostly male, although female examples such as Lillith exist). In Christian demonology and theology, although the belief in incubi and succubi is accepted, the matter of the sexuality of the demons is not so easy. Sumer (or Å umer, Sumerian ki-en-gir[1], Egyptian Sanhar[2]) was one of the early civilizations of the Ancient Near East, located in the southern part of Mesopotamia (southeastern Iraq) from the time of the earliest records in the mid 4th millennium BC until the rise of Babylonia in...
Babylon was a city in Mesopotamia, the ruins of which can be found in present-day Babil Province, Iraq, about 50 miles south of Baghdad. ...
For other uses, see Assyria (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the demon Lilith. ...
This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject. ...
Theology (Greek θεοÏ, theos, God, + λογια, logia, words, sayings, or discourse) is reasoned discourse concerning religion, spirituality and gods. ...
In Western medieval legend, an incubus (plural incubi) is a demon in male form supposed to lie upon sleepers, especially women, in order to have sexual intercourse with them. ...
A bracket carved as a winged succubus on the outside of an English inn, suggesting that a brothel could have been found inside. ...
Gregory of Nyssa (4th century), as well as Ludovico Maria Sinistrari (17th century), believed in male and female demons. Gregory of Nyssa ( 335 â after 394) was a Christian bishop and saint. ...
As a means of recording the passage of time, the 4th century was that century which lasted from 301 to 400. ...
(16th century - 17th century - 18th century - more centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 17th century was that century which lasted from 1601-1700. ...
Authors who believed in demons of opposite sex assigned them a heterosexual tendency, even adult men seducing adolescent boys by means of pederasty; the only demon with a bisexual tendency, and solely for some demonologists, was Asmodai. The term pederasty or paederasty embraces a wide range of erotic practices between adult males and adolescent boys. ...
Asmodeus (Asmodeus, Asmodaeus, pronounced Ashmed or Ashmedeus in Hebrew, also Chammadai, Sydonai) is a semi-Biblical demon mostly known thanks to the deuterocanonical Book of Tobit; he is also mentioned in some Talmudic legends and in demonology, as he is a leading figure in the construction efforts of the Temple...
But most demonologists did not recognise that there were female demons. They usually referred to demons as "he" (or equivalent) in all Indo-European languages it may be assumed that there were exclusively (or largely) male demons. This patriarchal mentality that banished completely the idea of female supernatural beings in Heaven and Hell led to another conclusion. As incubi and succubi existed for Christian authorities, demons, including The Devil, could take the shape of a man or a woman to act as an incubus or a succubus. Thus, they were attributing to all demons what today is known as a Hermaphrodite tendency. The Indo-European languages comprise a family of several hundred related languages and dialects [1], including most of the major languages of Europe, the Americas as well as many spoken in the Indian subcontinent (South Asia), the Iranian plateau (Southwest Asia), and Central Asia. ...
The Devil is the name given to a supernatural entity who, in most Western religions, is the central embodiment of evil. ...
In Western medieval legend, an incubus (plural incubi) is a demon in male form supposed to lie upon sleepers, especially women, in order to have sexual intercourse with them. ...
A bracket carved as a winged succubus on the outside of an English inn, suggesting that a brothel could have been found inside. ...
The 1st-century BC sculpture The Reclining Hermaphrodite, in the Museo Nazionale Romano, Palazzo Massimo Alle Terme in Rome In zoology and botany, a hermaphrodite is an organism that possesses both male and female sex organs during its life[1]. In many species, hermaphroditism is a common part of the...
It is licit to think which conception should be more appropriate: demons of both sexes with a heterosexual tendency or male demons with a bisexual tendency. Perhaps, as Christianity attributes the agency of some temptation to sins to demons, and all non-heterosexual tendencies are considered sinful, it is possible that demons should be of both sexes and their tendency bisexual, and perhapes there should be even homosexual demons of both sexes, but as a rule it this was not given thought, Homosexuality refers to sexual and romantic attraction between two individuals of the same sex. ...
