ee mH a ey ee yee n Raa Ὁ ΗΝ he | Gs “ἢ Ἦ AR AN Re A Ξ, εἰ ἊΝ Ὁ < εἴ, é a. ΜΙ ΓΙ [ ε: =e :. υν ‘ ;° ξ ἕ é ΕἸ é ¢ ¥ € ῃ εἰ ‘ ᾿ς ε J Ξε < € £ € AORN A AR am AR aN ah » δε eRe mM DD HP I OH ee ee ee ὁ oA vit iW Lee ry ee a = ——— i ee Ar [Theological Seminary, | PRINCETON, N. ἥ | No. Case, os A || : Na ΠΕ ΓΞ ῸΣ a a ia THE SCHOLASTIC PHILOSOPHY CONSIDERED IN ITS RELATION TO CHRISTIAN THEOLOGY, IN A COURSE OF LECTURES DELIVERED BEFORE THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, IN THE YEAR MDCCCXXXII. AT THE LECTURE ν FOUNDED BY JOHN BAMPTON, M.A. ἤ CANON OF SALISBURY. BY RENN DICKSON HAMPDEN, M.A. LATE FELLOW OF ORIEL COLLEGE. OXFORD, PRINTED BY SAMUEL COLLINGWOOD, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY, FOR THE AUTHOR. SOLD BY J. H. PARKER, OXFORD : AND BY J. G. AND F. RIVINGTON, LONDON. Φ MDCCCXXXIII. may Reece: Ὑϑουοκμαν am Be. aa 10) =, -7 sal - are is , An j ; . ( ΔΉ: ᾿ ; » + ΤᾺ A av A, an tld “ὐ λα i: es i Ὄ ἘΣ ἐν ? SORA, το νιν pais rr > PER toe » ae ὙΠ ΠΗ" ne reas _ TC 4 7 * ΗΜ ular! rR a ~. ᾿" ᾿ ee } ‘ αὐ νη; ἘΝ ind = BO v~ ᾿ δρᾷ : Een u ἢ ποτ θυ i i, can 5 3 . re Ἢ tae πα -:, ΑΝ, Wi. TENOR IE Custi ᾿ ies Vai Λ ist ys Ἂν 1. .“". “ἃ Pa iG) To OMe Ὁ ΔΑ Ὶ Git, Ἂς "ἢ oe Ny ha ' ian ae eden) ....:. tents RW sh ἣν A Ὁ οὐλὴ EXTRACT FROM THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF THE REV. JOHN BAMPTON, CANON OF SALISBURY. “1 give and bequeath my Lands and Estates to ** the Chancellor, Masters, and Scholars of the University “of Oxford for ever, to have and to hold all and sin- ‘** cular the said Lands or Estates upon trust, and to the ‘‘intents and purposes hereinafter mentioned; that is to “‘ say, I will and appoint that the Vice-Chancellor of the «ς University of Oxford for the time being shall take and “receive all the rents, issues, and profits thereof, and n “(after all taxes, reparations, and. necessary deductions «ς made) that he pay all the remainder to the endowment «ς of eight Divinity Lecture Sermons, to be established for “ς ever in the said University, and to be performed in the ** manner following : “1 direct and appoint, that, upon the first Tuesday in «ς Easter Term, a Lecturer be yearly chosen by the Heads «ὁ of Colleges only, and by no others, in the room adjoin- ‘ing to the Prmting-House, between the hours of ten in nn “ς the morning and two in the afternoon, to preach eight «ς Divinity Lecture Sermons, the year following, at St. “Mary's in Oxford, between the commencement of the ςς last month in Lent Term, and the end of the third week “in Act Term. a2 iv EXTRACT FROM CANON BAMPTON'’S WILL. « Also I direct and appoint, that the eight Divinity Lecture Sermons shall be preached upon either of the following Subjects—to confirm and establish the Chris- tian Faith, and to confute all heretics and schismatics —upon the divine authority of the holy Seriptures— upon the authority of the writings of the primitive Fa- thers, as to the faith and practice of the primitive Church —upon the Divinity of our Lord and Saviour Jesus ς Christ—upon the Divinity of the Holy Ghost—upon the Articles of the Christian Faith, as comprehended in the Apostles’ and Nicene Creeds. «¢ Also I direct, that thirty copies of the eight Divinity Lecture Sermons shall be always printed, within two months after they are preached, and one copy shall be given to the Chancellor of the University, and one copy to the Head of every College, and one copy to the Mayor of the city of Oxford, and one copy to be put into the Bodleian Library; and the expense of printing them shall be paid out of the revenue of the Land or Estates given for establishing the Divinity Lecture Sermons; and the Preacher shall not be paid, nor be entitled to the revenue, before they are printed. «« Also I direct and appoimt, that no person shall be qualified to preach the Divinity Lecture Sermons, un- less he hath taken the degree of Master of Arts at least, in one of the two Universities of Oxford or Cambridge ; and that the same person shall never preach the Divinity * Lecture Sermons twice.” Pile Biv Be" IT is not an unusual effect of taking a particu- lar view of a subject, to give the appearance of overlooking another view of it, no less important than that immediately presented. This is par- ticularly the case in a question of religion, in which the mind naturally fixes its eye on the divine part of the argument: and we are apt ac- cordingly to regard that as altogether slighted, because it is not ostensibly brought under our survey. I wish therefore to obviate any such miscon- ception of my design, in regard to the observa- tions contained in the present course of Lec- tures. I am exclusively engaged in considering what I may call a human section of the complex history of Christianity. But I would not, at the same time, be thought insensible to the divine part of the history ; or to forget, even for a mo- ment, the holy Agent himself by whom the a3 vi PREFACE: great work, in all its sacred outlines and living energy, has been wonderfully wrought. I request accordingly, that it may be remem- bered throughout, what is the immediate and re- stricted business of my inquiry: that it presup- poses a Divine origin to the Christian revela- tion, and a superintending Providence over its whole course. This is my point of departure. Assuming that the Holy Spirit has not been un- faithful to his charge over the church of Christ, I have endeavoured to take some account of that resistance, which the human agent has op- posed to the diffusion of the truth as it was purely inspired. A work of Christian evidences would have for its leading idea the operation of the Divine Author and Guardian of the Faith. Take, for instance, the Gospels, or the Acts of the Apostles: and it is the facts bearing on the character of the Divine Being and the Divine dispensations, which are solely or prominently brought to view. Human sentiments and con- duct are the mirror in which the work of God is reflected. Or take any merely human treatise on the evidences of Christianity: and the object will be found to be, to detect, amidst the various PREFACE. vil circumstances which have accompanied the rise and propagation of the Gospel, the indications of a power, wisdom, and goodness, more than human. As the present, however, is not a work of evidences, but a particular view of the con- nexion of human philosophy with the given truths of the Scriptures, the agency of man here forms the leading idea: and this therefore i have singled out for particular observation. There seems indeed to be an unreasonable jealousy in regard to any attempt to describe the importance of the human means concerned in the establishment and maintenance of the Gospel truth. There is a proneness in professed defenders of Christianity, as also in the Christian in general, to overstate the argument in its fa- vour. Whatever detracts accordingly from their own undue estimate, they are apt to regard as taking so much from the real evidence of Chris- tianity. But let us not estimate the cares of the Author of our salvation for the security of his work, by the standard of our fears. Let the human agents whom He has employed in the furtherance of it, have contributed their utmost either to support or to thwart what He has a 4 vill PREFACE. begun, the work still remains his. As in the natural world; corruption and disease may mark for their own the fairest works of the Divine hand, but cannot unmake them: so neither are we to suppose that the superintendence of Christ over his Church no longer exists, because the fields of his vineyard have been overrun with thorns and weeds. CONTENTS. LECTURE I. p.3. ORIGIN OF SCHOLASTIC PHILOSOPHY. NATURE of the Inquiry proposed, the force of Theory on Theo- logical language—the Scholastic Philosophy an important branch of this General Inquiry—its connexion with the philosophy of Aristotle—Neglect of consideration of its influence in compari- son with that of Platonism—the greater extent of its influence —its more immediate interest. The Scholastic Philosophy the result of a struggle between Reason and Authority—its history to be traced to the ascendancy of the Latin Clergy—contrast between the Greek and Latin Fathers—Practical character of the Latins exemplified in their leading men—strict correspondence sustained among them— Contrast of state of Society in the East and the West—Civil disturbance and misery of the West favourable to the power of the Latin Church—Rhetorical character of the Latin theological writers—Fruitless attempt of Jerome to improve the Latin lite- rature of his time—Monastic Institutions of the West less en- thusiastic than those of the East—Origin of the Scholastic System more developed in the progress of the Church after the middle of the Vth century.—The principle of liberty of reason which had led to the power of the Church, operating within the Church, leads at once to heresy and ecclesiastical coercion— Extent of jurisdiction over opinion claimed by the Latin Clergy evidenced in the predestinarian Controversy of the IXth cen- tury—Subsequent history a continuance of the struggle between Reason and Authority in the West.—Subjugation of the intel- lect leads to its insurrection—Character of its efforts at this pe- riod. The argumentative theology at length sanctioned by the Church itself in its authoritative capacity ——The Book of the x CONTENTS. Sentences—Albert the Great, and Thomas Aquinas, perfect the method established—Success of Scholasticism owing to its combination of unlimited discussion with deference to authority. LECTURE II. p. 5). FORMATION OF ‘THE SCHOLASTIC THEOLOGY. GENERAL statement of the evil of a Logical Theology—The Church sanctions the use of Logic only as an art of defence— Platonism the established Philosophy of the Church—An art of Logic indispensable to the speculating Christian in the West— Division of the Sciences in the middle age—Tendency of the age to blend all into a metaphysical Logic, or Dialect—Logic perverted into a Science of Investigation—Obstructions to the real improvement of Logic—Ignorance of Aristotle’s writings in themselves—Importance of the writings of Boethius—Effect of the Crusades in opening fresh sources of knowledge—Progress of Scholasticism illustrated in the division of parties into Nomi- nalists and Realists—Triumph of Realism. Realism, the scientific basis of Scholasticism—Nominalism, the resource of the more liberal speculators—Opposition be- tween Duns Scotus and Ockam—Ascendancy of a Logical Phi- losophy evidenced in the subsequent state of knowledge. Theology erected into an exact demonstrative Science—itts Principles drawn from the incomprehensible nature of the Di- vine Being—Regard to Authority maintained, by assigning Faith as the preliminary to the whole Speculation—Aristotle’s Phi- losophy applied as a method of eliciting the Divine truths in- volved in the Scripture—This resulted in a combination of the Ideal Theory of Platonism with the Sensualism of Aristotle’s Philosophy—Logic the instrument in effecting this result— Union of Mysticism and Argumentation in the Scholastic writ- ings—Abuse by the Schoolmen of the disputatious form of Aristotle’s writings. Fundamental errors of Scholastic Theology, 1. its neglect of the Historical Nature of the Christian Scriptures—consequent loss of the real instruction contained in them—2. their Rhe- torical nature also overlooked in an exclusive attention to the mere words of revelation.—3. their Ethical lessons also dispa- raged in the pursuit of theoretic truth. CONTENTS. xi LECTURE III. p. 97. THE TRINITARIAN CONTROVERSIES. Questions on the Trinity naturally the first to engage the attention of disputants—Their ecclesiastical and political im- portance in the early ages—Maintenance of the orthodox doc- trine chiefly owing to the Latin Church—Controversies on the subject assume a scientific form in the Scholastic writings— Promiscuous character of Ancient Philosophy exemplified in the discussion—Scholastic System applies the philosophy of mind to the investigation of God from his Effects in the world—Doc- trine of the Trinity, in its principle, the ideas or reasons of all existing things, traced to the Intellect of God—Description of the Scholastic mode of rationalizing the doctrine—Orthodox theory of the Divine Procession the exact view of the principle of Causation—Extremes of Sabellianism and Arianism traced to their misconception of this principle—Mischievous effect of the notion, that doctrines must be defended from their speculative consequences—Influence of Materialism—Rise of a technical phraseology—Logical principles employed in settling the precise notions of the different terms introduced—Popular illustrations of the Trinity examples of this mode of philosophizing—Contro- versies turn principally on the views taken of sameness, unity, diversity, &c.—Differences between the orthodox and the Sabel- lians and Arians in regard to the Divine Unity—Difiiculties pro- duced by the word Persona, obviated by logical distinctions. Illustration of the doctrine of the Incarnation from the prin- ciples of the established logical philosophy—It accounts for the differences between the orthodox, the Nestorians, and Euty- chians. Application of this philosophy in the Controversies on the Procession of the Holy Spirit—The words Filioque added to the Nicene Creed—This addition ultimately maintained on logical grounds. General practical reflections—Difficulties on the subject of the Trinity metaphysical in their origin—Popular misappre- hension of the Divine Unity an instance of this—The various theories all Trinitarian in principle—Simplicity of belief in Scripture facts, the only escape from perplexity. ΧΙ CONTENTS. LECTURE IV. p. 153. THE PELAGIAN CONTROVERSIES.—PREDESTINATION AND GRACE. Scnorastic nature of controversies relative to Divine and Hu- man Agency—State of the West disposes the Latin Christians to the discussion of such questions—Importance of the ques- tions in order to Church-government—The disputes here at first, less philosophical in comparison with the Trinitarian— Consequent laxity in the terms of the Pelagian theories, occa- sions more continual disputes—The Schoolmen, the first to systematize these doctrines—Connexion of them with the pre- vious theory of the Trinity—Scholastic view of Predestination an application of the Principle of Activity in the Divine Being to human actions—Importance of excluding reference to the Divine Intelligence, in our estimate of Predestination—Mode in which the notions of Contingency and Necessity, Time and Eternity, were employed in Scholastic reasonings.—The only proper difficulty on the subject is, the prevalence of Evil—No- tions of Optimism influential on such speculations—The term Good in ancient philosophy coincident with an object of will— Reprobation consequently, as implying evil willed, unknown to Scholastic system—lllustration to be derived to our article on the subject from the theories opposed by the Schoolmen—Dread of Manicheism in the Latin Church. Scholastic notion of Grace as the effect of Predestination, both physical and logical—The term Grace designates properly a general fact of the Divine conduct—Application of Aristo- tle’s physical doctrines in the scholastic account of the process of Grace—The theory of Transmutation—Instinctive Principle of motion attributed to the System of Nature—Approximation to Pantheism in this system. Practical reflections—Truths of Grace and Predestination concern the heart principally—Theoretic statements of them must always be peculiarly open to difficulty—The difficulties, evidently, chiefly metaphysical—The doctrines, practically taken, full of real comfort and peace. CONTENTS. xiil LECTURE V. p. 207. THE PELAGIAN CONTROVERSIES.—JUSTIFICATION. Trutus of Divine and Human Agency necessarily qualify each other—Human Agency, as viewed in the Scholastic system, the continued action of the First Cause—Justification, the law of Divine Operation in the Salvation of Man—Sketch of the Chris- tian scheme involved in this principle —Theory of Human Agency concerned first in accounting for Resistance to the Di- vine Will—Difficulty, as felt in ancient philosophy, -was to re- concile the fact with the certainty of Science—Schoolmen adopt Aristotle’s practical views of human nature—Application of the term Corruption founded on his physical philosophy—Theory of the Propagation of Sin maintains the universality of the prin- ciple of Corruption—Objections of Pelagius and Celestius to this theory—Error, both of the Orthodox and of the Pelagians, in speculating on the nature of Original Sin—Concupiscence—the application of this term to Original Sin, derived from ancient divisions of the soul— Materialism involved in the Specula- tion.—Doctrine of Original Sin, the counterpart to the doctrine of the Incarnation—Disputes between the Orthodox and the Pelagians turn on the force of the terms Nature and Person— Connexion between the heresies of Nestorius and Pelagius— Distinction between the effect of Adam’s sin, and the sin of subsequent parents on their posterity—View of the Christian life, as a change, coincides with this theory of Original Sin— Faith, the infused element of the new life—Doctrinal statements of Justification by Faith, to be interpreted by the light of Scholastic notions involved in it—Scholastic Notion of Free- will, not opposed to Necessity, but to the Force of sin, in en- slaving the will—Introduction of the theory of Justice into the Christian Scheme—Notion of Merit to be understood in con- nexion with this theory; as also of Merit of Condignity, Merit of Congruity—Peculiar views of Repentance, as a compensa- tion for offence—of- Punishment and Satisfaction, as applied to the Sacrifice of Christ—of Self-Mortification and Supereroga- tion—drawn from this theory of Penal Justice. Inefficacy of Repentance to remove guilt, and need of Atone- ment, illustrated by these speculations—Debasing effect of Scho- lastic theory of Expiation—True view of Human Agency to be χὶν CONTENTS. found in simple practical belief of the Atonement—Union of Strength and Weakness, implied in this doctrine, coincident with facts of human nature—Mischievous effect of speculative discussion of the subject—Moderation and forbearance of lan- guage on the subject most accordant with the spirit of Pro- testantism. LECTURE VI. p. 261. MORAL PHILOSOPHY OF THE SCHOOLS. No proper Moral Philosophy in the Scholastic System—Con- fusion of moral and religious truth injurious to both—Instance in Paley’s Moral Philosophy—Moral Truth at first taught on the ground of Authority—Platonism influential in blending it with Theology—Influence of Christian literature, the Sermons, and legends of the Saints, Ambrose’s Treatise ‘‘ On the Offices of “ Ministers,’ Gregory’s ‘‘ Morals,” Boethius’ ‘ Consolation of ‘* Philosophy” —Ethical science corrupted by being studied with a view to the power of the Clergy. Schoolmen systematize ethical precepts drawn from practice of the Church—The Treatise “ΟΥ̓ the Imitation of Christ” — Plato’s theological account of the Chief Good combined with practical detail of Aristotle’s Ethical Theory—Scholastic moral system a development of the Divine Energy in man’s internal nature—Aristotle’s notion of Happiness accordant with this view —Scholastic gradations of moral excellence to be traced to this fundamental idea—Hence, also, the importance attributed to the life of contemplative devotion—The doctrine of Perfection —Distinction of Counsels and Precepts—Outline of this double morality seen in the Aristotelic notion of an Heroic Virtue— Coincidence of Aristotle’s theory of Good-Fortune with the superhuman virtue of the Scholastic System—Connexion of ethical doctrine of the Schools with notion of Original Sin— Mortal and Venial Sins—Proper ground of this distinction— Division of Virtue into Theological and Moral, and into infused and Acquired—Doctrine of Gifts. Origin of questions in Modern Moral Philosophy to be traced to scholastic discussions—Instance in the idea of Moral Obli- gation—Extreme opinions as to the relative importance both of Theology and Ethics—Proper province of Ethics, inquiry into the principles of Human Nature—Revelation only gives new CONTENTS. XV objects to those principles—Importance of regarding the Science of Ethics as in itself independent of Religicn. LECTURE VIL. p. 307. THE SACRAMENTS. Docrnrine of the Sacraments a continuation of the Scholastic scheme of Divine Agency—Separate nature of the soul and body assumed throughout the speculation—The Sacraments viewed as the means of supporting and renovating the life of the Soul—General notion of them founded on the belief in secret influences—Belief in Magic auxiliary to this notion— Connexion of Sacramental Influence with the doctrine of the Incarnation—Agitation of the subject in the IXth century in connexion with Alexandrian Philosophy—Difference of opinion as to whether the Sacraments were signs or instruments—Pre- cision of language respecting the Eucharist in particular—Pre- eminence assigned to this Sacrament attributable to the esta- blished theory of Sacramental Influence—Doctrine of Intention —Question of the effect of the Vice of the Minister on the efficacy of the Sacrament—Notion of impressed Character at- tributed to some of the Sacraments—Evident superiority of Baptism and the Eucharist in comparison with the rest—Rough form of the early Controversies on the Sacramental Presence of Christ —The terms Substance and Species not taken at first in a strict metaphysical sense—Aristotelic Philosophy of Mat- ter and Form, Substance and Accident, introduced to perfect the theory of the Sacraments—This exemplified particularly in Transubstantiation—Connexion of this doctrine with the power of the Church enforces the assertion of the mystical virtue of the consecrated elements—Physical theory of Transmutation applied to the establishment of the Presence of Christ—Con- nexion with this, of the notion of the mysterious efficacy of certain words—Realism involved in the further use of the no- tions of Substance and Accident in the account of Transub- stantiation—The theory of the doctrine at variance with popular representations of it. General reflections on the abuse of the doctrine of the Sacra- ments in the Scholastic System—its repugnance to the spirit of Christianity—Necessity of vigilance against the temptations to refinement on this subject. xvi CONTENTS. LECTURE VIII. p. 347. NATURE AND USE OF DOGMATIC THEOLOGY. Examination of the nature and use of Dogmatic Theology sug- gested by previous inquiry—Confusion of thought on the subject, evidenced in popular statements of the relation between Faith and Reason—also in attempts to settle the necessary points of belief—Discussion of the Scholastic principles: 1. that whatever is first in point of doctrine is therefore true; and, 2. that the logical consequence of any doctrine is necessarily true—The former principle, a remnant of Scholastic view of Theology as a demonstrative science—Universality and ubiquity of belief no tests of divine truth—The principle only true when strictly con- fined to Scripture facts—Contrast of the earlier and later Chris- tian writers in the tradition of doctrine—The preference for earliest authorities inconsistent with the principle which es- tablishes doctrines by logical consequences—Symbolical nature of language in its application to Theology—Unscriptural doc- trines must result from the method of logical deductions—Ne- cessity imposed in such a case of answering all objections— Impossibility of maintaining thus the principle of Authority— Progressive accumulation of doctrines by such a mode of pro- ceeding—Truth of Fact confounded with Truth of Opinion in the Scholastic method—No dogmas to be found in Scripture itself—Dogmas therefore to be restricted to a negative sense, as exclusions of unscriptural truth—Articles and Creeds not necessarily to be dispensed with, because imperfect —Their de- fence however not to be identified with that of Christianity— Use and importance of Dogmatic Theology to be drawn from its relation to Social Religion. Sum of the whole inquiry—Present interest of it—Scholas- ticism the ground of controversial defence to the Church of Rome —Remnants of it in Protestant Churches in the state of Con- troversy, and in the importance attributed to peculiar views of religious truth—Result of the examination sufficient to prove the force of Theory on our ‘Theological language—The impres- sion from this fact not to be transferred to the revealed truths which are real parts of sacred history—Real beneficial effect of honest search into the truths of Divine Revelation. LECTURE I. LECTURE I. ORIGIN OF THE SCHOLASTIC PHILOSOPHY. B i irene Keys i Ἷ = τς —— se = SUMMARY. Nature of the Inquiry proposed, the force of Theory on Theo- logical language—the Scholastic Philosophy an important branch of this General Inquiry—its connexion with the philosophy of Aristotle—Neglect of consideration of its influence In compari- son with that of Platonism—the greater extent of its influence —its more immediate interest. The Scholastic Philosophy the result of a struggle between Reason and Authority—its history to be traced to the ascendancy of the Latin Clergy—Contrast between the Greek and Latin Fathers—Practical character of the Latins exemplified in their leading men—strict correspondence sustained among them— Contrast of state of Society in the East and the West—Civil disturbance and misery of the West favourable to the power of the Latin Church—Rhetorical character of the Latin theological writers—Fruitless attempt of Jerome to improve the Latin lite- rature of his time—Monastic Institutions of the West less en- _ thusiastic than those of the East—Origin of the Scholastic Sys- tem more developed in the progress of the Church after the middle of the Vth century.