The article examines the good, the bad, and the ambiguous in John of Morigny's "Flowers of Heavenly Teaching." According to the author, John of Morigny's account of redemption from necromancy in the "Flowers of Heavenly Teaching" parallels many medieval exempla of magicians, necromancers, and sorcerers' apprentices who traffic with demons and are either divinely punished or divinely redeemed.