Other conceptions posit that beings of spiritual substance are gender-transcendent or otherwise non-gendered; the experience of a demon as having gender and directional sexual tendencies would be the result of the purposes of the demon in tempting, deceiving, or otherwise harming human targets. It is of note that although God is predominantly experienced and self-revealed as male in the Hebrew Scriptures and Christian New Testament, the Hebrew Scriptures and their Greek translation - the Septuagint - contain feminine allusions to God (e.g., "El Shaddia" referring to breast, hence a nuturing image; "Lady Wisdom," often paralleled to the Word of John 1, whose incarnated form is Jesus; the Holy Spirit has feminine references, etc.). The notion that God is then gender-transcendent but self-revealed as male for puproses of revelation could also carry over to angels and demons. The Septuagint: A page from Codex vaticanus, the basis of Sir Launcelot Lee Brentons English translation. ...
By supporting the idea that demons could rape women and sexual relationships with them were painful, Nicholas Remy assigned a sadistic tendency to their sexuality, meanwhile most demonologists considered sexual relationships with demons pleasing. Nicholas Remy (aka Rémy and Remigius) (1534 - 1600) was a French Catholic priest. ...
Lust in demons Lust in demons is a controversial theme for Christian demonology. As usual, scholars disagree on the subject. This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject. ...
On one hand, it is considered that demons can feel sexual desire, experience pleasure, fall in love, be jealous and passionate, hate, and lust is an inherent quality of their nature. On the other hand, other demonologists consider that demons cannot feel desire or love, less jealousy or passion, and use lust as a means to induce people to sin. This article is about sin in the context of morality. ...
Early advocates of demon lust theory Augustine of Hippo (5th century), Hincmar (early French theologian, archbishop of Rheims, 9th century), Michael Psellus (11th century), William of Auvergne, Bishop of Paris (13th century), Johannes Tauler (14th century), and Ludovico Maria Sinistrari (17th century), among others, supported the idea that demons were lustful and lascivious beings. For the first Archbishop of Canterbury, see Saint Augustine of Canterbury. ...
Hincmar (c. ...
Theology (Greek θεοÏ, theos, God, + λογια, logia, words, sayings, or discourse) is reasoned discourse concerning religion, spirituality and gods. ...
The Archdiocese of Reims was founded (as a diocese) around 250 by St. ...
Michael Psellus is the name of two writers of the Byzantine Empire: Michael Psellus the Elder, a theologian Michael Psellus the Younger, a historian. ...
William of Auvergne was the Bishop of Paris from 1228 to his death in 1249. ...
Johannes Tauler (c. ...
Early opponents of demon lust theory Plutarch (1st and 2nd centuries), Thomas Aquinas (13th century), Nicholas Remy (16th century), and Henri Boguet (16th and 17th centuries), among others, disagreed, saying that demons did not know lust or desire and cannot have good feelings like love; as jealousy would be a consequence of love, they could not be jealous. Ambrogio de Vignati agreed with them. Mestrius Plutarchus (Greek: ΠλοÏÏαÏÏοÏ; 46 - 127), better known in English as Plutarch, was an Greek historian, biographer, essayist, and Middle Platonist. ...
Saint Thomas Aquinas [Thomas of Aquin, or Aquino] (c. ...
Nicholas Remy (aka Rémy and Remigius) (1534 - 1600) was a French Catholic priest. ...
Intermediate views Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger (15th century), authors of the Malleus Maleficarum, adopted an intermediate position. According to their book, demons did not feel love for warlocks or witches, because sexual relationships with them were a part of the compromise these men and women made together with the diabolical pact to honour them by humiliating themselves conceding what demons could sexually ask from them, but that demons acting as incubi and succubae with common people were passionate lovers that felt the desire of being with their beloved person and have sexual intercourse with him/her. Heinrich Kramer (also known under latinised name Heinrich Institor, 1430?-1505) was a churchman and inquisitor. ...