—The principle of liberty of reason which had led to the power of the Church, operating within the Church, leads at once to heresy and ecclesiastical coercion— Extent of jurisdiction over opinion claimed by the Latin Clergy evidenced in the Predestinarian Controversy of the IXth cen- tury—Subsequent history a continuance of the struggle between Reason and Authority in the West.—Subjugation of the in- tellect leads to its insurrection—Character of its efforts at this period. The argumentative theology at length sanctioned by the Church itself in its authoritative capacity——The Book of the Sentences.—Albert the Great, and Thomas Aquinas, perfect the method established.—Success of Scholasticism owing to its combination of unlimited discussion with deference to authority. BQ 1 Peter LV. 11. If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God. Εἴ τις λαλεῖ, ὡς λόγια Θεοῦ. Si quis loquitur, quasi sermones Dei. Lat. γύπα, LECTURE I. CHRISTIANITY had its beginnings amidst ob- structions of a twofold character; the .self-right- eousness of the human heart, and the presumption of the human understanding. It had to war with the pride of man, entrenched within these double fortifications. Not only were those principles of our nature, on which it was to exercise its sanctifying influence, armed in hostility against it; but those on which it had to rely as the interpreters of its overtures of peace and pardon, misconstrued and misrepresented its heavenly message. The history of infidelity and of heresy affords abundant instances of this twofold counteraction to the truths of the Gospel. It is not of the action of the heart on the understanding, and of the un- derstanding on the heart, that I now speak. That this mutual action and reaction take place in all our decisions on moral questions, is undoubtedly true; and a highly interesting fact it is both to the Theologian and the Moral Philosopher. The point, however, on which I now insist, is the separate in- fluence of the two great classes of principles, which our nature exhibits, on the reception of divine truth. There is a resistance simply moral, and another simply intellectual ;—the force of Vice and the force of Theory ;—both of which have played a consider- Β 9 6 LECTURE I. able part in the drama of Religion. Hach demands, accordingly, a distinct consideration, from those who would fully solve that great problem, which the ex- istence of a complex system of facts and doctrines, under the name of Christianity, presents to the thoughtful mind. My purpose in the following Lectures is, to ex- amine into the influence of one of these Classes of principles—those of the understanding ;—and to en- deavour to present to your notice, the force of Theory in its relation to the divine truths of our Religion. It is that portion of the inquiry which has attracted the least investigation in itself. For though ecclesiastical histories purpose to give a view of theological opinion, there is none that I am ac- quainted with, which has given an account of the effect of Opinion as such on the doctrines of Chris- tianity. They give rather a view of human pas- sions in their relation to the divine truth, or of human nature in general in its reception of the Gospel. They do not shew how the intellect of man has insinuated its own conclusions into the body of the revelation in the course of its transmission, and modified the expressions by which the truth is con- veyed. I do not indeed purpose to enter into the whole of so large an inquiry. Nor can I pretend, in the compass of the present Lectures, to exhaust even a part of it. I must content myself with laying be- fore you that portion of it which has forcibly struck my own mind; and which I hope may also prove, LECTURE 1. ἢ both interesting in itself, and important to the re- sult of the whole inquiry into the theoretic modifi- cations of our theological language. It is then to the effect of the Scholastic? Philo- sophy that I have directed my attention, and en- deavoured to trace the modifications of our theolo- gical language as illustrated in that vast theoretic system. The existence alone of that system in the very heart of the Christian Church for so many centuries—for more than a thousand years if we comprise the period of its formation antecedent to its perfect maturity, for more than five centuries if we look only to its perfect development—is a most striking fact. And I only wonder that it has not attracted more notice than it has hitherto obtained. We meet indeed with some incidental remarks in works of philosophy or theology on the theoretic character of the system. But with these remarks it is usually dismissed as a method long gone by, which has had its day and is now extinct, and re- mains only a monument of frivolous ingenuity, to be neglected and despised by the more enlightened wisdom of the present age. But surely a pursuit in which the human mind has been so long en- * The word Scholastic has now obtained a secondary mean- ing from the disputations with which it was connected. We see its original sense in the following passage: Omnes enim in scriptis suis causas tantum egerunt suas; et propriis magis lau- dibus quam aliorum utilitatibus consulentes, non id facere ad- nisi sunt ut salubres ac salutiferi, sed ut scholastici ac diserti haberentur. Salvian. De Gubern. Dei, Prefat. ed. Baluz. B 4 8 LECTURE I. gaged, and which has thus, as an indisputable mat- ter of fact, educated the human intellect in the West, for the larger views, and more elevated thoughts, and more masculine vigour, of Modern Science and Modern Theology, demands more re- spect, more serious consideration. If it supplied, as it undoubtedly did, the elements of our present im- provement, the stock of principles of which the Reformation, both religious and intellectual, of the sixteenth century, availed itself; to which that re- formation was forced to address itself; whose lan- guage it was forced to adopt in order to be under- stood and received; neither the historian of the human mind, nor the student of Religion, ought to leave this track of inquiry unexplored. The Scho- lastic Philosophy in fact lies between us at our present station in the world, and the immediate dif- fusion of the truth from heaven, as “ the morning ** spread on the mountains,” an atmosphere of mist through which the early beams of Divine Light have been transfused. It has given the celestial rays a divergency whilst it has transmitted them, and, by the multiplicity of its reflections, made them indistinct as to their origin. To the members indeed of this University, which, with such wisdom, has retained the study of Aristotle’s Philosophy, justly regarding it as the strongest, best discipline of the mind, whilst it has discarded the dialectical abuses of the system, the inquiry into the nature of Scholastic Philosophy peculiarly recommends itself. It becomes an in- LECTURE I. 9 quiry into the nature and effects of that very phi- losophy which our University discipline upholds to a certain extent. For the Scholastic method is nothing more than a view of the philosophy of Aristotle, as it was moulded by the state of civil- ization and learning, and by the existing relations between the civil and ecclesiastical powers in the course of the middle ages. It is what the cherished study of this place was at a period, when it was pursued with an excessive intensity of devotion to the combined authority of the Philosopher and the gifted commentator on his doctrines. The erection of this and other Universities was the great ex- | ternal means, by which the Scholastic Philosophy was constituted into that form which it ultimately attained. The chairs of theology and philosophy, established here and elsewhere, were the oracular seats, from which the doctrines of Aristotle were expounded, as the rateonale of theological and moral truth. The collection of these several authoritative decisions at length rose into a peculiar system of Philosophy in itself; of which Aristotle indeed was the foundation and cement, but the structure itself, commentary piled on commentary, and conclusion on conclusion. It may appear strange, then, that whenever the history of religious opinion has attracted attention, curiosity should rather have been directed to the effects of Platonism, than to those of the more es- tablished Aristotelic philosophy. It is owing, per- haps, to the circumstance that Platonism has been 10 LECTURE I. more arrogant in its pretensions: it has aspired, not to modify, but to supersede Christian truth. Chris- tianity had to struggle in its infancy against the theology of the school of Alexandria; which re- garded the Christian system as an intrusion on the philosophical ascendancy which it had hitherto en- joyed. The New-Platonists disputed the originality of the Christian doctrine, asserting that the sayings of our Lord were all derived from the doctrines of their Master’. Nor was the mischief from the Alexandrian School neutralized, when, its open hos- tility being found ineffectual, disciples of that school merged themselves into the Christian name. The accommodation which then took place between the theories of their philosophy and the doctrines of the Faith, proved a snare to members of the Church. Hence, upon the whole, resulted, even in the be- ginuings of the Gospel, an ambiguity respecting the peculiar rights of the antagonist systems. And this ambiguity affected the question of the self- originated divine character of the Christian Truth. The attention of Theologians, therefore, could not b De utilitate autem historia, ut omittam Grecos, quantam noster Ambrosius questionem solvit, calumniantibus Platonis lectoribus et dilectoribus, qui dicere ausi sunt, omnes Domini nostri Jesu Christi sententias, quas mirari et predicare cogun- tur, de Platonis libris eum didicisse, &c. Augustin. De Doct. Christ. lib. II. c. 2. vol. III. p. 12. ed. 4to. Venet. 1584. Libros beatissimi Pape Ambrosii credo habere sanctitatem tuam; eos autem multum desidero, quos adversus nonnullos imperitissimos et superbissimos, qui de Platonis libris Dominum profecisse contendunt, diligentissime et copiosissime scripsit. Augustinus Paulino, Epist. XXXII. Oper. vol. I. p. 39. LECTURE I. 11 but be drawn to the subject. The Faith itself was at stake in the endeavour to disentangle it from the theories of the Platonizing Christians. It was to be determined whether Christianity was a true re- ligion possessing an intrinsic authority. It has not been so with regard to the. Aristotelic philo- sophers. These were in comparative obscurity when the Alexandrian School gave the law to the literary world. They did not put forward any pretensions as the rivals of Christianity, but pur- sued their own independent path, struggling rather against the domination of the Platonists than against the Christian innovator. The Church too looked upon the Peripatetic school with shyness and aver- sion at the first, regarding it as atheistic and im- pious, the resource of heresy and religious perfidy ; whereas towards the Platonic system, the early doctors entertained a tacit partiality, amidst their actual hostility to the professors of that system. Opposing Platonism, as a sect jealous of the rising power of Christianity, they still felt no repugnance to the intermixture of its speculations with the vital truths of the religion. The philosophy of Aristotle, on the contrary, crept into the Church imperceptibly, and even against the consent of the Church. No compromise took place between its disciples and the members of the Church. There was none of that ostentatiousness of principles on their part, which characterized the proceedings of the New-Platonic school in their intercourse with the Church. But the logic of Aristotle continued from 12 LECTURE I. time to time to supply the heretic with arms. And this dexterous warfare, carried on by the heretic, gradually brought the Church to the use of the same arms which it had rejected with disdain. Thus, amidst all the disavowals of the system which it strenuously made, the Church became un- awares Aristotelic. It had learned the arts of its impugners, and spoke the language of their theories in its own authoritative declarations against them. But in reality, the question of the influence of Aristotle’s philosophy is more important on _ this very account, that it has been more subtile, more silently insinuated into, and spread over, the whole system of Christian doctrines. Being employed as an instrument of disputation, it has not been con- fined, like Platonism, to certain leading points of Christianity, as, for instance, to the doctrines of the Trinity and the Immortality of the Soul, but has been applied to the systematic development of the sacred truth in all its parts. That complete dis- cussion, which the minutest points of Christianity obtained under the discipline of the Aristotelic phi- losophy in the hands of the Schoolmen, has fixed our technical language in every department of Theology. I consider it therefore necessary for the perfect understanding of those terms of our Re- ligion, which an established usage has now made the unchangeable records of religious belief; which, both the orthodox and the heretic, the catholic and the schismatic, alike employ in all their religious statements and arguments; to examine to some ex- LECTURE I. 13 tent, how far their history may be traced in the Aristotelic theories of Scholasticism. In that familiarity which we have acquired from our infancy with the mysterious terms of Christian Theology, the necessity of inquiring into their history escapes our ordinary reflection. We little think that we are walking among the shades of de- parted controversies, among the monuments, and the trophies, of hearts that have burned with zeal, and of intellects that have spent themselves in the sub- tilty and vehemence of debate. But as to the un- conscious traveller over ground which history or poetry has ennobled, so to us, the land is mute: it brings not the rich recollections of other men and other days: and we pass on in careless haste, think- ing it enough, that these memorials of our Fathers in the Faith serve the actual occasions of our pre- sent convenience. The Scholastic Philosophy, indeed, is preemi- nently a record of the struggle which has subsisted, between the efforts of human reason, on the one hand, to assert its own freedom and independ- ence; and on the other hand, the coercion exer- cised over it by the civil or ecclesiastical powers. In the general survey of it, it will be observed to be distinguished by two very opposite characteristics ; an unbounded liberty of discussion, that advances with unawed step into the most startling curiosities of minute inquiry; and a servile addiction to the previous determinations and sanctions of the vene- 14 LECTURE 1. rated doctors of the Church. Both these facts, so conspicuous in the matured form of the Scholastic Theology, are the surviving evidences of that strug- gle under which its system gradually rose and esta- blished itself. It was by its artful combination of these two ingredients of the human judgment,—the positiveness of dogmatism, and the waywardness of private reason,—that its empire was decided. To this combination we owe the precision and the com- pass of our theological language. No thought was left unexpressed, which the captiousness of real or imaginary objection might obtrude on the sacred subject ; no authority was passed by, without being tasked for its contribution to the exact definition of each point examined. On the present occasion I shall address myself principally to the development of these facts, as they are illustrated in the History of the Scholastic Philosophy ; reserving the consideration of the ge- neral nature of the Philosophy itself, and the illus- trations to be derived from it to particular terms of Theology, for the subjects of the following Lec- tures. The origin of the Scholastic Philosophy carries back our inquiry to the causes of the ascendancy obtained by the Latin Clergy over the Greek. The establishment of the Papal power of Rome was in itself among the effects of that ascendancy—the consummation to which it led. The real ground of LECTURE); 1. 15 that Power lay more deeply than in the temporal advantages which the see of Rome possessed, or in the successful policy of its Bishops. The continu- ance of the Papal power, amidst its rapid transition through the hands of successive Bishops, and these also often individuals not distinguished .by their talents or their general merits in the ecclesiastical body, argues the stability and perpetuity of a prin- ciple upholding that power, and guarding it against the casualties of personal imbecility and worthless- ness. This principle was the predominant influence of the Latin Clergy. The course of events in the early history of the Church seemed to be eminently favourable towards the preponderance of the Greeks. Theirs were the Churches immediately founded by the Apostles. Theirs was the language of the sa- cred books and of philosophy. Theirs, with a few exceptions, were the Apologies by which Chris- tianity defended itself against the assaults of the Jew or the Pagan in the first centuries. It was their writers, who took the lead in systematizing the doc- trines of the Faith, and allied them with philosophy. It was their Bishops who took the ostensible part in the great Councils of the first four centuries, and the first half of the fifth. In the course of that pe- riod, too, occur the names of all the most illustrious Fathers of the Greek Church; Justin Martyr, Ori- gen, Eusebius of Czesarea, Athanasius, Basil, the two Gregories, Chrysostom; men of acute and elo- quent genius, as well as of intrepid energy. Still the efforts of the Greeks may all be characterized as 16 LECTURE I. eminently literary ; as philosophical defences and expositions of the Faith, more than practical ener- gies in its behalf. This I observe is their general character ; not denying, at the same time, that there are exceptions to this general remark, in some strik- ing instances of individual conduct, among those to whom I have referred. Contrast, on the other hand, the labours of the Latin Clergy during the same period. The practical character here shews itself as the prominent feature; the literary, or philosophical, being entirely subordi- nate to it. The Latins have not that splendid array of philosophical writings, which the catalogue of the Greek Fathers exhibits; but they had sagacious po- litical leaders, popular advocates of the sacred cause, men of extensive knowledge of the world combined with a nervous enthusiasm of thought and feeling. In Tertullian, for instance, we see the art of the rhetorician united with the obstinacy and rude ve- hemence of the practical enthusiast: in Cyprian, amidst the placid flow of his style, the resoluteness of moral feeling, which at length carried him to martyrdom: in Lactantius and Arnobius, the per- suasiveness of advocates intent more on the effect of their arguments than on their philosophical accu- racy or logical cogency: in Jerome and Augustine, at once the rigour of logicians, the comprehensive views of philosophers, the persuasiveness of orators, the command of political leaders. Jerome, perhaps, is one of the most extraordinary instances which history exhibits, of the union of dark LECTURE I. Τὴ and solitary abstractedness of mind, with dexterous facility in wielding to theoretic views the com- plex means which human society presents. His influence was like that of invisible agency, proving its existence by its effects, but defying our search into its mysterious powers. Whether at Rome, dic- tating the law of religion to devout followers, or lurking in the wilds on the Syrian confines‘, or buried in the seclusion of his monastery at Beth- lehem, this extraordinary man appears to have se- cured in himself the declining fortunes of ortho- doxy, and effectually established its future dominion in the Church. Take again the case of Ambrose; a civil officer of Rome, in the full activity of youth, and as yet unbaptized, suddenly called by the acclamations of the people to the vacant archbishopric of Milan, then the seat of the Western Empire‘. He united the inflexible religion of Athanasius with the prac- tical dexterity of the man of the world: so that, whilst he carried his principles into effect with a straight-forwardness of purpose, which appeared the result of a reckless enthusiasm, forcing its way in spite of the current of human affairs: he yet, by his penetration into characters and circumstances, evidently calculated the force of resistance to be © See his Epistle to Damasus. Hieronym. Oper. tom. II. p. 131.—Note A. Appendix. ἃ Gregory Nazianzen also describes the election of a person who had not even been baptized, to the bishopric of Cesarea. —Note B. 18 LECTURE I. encountered, and the ultimate superiority of his in- fluence. Study him in his different relations with the Emperor Gratian, with Theodosius*, with Jus- tina and the younger Valentinian; and compare with him the conduct of Athanasius in the like circumstances. In the latter, we see a bold uncom- promising enthusiasm, a chivalrous ardour in the cause of religion, undaunted by difficulties, acquir- ing intensity by struggle with adventures: but throughout it is a theoretic enthusiasm which his conduct displays. The actions of the man seem only the bold expression of his theories. But in Ambrose we contemplate the talent of the skilful Governor of the Church; a determination inspired by a confidence of actual power; and an exertion of that power for the maintenance of his religious principles‘. € Qui leges tulerat, quam patienter tulit sententiam sacerdotis Mediolanensis. Et ne sententiam emolliti presbyteri, et princi- pibus applaudentis, fuisse teneram putes, a regalium usu sus- pensus est princeps, exclusus ab ecclesia, et peenitentiam co- actus est explere solennem. Joann. Saresberiens. Policraticus, hb. ΤᾺ ΘΟ. Ρ. 29: f Christians in the [Vth century had still retained a great deal of heathen practice mixed up with their religion. Ambrose acted the reformer by his authority.