James Sprenger was born in Basel between 1436 and 1438. ...
Cover of the seventh Cologne edition of the Malleus Maleficarum, 1520 (from the University of Sydney Library). ...
Warlocks are, among historic Christian traditions, said to be the male equivalent of witches (usually in the pejorative sense of Europes Middle Ages), and were said to ride pitchforks instead of broomsticks. ...
This article is part of the Witchcraft series. ...
According to Christian tradition on witchcraft the diabolical pact is a pact between a person and Satan or any other demon (or demons) in which the person offers (or sells) his/her soul in exchange for favours. ...
In Western medieval legend, an incubus (plural incubi) is a demon in male form supposed to lie upon sleepers, especially women, in order to have sexual intercourse with them. ...
A bracket carved as a winged succubus on the outside of an English inn, suggesting that a brothel could have been found inside. ...
Augustine, Hincmar and Psellos thought that lust was what led demons to have sexual relationships with humans. William of Auvergne, conceived the idea that demons felt a particular and morbid attraction by long and beautiful female hair, and thus women had to follow the Christian use of covering it to avoid exciting desire in them. Tauler had the opinion that demons were lascivious and thus they wanted to have sexual intercourse with humans to satisfy their lewdness. Sinistrari supported the idea that demons felt sexual desire, but satisfaction and pleasure were not the only motivation to have sexual relationships with humans, being another reason that of fecundating women. It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Christianity. ...
Plutarch wrote that demons could not feel sexual desire because they did not need to procreate, his work inspiring later Remy's opinion. Thomas Aquinas asserted that demons could not experience voluptuousness or desire, and they only wanted to seduce humans with the purpose of inducing them to commit "terrible" sexual sins. Remy wrote that demons do not feel sexual desire inspired by beauty, because they do not need it to procreate, having been created since the beginning in a predetermined number. Boguet said that demons did not know lust or voluptuousness because they are immortal and do not need to have descendants, and so they also do not need to have sexual organs, so demons could make people imagine that they were having sexual relationships, but that actually did not occur. Vignati agreed with Boguet saying that sexual relationships with demons were imaginary, a mere hallucination provoked by them, and Johann Meyfarth agreed too. Plutarch, Remy and Boguet do not seem to have explained what they wanted to but the need of demons for procreation, what seems to be a different subject. Christian theologians associated the coitus with procreation and not pleasure, but this does not seem to be valid for demons, who might be supposed to want all pleasures that Christian religion denied to humans. Christianity considers sexual pleasure outside of the bonds of marriage to be inappropriate and sinful, so it should be appropriate for demons, especially if it is contrary to what allegedly is "God's will". A pair of lions copulating in the Maasai Mara, Kenya. ...
Christianity is a monotheistic[1] religion centered on the life and teachings of Jesus of Nazareth as presented in the New Testament. ...
This article discusses the term God in the context of monotheism and henotheism. ...
Pierre de Rostegny supported the idea that Satan preferred to have sexual intercourse with married women to add adultery to other sins like lust, but told nothing about his lust or that of his companions. Pierre de Rostegny, Lord of De Lancre, aka De Lancre (1553 - 1631) was a French jurist. ...
For other uses, see Satan (disambiguation). ...
Demon lust in fiction works Supporting the idea that demons had feelings of love and hate, and were voluptuous, there are several stories about their jealousy. The first story of this type is narrated in the deuterocanonical Book of Tobit. This story tells that the demon Asmodai either fell in love with Sarah and/or felt sexual desire for her, and jealous for she got married killed seven of her husbands before the first coitus could be consummated. Asmodai never had sexual intercourse with Sarah, but he also intended to kill Tobias, her eighth husband, but was foiled by the angel Raphael. Deuterocanonical books is a term used since the sixteenth century in the Roman Catholic Church and Eastern Christianity to describe certain books and passages of the Christian Bible, in contrast to the protocanonical books which are contained in the Hebrew Bible. ...
Tobias and the Angel, by Filippino Lippi The Book of Tobit (or Book of Tobias in older Catholic Bibles) is a book of scripture that is part of the Catholic and Orthodox biblical canon, pronounced canonical by the Council of Carthage of 397 and confirmed for Roman Catholics by the...
Asmodeus (Asmodeus, Asmodaeus, pronounced Ashmed or Ashmedeus in Hebrew, also Chammadai, Sydonai) is a semi-Biblical demon mostly known thanks to the deuterocanonical Book of Tobit; he is also mentioned in some Talmudic legends and in demonology, as he is a leading figure in the construction efforts of the Temple...
Tobias is a Greek version of the Hebrew biblical name Tuviah, meaning god is good. It is a popular male given name in Germany, Great Britain, Denmark, Sweden, Norway and the United States. ...
Raphael (Heb. ...
Another of these stories about demonic lewdness and passionate love is told in The Life of Saint Bernard, written by a monk, and said that during the 11th century a demon fell in love with a woman, and when her husband was asleep he visited her, awoke the woman and began to do with her as if he were her husband, committing every type of voluptuous acts during several years, and inflaming her passion. Saint Bernard of Clairvaux (Fontaines, near Dijon, 1090 â August 21, 1153 in Clairvaux) was a French abbot and the primary builder of the reforming Cistercian monastic order. ...
And a story referring to demonic jealousy was told by Erasmus (16th century), who blamed a demon for the fire that destroyed a village in Germany in 1533, saying that a demon loved deeply a young woman, but discovered that she had also sexual relationships with a man. Full of wrath, the demon started the fire. Desiderius Erasmus in 1523 Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus (also Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam) (October 27, probably 1466 â July 12, 1536) was a Dutch humanist and theologian. ...
If we consider that demons are angels for Christian theology, never mind if fallen, it can be supposed that the feeling of love is possible in them, and taking into account that Christianity partially blames demons for temptations, lust being one of the seven deadly sins, it would be appropriate that they were lustful, and their love passionate and full of sensuality and voluptuousness. Seven sins redirects here. ...
Demons and sexual relations Christian demonologists agree in the fact that sexual relationships between demons and humans happen, but they disagree in why and how. A common point of view is that demons induce men and women to the sin of lust, and adultery is often considered as an associated sin. Pierre de Rostegny supported the idea that Satan preferred to have sexual intercourse with married women to add adultery to her sins. It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Christianity. ...
This article is about sin in the context of morality. ...
See also Lust (onomastics) for other uses Lust is any intense desire or craving, usually sexual, although it is also common to speak of a lust for life, lust for blood (bloodlust for short), or a lust for power or other goals. ...
This article or section is not written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article. ...
Pierre de Rostegny, Lord of De Lancre, aka De Lancre (1553 - 1631) was a French jurist. ...
For other uses, see Satan (disambiguation). ...
Gregory of Nyssa said that demons had children with women, which added to the children they had between them, contributed to increase the number of demons. Gregory of Nyssa ( 335 â after 394) was a Christian bishop and saint. ...
St. ...
It was considered that demons always had sexual relationships with witches and warlocks in the form of incubi and succubae, and some witches had sexual intercourse with a male goat, as it was supported by Pierre de Rostegny. But common people, as it was believed, also were seduced by incubi and succubae, especially while they were asleep, and sometimes when they were awake, in the form of a beautiful man or woman that excited their desire to the point of not being able to resist the temptation, although the possibility of resistance always existed as asserted by Christian theologians, but the tendency to sin was stronger than their faith. Francesco Maria Guazzo offered detailed descriptions of sexual relationships between demons and humans. This article is part of the Witchcraft series. ...