—Itaque cum ad memorias sanctorum, sicut in Africa solebat, pultes, et panem, et merum adtulisset, atque ab ostiario prohiberetur, ubi hoc Episcopum vetuisse cognovit, tam pie atque obedienter amplexa est, ut ipse mirarer, quam facile accusatrix potius consuetudinis sue, quam disceptatrix illius prohibitionis effecta sit. Augustin. Confess. VI. cap. 2. In cap. 3. of the same book, Augustine gives an account of the manner in which the time of Ambrose was occupied.— Note C. LECTURE I. 19 Where again in the Greek Church shall we find a parallel to Augustine, the individual to whom perhaps, after the great Apostle of the Gentiles, the Christian cause, so far as human ability has sup- ported it, owes principally its present strength and triumph. There are in Augustine some lines of character strongly resembling those of the Apostle himself. He displayed an ardent zeal like that of Paul; a sleepless vigilance like that of Paul for the spiritual needs of the Church; like Paul also, a vigorous power of argumentation, a perception of the force of heretical objections, and an energy of rapid retort. Like the Apostle again, he had been the ardent devotee of a hostile system of religious opinion. The Manicheism of his early life had nourished the fire of enthusiasm in him; as in the youthful bosom of St. Paul the prejudices of a Pharisee had glowed into the flames of a perse- cutor. Neither of them could take a passive sub- ordinate part in any course in which they might be engaged. The parallel only fails, when we think of the frankness and simplicity of the Apostle, com- pared with the shrewdness and versatility of the Saint. We see the force of Augustine’s character in the management of the Church itself, the work of greater difficulty, rather than in the dexterous use of the civil power. The Church of the West during the period when he flourished, the latter half, that is, of the [Vth century and the com- mencement of the Vth, was daily becoming a more complex machine, more unwieldy to ordinary C2 20 LECTURE I. hands, demanding talents of the first order to grasp its various relations, and a commanding moral power to direct and control the whole system. Such occasions, it has been often observed, are always found to call forth the spirits that alone are meet to cope with them. Jerome was a spirit of this mould; still more so was Augustine. He had not the learning, or the eloquence, or the depth of character, which Jerome possessed ; but he had the advantage of a more pliant temper, a more social taste, a more personal influence—an influence, not merely of respect for his station, and talents, and moral power, but evidently of affection for the man’. In Jerome there was a strong tinge of Oriental enthusiasm: Augustine was throughout the Latin Churchman. It is the care of the Churches which he evinces through his whole career: we never lose sight of him as the Chief Pastor of the flock, as the head of a vast spiritual community, for which he appears to hold himself responsible. His very writings, in fact, are so many actions. The view of them as compositions is lost, in the im- , pression which they give us, of the design of the writer to produce some practical effect. We do him injustice, when we contemplate him simply as the writer, or the literary debater. In this respect we are apt to pronounce him inconsistent, or even con- tradictory to himself. But this very inconsistency is a strong evidence of the really practical design of 8 See the Letter of Volusian.—Note D. LECTURE I. 2] the writer. He was too acute a logician, not to see the speculative consequences of his own state- ments—too skilful a rhetorician, not to suspect that his own positions might be urged against him. But, at the same time, he had too deep an acquaint- ance with the practical course of things, not to be aware, that the skill of the logician is not omnipo- tent over the affairs of life; and that he who would rightly avail himself of men and things, must some- times be content to wear that guise of paradox, which the actual constitution of the world often exhibits in itself. A feeling of surprise indeed must arise in our minds, when we look back to the IVth century, and contemplate that restless activity by which the leading members of the Latin Church were dis- tinguished. An active communication indeed sub- sisted throughout the Church at large. Athanasius, from his retreat in the solitudes of the Thebaid, could make his counsels felt in the heart of the Empire; and Chrysostom, from his exile on Mount Taurus, could sustain an incessant intercourse with the Faithful at the most remote places. But in the Western Church more especially, the correspondence of feelings and views was vigorously sustained by the great leaders of the Church, evidently as the great instrument of unity in doctrine and govern- ment. No point of heterodoxy was touched in one part of the Empire, but it regularly spread in widen- ing circle until it reached the opposite extreme. The Bishops and rulers of the Church had the Cc 3 Q2 LECTURE I. deacons and presbyters" at their command, to bear their various communications of intelligence, and their replies to the questions sent to them from the distant provinces of their communion. Sagacious practical men, at different important stations, formed a chain of communication, which was kept in con- stant tension, and vibrated throughout wherever the impression was madei. The state of society, both civil and religious, in the Western Empire, was such as to occasion and promote the influence of the Latin Clergy. The decline of the Roman Empire in the West ex- hibited more of the character of a violent breaking up and crumbling into pieces; whilst in the Kast there was a continuity of dissolution, like the silent melting of a frozen mass, full of decay, yet pre- serving the general sameness of its form. The cala- mities of the West had produced a shock through- out society, and spread a demoralizing influence through all classes of men. Paganism, which, even in the [Vth century, amidst the widely-extended dominion of Christianity, had not been effaced from the intercourse and manners of civil life, reclaimed to itself the waste which barbarian inroads had h Sanctum Presbyterum Firmum, anno preterito ob rem earum Ravennam, et inde Aphricam Siciliamque direximus, quem putamus jam in Aphrice partibus commorari. Hieronym. Augustino, Ep. XXX. Aug. Op. Vol. IL. p. 36. col. 2. ed. quarto. Has literulas de sancta Bethleem sancto presbytero Inno- centio dedi perferendas. Hieronym. Aug. Ep. XXIV. p. 29. i Note EF. LECTURE I. 23 made. ἊΝ Ν 3 Ν ἊΝ 3 SKE / SEEN Lol Εἰσελθὼν δὲ εἰς τὴν συναγωγὴν, ἐπαῤῥησιάζετο, ἐπὶ μῆνας τρεῖς διαλεγόμενος, καὶ πείθων τὰ περὶ τῆς βασιλείας τοῦ Θεοῦ. «ς » a \ Ὡς δέ τινες ἐσκληρύνοντο καὶ ἠπείθουν, κακολογοῦντες τὴν ὁδὸν > i ny / ἊΣ Ν by) > “ »} ἊΝ Ν ἐνώπιον τοῦ πλήθους, ἀποστὰς AT αὐτῶν, ἀφώρισε τοὺς μαθητὰς, > , an a a καθ᾽ ἡμέραν διαλεγόμενος ἐν TH σχολῇ Τυράννου τινός. “Τοῦτο δὲ ἐγένετο ἐπὶ ἔτη δύο, ὥστε πάντας τοὺς κατοικοῦντας τὴν > lal a na \ Ασίαν ἀκοῦσαι τὸν λόγον τοῦ Κυρίου ᾿Τησοῦ, lovdaious τε καὶ Ἕλληνας. Introgressus autem synagogam, cum fiducia loquebatur per tres menses, disputans et suadens de regno Dei. Cum autem quidam indurarentur, et non crederent, maledicen- tes viam Domini coram multitudine, discedens ab eis, segregavit discipulos, quotidie disputans in schola tyranm cujusdam. Hoc autem factum est per biennium, ita ut omnes, qui habitabant in Asia, audirent verbum Domini, Judi atque Gentiles. Lat. Vuue. LECTURE II. In my first Lecture, I have endeavoured to shew the origin of the Scholastic Philosophy, in the pecu- liar circumstances of the Latin Church; that it was such a system, as naturally grew out of the struggle * continually subsisting in the West between Reason and Authority. I now purpose to explain the na- ture of that Philosophy itself, when it became the acknowledged system of the Church; to give some account of its formation; and of the general cha- racter of the Theology resulting from it. The subject immediately before us, is one of the most serious interest to all, who have a just concern for the maintenance of sound practical Christianity. We are now tracing to its origin that speculative logical Christianity, which sur- vives among us at this day; and which has been in all ages, the principal obstacle, as I conceive, to the union and peace of the Church of Christ. To some indeed the assertion may even seem strange, that the cause of Christianity has suffered to such extent, from the /ogical character of the speculations adopted into its system. They may readily admit in general terms, that the intermixture of any spe- culation whatever with the body of religious truth, must be detrimental to that truth. But they may not be aware, at the same time, of the mischief E 3 54 LECTURE IL arising from the purely /ogzca/ character of the spe- culation. It will be the object of the whole of the present course of Lectures, to point out this mis- chief. But in order that I may carry my hearers along with me throughout in my design, I would place in front of the observations now to be sub- mitted, the nature of that evil which Scholasticism embodies in it,—the evil of a Logical Theology. If it be inquired then, why a Logical Theology should be injurious to the cause of Christian truth, we must seek an account of the case, not in the association of any particular truths of human reason with those of revelation, but in the simple fact of the irrelevance of all deduction of consequences to the establishment of religious doctrine. The Scrip- ture intimates to us certain facts concerning the Divine Being: but conveying them to us by the medium of language, it only brings them before us darkly, under the signs appropriate to the thoughts of the human mind. And though this kind of knowledge is abundantly instructive to us in point of sentiment and action; teaches us, that is, both how to feel, and how to act, towards God;—for it is the language that we understand, the language formed by our own experience and practice ;—it is altogether inadequate in point of Science. The most perfect reasonings founded on the terms of theological propositions, amount only to evidences of the various connexions of the signs employed. We may obtain by such reasonings, greater precision in the use of those signs. But the most accurate LECTURE II. 55 conclusion still wants a key to interpret it. There must be in fact a repeated revelation, to authorize us to assert, that this or that conclusion represents to us some truth concerning God. If then it should appear, that the Scholastic Phi- losophy was in its fundamental character, a Logical Theology, the nature of that evil which it has im- ported into Religion, will be sufficiently apparent. And antecedently to our entering into the examin- ation of particular points, the reason will be seen in general, of that vast apparatus of technical terms; which Christian Theology now exhibits. It will appear, that, whilst theologians of the schools have thought they were establishing religious truth by elaborate argumentation, they have been only mul- tiplying and arranging a theological language. Nor let it be thought that the evil has rested here ;—that the mere futility of the process has worked its own antidote. Experience tells us that it has not rested here. The signs have been con- verted into things. The combination and analysis of words which the Logical Theology has produced, have given occasion to the passions of men, to arm themselves in defence of the phantoms thus called into being. Not only have professed theologians, but private Christians, been imposed on, by the specious religion of terms of Theology; and have betrayed often a fond zeal in the service of their idol-abstractions, not unlike that of the people of old, who are said to have beaten the air with spears, to expel the foreign gods by whom their E 4 56 LECTURE II. country was supposed to be occupied*. For my part, I believe it to be one of the chief causes of the infidelity which prevails among speculative men. Notions are proposed to them, which they feel them- selves competent to examine with freedom ; because they have an instinctive perception of the source from which they are derived. Every one who re- flects at all, has some knowledge of metaphysical truth; for it is the truth that is most intimate with him. And when a reflecting person, accordingly, has notions proposed to him, which he finds to be part of the internal stock of principles belonging to his nature, he is led to compare them with each other, to discern contrarieties, and to reject what perplexes and confounds him. Premising these observations, with the view of keeping steadily before the attention, the object, not only of this Lecture in particular, but of the whole course; and as a general index to the re- marks which I shall be continually directing to the same point; I proceed now, to give a sketch of the progress of Christian Theology to that state, from which the evil consequences adverted to, have flowed. These evil consequences have long been fully ac- knowledged in the parallel case of Physical Science. It has been admitted there, that conclusions from abstract terms, are no valid indications of facts in nature. May we hope, that the time will come, when the like will be as fully, and as practically, admitted in Theology ! 4 Herodotus, in his account of the Caunians. BE GWU RE 11. 57 “« Time was,” says a Greek Father, “ when “ things with us were flourishing and well-ordered; “ when this exquisiteness, and precision, and tech- nicality, of Theology, had not so much as access “to the divine courts; when the saying or hearing 6 ΩΝ ς σι n any thing of subtilty, was accounted the same as playing tricks with pebbles that deceive the sight by sleight-of-hand, or as imposing on spectators in dancing with various and effeminate inflexions ; ς σι ς σι 6 σι “when simplicity and ingenuousness of expression “had the estimation of piety. But from the time “of the Sexti and the Pyrrhos, the tongue of “ antithesis®, like some grievous and malignant * plague, has insinuated its corruption into our “ Churches, and frivolity has been considered eru- “dition; and, as the Book of the Acts says, we 6 “ σι. spend our time in nothing else but in telling or “ hearing something new 4.” In this passage, Gregory Nazianzen, writing dur- ing the keen agitation of the Arian disputes, is ex- pressing his strong dislike of that disputatious logic, which had proved an active weapon of disturbance b Gregor. Nazianz. Orat. ΧΧΙ. p- 380. ed. Prun. Paris, 1609 ; also Orat. XXIII. p. 422. —Note A. Lecture I. ὁ Antithesis was the favourite expedient of the heretic Mar- cion. By stating antitheses, or contrarieties, in the Old and New Testaments, Marcion wished to prove, that the God of the Jews was distinct from the God of the Christians. See Tertullian adv. Marcion. lib. I. c. 11. lib. IL. c. 29.--The ex- pression appears to be drawn from tie ancient Physical Phi- losophy, in which the doctrine of Contrarieties was a funda- mental principle. d Note B. 58 LECTURE ILI. to the Church. Early in the Latin Church, in the writings of Tertullian, we find the like remon- strances against the dialectical warfare with which heresy assailed the doctrine of the Trinity’. From other ecclesiastical writers also, many passages might be collected to a similar purport. And yet the great Father of Latin orthodoxy, Augustine, expressly di- rects the Christian student to acquaint himself with the discipline of disputation, the Logic or Dialectic of those times; characterizing it, as available for “ the penetration and solution of all kinds of ques- 3 “ tions in sacred literature ;” and only cautioning against “a passion for wrangling, and a childish “ sort of ostentation of deceiving an adversary “ἢ To logical science, in fact, simply considered as an art of defence, as a discipline of disputation ap- plicable to the service of orthodoxy, there was never any indisposition on the part of the Church author- ities. The most violent declaimers against the re- finements of logic are often, on the contrary, exam- ples of the most strenuous and undaunted argumen- tation in their own writings. As defenders of the sacred truth, they would justify themselves by an appeal to the manner and the precept of the Scrip- tures. The Epistles, it would be observed, were for the most part works of controversy. St. Paul is 4 Tertull. de Prescript. Her. c. vii. p. 205. fol. e Sed disputationis disciplina ad omnia genera questionum que in literis sanctis sunt, penetranda et dissolvenda, et pluri- mum valet: tamen ibi cavenda est libido rixandi, et puerilis quedam ostentatio decipiendi adversarium. August. de Doctr. Chiist.tib: Ties si LECTURE II. 59 particularly represented in the passage of the Acts, which I have already read, and in other places, as ‘disputing and persuading the things concerning * the kingdom of God'.” The word “ disputing”— in the original, d:adeyouevos—would be recognised as the technical term, by which the Greeks denoted their familiar exercise of philosophical discussion ; and which gave the name of Dialectic to their ori- ginal logical science. Again, in the conversations of our Saviour himself, traces would be found of the argumentative method of the ancient Schools: such as the dilemma respecting the baptism of Johns: and the mode in which he sometimes evades a par- ticular question, by putting a question in return. To the same purport would be interpreted, the de- scription of him in the midst of the Jewish Doctors, hearing them, and asking them questions. Such passages as these are expressly referred to, indeed, by theological writers, in order to prove, that the science of argumentation is a Just accomplishment of the Christian, who would “ give a reason of the “ hope that is in him.” Still more, the word Logos Note. & This instance is still more striking when we refer to the Greek, Matt. xxi. 24. Ἐρωτήσω ὑμᾶς κἀγὼ λύγον eva—expressions which remind us of the Socratic method of disputation—the erotetic method by which the Greek sage used to extort the truth from his reluctant opponent in argument. See also Matt. xxii. 41—40. " -Enep@tavta. Luke ii. 46. Duodecim annos Salvator imple- verat, et in templo senes de questicnibus legis interrogans, magis docet, dum prudenter interrogat. Hieronym. Epist. ad Paulin. p. 6. Opera, Vol. I. 60 LECTURE II. has been singled out for especial remark ; and its application to Christ, as the Reason or Wisdom, and Word, of God, has been cited, as an account of the connexion of Logic, the science of words and rea- sons, with Christian Theology. It would appear, therefore, that the authorities of the Church objected only to the employment of logic in discussing questions of religion, when it was found a vexatious instrument in the hands of the heretic. Where the disputant professed an agreement with the prescriptive views of the Church, there was no objection in this case to the use of subtilties, which otherwise incurred the severity of reprobation and invective. Hven sophisms, it was conceded, might be rightly employed, where the design was, to esta- blish the orthodox truth, and subvert the false and delusive conclusions of heresy *. Thus was a kind of Lacedzemonian policy pursued in regard to the cultivation and exercise of logical science in the Church. The member of the spiritual common- wealth was trained to acts of hostility against the stranger and the enemy, but was most inconsistently expected to live in quietness and inaction at home. The whole institution was for war abroad; whilst he was strictly prohibited from displaying the skill which he had acquired, in any occasion of domestic grievance. The natural consequence was, that, as the Spartan was restless within his own territory, so the Christian logician was ever impatient to exert i Note D. k Note E. LECTURES 11. 61 his disciplined acuteness within the pale of the Church itself. Aristotle had been the great authority of some of the early heretics. The speculations on the Trinity, introduced by Artemon and Theodotus in the IInd century, were imputed to their study of Aristotle, amongst other philosophers and authors of exact science!. Lal ? \ / νοούμενα καθορᾶται, ἥτε ἀΐδιος αὐτοῦ δύναμις καὶ θειότης. Invisibilia enim ipsius, ἃ creatura mundi, per ea que facta sunt, intellecta, conspiciuntur ; sempiterna quoque ejus virtus et divinitas. Lat. Vuue. LECTURE III. THE consideration of the Trinitarian controversies naturally takes the lead in the present inquiry. We have seen, that the Scholastic Philosophy had for its basis a theoretic knowledge of the Divine Being ; a knowledge of God as the Highest Cause of all things, the Primary Being in the order of the Uni- verse. We have also seen, that it was a system of Realism, employing terms denoting abstractions of the human mind, as the philosophical accounts of processes in nature ; and establishing revealed truths by logical deduction. It was consistent therefore, that theologians, the disciples of such a philosophy, should commence their Books of Sentences, their Sums of Theology, and their Commentaries, with expositions of those First Truths which immediately respect the Divine Being ἃ. The controversies, however, involved in the doc- trine of the Trinity, are the least peculiar to the Scholastic Theology, in point of fact. They were ἃ Thus too, not only in the decrees of the Council of Trent, but in our own Articles, the doctrines on this head occupy the first place; the Church of Rome evidently following that method of Theology, which her great Doctors had sanctioned by the authority of their practice; whilst the Fathers of the Church of England, even in shaking off the spiritual bonds of Rome, were tacitly influenced by the discipline in which their minds had been trained. H 2 100 LECTURE III. congenial indeed to the spirit of that Theology, and presented it with materials, on which it has amply exercised its keen and inexhaustible research. But the outlines were supplied to its hand, by the labours of earlier disputation. It remained only for the Schoolmen, to dilate, to give distinctness, to me- thodize objections and replies, and to reduce each member of the disputation to its proper place, in a minutely-articulated system of Theology. This in general is what they have accomplished: and they have accomplished it, we must allow, with extra- ordinary penetration, with amazing compass of thought, and, on the whole, with an admirable skill. I speak more particularly of Aquinas, in whom, we see the system, in its utmost perfection of workman- ship. The more indeed we study his writings, the less we shall wonder, that the admiration of a spe- culative age should have crowned such labours, with the titles of Angelic, Seraphic, Profound, and other similar designations of honour, which distinguish the several leading Doctors of the Schools ἢ. These controversies could not fail to attract the curiosity of the Greeks, at an early period of the Gospel. For their Philosophy, in itself a mass of subtile speculation into the nature of Being, was confronted by a system of Theology, declaring facts illustrative of the great First Being, the object of their pursuit, and professing to have surpassed b Aquinas is styled the Angelic Doctor; Bonaventura, the Seraphic; Alexander de Hales, the Irrefragable ; Duns Scotus, the Subtile; &c. LECTURE III. 101 the utmost reach of all former discoveries of the truth. Looking from a distance at the ardour and bit- terness, with which minute points of difference were debated, in the several attempts to perfect the theory of the Trinity, we are apt to feel surprise at the extraordinary excitement; and either to pity, or to smile at, such apparent waste of intellect and energy. But such feelings are awakened only by very super- ficial views of the case. Adequately to conceive the interest of theological questions, at the period, when they were most keenly agitated, we must view them under a political aspect. We must imagine, how persons may have felt, whose social existence and importance were regarded as at stake, in any shock to the unity of the Faith. The theory of the Divine Being was eminently that point, in which an unity of opinion was indispensable to the religious society. The smallest discrepancies in this primary article,— the very base on which the society stood combined,— compromised the principle of perfect unity, as really, as the greatest differences. The abstract curiosity of the question itself, and the habit of disputation, contributed, undoubtedly, to give an eagerness, and a relish, to controversies on the Trinity. But these are not sufficient to account for the origin, and the extent, of the interest excited. For the interest evidently was not confined to the Church-leaders : they were fully supported by the spirit existing in the Christian public at large. The profane fami- Η 3 102 LECTURE ΠΙ. liarity, with which articles of the Trinitarian question are said to have entered into the every- day conversation of the times, characterizes the general feeling on the subject, at a period, when the Spiritual Polity formed the great common- wealth of the Roman world; and whilst Philo- sophy, regarded as identical with Theology, was essentially dialectical or colloquial. There was, in fact, no other topic of such common concern. The national bond of union had been lost in the vague citizenship of the Roman Empire; and that Em- pire, now falling into disjointed masses, ceased to possess the charm of a common welfare, or a com- mon glory, for the individual members of it. But whilst the fabric of civil society was daily decaying, the principle of religious union, as 1 pointed out on a former occasion, was diffusing and strengthening itself by sure advances. In such a state of things as this, the bold assertion of its characteristic doc- trines, in their points of contrast with the antagonist systems of Judaism and Paganism, would naturally appear. Assertions of its external evidences would diminish ; and its internal system, the theory of the religion, would be brought more prominently into notice. ‘The battle being won, the victors had only to proclaim the name of the Lord in songs of tri- umph—to tell it out among the heathen, that He was God alone. It was then, in this day of triumph, that the peculiar notions of God, involved in the in- ternal system of Christianity, were freely discussed in writing and in conversation. When friend met LECTURE: WL 103 friend, or stranger met stranger, it was the natural inquiry, what was doing in the great religious com- monwealth. It was of less consequence, even poli- tically, to the mass of the people, what victories, Constantine, or Constantius, might have gained over the arms of Imperial opponents, than to which party of the theological disputants the reigning Emperor inclined. The passionate obstinacy, with which the people of Alexandria, and of Milan, supported the cause of their Prelates, shews, how deeply implicated the fortunes of individuals were, in the decisions of questions on the doctrine of the Trinity. What rendered these disputes more complex, was, that they were agitated, whilst as yet an active intercourse subsisted between the Greek and Latin Churches, as members of one spiritual body. The Latins were unable, on account of “ the narrowness “of their language and their poverty of terms °,” to reach the precision and compass of the Greek phraseology. But the Greeks, regarding their own tongue as the sacred idiom of philosophy and the- ology, strove to impose their own modes of thought, and their very words, on the reluctant sense of the Latins. Even among the Greeks themselves, disputes were multiplied, as each employed the prin- cipal terms of the controversy in a strictly philoso- phical, or in a popular, acceptation; as the habits of. © Gregory Nazianzen speaks of disputes having been caused, διὰ στενότητα τῆς Tapa τοῖς ᾿Ιταλοῖς γλώττης, καὶ ὀνομάτων πενίαν, Orat. XXI. p. 46. H 4 104 LECTURE III. thought in individuals, were coloured with Oriental, or Greek, associations. So great indeed were the impediments arising from the varied use of Terms, where the whole discussion was fundamentally dia- lectical, that the measure of accommodation be- tween those who really agreed with each other, would probably have failed in any other hands but those of Athanasius. The years which that intrepid advocate of orthodoxy spent at Rome during his second exile, when, with the sagacity of Themis- tocles, he studied the language of the party, on whose protection and influence he had thrown him- self, gave him a facility for overcoming the existing obstacles from the discordances of language. He seized the points of agreement between the contend- ing parties, and, by his wise and conciliatory policy, secured, at least, a standard of orthodoxy for future ages of disputation, both to the East and the West‘. But though Athanasius was the great author of that theoretic agreement, which established the or- thodox doctrine of the Trinity; the maintenance, and diffusion of it, were owing principally to the active zeal of the Latin Clergy. Nothing can de- clare this more strongly, than the fact, that the original of the Athanasian Creed is a Latin com- position. It is sufficiently remarkable, that eccle- 4 The works of the Latin Fathers were sometimes translated into Greek. We find Damascenus quoting passages from Am- brosius in Greek. Contra Jacobit. p. 443. Oper. Damasc. In general however the Greeks were ignorant of the Latin literature. —Note A. Lecture III. LECTURE III. 105 siastical history has not been able positively to assign the authorship, or date, of the Creed as a composition δ. It appears to me, that the silence re- specting the individual author was designed, or at least his name was forgotten, in the wish to give a higher authority to the document; and that its reception by us in its present form, as the “ sym- “bol” or “ faith” of Athanasius, is an evidence of the triumph of a party in the Church, thus de- claring their authoritative judgment, under the sanc- tion of a name, which expressed in itself every thing hostile to Arianism‘. The Greek placed *“ the sword of Aristotle” in the hand of the Latin; but the spiritual legionary of Rome girded it on, and cleft with it the way for the orthodox truth, through the opposing ranks of heresy and infidelity. The jealousy, with which the Latin Church watched © Vigilius of Tapsus, to whom it has been ascribed, is excluded, from the expressions not being those employed by him, in touch- ing on the same points. He uses the word, Unio, where the Creed has Unitas. See Le Quien, in Dissert. Damascen. prefixed to his edition of the works of Damascenus. Hilary of Arles, a contemporary and correspondent of Augustine, has also been supposed to be the author of the Creed; and so has Vincent of Lerins, of the same period. But the Creed throughout savours more of the African Theology than of the Gallic. Many of the expressions closely correspond with the language of Augustine himself. f It is by no means necessary, as I have before observed, to have recourse to the supposition of fraud, to account for the attaching the name of a particular author to any writing. The Schoolmen, however, cite the Creed as written by Athanasius himself ; which was natural in an age ignorant of criticism, and when Greek authors were read only in Latin translations. 106 LECTURE III. the whole doctrine of the Trinity, corresponds with this view. The Greeks sustained the debate more on particular points, disputing about the parts; whilst the Latin seems to have looked on the whole, as a deposit entrusted to his care. The Latin at once looked to the effect of each proposition on the whole question; and raised his arm against the authors of the heretical language, as against the impious blasphemer, the denier of the truth con- cerning God δ. The living disputants however, who gave the mould to the controversies on the Trinity, had long passed away, when, with the rise of intellectual activity in Europe, the quarrels of other days were resuscitated in the Schools of a theological litera- ture. In the Volumes of the Scholastic divines, we contemplate the phantoms of the departed, acting over, in solemn representation, the pastimes of their real life; and the transactions of ages of tumult and noise glide before our eyes, as in one panoramic scene. It is here then, that the Trinitarian con- 8. So vigilant were they, that Hincmar of Rheims commanded the ancient Hymn, Te Trina Deiias, to be altered to, Te Summa Deitas, and wrote a book himself against it; the former ex- pression admitting of a tritheistic construction. The alteration however excited the jealousy of the other great party of the Gallic Church, that of the South of Gaul; and Ratramn of Corbey was employed to defend the obnoxious expression ; which he did in writing. The keenness of the Occidentals on the Trinity, was probably the effect of persecution ;—the Arian persecution in Africa, under the Vandals, and in France and Spain, and even Italy, under the Visigoths.—Note B. LECTURE III. 107 troversies fully reveal themselves as a Science. They are no longer living energies, acted on by events, and modified by personal intellect and cha- racter; but a combination of logical theories, all tending, as to a common point, to establish a per- fect theory of the Divine Being. The various opinions of the early disputants, were, for the most part, founded on, or maintained by, the same method of philosophizing, of which the Scholastic system was the mature development. The disputations of the Schoolmen, accordingly, are, at once, an historical sketch of the Trinitarian question, and an establish- ment of the theory of the Trinity by a course of logical investigation. The Doctor of the Schools, as the judge of the sacred cause argued before him, hears the pleadings of the heretic, and the replies of the orthodox; and extracting the truth from the conflict of opinions, pronounces it with the weight of reason and authority, at once, as the conclusion of the philosopher, and the sentence of the master of theology. Generally then, in the first place, I would observe respecting the controversies on the Trinity, that the only means of arriving at just notions of them, is, to be aware of that promiscuous combination of sciences, which formed the ancient Logical Philoso- phy; and which was adopted into the Christian Church, both as coincident with Theology, and as an organ for the investigation of Truth. The several disputations will be found to have for their 108 LECTURE III. object; either to explain the Being and Attributes of God on assumed physical principles; or to reconcile the various hypotheses advanced with each other, and illustrate them, in their connexions and con- sequences, by processes of argumentation, and exact distinctions. But the two proceedings are con- tinually running into each other; as must be the case, where metaphysical truth is only a refined materialism, and physical truth is sought in the abstractions of metaphysics :—which was eminently the case in the Ancient Philosophy, and the Scho- lastic system founded on it. The pantheism of the New-Platonists was an ex- treme case of the application of the logical method of philosophizing. When nature is explored in the mirror of the human mind, material objects are easily represented to our thoughts, 85. pos- sessing only a shadowy metaphysical existence. The mind becomes every thing in fact and reality, as it is every thing in its power of conception and generalization». And when the philosopher is also a theologian, and carries up his speculation from the human mind to the divine, the theory of ma- terial nature resolves itself into the pure existence of the Divine Being, in whose intellect are the h Aristot. De Anim. 1. III. c. 9. ἡ ψυχὴ τὰ ὄντα πῶς ἐστι πάντα. Ibid. c. 3. καὶ εὖ δὴ οἱ λέγοντες τὴν ψυχὴν εἶναι τόπον εἰδῶν" πλὴν ὅτι οὔτε ὅλη, ἀλλ᾽ ἡ νοητικὴ, οὔτε ἐντελεχείᾳ, ἀλλὰ δυνάμει τὰ εἴδη ..... a δὲ “ a 4 « re Ὁ , , ἃ ΦῈΙ Ψζ, ΟΤαν O€ ουτῶς εκΚκαστα γένηται, ας ὁ εἐπιστημων λέγεται O KaT ενεργείαν. Aquin. Summa Theol. Prima Pars, qu. x1v. art. 1.—Note C. LECTWRE Π|Ι. 109 primordial causes, the immutable first principles, of all existing things. The Schoolmen, as I pointed out in my last Lec- ture, did not explicitly adopt the Platonic doctrine of Ideas, the basis of the pantheistic philosophy. They did not proceed to the extreme of resolving all material things into mere phenomena, the simple manifestations of the Divine Being: the more ex- perimental philosophy of Aristotle guarding them from the express admission of this extreme theory : but they virtually admitted it, in their @ priori method of tracing up all real existences to the Being of God. Thus, according to their view, all power, or wisdom, or goodness, observed in the uni- verse, were actual derivations of qualities, intrinsi- cally residing in God himself, and going forth as it were out of Him into the works of his creation; not simply the ev¢dences of the existence of such qualities in Him as their Author and Giver; but the real presence of the Divine qualities themselves analogically denoted by those terms. So again, the relations of human life, as that of Father and Son, were, according to their view, not original as ex- isting in human nature, but founded on their arche- types in God. Appeal was made to that text of St. Paul ;—*“ I bow my knees to the Father of our « Lord Jesus Christ, from whom the whole family “in heaven and earth is named,”—ex quo omnis paternitas in terris et in ccelo nominata est ;—to prove, that the filial relation among men, was only an expression, or copy; of a prior relation, existing 110 LECTURE III. between the Father and the Son in the Holy Trinity}. A philosophy of this kind led them to seek their definitions of the Being and Attributes of God, in the phenomena of the material world. The analo- gies of the physical universe were to such phi- losophers, more than presumptive proofs of the ex- istence and character of God: they were positive resemblances, or participations, of the Divine Na- ture; so that, in the survey of these, the mind con- templates express manifestations of God himself. This is the sense, in which the School-Divines speak of our knowing God, only by the L/ffects of his agency on the world. At the first view, they may appear in this admission, the advocates of a cautious in- ductive Theology, that modestly gathers up the notices of God’s agency scattered throughout nature. But a closer attention to their method, will shew, that this very notion of our Divine Knowledge, was highly speculative; that, as I have stated, it was a discernment of God himself, as manifested in his works,—a theory of the principles of the Divine Nature, indirectly obtained through the veil of the material world, but immediate and direct at the same time, so far as those principles were discernible by the spiritualized intellect *. Such was their construction of the Apostle’s i This instance may suffice to shew the Scholastic miscon- ception of the real nature of Scripture-truth, when speculators could so readily seize on a word to raise a system of Theology.— The argument is lost in our translation—Note D. k Manifestum est autem, quod ea que naturaliter fiunt, de- LECTURE III. 111 words to the Romans; “ The invisible things of * God are clearly seen, being understood by the 3 “ things that are made:” words, perhaps, in them- selves, borrowed from the Platonic philosophy, but clearly intended by the Apostle, in the practical argument pursued in this Epistle, only to declare the sure attestation of Nature to the Divine Being, by whom its constitution and course have been framed. As their Theology, accordingly, was the Science of God,—an attempt to explore the mysterious principles of the Divine Intelligence, on which the truths of Revelation were conceived to depend,— the Schoolmen set themselves in the first instance, to rationalize the doctrine of the Trinity. The in- tellectual grounds of this doctrine demanded to be ascertained, and premised; because these would con- stitute the great First Reasons, or Principles, from which, the whole train of reasonings to the ra- tional principles of other doctrines, would neces- sarily be deduced. Or, to express it more ac- cording to their technical method, the Being of terminatas formas consequuntur. Hec autem formarum deter- minatio oportet quod reducatur, sicut in primum principium, in divinam sapientiam, que ordinem universi excogitavit, qui in rerum distinctione consistit. Et ideo oportet dicere, quod in divina sapientia sunt rationes omnium rerum, quas supra diximus ideas, id est, formas exemplares in mente divina ex- istentes. Que quidem licet multiplicentur secundum respectum ad res, tamen non sunt realiter aliud a divina essentia, prout ejus similitudo a diversis participari potest diversimode. Sic igitur ipse Deus est primum exemplar omnium. Aquinas, S. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xtiv. art. 3.—Note E. 112 LECTURE III. God, considered abstractedly from the works of his creation, presented to the Philosopher that ultimate abstraction of which he was in quest ;—the Ideas, or Forms, of all existing things of the Universe, reduced to their perfect simplicity and immate- riality. Every particular subordinate theory of doc- trine drawn from the analogies of nature, would thus be rationalized in the most intense degree; being contemplated, as it was the reason, the very intelligence, of God himself. For in order to understand the Scholastic mode of proceeding, in their reasonings on this as well as every other truth of Christianity, we must bear in mind throughout, the nature of the inquiry under- taken. It was to assimilate and identify, as far as possible, two apparently different systems—the re- vealed, and the intellectual, world. The facts of both were assumed ;—those of the revealed world, as given in the words of Scripture and in the authoritative decisions of the Church: those of the intellectual world, as ascertained by the principles of the esta- blished philosophy. Their object then was, to ex- tort from that philosophy, a confession of the mys- terious wisdom, revealed in Scripture and _ ex- pounded in the dogmas of Theology. The primary truth therefore, which, in one sense, may be called a Theory of all revealed truth; as being, in the just view of it, the combined result of all the Scripture- facts ;—the doctrine of the Trinity;—was to be con- verted into a speculative ὦ priorz principle,—a logical basis, from which all other facts of Scripture, ra- LECTURE III. 113 tionalized in like manner, might be demonstratively concluded. The controversies on the Trinity, accordingly, if we view them in their result, were a determination in precise terms of that account of the Divine Being, which the Scripture-Revelation involved : those terms being drawn from the analogies of na- ture, in which the mysterious truth was conceived to be veiled. But in their progress and formation,— in the views taken of those analogies on which the reasonings are founded,—use is made of all existing theories, in the different branches of science, whether physical, metaphysical, or moral, as then understood and received. The human mind, as I have observed, being taken as the medium of philosophical observation in the Scholastic system, the facts of Scripture and nature were resolved into the fundamental principles of our mental constitution. These presented in such a method of inquiry, those ultimate truths which the philosopher desired to reach. For after all the va- rious associations of thought have been analysed,— after the utmost effort of minute subdivision of no- tions,—there still remains an higher ground of ab- stract contemplation; that, in which all these various ideas are resolved into the principle of Consciousness itself,—into the nature of the thinking mind, in which all this wonderful mechanism of thought is carried on. It was observed then, that in the human mind I 114 LECTURE III. there were two distinct classes of facts; those in which the mind is exercised immediately on itself— the intellectual principles; and those in which it applies itself, as it were, to external objects—the moral principles. Plato, and Aristotle, had both recognised this division of the mind. The School- men inherited and availed themselves of this divi- sion, in their survey of the various manifestations of God, for the erection of their philosophical system of the Trinity. The effects discernible in nature being summed up in these primary laws of the human mind, and there regarded as in their Causes; the next step of the speculation was, to trace the order of connexion between these principles now viewed in the mind. An object of our moral nature, as Aristotle had pointed out, must first be apprehended by the intel- lect ; it must first be Anown in order to be pursued™. The intellectual principle therefore was prior in order to the moral—or the intellect prior to the will. Thus far the speculation was merely human. The various effects of nature were referred to their great m Necesse est autem quod amor a verbo procedat ; non enim aliquid amamus, nisi quod conceptione mentis apprehendimus. Unde et secundum hoc manifestum est, quod Spiritus Sanctus procedit a Filio. Aguin.S. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xxxvu. art. 2. Sed Deum velle, habet aliud verum naturaliter prius eo, scilicet Deum cognoscere, quoniam Deus naturaliter prius cog- noscit quodlibet volutum, quam velit illud. Omnis enim volutio est necessario precogniti, sicut tam Philosophis quam Theo- logis satis constat. Bradwardin. De Causa Dei, lib. 1. c. 12. p. 200. LECTURE III. 115 moving causes in the mind; and a theory was given, of the mode in which these causes moved, or pro- ceeded into effect. But the human mind being formed in the image of God—being in itself an ef- fect of the agency of the Supreme Mind,—the transi- tion was easy, from the human principles of causa- tion, to the divine, as from the inferior and derivative agency, to the superior and the original. The mind therefore, its intelligence, and its will, were contem- plated, as they had their being, in the mind, the in- telligence, and the will of God. These principles, accordingly, were the true analogies, corresponding to the Scripture designation of the great Divine Cause of all things, under the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. It only remained, in reason- ing upon these analogies, to take into view the circumstances of imperfection and darkness, under which they were discerned,—the proper incom- prehensibility of the Divine subject by the human faculties in the present state. It was necessary further, to proceed by negations ; to abstract from the divine truth, whatever was peculiar to the ordi- nary human notion of Causation; and so to ap- proximate to the notion of the Divine Being, as He exists in himself,—to the theory of the Causa Al- tissima, as it is purely the principle of causation. Aquinas philosophizes concerning the Trinity ex- actly in the way that I have described. Assuming the process of the intellect and the will in man, as the counterpart of the Scriptural truth which he has undertaken to explain, he demonstrates the 12 116 LECTURE III. theory of Divine Procession according to it. The Son, the Logos, the Reason and Word of God, is the principle of intelligence in the Divine Being,—the internal word of God, expressing and comprehend- ing all the principles of created things. The Holy Spirit is the Love of God towards his creation, re- garded as it subsists in his own nature ; as it centres in the Divine Word or Reason, or principle of intelli- gence; being the nexus, or bond of union, between the Father and the Word. But why, it may be asked, is the one process called Generation; the other simply Procession ?