Warlocks are, among historic Christian traditions, said to be the male equivalent of witches (usually in the pejorative sense of Europes Middle Ages), and were said to ride pitchforks instead of broomsticks. ...
In Western medieval legend, an incubus (plural incubi) is a demon in male form supposed to lie upon sleepers, especially women, in order to have sexual intercourse with them. ...
A bracket carved as a winged succubus on the outside of an English inn, suggesting that a brothel could have been found inside. ...
Species See Species and subspecies The goat is a mammal in the genus Capra, which consists of nine species: the Ibex, the West Caucasian Tur, the East Caucasian Tur, the Markhor, and the Wild Goat. ...
Pierre de Rostegny, Lord of De Lancre, aka De Lancre (1553 - 1631) was a French jurist. ...
Theology (Greek θεοÏ, theos, God, + λογια, logia, words, sayings, or discourse) is reasoned discourse concerning religion, spirituality and gods. ...
Francesco Maria Guazzo, aka Guaccio, aka Guaccius (15??-16??) was an Italian priest in Milan. ...
Nicholas Remy, disagreeing with many theologians and demonologists, supported the idea that even if a woman opposed resistance to the demon he could rape her, and wrote about a case of a young teenager that "was raped twice the same day by a demon, although she opposed resistance, and, not being her body enough mature to receive a man, she almost died because of the hurts". Catherine Latonia confessed this case to him in 1587. If that confession was an excuse to avoid giving the name of the rapist or the girl actually thought that a demon had raped her, will remain unknown. Sylvester Prieras agreed with Remy, supporting the idea that demons could not only rape common women but also nuns. Nicholas Remy (aka Rémy and Remigius) (1534 - 1600) was a French Catholic priest. ...
1587 was a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar (or a common year starting on Sunday of the 10-day slower Julian calendar). ...
The Malleus Maleficarum established that sexual relationships between demons and humans were an essential belief for Christians. But its authors considered also the possibility that demons provoked a false pregnancy in some women, filling their belly with air due to certain herbs they made them drink in beverages during the Sabbaths; at the time of giving birth to the child, a big quantity of air escaped from the woman's vagina. The false pregnancy was later explained by medicine. Cover of the seventh Cologne edition of the Malleus Maleficarum, 1520 (from the University of Sydney Library). ...
False pregnancy, also known as pseudopregnancy or pseudocyesis, is a psychological condition causing a woman to believe she is pregnant. ...
Francisco Goyas Los Caprichos: Linda maestra! (Nice mistress!) - witches heading to a Sabbath In Christian folklore, the Sabbath (also known as Witchs Sabbath) was a gathering supposed to have been celebrated by Satanists, witches and warlocks to honor the Devil, offend God, Jesus, the sacraments, the cross, and...
Medicine is a branch of health science and the sector of public life concerned with maintaining or restoring human health through the study, diagnosis, treatment and possible prevention of disease and injury. ...
Many Christian theologians (Martin Luther and Jean Bodin among others) believed that demons could impregnate women but their children would have a short life and be good for nothing; other theologians (Francisco Valesio, aka Valesius, Tomaso Malvenda and Johann Cochlaeus among others) thought that these children could be important characters, like Attila, Martin Luther, Melusine or the Antichrist. Martin Luther (November 10, 1483 â February 18, 1546) was a German monk,[1] priest, professor, theologian, and church reformer. ...
Jean Bodin (1530-1596) was a French jurist, member of the Parliament of Paris and professor of Law in Toulouse. ...
Tomaso Malvenda was a theologian who believed in sexual relationships between demons and humans Categories: Stub ...
Johann Cochlaeus (1479 - January 10, 1552) was a German humanist and controversialist. ...
For other uses, see Attila (disambiguation). ...
Martin Luther (November 10, 1483 â February 18, 1546) was a German monk,[1] priest, professor, theologian, and church reformer. ...