—why is the Word called the Son, and the Love of God called the Spirit? It is the resemblance of the thought to the mind from which it proceeds, that gives the appropriateness of the term Generation in its highest sense,—that of like producing like,—to the Procession of the Word or Reason of God; and therefore, the relation of the Word is represented, as that between a Father and a Son ; and the Word is called the Son. But in the. process of the will, there is no resemblance between the object on which it is exerted, and the will itself. Hence, there is no appropriate name for the pro- ceeding of the Divine Love, but the general one of Procession ; and this relation in the Divine Being can only be expressed by the name of Spirit, founded on the analogy of spiration, or breathing, by which his derivation from the Father and the Son is de- scribed in Scripture ". n Aquin. 5. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xxxvir. art. i. The ex- pression, ex substantia Patris, was appropriated to the Son; so LECTURE III. 1 In this speculation there is certainly a great deal of the language of Platonism. In the Timaeus, we find, the term μονογενὴς, the unigenitus of the Latin Fathers, more than once applied to the Universe, the secondary Divine Being of the Platonic system ; and the description of a third Being, as a bond be- tween God and the Universe—decpdv ἐν μέσῳ ἀμφοῖν ξυναγωγὸνο. But though there is a Platonic under- current of thought in the scholastic theory, the ap- plication of the theory is Aristotelic. Plato did not attempt to shew the nature of the Divine Being, as a Principle of Motion. His Deity was simply a general Theory of the Universe. Whereas Aristotle endeavoured to trace the successions of motions, from the changes in the visible world, to their “ First “ Mover” in God. His Deity was an abstract principle; as that of Plato was; but the theory was drawn from a philosophy of JMZotion. The Schoolmen ac- cordingly considered the Being of God, not only with the eye of Platonic mysticism, but further, as the principle of Hffictency—the Cause from which all Effects proceeded ; only viewing this principle of that, though the Holy Spirit was spoken of as consubstantial with the Father and the Son, it was not considered correct to describe the Spirit, as of the substance of the Father, but only to apply to Him the term, proceeding from the Father. See Abelardi Introd, ad Theol. lib. I1.—Note F. © Plato. Timeus, p. 307. Bipont. Ed. cis ὅδε μονογενὴς οὐρανὸς γεγονώς : and at the end of the Dialogue. There is a reference also in this mode of philosophizing to ancient theories of the Universe—as to the νοῦς of Anaxagoras, and the principle of Love assigned by Hesiod and Parmenides. —Note G. 13 118 LECTURE III. Efficiency, or Causation, in that ultimate state, where all outward effects vanished in the abstract view of the Cause itself. The orthodox theory of the Trinity, accordingly, consisted in an exact scientific view of the prin- ciple of Causation. It was that theory, in which, the efficient principles of the universe being traced up to Mind, and the principles of intelligence and action in the mind, were further regarded in the Divine Being tntrinsically; as distinct from those effects, by which they are outwardly displayed to our contemplation. The heterodox in either ex- treme, whether those whose theories were charged with unitarian consequences, or those who incurred the imputation of tritheism, failed in speculating concerning the principle of Causation. They did not contemplate it in the ultimate evanescent state; as it exists purely internally in the Divine Being. The Sabellian Συναλοιφὴ, or Unio, viewed the Cause in the act of transition into Hiffect. It supposed the Divine Being to be a vast tide of efflux and reflux, by which the Deity was, continually, and successively, protended from the Father, to the Son, and the Holy Spirit?. It thus did not view the Deity under those P Aquinas, as well as the other Schoolmen, often present this idea of the Divine Being. Quoting Damascenus, Aquinas says: Unde et Damascenus dicit, quod principalius omnibus que de Deo dicuntur nominibus, est, Qui est. Totum enim in seipso comprehendens, habet ipsum esse, velut quoddam pelagus substantia infinitum et indeterminatum. Damascen. de Fid. Orth. I. 12. Aquin. S. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. x1. art. 11. Also Joan. Duns Scot. Quodlib. qu. x1v. fol. 41. LECTURE III. 119 negations or limitations, in which every thing of Effect, as distinct from the principle of Causation, disappeared. It contemplated the Deity, as, in a manner, going out of Himself. The Arian exposed himself to the charge of maintaining a tritheistic hy- pothesis,—or, if he denied this, an unitarian;—whilst he stated the principle of Causation in the Deity, in combination with the effect produced ; regarding the Son, as an effect produced by the Father, and the Holy Ghost, as an effect produced by the Son. He did not restrict his view, any more than the Sabel- lian, to the simple point, where the Deity was re- garded as pure Efficiency,—pure Energy or Act, as the Schoolmen speak; but gave an account of Him after a gross manner, as He is seen in the material world. All that was intended, at the first, by these spe- culations concerning the Divine Procession, was, to present to the mind a view of the mysterious facts of the Trinity, according to that theory of Causa- tion, which was the philosophical creed of the day ; and thus to satisfy the questions of speculative men. Origen indeed attributes the origin of all heresies in religion, to the anxiety of inquisitive men to under- stand the doctrines of Christianity. Rather, they were owing to the undue solicitude of Christians to meet the objections of opponents. ‘Theoretic views of the Scripture Truth, it was thought, might be useful, in maintaining an argument with the infidel philosopher, or the sceptical Christian ; they might I 4 120 LECTURE ΠῚ. serve at least as arguments to the individual ad- dressed. But soon, the more scrupulous, or the less philosophical, believer would take alarm at the in- troduction into religion, of expressions apparently foreign to the truth. The alarm would spread; and the leaders of orthodoxy would be roused to vindi- cate the sacred cause. The heretic philosopher would be called on for his defence; he would be in- duced to maintain the position which he had origin- ally advanced; and his defence of his peculiar view would then lead him into further speculations on the subject. Thus were men of both parties, the reputed orthodox, as well as the reputed heretic, gradually forced into conclusions, and from these conclusions into other premises, at which they might at first have revolted. ‘They gradually went deeper and deeper, until at length their footing was lost, and they abandoned themselves to the current. When once the principle is recognised, that a doc- trine must be defended from all the consequences deducible from it; there is no extravagance of theory, which the disputant may not be forced to adopt, for the sake of saving his original hypo- thesis. When the Arian, for instance, explained the Di- vine Procession, as an eaternal efficiency in God, it would naturally be argued, that, on this principle, the Son was the creature of the Father. The same reasoning would apply to the nature of the Holy Spirit. Hence, by logical consequence, it would be the creed of Arianism, that the Holy Spirit was the LECTURE III. 121 creature of a creature; and that both the Son and the Spirit were inferior to the Father. Whether this were the original creed of the Arian, or no, it seems scarcely possible, but that, in the progress of controversy, he should have been brought to the admission of it. His theory assumed a distinctness between the Father and the Son, analogous to that between an effect and its antecedent cause. This implied some interval of Time between the Two. He was forced to admit this; though he might re- duce the interval to the evanescent limit of a mo- ment. But it involved still the admission, that the Son was not coeternal with the Father. Again, the Sabellian Theory produced an indis- tinctness in the mode of apprehending the Son and the Holy Spirit. Hence, it might naturally be said, that the Sabellian made no veal distinction between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit: that the dis- tinction, according to him, existed only λόγῳ, logic- ally ; and he would be called on to defend himself from the charge of asserting a verbal Trinity. In maintaining his hypothesis, he would be led on, to insist further on the validity of those distinctions, which it asserted; and these logical statements, or verbal reasons, would tend to confirm his opponents in their original view of his doctrine. He would more and more establish the idea, that the Trini- tarian distinctions, according to his doctrine, rested only on definitions. Notions of materialism, we may perceive, were 122 LECTURE III. mixed up with these several theories of Causation. The materialism of the Gnostic systems was more open and avowed: it stands forth confessed, par- ticularly, in the προβολὴ. or prolation, of the Valen- tinians4. But though in the progress of the Tri- nitarian speculations, the original materialism of the Church-philosophy’ is partly disguised under metaphysics and logic; it may still be detected, as a fundamental prejudice in the mind of the later spe- culatist. Though he may be engaged in stating only the modes of apprehending the subject ex- plained,—in shewing those just conceptions, which the mind ought to form, of the primary principles of the Divine Being,—he is continually perplexing the subject with notions drawn from material things;— appearing, at one moment, to take a word in its strictly logical sense, as descriptive only of a process in the mind; at the next moment, reasoning from it, as if it described a process in nature. Thus even in what was considered the orthodox view of the 4 Tertullian speaks of the Son as, ex ipsius (Patris) substan- tia missum; and as prolatum ἃ Patre; defending the last assertion, as distinct from the Valentinian probola, which implied separa- tion. Adv. Praz. c. vii, vill. p. 504. r Augustine says, that it was his prejudice against the belief of immaterial substance, that kept him back from an earlier profession of Catholic Christianity—Ipsum quoque Salvatorem nostrum, unigenitum tuum, tanquam de massa lucidissime mo- lis tuee porrectum ad nostram salutem, ita putabam, ut aliud de illo non crederem nisi quod possem vanitate imaginari. Talem itaque naturam ejus nasci non posse de Maria Virgine arbitrabar, nisi carni concerneretur. Confess. lib. V. c¢. το. Ibid. c. 14. lib. VI. c. 3.—Note H. LECTURE III. 123 Divine Proceeding,—avowedly a theory of the Deity as the great First Cause,—materialism intruded itself, in the attempt to trace the order of deriva- tion of the Son and Holy Spirit from the Father. Such texts as; Ha ore Altissimt produ; Eruc- tavit cor meum verbum bonum; Ego de Patre exivi; Ego ex Patre processi; (I quote the trans- lations used by the Latins, as these illustrate bet- ter their mode of deducing reasons from words of Scripture;) were argued from, as proofs, that the Son was of the same substance with the Father ‘. Then in applying this notion, the metaphysical principle, that “ whatever is zx God is God Him- “ self,’ was appealed to, as further proof, that the Son, being of the substance of the Father, must also be God '. The theory however of the Divine Procession, and its modifications by the Sabellian or Arian, 8 Verbo Domini cceli firmati sunt, et spiritu oris ejus omnis virtus eorum; applied by Anselm. De Process. Sp. p. 130. Also by Ambrose and others.—Note I. t Ad primum ergo dicendum ; quod in inferioribus non pro- cedit persona a persona per amorem, ex defectu et materialitate est personarum: scilicet quia non quicquid est in ipsis est idem eis. Et ideo non procedit persona a persona, nisi divi- sione alicujus ab ipsis: quod universaliter accipit virtutem ad formandum totum. Et amor qui est in inferioribus, non est idem eis, sed passio quedam. Sed in Deo quicquid est, Deus est: et ideo cum aliquid procedit ab ipso, tali in procedendo communicat naturam divinam; et modo emanationis, pro- prium accipit existendi modum quo persona est. Albert. Mag. in Lib. Sentent. Tract. VII. qu. xxxr. fol. 84. 124 LECTURE III. demanded their appropriate phraseology, without which they could not be maintained. In fact, these were only points of departure, from which the vari- ous controversies of the Trinity took their course. The questions next arose, how to reconcile these dif- ferent views with the Unity of the Divine Being ;— how to discriminate between the Father, Son, and Spirit ; and what common name was to be assigned them. Then came also the disquisitions arising from the Incarnation of the Word, and their re- action on the notions conceived of the Trinity; and the minute discussions concerning the relation of the Holy Spirit to the other members of the Trinity, as to the order and mode of procession ; and the re- action of these also on the original hypotheses of the Trinity. Now all such questions strictly fall under the general heads which constituted the Dialectical Science of ancient times. The reduction of all ob- jects examined under certain classes; their differ- ences under the common class to which they might be referred; their properties; their circumstances ; and that assemblage of classes on each particular object, by which it is logically defined; were the points of inquiry with the dialectical philosopher. So they were with the Scholastic Divine, in his at- tempt to settle his theory of the Trinity. The notions again of identity and diversity, similarity and dissimilarity, priority and posteriority, coin- stantaneousness, consecutiveness, &c., were, as Ari- LECTURE III. 125 stotle points out and illustrates, the great matter of inquiry with the ancient dialectician". But these are precisely what occupy the attention of the Scho- lastic Divine, in all those subordinate questions, which arose out of the speculation concerning the Processions in the Divine Being. I shall now illus- trate some of these points; the limits of a discourse obliging me to restrict myself to a specimen only, in such abundant materials of evidence. A speci- men however may amply suffice for the induction which I wish to establish, of the force of logical theories, in the existing views and statements of the Trinitarian doctrines. The manner in which the Unity of God was maintained in the different speculations, of the ortho- dox, the Sabellian and the Arian, is extremely wor- thy of observation. It was an Unity both physical and logical which the orthodox held; whereas the Sabellian taught only a physical unity, the Arian only a logical. The orthodox, for example, asserted that there was no division, no separation, no trans- mutation, of the Divine Being, in the Trinity ; but that the whole Deity was transfused (they employ this very term) from the Father to the Son and the Holy Spirit. To express this entire presence of the Godhead in each, without any separation, they adopted the word circumincessio, the περιχωρήσις of u Aristot. Metaph. lib. IIL. c. 1. περὶ ὅσων οἱ διαλέκτικοι πειρῶνται σκοπεῖν. 126 LECTURE III. the Greeks *; characterizing by it, as they con- ceived, the Scripture account, 7 am in the Father, and the Father in me, and that mutual Love of the Father to the Son, which was the Holy Spirit pro- ceeding from both. Thus too they delighted to speak of the Son, as of the Substance, or Usia, of the Father, and of the whole Trinity, as Consubstantial, or Homoousion’. The word Substance, by the am- biguity of its meaning, as also was the case with the Usia of the Greeks, answered the purpose of the orthodox Latin, in asserting at once a physical and logical unity. It was employed without preci- sion; sometimes to denote the material nature or the principal portion of a thing; sometimes as sy- nonymous with essence or the logical species; some- times for individual Being, the support of Attri- butes or Properties 5. It was taken accordingly by the Latins into the account of the Trinity, rather than Essence, which corresponded more closely with the Greek Usia; as was also the term con- substantial, rather than coessential, the more exact translation of homoousion. These terms served to exclude the materzal notion of actual division or motion in the Divine Being; and at the same time, affirmed, that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, all agreed in the same definition of Deity—that, so far as they were God, there was no difference in the X Kai τὴν ἐν ἀλλήλαις περιχώρησιν ἔχουσι δίχα πάσης συναλοιφῆς καὶ συμφύρσεως" οὐδὲ ἐξισταμένων, ἢ κατ᾽ οὐσίαν τεμνομένων κατὰ τὴν ᾿Αρείου διαίρεσιν. Damasc. De Fid. Orthod. I. p. 140. ν Νοίς 1. 7 Note K. LECTURE III. 127 account, and notion, of their Being. Such was the unity, at once physical and logical, maintained by the orthodox. The Sabellian approached nearly to the orthodox in his account of the Divine Unity; since he not only maintained the Divine distinctions, but was willing also to use the term homoousion in the de- scription of the Trinity. The Latins indeed, during the agitation of the Arian disputes, were taunted by the Greeks, as symbolizing with the Sabellian: his zeal for the consubstantiality, being construed into an indiscriminateness in his notions of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The stress of the controversy, accordingly, between the Sabellian and the orthodox, lay in the proof, that, in his application of the word homoousion, the Sabellian maintained an actual solz- tude of the Divine Being,—merely the physical notion of usia or substance, and not the logical also; a sameness, that destroyed the distinction of number a Hilary of Poitiers, on making his appearance at the Coun- cil of Seleucia, was anxiously inquired of concerning the faith of the Gallic Church, which the Orientals suspected of Sabel- lianism. Sulpicius Severus says: Is ubi Seleuciam venit, magno cum favore exceptus, omnium in se animos et studia conver- terat, ac primum quesitum ab eo, que esset Gallorum fides : quia tum, Arrianis prava de nobis vulgantibus, suspecti ab Orientalibus habebamur, trionymam solitarii Dei unionem se- cundum Sabellium credidisse; sed exposita fide sua, juxta ea que Nice erant a patribus conscripta, Occidentalibus per- hibuit testimonium. Hist. Sacr. II. ¢. 42. p. 271. ΠΙᾺ apud omnes constitit, unius Hilarii beneficio, Gallias nostras piaculo heresis liberatas. Ibid. c. 45. p. 279. See Letter of Jerome, Note A. Lect. I. 128 LECTURE III. in the members of the Trinity, and left only a dis- tinction of Names ὃ. The Arian Unity was a logical, and not a physi- cal unity; because the difference which the Arian assigned between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, would not admit the assertion of a sameness, or even of a similarity, of substance, and left only a general consonance in which the Holy Three agreed. The term God, indeed, might be applied to each, accord- ing to the Arian notion; but evidently only in a generic sense, as equivalent to divine nature. Thus it was, that the Arian asserted an unity in thought, and will, and action; interpreting, in this way, the saying, I and the Father are one. He urged again the text, the Father is greater than I, as evidence against the unity of substance; taking substance in the sense of individual Being—the πρώτη οὐσία of the Categories. The orthodox, consequently, had to ’ shew against the Arian, that such an unity as this, was a severing of the Godhead; that it consisted with so great a distinction between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, as either to establish three Gods, or otherwise, one Supreme God and two subordinate Divine Beings. The various illustrations of the Trinity from na- tural objects, employed in the writings of the Fathers and the Schoolmen, are instances of the same dia- lectical spirit, which laboured to establish the Divine Unity amidst the Trinitarian distinctions. The con- b Note L. LECTURE III. 129 nexion between the sun, the ray, and the heat ; the fountain, the stream, and the lake; the seed, the stalk, and the fruit; the metal, the seal, and the impression; the memory, the intelligence, and the will; the premises and conclusion of a syl- logism ; and other like instances ;—have been ad- duced on this point, when the design has been, not so much to establish the truth, as to illustrate it®. It is probable, that such illustrations were drawn from the explanation of Sameness, given by Aristotle. The instance, indeed, of the application of the word same to the water taken from the same fountain, is that expressly given by the philosopher, in his Topics, to shew, that things are called the same, so far as they are very strongly alike‘. The Christian speculators, when pressed in argument to explain, in what the identity of the Godhead con- sisted, resorted to illustrations in which, a close resemblance, or intimate connexion, was regarded as equivalent to sameness. And we thus see the reason, why the Anomeans objected to the admission of the expression, homotousion, or similar substance, into the Creed*. It was felt by these reasoners, that similarity and sameness were convertible terms, when applied to the essence of a thing. Accord- ingly, both Hilary and Basil were disposed to sanction the term, on the same ground on which the Ultra-Arians rejected it; as equivalent, that is, ¢ Note M. d Note N. € Sulpic. Sever. Hist. Sacr. lib. II. e. 40. ᾿ Κ 130 LECTURE III. when rightly understood, to the homoousion of Nice ἢ, 1 The disputation, in its progress, turned upon the point, how far difference might be asserted, con- sistently with that sameness, which constituted the Divine Unity of Being, or Substance. It was in- quired, whether the distinction could be rightly ex- pressed by hypostasis, or persona; whether the ideas involved in one, or the other, of these terms, did not import too express and real, or too shadowy a distinction. The difficulty here was; to avoid dis- tinguishing the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, in such a way, as to represent them differing, as three angels, or three men, differ from each other; and yet to preserve the real distinctions. Dialectical Science furnished the expedients in this difficulty ; and established that peculiar phraseology, which we now use, in speaking of the Sacred Trinity, as three Persons and one God. The manner in which reasonings had been drawn from the visible effects of Divine Power, Wisdom, and Goodness, to the existence of a Trinity in the Divine Being, seemed to confound the Trinitarian f Testor me utrumque sensisse; says Hilary, De Synod. lib. I. —‘“If the term ἀπαραλλακτῶς be added to the term (homoiousion) “1 also admit it ;” Basil. Epist. ad Apollinar. Note to Damasc. Dialectic. p. 38.—Hilary, De Trin. lib. IV. c. 4. p. 73. gives several Arian explanations of the term homoousion. Arians en- deavoured to shew, that they objected to it, on grounds distinct from those on which it was held by the orthodox.—Note O. LECTURE II. 131 Distinctions with the Divine Attributes. It was pri- marily important therefore to the Theologian, to mark the difference between the two. He points out accordingly ; that, whilst the Attributes of God exist substantially—are of the substance or essence of God,—or in logical language, belong to the Cate- gory of Substance ;—the Trinitarian distinctions ex- ist relatively,—or belong to the Category of Relation; the terms, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, denoting mntrinsic relations in the Divine Being, agreeably to what I have before observed. Whence it followed, that it would be improper to speak of the divine power, or justice, or wisdom in the plural; for this would be to assert three Beings, or Substances, in God. But there was no impropriety in asserting three Relations; since these differed in properties only, and their distinctness did not multiply, or separate, the Divine Substance 8. But this idea of the Trinitarian Distinctions could not alone satisfy the requisitions of a logical philosophy. Distinct Relations must be 7m distinct subjects. They could only be conceived, as they were based on their peculiar swpposita, or grounds. This was the occasion of the adoption of the word & Ea vero que significant essentiam adjective, pradicantur pluraliter de tribus, propter pluralitatem suppositorum: Dicimus enim tres existentes, vel tres sapientes, aut tres eternos et im- mensos, si adjective sumantur. Si vero substantive sumantur, dicimus unum increatum, immensum, et eternum, ut Athana- sius dicit. Albert. Mag. in lib. Sentent. Tract. IX. qu. xuiv. fol. 94. Aquinas, ὃ. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xxxix. art. 3. —Note P. K 2 132 LECTURE III. Hypostasis, by the Greeks, and of Person, or Sub- sisting Person, by the Latins. Hypostasis indeed was a word already consecrated to the use of Re- ligion, from its being employed by St. Paul in several passages of his Epistles. It is obviously a tech- nical term, denoting that ultimate point of meta- physical analysis, in which we conceive the bare existence of any thing, apart from its properties: the expression itself being a metaphorical one, drawn from a supposition, that the connexion be- tween the being and the properties of a thing, re- sembles that between a material prop, or base, and what it supports. It will be found, 1 think, to be used in this fundamental sense by the Apostle. The Greek therefore answered strictly on the principles of his dialectical science, when, being interrogated as to the point where he rested the Trinitarian distinctions, he replied, that they were three Hy- postases. But to the Latin, the want of a philosophical vocabulary rendered the answer not so easy. When the Latin was pressed with the question,—qud tres, or quid tria ?—what are the three ?—he found, that his unscientific language denied him the means of answering satisfactorily. He had no other word, that sufficed at all to represent, what the Greek in- tended by Hypostasis, but Persona: since Substan- tia was already appropriated to denote the Divine Being. What rendered Persona more applicable to the high subject, was, that, in its transition to denote an individual man, it was first applied to LECTURE III. 133 individuals of dignity". The Schoolmen are express in pointing out, after Augustine, that the term was adopted, not to express any definite notion, but to make some answer, where silence would have been better ; to denote, by some term, what has no suit- able word to express it'. But the term exposed him to a double inconvenience. If it was under- stood, in its original sense, of a mask, or character assumed, he was charged with Sabellianism; if it was taken in its acquired sense, it gave the sound h Thus Aquinas says, Cum Persona importat dignitatem, &c. S. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xx1x. art. 3. qu. xxx. art. 3. He ar- gues, that the humanity in Christ is not a Person, because it was assumed a digniori. Cicero uses Persona in this elevated sense : as in, persone et dignitatis esse negent—De Fin. I.c.1. Black- stone states, in accordance with this, that the appellation of ‘* Parson” is “ the most legal, most beneficial, and most honour- “able title that a parish priest can enjoy; because such a “one, (as Sir Edward Coke observes,) and he only, is said “ς vicem seu personam ecclesia gerere.’ Commentar. B. I. c. 11. p- 394. The use of the term was probably facilitated by its adoption in the systems of Grammarians. The Scholastic writers draw illustrations from the grammatical use of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Persons, to the Persons of the Trinity. It is probable, as a friend has observed to me, that the as- sociation, which made Persona signify dignity, is the notion of the public character, which every one in office must act. A pri- vate person is not called upon to personate, or act, for instance, the Magistrate, the Bishop, &c. But when such partes have been given him in the drama of the world, he must. use his authority under the proper mask, or persona. i Tres nescio quid, is the expression of Anselm, in his Monolo- gium.—P. Lombard. Lib. Sentent. I. Dist. 25.—Agquin. S. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. ΧΧΧΙ. art. 2. qu. ΧΧΧΙΙ. art. 3.—Note Q. K 3 134 LECTURE III. of Tritheism. On the one hand, the Arian, dis- satisfied with the term, still exacted of him, the confession of the three hypostases of the Greeks ; and “ branded him,” on his refusal, as Jerome in- dignantly complains, “ with the cautery of the “ Union *.” On the other hand, the difference as- serted was too great, to be consistent with an unity of Substance, if by three Persons were conceived three individual Beings. In order to obviate this last inference, it was necessary to have recourse to the original subtile speculation, on which the Procession of the Divine Being was founded. It was pointed out, that the objection arose, from an inattention to the peculiar circumstances, to which the reasoning applied. There was in God no distinction of matter and form, as in all created things. In man we see the two principles of matter and form,—the idea of the Divine Intellect, and the material on which it is impressed. The idea or form, when viewed out of the Divine Being, must have a suppositum of mat- k In the Epistle to Damasus, before referred to; and given in Note A of Lecture I.—The anxiety to avoid Sabellianism sometimes led the orthodox into tritheistic modes of expression. Gregory Nazianzen, in Orat. 1. speaks of ‘ some over-orthodox “* persons,” τινες τῶν παρ᾽ ἡμῖν ἄγαν ὀρθοδοξῶν, having introduced ““ polytheism.” Aquinas, in like manner, observes, that, “ for the ““ purpose of stating the truth of Essence and Person, holy Doc- *‘ tors have sometimes spoken more expressly, than the pro- *« priety of speaking admitted.” S. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xxxrx. art. 5. Such appears to have been the case with Dr. W. Sher- lock, in his Defence of the Trinitarian Doctrine; in which he insisted on the notion of three distinct Minds.—Note R. LECTURE III. 135 ter, on which it may act. It thus is individualized in matter. The humanity imparted in each in- stance, constitutes an individual Being, separate from other instances in which the same operation takes place. But in God there is no material in- dividuation. In Him the form and the suppositum are identical. So that, whilst the Divine Nature is communicated, and distinct relations therefore are constituted, there is no separation of Beings. The persons accordingly are Three, whilst the Divinity remains One!. Sometimes indeed the objection was answered in another way. It was argued, that the Deity would not be multiplied, though we might assert Three Persons; since it was only the usage of speech which made us say Three )Zen—employing, that is, the word man in the plural—of Three Individuals. There was strictly only one humanity, the common essence of all human individuals. This explanation, 1 Hee igitur est ratio, quare Socratem, et Platonem, et Ciceronem, dicimus tres homines: Patrem autem, et Filium, et Spiritum Sanctum, non dicimus tres Deos, sed unum Deum; quia in tribus suppositis humane nature sunt tres humanitates ; in tribus autem personis est una divina essentia. Aquinas, ὃ. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xxxrx. art. 3. Nam nec Deum, nec personas ejus cogitat ; sed tale aliquid, quales sunt plures humane persone. Et quia videt unum hominem plures homines esse non posse, negat hoc ipsum de Deo. Non enim idcirco dicuntur tres persone, quia sint tres res separate, sicut tres homines: sed quia similitudinem habent quandam cum tribus separatis personis. Anselm, De Incar. Verb. c. vi. p. 40. K 4 136 LECTURE III. however, merged the physical notion of the Divine Being in the logical ™. These several difficulties, in the explanation of the Trinitarian doctrine, are well summed up and stated by Aquinas, in a manner which throws light on the logical character of the whole theory. “ It behoves us,” he says, “ in what we say of “ the Trinity, to beware of two opposite errors, tem- “ perately proceeding between both; the error of * Arius, who laid down, with the Trinity of Per- * sons, a Trinity of Substances; and the error of “ Sabellius, who laid down, with the unity of Es- * sence, an unity of Person. To escape, then, the “error of Arius, we must avoid, in divine things, “ the terms Diversity and Difference, lest the unity “of Essence be destroyed. We may however use “the term Distinction, on account of the Relative “ Opposition. Whence, if any where, in any au- “ thentic Scripture, diversity or difference of Per- * sons is found, diversity or difference is taken for * Distinction. Again, that the Simplicity of the * Divine Essence may not be destroyed, the terms “ Separation and Division must be avoided, which “are of a whole into parts. Again, that equality “may not be destroyed, the term Disparity must “ be avoided. Further, that similitude may not be “ destroyed, the terms Alien and Discrepant must “ be avoided. .. . Further, to avoid the error of Sa- “ bellius, we should avoid Singularity, that the “ communicability of the Divine Essence may not m See Curcellei Oper. p. 852.—Note 5. LECTURE III. 137 “ΒΡῈ destroyed. ... We ought also to avoid the term “ One Only, Unicum, that the Number of Persons ‘“‘ may not be destroyed. ... The term Solitary also “ must be avoided, lest the association, of Three “ Persons be destroyed "ἢ If we compare, with these general disputations respecting the Trinity, the particular controversies connected with the Incarnation and the Procession of the Holy Spirit, we shall find them following the same method. The discussions on the Incarnation were, in like manner, partly physical, partly logical. It was at- tempted to be explained, in what way the Son might be said to be generated of the Father; whether out of the substance of God, or out of a common Di- vinity, of which each participates ; or by division of the Paternal substance, as a portion severed from the Father: whether further, He is the Son of God by nature, or necessity, or will, or predestination, or adoption. The confusion of principles of differ- ent sciences in these promiscuous inquiries, is suf- ficiently apparent. But it was by such a philosophy that the orthodox language was settled, declaring the Son “ begotten, before all worlds; of one sub- “ς stance with the Father.” The account of the Incarnation itself was more peculiarly logical; still there was a mixture of phy- sical speculation respecting the principle of life in man. The notion entertained, both by Fathers n Aquin. Summa Theolog. Prima Pars, qu. xxx1. art. 2.—Note T. 138 LECTURE III. and by Schoolmen, was, that the animating prin- ciple was 7nfused into the body ; and thus, the inert matter of the flesh became the living substantial form of man. That all souls were consubstan- tial with the Deity, was an ancient Pythago- rean notion, that survived in the Church. Thus Tertullian speaks of man as animated out of the substance of God. The observation of this fact accounts for the opinion attributed to Apollinarius, that the Divinity was the animating principle of Christ. He was fearful of introducing a Quaternity into the Notion of the Divine Being, if it were con- ceived, that our Lord possessed the Substance of human nature, a sentient and intelligent human principle, as well as the Substance of the Divinity ; and was thus led to the denial of the perfect huma- nity of Christ °. The peculiarly logical part of the inquiry appears, in the points of controversy between the orthodox and the Nestorians and Eutychians. These were, in respect to the Incarnation, analogous to the disputes between the orthodox and the Sabellians and Arians, on the general question of the Trinity. The points of sameness and diversity were here also to be exactly determined. The orthodox main- tained, that the notion of sameness here consisted, in the Personal individuality of Christ, regarded as © Damascen. De Heres. p. 77. note.—Lombard. Sent. I. Dist. 17. B. Putaverunt enim quidam heretici, Deum de sua sub- stantia animam creasse, &c., p.178.—See Ibid. Dist. 18. H. on the Creation and Infusion of the Anima, p. 182.—Note U. LECTURE III. 139 a Member of the Trinity ; whereas the diversity was in the two Natures, the divine and the human, united in His Person. But the Nestorian offended against the theories of the logical philosophy, in stating two different hypostases, as the support of those common properties which belonged to Christ, and destroyed also the personal individuality. The EKutychian maintained the personal individuality, but destroyed the substantial differences. Theories of the composition and mixture of bodies, entered largely into these discussions: but they were still metaphysical in principle, resulting only in settling the connexion and relation of edeas concerning the Incarnation. They terminated in the decision of the place which the terms—Substance, Nature, Person,— should hold in the definition of the whole nature of Christ. And the excellence of the orthodox theory, we may observe, consisted, in its excluding from that definition, all ideas imported from the physical speculations, and reducing it to perfect consistency with the original theory of the Divine Procession. It brought the inquirer back to the point from which he set out, to acknowledge the simple Di- vine Personality of the Saviour,—that He was the Word made flesh. The disputes, at the same time, were in many points merely verbal; the contro- versialists reasoning about words which they took in different senses?. We should observe, for in- P Apollinarius and Cyril took the word Nature in different senses: Apollinarius, after the manner of the Oriental Chris- tians, for Essence, or Substance; Cyril, in a popular sense, for 140 LECTURE III. stance, how the more general language, according to which, our Lord was described as having two whole and perfect Natures, was preferred to the assertion of two Substances. The term Nature here expressed the proper Divinity and the proper Humanity ;— the proper Divinity, as indicating that real persona- lity, which belonged to Christ, as very God of the Substance of the Father; the proper humanity, as in- dicating that abstract humanity, which He asswmed to the Divinity, by being made flesh of the Substance of his Mother. It was adopted, evidently, to avoid the assertion, that our Lord assumed to the Divinity any particular individual man; which would have implied a twofold personality 4. We may observe too, how the perpetual union of the Godhead and the manhood in Christ, was secured, by the logical basis, on which the distinct properties of the two natures were rested. Being united in one hypos- an individual thing in itself, whether essence, or hypostasis, or person. Many Catholics thought, that, to oppose Nestorius, one Nature in Christ was to be professed, taking Nature in its common meaning. Dissert. Damasc. I]. p. 42.—Contra Ja- cobit. c. 52. p. 408. t. I. Oper. Damasc. Monophysites objected to the illustration, drawn from the union of soul and body, to the two natures of Christ, arguing that soul and body constituted only a single nature. Damasc. Dialect. 41. p. 44.—Note V. q Non enim est alius Deus, alius homo in Christo, quamvis aliud sit Deus, aliud homo; sed idem ipse est Deus, et qui homo. Verbum enim caro factum, assumpsit naturam aliam, non aliam personam. Nam cum profertur homo, natura tantum que com- munis est omnibus hominibus significatur, &c. Anselm, De Incarn. Verb. c. 5. p. 39.—Note W. LECTURE III. 141 tasis,—or, as it is expressed, the union being hy- postatical,— the two natures remain “ indivisible * throughout’.” Thus we find the language of our article affirming in Christ, “ two whole and perfect “6 natures,” “ never to be divided.” The controversies relating immediately to the Holy Spirit, became more dialectical in their pro- gress. At first, the Latins were content to speak of the Holy Spirit, as the mutual Love of the Father and the Son; using the language of Platonism ὅ. Afterwards, as they came into collision with the Greeks on the point of the procession of the Holy Spirit from the Son, the disputation with their philosophical antagonists obliged them to a more precise, and strictly logical, mode of stating the doctrine. This transition may be noticed, in the treatise of Anselm on the Procession of the Spirit ; a work composed in his more advanced age, after a conference with the Greeks, in which he had taken an active part. In this treatise there is no mention of the original theory of the Latins, but the proof tr Thus Damascenus, ‘‘ When, once for all, the natures re- “ ceive the hypostatical union, καθ᾽ ὑποστάσιν ἕνωσιν, they remain ‘‘ indivisible for ever,” ἀδιαίρετοι εἰς τὸ παντελές. Dialectica, cap. 67. Oper. p. 78. “ for though the soul,” he adds, “ is parted “from the body in death, still the hypostasis of both is the “ same.”—Note X. 5. Rationes precipue, quibus probatur Spiritum Sanctum a Patre et Filio procedere, sumuntur ex verbis Dionysii, lib. de Divinis Nomin. c. 4; ubi dicit, quod etiam in Deo extasim fa- cit divinus amor: non sinens ipsum sine germine esse, &c. Albert. Mag. in Sent. Tract. VII. qu. xxxr. fol. 73. 142 LECTURE III. of the point is rested entirely on logical grounds: such as, the necessity of identifying the Father with the Spirit, or of asserting the procession of the Son from the Spirit, if the procession of the Spirit from the Son were denied. The point appears to have been left undetermined during the heat of the Arian disputes. The heresy of Macedonius, in stating the Holy Spirit to be a creature, was only a form of Arianism; and did not touch this question immediately '. The orthodox seem to have avoided any express assertion of the Procession from the Son; both, as it was not re- quired. in that state of the controversy, and as the Procession from the Father was more directly op- posed, both to the Sabellian and Arian notions of successive, or continuous, derivations". But the spe- culations of the Nestorians concerning the Incarna- tion, were found to bring perplexity into the subject. Aquinas expressly attributes to the Nestorians, as a novel article, the doctrine, that the Holy Spirit does t Theodoret objected to Cyril of Alexandria, for asserting the procession of the Spirit from the Son, ex Filio, as savouring of the heresy of Apollinarius, and of Macedonius. Dissert. Da- mascen. I. c. 2. De Fid. Orthodox. I. Damascen. Oper. tom. I. Bp. 141. u This appears to have been the foundation of the objections of the Greeks to the insertion of the proceeding “ from the Son.” Cavebant enim, Le Quien says, ne, Ariano more, Spiritus Sancti productio in Filium presertim refunderetur. Note at p- 141. Damasc. Oper. tom. I. on the text of Damascenus, ἐκ Tod Υἱοῦ δὲ τὸ Πνεῦμα οὐ λέγομεν. The opposition once begun, other reasons were of course readily devised, both for, and against, the filioque. LECTURE III. 143 not proceed from the Son; referring to the Council of Ephesus, in which a creed of the Nestorians was con- demned on that ground*. To those who, as the Nestorians, admitted two hypostases in Christ, there was a logical difficulty, in admitting the procession of the Spirit from the Son; since it introduced a Quaternity in God instead of a Trinity. At length, having been gradually introduced, it seems, in the course of divine service, in some Churches of the West, the words jilioque were sanctioned by the IIIrd Synod of Toledo, towards the close of the VIth century, when the Goths of Spain abjured their Arianism. At the beginning of the IXth cen- tury, the Gallo-Frank Church adopted the same ex- pression. Afterwards, but at what precise period is a matter of uncertainty, at the instance of the Western Churches, it received the sanction of the Apostolic See’. The gradual admission and preva- x Ad tertium dicendum, quod Spiritum Sanctum non proce- dere a Filio, primo fuit a Nestorianis introductum, ut patet in quodam symbolo Nestorianorum damnato in Ephesina Synodo. Et hune errorem secutus fuit Theodoritus Nestorianus, et plures post ipsum. Inter quos fuit etiam Damascenus. Unde in hoc, ejus sententiz non est standum. Quamvis a quibusdam dicatur, quod Damascenns, sicut non confitetur Spiritum Sanctum esse a Filio, ita etiam non negat ex vi illorum verborum. Aquinas, 5. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xxxvi. art. 2. We see also in this passage, how anxious the Schoolman was, not to lose any authority that had once been sanctioned by the Church. Even the opposing Greek must be brought over to his side, if possible. y Leo III. refused his authority for inserting the words filioque, into the Nicene Creed, simply on the ground of not altering the 144 LECTURE III. lence of the article among the Latins, marks the triumphs of the orthodox theology under the strong hand of the Spiritual Power; whilst, in the East, the state of controversy, controlled by Imperial dis- putants, would admit no alteration of the original formularies”. It shews, how tenacious the Latin was, of what had once been passed as a doctrine, by the authority, or even the practice only, of his Church ; and with what pliant facility his logic could min- ister reasons for its abstract truth, and incorporate it with the system of his faith. The words were confessedly an addition to the Nicene Creed. The Latins only claimed to themselves the right, of more explicitly stating the doctrine on that point*. But the Greek urged the anathema of the Council against all who should alter the words of the Creed, and fiercely resisted all accommodation with the Latins on the point. According to the Schoolmen, the ground, in which the procession of the Spirit from the Son was maintained, was altogether logical : since, as they argue, unless it be allowed, there will be no means of distinguishing the Holy Spirit from original formulary ; professing at the same time his full assent to the doctrine involved in the addition. z Ratramn of Corbey is said to have written a work, about A.D. 868, against the Greeks. The title of it evidences the dif- ferent characters of the Greek and Latin disputants. Contra opposita Grecorum Imperatorum Romanam Ecclesiam infaman- tium, libri quatuor Rathramni Monachi. Mauguin, tom. II. Dis- sert. c. 17. in his Collection of Tracts of the IXth century on Grace and Predestination. a Anselm de Process. Sp. Scti. Oper. tom. III. p. 134.— Note Y. LECTURE III. 145 the Son. Relations, they observe, are only distinct when they are opposed. Thus the Father has two Relations, one to the Son, and the other to the Spirit; but these two relations, not being opposed, do not constitute two Persons. The like then would be the case, if the relations of the Son and the Holy Spirit to the Father were not opposed: whence it would follow, that the Son and the Holy Spirit were but one Person ὃ. I have now taken a review of the principal parts of the Trinitarian controversies, so far as I have thought it necessary to illustrate the origin of our theological vocabulary on this sacred subject. I have some general remarks yet to offer, on the effect pro- duced on the whole doctrine, by the consideration of those scholastic discussions to which I have called your attention. The examination then, I would observe, has forci- bly impressed on my mind the conviction, that the principal, if not the only, difficulties on the doctrine of the Trinity, arise from metaphysical considera- tions—from abstractions of our own mind, quite distinct from the proper, intrinsic, mystery of the holy truth in itself. Perplexities from the nature of Number, of Time, of Being; in short, all those various conceptions of the mind which are its ulti- mate facts, and beyond which no power of analysis ἃ Aquin. S. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xxxvi. a. 2. Respondeo dicendum, quod necesse est dicere Spiritum Sanctum a Patre esse. Si enim non esset ab eo; nullo modo posset ab eo per- sonaliter distingui, &e.