Melusines secret discovered, from One of sixteen paintings by Guillebert de Mets circa 1410. ...
// The English word Antichrist is translated from the Greek ανÏίÏÏιÏÏÎ¿Ï antÃkhristos, which literally means opposite of Christ. A broader meaning is in place of Christ. Therefore, antichrist means opposed to Christ by being in the place of Christ. ...
Augustine of Hippo, Pope Innocent VIII, Albertus Magnus, Thomas Aquinas, Peter of Paluda, Martin of Arles and Ludovico Maria Sinistrari believed that demons could fecundate women, but Ulrich Molitor, Heinrich Kramer, Jacob Sprenger and Nicholas Remy disagreed. For the first Archbishop of Canterbury, see Saint Augustine of Canterbury. ...
Pope Innocent VIII (1432 â July 25, 1492), born Giovanni Battista Cybo, was Pope from 1484 until his death. ...
Albertus is also the name of a typeface. ...
Saint Thomas Aquinas [Thomas of Aquin, or Aquino] (c. ...
Ulrich Molitor (15th century) was a Professor of Law at the University of Constance, Germany. ...
Heinrich Kramer (also known under latinised name Heinrich Institor, 1430?-1505) was a churchman and inquisitor. ...
James Sprenger was born in Basel between 1436 and 1438. ...
According to Remy, sexual relationships with demons were painful, meanwhile many persons that confessed to have had those relationships told that they were satisfying. Henri Boguet and Johann Meyfarth supported the idea that demons provoked an imaginary coitus because they did not have sexual organs, such as a penis or a vagina. A pair of lions copulating in the Maasai Mara, Kenya. ...
The penis (plural penises, penes) is an external male sexual organ. ...
The vagina, (from Latin, literally sheath or scabbard ) is the tubular tract leading from the uterus to the exterior of the body in female placental mammals and marsupials, or to the cloaca in female birds, monotremes, and some reptiles. ...
Nephilim Some speculate that the Hebrew and Christian bibles show belief in the mating of angels or demons to humans. In Genesis chapter 6 the "sons of God", presumed by this theory to be fallen angels, mate with human women, creating a race of super-beings called the Nephilim. This interpretation is disputed by some, who claim that "sons of God" in that text refers only to believers in the "Promised Seed" (Genesis 3:15) and that "daughters of men" refers to pagan women, particularly implying that descendants of Seth were marrying descendants of Cain. Seth or Shet (Hebrew: שֵ×ת, Standard Å et, Tiberian ; Arabic: Ø´ÙØ« Shith or Shiyth; Placed; appointed), in the Book of Genesis of the Hebrew Bible, is the third listed son of Adam and Eve and brother of Cain and Abel and is the only other son mentioned by name. ...
In stories common to the Abrahamic religions, Cain or Káyin (×§Ö·×Ö´× / ×§Ö¸×Ö´× spear Standard Hebrew Qáyin, Tiberian Hebrew Qáyin / QÄyin; Arabic ÙØ§ÙÙÙ QÄyÄ«n in the Arabic Bible; ÙØ§Ø¨ÙÙ QÄbÄ«l in Islam) is the eldest son of Adam and Eve, and the first man born in creation...
Under this interpretation, the Nephilim were not physical giants, but just men without conscience who were extremely evil and aggressive. This interpretation limits the direct roles of demons on the early human race to merely a role as being influential to human affairs, without actually engaging in sexual relations with humans themselves. Under this, the Nephilim were not part-man and part-demon, but were full-blooded men that were particularly susceptible to demonic influence over their actions. Artists impression of a Grigori or fallen one and his human bride. ...
The key argument defending this interpretation is that demons had no need to mate with humans and turn them against God, but only a need to stop the entire human race all at once from having faith that it would be promised a savior from sin, which would guarantee the damnation of all humanity at once, thereby allowing Satan to fulfill his revenge against God for expelling him from Heaven. This article is about sin in the context of morality. ...
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