—Note Z. L 146 LECTURE III. can reach ; these, I think, the course of the present in- quiry has tended to shew, are our real stumbling- block, causing the wisdom of God to be received as the foolishness of man. These have forced them- selves on the form of the Divine Mystery, and given it that theoretic air, that atmosphere of repulsion, in which it is invested. The truth itself of the Trinitarian doctrine emerges from these mists of human speculation, like the bold, naked land, on which an atmosphere of fog has for a while rested, and then been dispersed. No one can be more convinced than I am, that there is a real mystery of God revealed in the Christian dis- pensation ; and that no scheme of Unitarianism can solve the whole of the phenomena which Scripture records. But I am also as fully sensible, that there is a mystery attached to the subject, which is not a mystery of God. Take, for instance, the notion of the Divine Unity. We are apt to conceive that the Unity must be un- derstood numerically>; that we may reason from b In Gregory Nazianzen, Orat. 45. p. 717. the question is proposed, “ If the nature of God is simple, how will it admit the ** number three?” &c. Again, Integer, perfectus numerus Trinitatis est. Concil. Sir- miens. A.D. 357. Hilar. De Synodis, Opera, p. 466.--πΠρὸς δὲ καὶ φυσικὴ ἀνάγκη μονάδα eivas δυάδος ἀρχήν. Damasc. De Fid. Orthod. ΕΠ ΟΕ: The Valentinian System was a play of numbers. The Pytha- gorean part of Platonism, the philosophy of Numbers, it cannot be doubted, must have exercised great influence over the minds of the early philosophic Christians. So also would the Jewish mystical application of Numbers, on the converts from Judaism. ECTURE III. 147 the notion of Unity, to the properties of the Divine Being. But is this a just notion of the Unity of God? Is it not rather a bare fact, a limit of specu- lation, instead of a point of outset ? For how was it revealed in that system, in which it was the great leading article of divine instruction? When Moses called upon the people ;—* Hear, O Israel, the Lord “ our God is one Lord ;’—was it not a declaration, that Jehovah is not that host of heaven,—that multi- plicity of the objects of divine worship, which heathen idolatry has enshrined, but the God in heaven, and in the earth, and in the sea,—not the Teraphim of domestic worship, but the Universal Governor, over- shadowing all things with the ubiquarian tutelage of his Providence? Surely the revelation of the Divine Unity was not meant to convey to Israel any speculative notion of the oneness of the Deity; but, practically, to influence their minds in regard to the superstitions from which they had been brought out. It was no other than the command; “ Thou * shalt have no other Gods but me.” Now, were this view of the Revelation of the Divine Unity strictly maintained, would it not greatly abate the repugnance often felt at the ad- mission of a Trinity in Unity? We should profess, that we only knew God, as the exclusive object of divine worship; and should acknowledge, that it was quite irrelevant to our scheme of Religion, either to demonstrate, or to refute, any conclusion from the nature of Unity, concerning any further revelation of the Divine Being. To deny a Trinity, L 2 148 LECTURE III. would then be felt the same, as to assert, that, be- cause Polytheism is false, therefore no new mani- festation of God, not resulting from the negation of Polytheism, can be true. There is another observation, which the present inquiry has suggested, and which I think of great importance, in order to a just view of the Trinitarian Controversies. Let it then be remarked, that all the theories proposed on the subject are Trinitarian 2 principle. If the opinions of Praxeas, and Artemon, and Theodotus, of Paul of Samosata, Noetus, Sabel- lius, and others, amounted to Unitarianism ; it was in the way of consequence, or inference. They set out with a Trinitarian hypothesis, and either explained it away themselves by their speculations, or had the consequences of their theories forced on them by their adversaries, as the principles of their belief. We can plainly perceive, though unfortunately but very slight memorials remain to us of their dis- quisitions, that their anxiety was, to account for certain acknowledged facts of the Scripture narra- tive. They refer to admitted manifestations of God, as the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit: and the desire of accommodation to Jewish or Hea- then prejudices, the refutation of the theories of others, the fancies of private speculation,—these, and other influences concealed from our research,—sug- gest to the several inquirers peculiar combinations, or analyses, of the given facts, in their respective doc- trines of the Trinity. Take the reverse of the case, LECTURE III. 149 and you will judge, what a difference would have been in the language of these theorists. We should have had no attempts to explain the Divine Unity consistently with Trinitarian distinctions. They would not have been employed in explaining away distinctions, which they did not admit in some sense at least. They would have simply explained, and enforced, the Unity which they did admit. Or, had they referred to Trinitarian distinctions as main- tained by opponents in argument, they would have endeavoured to disprove them, instead of labouring, as they have done, to retain these very views, how- ever imperfectly, erroneously, or vainly, in their own systems. One fact is clear through all this labyrinth of variations which theological creeds have exhibited ;— that there is some extraordinary communication concerning the Divine Being, in those Scriptural notices of God which have called forth the curiosity of thinking men in all ages. To me it matters little, what opinion on the subject has been prior, has been advocated by the shrewdest wit or deepest learning, has been most popular, most extensive in its reception. All differences of this kind belong to the history of the human mind, as much as to the- ology, and affect not the broad basement of fact on which the manifold forms of speculation have taken their rise. The only ancient, only catholic, truth is the Scriptural fact. Let us hold that fast in its depth and breadth—in nothing extenuating, in no- thing abridging it—in simplicity and sincerity; and L3 150 LECTURE ΤΠ]: we can neither be Sabellians, or Tritheists, or Soci- nians. Attempt to explain, to satisfy scruples, to reconcile difficulties ; and the chance is, that, how- ever we may disclaim the heterodoxy which lurks on every step of our path, we incur, at least, the scandal at the hands of others, whose piety, or pre- judices, or acuteness, may be offended by our words. I should hope the discussions in which we have now been engaged, will leave this impression on the mind. Historically regarded, they evidence the re- ality of those sacred facts of Divine Providence, which we comprehensively denote by the doctrine of a Trinity in Unity. But let us not identify this reality with the theories couched under a logical phraseology. I firmly and devoutly believe that word, which has declared the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. But who can pretend to that exactness of thought on the sub- ject, on which our technical language is based ? Looking to the simple truth of Scripture, I would say, in the language of Augustine, ec scio. Distin- guere autem inter illam Generationem et hanc Pro- cessionem, nescio, non valeo, non sufficio’.—Verius enim cogitatur Deus, quam dicitur ; et verius est, quam cogitatur ©. 4 Contra Maximin. III. p. 237. 4to ed. ΘΠ ΘΠ Vile. 4. LECTURE IV. THE PELAGIAN CONTROVERSIES. PREDESTINATION AND GRACE. i) ae ψ «sq es pe are Ἢ J dy sree 50 ΔῪ i Nba | f . ὌΝ , ie et ie yr Peabins eral ; ” ish, i] ry. ‘ ἢ J Hf = we ' ] ΠΝ i oe a AE ἣ sep j ha) had “a Dy ἡδν ΙΝ ἣ aa Τὴ " HM Noss ete ὶ baeink a ATA. ΜΝ, sea ‘i ἃ ' Ὑ τ τυ ἘΣ RAT ha; ὑμένα ὌΝ νά τα χὰ ἀνὰ ea ag bby ty iat at Wa de pe γα 5 i ea Re ΤΑΝ ΤΣ ὧν ν᾿ κε ἂν ΕΚ τ ἡμῶν ΝΥ τὶ ‘Ver CLV ΜΗ ΔΟΡῚ ἵ ΤΥ td 4 ? ; ; " ΜῈΝ ‘ i SUMMARY. Scuoxastic nature of controversies relative to Divine and Hu- man Agency—State of the West disposes the Latin Christians to the discussion of such questions—Importance of the ques- tions in order to Church-government—The disputes here at first, less philosophical in comparison with the Trinitarian— Consequent laxity in the terms of the Pelagian theories, occa- sions more continual disputes—The Schoolmen, the first to systematize these doctrines—Connexion of them with the pre- vious theory of the Trinity—Scholastic view of Predestination an application of the Principle of Activity in the Divine Being to human actions—Importance of excluding reference to the Divine Intelligence, in our estimate of Predestination—Mode in which the notions of Contingency and Necessity, Time and Eternity, were employed in scholastic reasonings.—The only proper difficulty on the subject is, the prevalence of Evil— Notions of Optimism influential on such speculations—The term Good in ancient philosophy coincident with an object of will—Reprobation consequently, as implying evil willed, unknown to Scholastic system—lIllustration to be derived to our article on the subject from the theories opposed by the Schoolmen—Dread of Manicheism in the Latin Church. Scholastic notion of Grace as the effect of Predestination, both physical and logical—The term Grace, designates pro- perly a general fact of the Divine conduct—Application of Aris- totle’s physical doctrines in the scholastic account of the pro- cess of Grace—The theory of Transmutation— Instinctive Principle of motion attributed to the System of Nature—Ap- proximation to Pantheism in this system. Practical reflections—Truths of Grace and Predestination concern the heart principally—Theoretic statements of them must always be peculiarly open to difficulty—The difficulties, evidently, chiefly metaphysical—The doctrines, practically taken, full of real comfort and peace. James I. 17. Every good gift, and every perfect gift, is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, nor shadow of turning. Πᾶσα δόσις ἀγαθὴ. καὶ πᾶν δώρημα τέλειον, ἄνωθέν ἐστι a “5 Ν cal Ν lad , Se > ΝΜ καταβαῖνον ἀπὸ τοῦ πατρὸς τῶν φώτων, παρ᾽ ᾧ οὐκ ἔνι παραλ- “Ὁ rn λαγὴ ἢ τροπῆς ἀποσκίασμα. Omne datum optimum, et omne donum perfectum, de- sursum est, descendens a Patre luminum ; apud quem non est transmutatio, nec vicissitudinis obumbratio. Lar. Vue. LECTURE IV. το τ a In opening my inquiry into the influence of the Scholastic Philosophy, as also in entering on the illustration of it in the Trinitarian Controversies, I had occasion to point out the fact of the real as- cendancy obtained by the Latin portion of the Christian Church. It appeared that this ascendancy was not at once decided and complete; but that still it was effectually achieved by those stirring spirits, the great Latin Fathers of the [Vth century. A review of another class of controversies, which, next to those on the Trinity, engaged and absorbed the attention of Christian disputants,—the controver- sies relating to Divine and Human Agency,—will still more illustrate this origin of the Scholastic Philosophy, and its incorporation with Theology, as a subtile instrument of spiritual power. We now, indeed, enter on ground which is more peculiarly that of Scholasticism; where the Greek Theology is comparatively silent, and the whole moulding and ultimate complexion of the doctrines professed, are the work of the Latins, or rather of the influential portion of the Latins, the African Churches, under the management of Augustine, at the commencement of the Vth century. The Greeks, looking more with the eye of philosophers than of Church-leaders, at the questions of Divine and 156 LECTURE, Iv. Human Agency, did not take a strictly theolo- gical interest in their decision. They regarded these questions, rather as the proper matter of phi- losophical disquisition; as they really are, when justly considered ; since they suggest themselves to the inquisitive mind, independently of any peculiar views of God and man resulting from Revelation. This field of disputation therefore, as a part of Christian Theology, was left open to the busy intel- lect of the Latin Divines. In the East indeed, there was not that call for the decision of these questions, which existed in the West. The attention of the Greeks was sustained on parts of the Trinitarian controversies, at the period when Pelagianism was producing a ferment in the Latin Church. The uniformity of the general state of things in the Eastern Empire, is strikingly contrasted by the restlessness, and fever of change, with which the West was troubled during the IVth and Vth centuries. Though the East was the theatre of wars during that period, there was no such uni- versal shock to the repose of the human mind, as in the West, where revolution and confusion had taken the place of regularity and order. The world witnessed the sack and misery of the Im- perial City herself; whose fall might well seem the prelude of the universal dissolution of society. All was either ruin, or expectation of ruin. This anar- chy of social life in the West might naturally re- present itself to the religionist, as well as to the pro- fane and irreligious, as the disenthroning of Provi- LECTURE IV. 157 dence; whilst the one would be confirmed in his infidelity, the other would be staggered in the con- fidence of his Faith. To a Christian trained in a speculative Theology, the difficulty would be aggra- vated. The immutability and perpetuity of order, which he had been taught to ascribe to the Divine Principles, would receive, to his apprehension, a contradiction, in what he observed passing around him. How prevalent such feelings were, we may learn from the testimony of Salvian, a Gallic writer of the Vth century, in his work “ on the Government ‘of God;” whose expressions, though allowance must be made for a declamatory style, give a vivid repre- sentation of the disorder of the times, and of the infidel distrust of Providence resulting from it. The evil seems to have reached its height, when this writer drew his picture of it. It was at such a crisis, when Pelagianism began to make advances in the world; when opinions were disseminated, which were regarded, or at least apprehended in their consequences, as infringements on the great truths of Providence and Grace, and as in this sense harmonizing with the profane tendency of the age®. Africa, however, continued for some time exempt from the general ruin, and Augustine had leisure to contemplate the rolling wave in its progress, before a See also Augustine’s complaint of the drunkenness which prevailed in the African cities in his times; and with which even the celebration of the memory of the martyrs was pro- faned: and the ineffectual attempts of the Bishops to check it. —Note A. Lect. IV. 158 LECTURE IV. at length the cities of Carthage and Hippo were swept under it». Jerome also, sequestered from every thing but the storms of a passionate enthusiasm, at his loved retreat in Palestine, could watch the state of religious feeling at this crisis, and, himself un- moved, mingle with the agitating events of the West. But the sceptre of spiritual power was then passing from his veteran hands to the more vigorous Bishop of Hippo’; and, whilst his counsels and ex- ample are sought in the difficulties of the strug- gle against the Pelagianism of the times, it is the African Divines, with Augustine at their head, who take the lead in the controversies; to whose ex- ertions the orthodox decision is owing’. Read the repeated expostulations of the African clergy, con- veyed, in the form of respectful epistles, to the heads of the Roman Church, on the case of Pelagius and Celestius; and, under their half-expressed fears of the orthodoxy of Rome, and their obsequious language of duty, you will easily see, who are the real arbiters of the dispute; whose is the influential opinion, be- b Jerome born A. D. 331, died in 420. Augustine born A. D. 354, died in 430. Pelagian Controversies began to be agitated in 405. ¢ Jerome, amidst his compliments of Augustine, still reminds him who it is that makes these acknowledgments: Quem post me, he says, in writing to Augustine, orientem in scriptura- rum eruditione letatus sum. Hpist. XIV. in Augustin. Oper. tom. II. p. 19.—Note B. d Prosper, in speaking of the Council of Carthage, says, .... cul dux Aurelius, ingeniumque, Augustinus erat. Carm. de Ingratis —Note C. LECTURE IV. 159 fore which even the pride of the Apostolic See must bow “. The nature and the decision of the controversies on Divine and Human Agency, bespeak entirely the practical theology of the Western Divine. These controversies were of leading importance in relation to the government of the Church. Opinions, adverse to a belief in the supremacy of Divine Providence, were also adverse to the dependence of the spiritual community, on the personal oracles of the Divine Will, and visible ministers of the Divine Power. If the real invisible Theocracy were not acknowledged in the fullest sense, the principle of a deputed theo- cratic power would sink in estimation at the same time; and the hearts of the people would be se- duced from that loyalty, with which the sacerdotal ministrations had been hitherto attended. So that, even though the logic of Pelagius, and the known purity of his character, might have acquitted him from the charge of teaching a doctrine of ingrati- tude and rebellion against God ; yet it was probable, that discussions, touching the nature and necessity of Divine Grace, if they amounted only to a modera- tion of language on the subject, would raise ques- tionings and unsettle the faith of many‘. Practical men would readily see this, and, regarding the mat- ter, not as a point of disputation, but as a question of government, would take their measures against consequences probable i fact, rather than against the abstract speculation itself. © Note ἢ. f Note E. 160 LECTURE IV. It was also to hearts, which had so lashed them- selves to the helm of the Christian vessel, a ques- tion of piety or impiety, whether an exclusive, or a qualified, ascription to God, of the glory of human salvation, should be adopted in the dogmatic lan- guage of the Church. In opposing Pelagianism, they conceived themselves pleading “ the Lord’s con- troversy” against His “ ungrateful” creatures 5, and felt their zeal, as Churchmen, stimulated by the righteousness of the cause which they advocated. To impute any efficacy to Human Agency, in the great work of Salvation, might appear a denial of God’s mercy and power,—a disclaimer of that Pro- vidence, whose blessing had hitherto crowned their measures with success. They exulted in an oppor- tunity of vindicating the cause of God, through evil report and good report; rejoicing in the very hatred incurred at the hand of the heretic ἢ. & Prosper’s Poem against the Pelagians, is inscribed, De In- gratis. Bradwardine, Archbishop of Canterbury in the XIVth century, entitles his elaborate metaphysical work against Pela- gianism, De Causa Dei. Bradwardine died in 1349. h They perverted our Lord’s declaration, “ Rejoice when ** men hate you and persecute you,” &c. Macte virtute, says Jerome, writing to Augustine, in orbe celebraris ; catholici te conditorem antique rursum fidei vene- rantur, atque suspiciunt: et, quod signum majoris glorie est, omnes heretici detestantur, et me pari prosequuntur odio; ut, quos gladiis nequeunt, voto interficiant. Hpist. 25.— Augustini Oper. tom. II. p. 29. 4to ed. Gregory Nazianzen speaks with exultation of the shocking manner of Arius’s death. Arius is uniformly regarded by the orthodox Fathers as another Judas. τῷ LECTURE IV. 161 The Pelagian controversies, accordingly, evidenced a different character, at their outset, from that by which the questions on the Trinity were distin- guished. The assertion may seem paradoxical ; but it may be said, that they were more properly re- figious than the Trinitarian; that is, they were viewed more immediately in their reference to the general sentiments and conduct of Christians, and decided, in the first instance, on practical grounds. The disputes on the Trinity, indeed, more properly belonged, in principle, to Christianity; as,on the other hand, the Pelagian controversies, in principle, be- longed to Philosophy. But, in the discussions of the former, Christianity was almost forgotten in the philosophical spirit with which they were pursued. And so, in the discussions of the latter, the proper philosophical arguments, by which the truths re- specting Divine and Human Agency might have been fairly appreciated, were neglected ; and points of abstract inquiry were decided by their probable effect on human practice. ‘The consequences of certain opinions were estimated in each case, both in the Trinitarian and the Pelagian disputes. A Theology, essentially logical, shewed itself in the one as in the other. Only, in the Trinitarian disputes, the argumentation was exclusively and strictly lo- gical; in the Pelagian, the logical and practical con- sequences were confused together. Because such an effect would probably follow such an opinion in the conduct of the Christian, therefore, it was argued, the opinion must be untrue. M 162 LECTURE IV. Thus the objection, which Jerome adduces against the theory of the power of man imputed to Pela- gius, is, that it tended to an “ apathy” and “a sin- “ lJessness *,” such as was inculeated by Stoic or Pythagorean, and consequently would lead to a state of inaction and presumptuous security. The imputation, surely, is groundless and unphilosophical as an argument against the truth of the theory ; though, as a practical objection, and rhetorically employed, it may avail. In like manner Augustine argues, that, if the doctrine of Pelagius were ad- mitted, the importance of Baptism would cease ; men would no longer think it necessary to resort to the laver of regeneration, to be washed from pol- lutions which they did not acknowledge. Again, that the duty of Prayer would be neglected: in vain would our Lord have commanded men to pray, that they be not led into temptation, when the self-forti- fied soul felt, within itself, the fond presumption that it was safe. We may perceive, then, in the origin of these con- troversies, a confusion of rhetorical and logical ar- gumentation; such as might naturally have been expected from the rhetorical school, in which the Latin Fathers were trained, and from that prac- tical design which was ever uppermost in their minds in all their theological discussions. Had these controversies, in their connexion with Chris- K "Anabela et ἀναμαρτήσια. It is curious to find the very same consequences imputed to Calvinism in more modern times.— Note F. LECTURE IV. 163 tianity, been as fully treated by the Greeks as the Trinitarian were, we should have found a more exact technical vocabulary on the several points of discussion, as well as a more logical deduc- tion of consequences, at the outset of the dispu- tation. As it was, they were left by the Latin Fathers in the unscientific, floating form-of prac- tical conclusions. The Latins had not the acumen, and the expertness, of the Greek theologian; as neither had they a preper instrument of philosophy in their language; to enable them to draw those lines of discrimination, on which an exact theoretic phraseology could be constructed. Indeed, they had no design of so stating the truths of Divine and Human Agency. They were bent on resisting a practical mischief. And hence has resulted that very remarkable difference in the comparison with the Trinitarian controversies. A copious phraseology, an exactness and rigour of statement, are charac- teristic of the Trinitarian theories, from the first full discussion of them. On the Pelagian question, we seek in vain, in the writings of Augustine, any positive, dogmatic language, by which an exact theory of Divine and Human Agency, in their re- lation to each other, may be enunciated. This is evidenced in the fact, that the orthodox, the Jan- senists, the Thomists, and the Jesuits, or Molinists, all equally refer themselves to the authority of that Father. Something must be allowed in such re- ferences for the obligation felt by the several dis- putants, to maintain their agreement with so catholic M 2 164 LECTURE IV. an authority. Something too must be allowed for the unphilosophical nature of the Latin language. Still, had Augustine spoken with more dogmatical precision on the subject, there would not have been that plausibility of evidence in his writings to views 50 opposed. The observation is illustrated in the disputes sub- sisting on the Question, after the death of Augus- tine, and in the difficulty manifested, in the course of these discussions, of ascertaining the precise views of Augustine himself. In the monasteries of the South of Gaul, not long after the death of Augus- tine, objections were raised against some of his as- sertions, as destructive of the freewill of man!. The authority of the Father was maintained at the ex- pense of the orthodoxy of his objectors; who, as not advancing to the full length of the Great Mas- ter’s language, were accused as favourers of Pela- gius, or as Semi-Pelagians. But we do not find any thing of this kind taking place, in regard to the great authorities on the question of the Trinity. There is no ambiguity, for instance, on the Trinity, as to the precise doctrine of Athanasius, or Gregory Nazianzen. The precision of the Greek Philosophy guards the doctrines of these writers throughout. 1 Mera μέν τοι ye θάνατον τοῦ ἐν ἁγίοις Αὐγουστίνου ἤρξαντό τινες μ γ a} Y 7) > lal , A ‘ ‘ , ,ὔ “ Ν > τῶν ἐν τῷ κλήρῳ TO μὲν δυσσεβὲς κρατύνειν δόγμα, κακῶς δὲ λέγειν Av- γουστίνον καὶ διασύρειν, ὡς ἀναίρεσιν τοῦ ἀυτεξουσίου εἰσηγησάμενον. ᾿Αλλὰ καὶ Κελεστῖνος ὁ Ῥώμης, ὑπέρ τε θείου ἀνδρὸς, καὶ κατὰ τῶν ἀνα- κινούντων τὴν αἵρεσιν, τοῖς ἐγχωρίοις γράφων ἐπισκόποις, τὴν κινου- μένην πλάνην ἔστησεν. Photii Biblioth. c. 53. Voss. Hist. Pelag. libs 7 Se. 307 p01. LECTURE IV. 165 The same is observable in Augustine himself, in his treatises on the Trinity. But, where he had not the previous clearing of the question, in its theological bearings, by the labours of Greek theologians, he is more the practical reasoner than the accurate theo- rist; stating rather what may check a growing evil, than what is calculated to set at rest a speculative question. I do not indeed say this, as supposing that any speculative statement, or scheme, of Di- vine and Human Agency, could set the question at rest. Experience proves the contrary. It opens too many attractive views to the curiosity of the human mind, for speculation to acquiesce in any given definition of the subject. But I merely wish to point out the state, in which the Pelagian con- troversies descended to the Church: particularly, as it affords some solution of the general state of those controversies in all ages of the Church. It is a striking fact, that Trinitarians, with little ex- ception, are all now agreed among themselves; whilst, in regard to the Pelagian controversies; there subsists the greatest variety of opinion in whole Churches and among individuals. Each spe- culator has his theory, his peculiar view ;—each separate communion, some antagonist statement on the several points involved in them. Now, it is not enough to say, that one class of truths is more prac- tical than the other, and therefore more awakens the attention and interest of thinking persons. Those who rightly discern and value the Trinitarian truths, will hardly allow, that there are any truths of the M 3 166 LECTURE IV. Gospel more strictly practical than these. But, even on that supposition, there will still remain to be ac- counted for, a remarkable difference, in the opening for controversial discussion, presented in the terms, by which the truths relative to Divine and Human Agency are expressed. There is a great deal of de- finition and of apparent precision of language on the subject. But, with all its formality, the disputation bears the mark of its rhetorical origin, leaving an escape for the theorist to raise up his own system even on the terms of its theories. In the revival of the Pelagian Question in the IXth century, in the discussions on Predestination to which 1 alluded in my first Lecture, an attempt was made by Erigena to introduce the language of philosophy into the subject. He laboured to prove, against the unfortunate Gotteschalec, who had de- duced from the writings of Augustine “ a twofold * Predestination,” as it was termed,—a Predestina- tion to Life, and a Predestination to Death, or Re- probation,—that it was impossible for the doctrine of Reprobation to be true; on the grounds, that Death and Sin, and Evil in general, were non- entities, mere negations, that had no proper being, and therefore could not pre-exist in the mind of God, or be predestined. This conclusion, however, of Erigena, being founded on an abstruse, mys- tical philosophy, not very intelligible to an age of literature, only then emerging from the barbarism of preceding times, obtained no favourable reception LECTURE IV. 167 with the Church. In fact it only roused a spirit of resistance. The Southern Church of Gaul felt alarmed for the authority of Augustine. Not only were individuals engaged in replying to the argu- ments of Erigena; but even the Church of Lyons, softer in temper than her sister of Rheims™, pub- lished her strictures on the arguments of the phi- losopher, and her remonstrances against the perse- cution of Gotteschalc; characterizing, as “ inhuman “ cruelty,” the violence with which the poor sufferer had been treated ", This resistance against a more theoretic view of the doctrines involved in these Controversies, was a further means of keeping the discussion in that practical form, in which it had been bequeathed to the Church by Augustine. The writers against Erigena, Ratramn of Corbey, Prudentius, Bishop of Troyes, and Florus, a Deacon of Lyons, are all strongly opposed to a scientific discussion of the sub- ject. They rule the question by the simple autho- rity of Scripture and the Fathers; objecting to Eri- gena, on the very ground, that he had corrupted the simplicity of the truth by refimements of reason- ing °. Such then was the form, in which the Theories m The Southern part of Gaul had a larger infusion of Roman Civilization, and this is seen in the different character of the Church there, as compared with the Northern. 2 Note M of Lecture I. ο These several writings are in the Collection, by Mauguin, of Authors of the [Xth century on Grace and Predestination. M 4 168 LECTURE IV. belonging to the Pelagian Question descended to the proper age of Scholasticism—the period, when the disputations of the Schools were reduced to a sys- tematic form, in consequence of the fuller introduc- tion of the Aristotelic Philosophy. Therefore it is, that I characterize this class of controversies, as more peculiarly Scholastic than the Trinitarian. The conclusions to be established were handed down to the Schoolmen, in the volumes of their own great Master. But these conclusions wanted contexture and theoretic stability. It yet remained, for the doctrines on these points to be moulded into a ra- tionalized system of Theology; to be deduced in connexion with the Principles of the Divine Being, already laid down as the scientific basis of all truth. It has been seen, in the account which I gave of the theories proposed on the Trinity, that the ground of the speculation was, the notion of God, as the Principle of Causation or Efficiency; that this no- tion itself was drawn from analogies in the human mind, viewed as the means of tracing up the facts of the visible world to their fixed principles in God. The speculations on the Pelagian Question, as developed in the Scholastic system, were an appli- cation of this fundamental principle of the Theology to a particular class of facts; those produced by moral and intellectual Beings. The theory of God, as a Trinity in Unity, had respect, according to the scholastic views, to the whole universe: it was the mysterious solution of the whole order of things; LECTURE III. 169 containing in it the immutable reasons, or principles, of all existences whatever. The account, however, of the peculiar phenomena attending the thoughts and actions of rational agents, such as angels and men—and of men more particularly, as the subjects of Divine Grace revealed in the dispensations of re- ligion—suggested occasion for a more explicit and distinct inquiry. A theory of Providence, therefore, was to be drawn out; of the connexion rather of Providence with the natural and revealed condition of human nature. The Schoolmen, accordingly, proceeded to philo- sophize on the mode, in which the Will of God ful- filled itself, consistently with the free-will of man. The spirit of their Theology made it incumbent on them to demonstrate the operation of the Divine Will, as the sole Master-Will, comprehending in itself the derived and subordinate wills of all other agents. And here the important point to be observed, in developing the force of theory on the doctrines now under review, is, the reason, why they referred the speculation to the W7//, rather than to the Intelli- gence of God. It was in pursuance of a maxim of their adopted philosophy, that “mere intelligence * moves nothing,”—is no cause of production or change?. The inquiry was essentially concerned about a theory of change,—an account of a class of ever-flowing, variable, phenomena. To understand this, we should be aware of the extent of meaning P Aristot. Ethic. VI. διανοιὰ δ᾽ αὐτὴ οὐθὲν κινεῖ. 170 LECTURE IV. attached to the word Motion, in the ancient Physics. It included under it much more than we apprehend by the term; applying to any change whatever that might occur, either in the internal structure, or ex- ternal form of bodies, no less than to their change of place. As the nature of the soul was classed among the objects of physical inquiry, any modification of the soul, by its exertion in action, came under this definition of Motion. We may judge then of the con- nexion of the maxim, to which I have referred, with the theory of Divine Agency. In exploring the principle of actions, we exclude from the induction whatever belongs to the simply intellectual view of their nature. We look only to the motive principle. Weare sufficiently accustomed, indeed, to ascribe the moral nature of actions to the motives exemplified in them. But we little think of the abstruse philo- sophy on which the expression is founded; that it is a rejection of every thing else but the Will,—the principle of Activity,—from the abstract theory of human conduct. The doctrine of Predestination, accordingly, is a reference of actions to their primary Motive, the great principle of all Activity, the Will of God. The reasons or ideas of actions, as of all other effects throughout the Universe, might have existed eter- nally in the Divine mind ; like the principles of an art in the mind of the artist: but nothing would have been created, no action would have taken place, unless the Divine Will had stretched out the hand of God to the work. It was the Will of God LECTURE IV. 171 that occasioned the Divine Intelligence, the wisdom or word of God, to go forth, and diffuse the Divine power, wisdom, and goodness over the works of a visible world. From the perfect simplicity, indeed, of the Divine nature, the Will of God is identical, as the School- men assert, with his Intelligence; as both are also identical with his Being 4. But, in speculating con- cerning the principle of voluntary actions, it is im- portant that the attention should be confined strictly to that ultimate abstraction which properly repre- sents their nature in the Being of God—the simple principle of the Divine Will. Had the views of the Schoolmen, and of others who have philosophized after them, been confined strictly to this point, much perplexity of thought on the questions arising out of the subject would have been avoided. A simple solution in that case would have been given of the effects of subordinate agents, by deducing them from the great law of the Divine Will. This class of variable phenomena would, at least, have been simplified, by being contemplated as His agency, in whom is no variableness, nor shadow of turning. They would have been deprived of their anomalous character, by the steadiness of purpose with which such a theory would invest them. 4 Et sic oportet in Deo esse voluntatem, cum sit in eo in- tellectus. Et sicut suum intelligere est suum esse, ita et suum esse est suum velle.— Aquinas, Sum. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xrx. art. 1. Quia essentia Dei est ejus intelligere et velle. Ibid. art. 4. 172 LECTURE IV. But the intellectual principle, as being physically inseparable from the moral, has been also brought into the speculation: and the stability, attributed to this principle, has been taken into the view of the origin of those changes which the moral world ex- hibits. Conclusions have been drawn from that other maxim of ancient philosophy, that what is known—whatever is the object of Science—must be fixed and immutable. It has been forgotten in the course of inquiry, that the speculation is concerning the principle of change,—that it is an endeavour to ascertain some limit to those variable results which the human will produces, by viewing them in their original cause of variation, itself immutable, the Will of God. Thus, when any event or effect is simply regarded in its reference to the Will of God, the assertion which it becomes us to make respecting it, is that its accomplishment could not eventually be resisted ; could not be frustrated. The design of that act of volition must surely be effected: the wills of all sub- ordinate agents must work together with that sove- reign Will, which pursues its own purposes through their agency. In the acts of Human will there is no assurance of the result being the object intended ; there is no certainty of correspondence between the motive and the effect, because of the various obstacles arising from the conflicting wills of different indivi- duals. But, even of the Human will, we may pre- dict a certain result, in proportion as the agent ap- pears to have calculated justly the resistance, or the LECTURE IV. 173 cooperation, to be expected from the wills of others. Now the Divine Will is only an extreme case of this analogy,—a case in which are included the wills of all creatures,—where the purpose, accord- ingly, will surely be accomplished, not only amidst the utmost variety and complexity, and apparent contradiction of human wills, but by means of that very entangling and contrariety of motions which puzzle the eye of the human spectator. Take however the Divine Intellect into the account; re- gard any given effect as the simple object of Divine knowledge; and we must then say that the effect could not be otherwise; the result, in any other form, becomes inconceivable and self-contradictory : as known to God, it must be infallibly and specula- tively true: a conclusion which brings us immedi- ately to a doctrine of Necessity, or Fatalism. The Schoolmen attempted, in this speculation, to solve the difficulty which had perplexed the ancient philosophers. Whilst some of these resorted to the notion of a sovereign fate, or a principle of malig- nity, or necessity—and the more pious to that of a providence—to explain the devious course of human events; all may be regarded, as having admitted the impossibility of reducing this class of facts to any strictly scientific principles. They were placed, indeed, among those truths which were held to be essentially variable or Contingent, in contradistinc- tion to those which were called Necessary, as capable of being referred to fixed laws. So that, whilst the 174 EE CTURE (IN. philosopher assigned these several abstract causes for the variable phenomena of actions, it was not a solution of the facts that he proposed, but a con- fession of his ignorance of any proper philosophical account of them. The Platonic doctrine of an abstract Idea of Good, was the nearest approach to such an account. This was, however, an attempt to reduce the calculations of moral judgment, to the certainty which belongs to the purely intellectual perceptions, rather than a theory that applied itself to the actual anomalies of human life. But the Schoolmen, adopting Aristotle’s practical view of the subject, admitted, with that philosopher, the uncertainty of human conduct in its dependence on the free-will of man. At the same time, as theologians and logicians, they felt themselves bound to reconcile this admission with the fixedness of those Ideal Principles, from which all this devious course of human actions primarily originated. The manner in which they effected the reconcilia- tion, is extremely worthy of our notice, as an in- stance of the dependence of their Theology on meta- physical theories. The explanation rests entirely on assumed definitions of Time and Eternity. These are contrasted with each other; Time, as the “ mea- “sure of motion,’—Eternity, as the “measure of “ permanent being.” Whilst events therefore, viewed in connexion with the capacities of finite beings, develope themselves successively, and are uncertain, or contingent, as arising out of their proximate causes ; LECTURE IV. 175 they are fixed and immutable in their “presentiality” before God, whose eternity admits no change, no suc- cession °. It is sufficiently clear, I think, from these diff- culties, and their proposed solution, that the meta- physics of a logical philosophy have tied the knot, in which this subject has been involved. Realism converted distinctions, which are the mere cre- ations of the mind, into differences in the nature of things. For the terms, Necessary and Contingent, express nothing more than laws of thought, the varied character of evidence belonging to dif- ferent perceptions of the mind: the necessity im- puted to the objects of Divine knowledge being a consequence from the notion of immutability; the contingency imputed to the facts of human life, being the simple evidence of experience, which may vary, and even be directly contrary, without any in- trinsic absurdity. Whence, the attempt to reconcile them is only to confound two distinct classes of mental facts. The Schoolmen, indeed, were not ig- norant of the nature of this distinction’; but the logical basis of their Theology obliged them to in- terpret it in the way in which they have done. The necessity, and fixedness, and eternity of the Divine Being, were the given principles, which their method called upon them to apply to the facts of human ex- perience. They commenced with the rigour of logic, riNote Li: 5. Aguinas, Sum. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. x1x. art. 3.—Note H. 176 LECTURE IV. and were forced to throw its chains over the stream of human affairs. The only proper difficulty in the subject of Divine Agency,—that which has more strictly the force of objection against it,—is, the fact observ- able in the world, of apparent resistance to the will of God, by the deep and wide prevalence of evil. This fact impugns the very ground on which the truth of the Divine Agency is founded; since the good designed in the constitution of the world, is the evidence to us of that great law of natural re- ligion,—that God wills the happiness of his creatures. In short, it is principally, if not solely, from a con- viction of the Divine good-will, that we assign to God the operation of will at all. | But even this difficulty, real as it is, (for the ex- istence of sin and misery in the world is as clear a fact as any in its history,) is greatly aggravated by that speculative optimism, which seems a funda- mental prejudice or instinct of our minds. The maxim that nature works all things for the best— that there is nothing imperfect or vain in her sys- tem—was the form which this idea assumed in the ancient philosophy. It would be well, if we held it simply as a general truth, highly important for our practical needs; as a resource in the perplexities of life ; but rejected it altogether as a ground of spe- culation. For as soon as we begin to reason from it, that, “ of two ends, the better must be the design “οὗ Providence;” as the ancients did reason, and as ᾿ LECTURE IV. Lad We are ourselves apt to do; we incur difficulties arising from our own conceptions of what is best. We have then to satisfy the importunate requisi- tions of imaginary hypotheses. When we come indeed to examine the subject more closely, as it is illustrated by that Logical Philosophy on which our attention is now engaged, the theory itself of Predestination will be found to involve reasonings on this fundamental principle. It is, in fact, a speculation founded on our moral nature; which cannot rest satisfied, until it has mo- delled the system of Grace, as of Nature, after its own tendencies towards an excellence and perfection beyond its positive experience. The Father of Mo- dern Philosophy has observed, that the human in- tellect supposes a greater regularity and equality in things than it actually finds. This is particularly the case in the world of religion. Captivated with the contemplation of the eternal destinies of man, it loves to trace the links, which bind together the remote parts of the mysterious life of the soul, in continuous and uniform series. It will not acquiesce, therefore, in the naked declarations of Scripture on the subject of Human Salvation. It eagerly seizes on the truths contained in these, to recast them in the mould which its own imaginations have framed. Hence that charm, which doctrines of Absolute Predestina- tion, Indefectible Grace, Assurance of Salvation, and the like, possess both for the philosopher and the vulgar. The mind is placed by them in a com- manding elevation, from which it beholds the whole N 178 LECTURE VIV. course of the Christian life stretched before it. It feels itself transported into the very region which properly belongs to religion ; where the amazement of thought, naturally excited by the subject, seems to be answered by the majesty and sublimity of the scenery presented. Otherwise, it might be matter of surprise, how pious and amiable men have delighted in stern and appalling views of the Divine Predes- tination ; not scrupling to declare the devout emo- tion, with which they could contemplate the terrors of Divine wrath, sentencing the sinner to everlast- ing dereliction and misery *. To understand, however, the theoretic nature of Predestination, we must enter more fully into the ethical speculation, of which it is the counterpart in the system of Religion: if, at least, we would rightly estimate the meaning of the dogmatic declarations on the subject. Whatever is the object of a natural passion, or active principle of the soul, was termed, in the lan- guage of ancient philosophy, “a good,” and an “ end;”—an end, because the affection, or active prin- ciple, when duly exerted, was conceived to rest in its object, then attained or completed ;—a good, because nature does nothing in vain, and suggests no object to the desires of man, without a beneficial design. The notion of Good became thus essentially at- tached to an object of the will; or was rather the t Note I. LECTURE IV. 179 result of such an association. Accordingly, whatever was desired, was represented to be a good, either real or apparent ;—a real good, if the affections were rightly constituted ;—an apparent good, pursued as real, where the affections were disordered and per- verted. This general view of moral facts will be recognized as pervading the ethical philosophy of Aristotle. And hence the great business of that philosophy, as of the ancient Ethics in general, was, to find out the general law of Good, or great End of Actions; the object universally aimed at, though often under mistaken views, in the va- rious moral facts which human life exhibits; or, as it was abstractedly termed the Chief Good,— the ultimate End, or in Scholastic language, Final Cause, of all actions. Now, if we conceive this Theory of Actions trans- ferred to the Divine Being, we shall obtain a just view of what the Schools intended by the doctrine of Predestination. ‘The End, or Final Cause, of all the actions of God,—of all exertions of his will, —could be no other than his Goodness. As, under the view of religion, the Chief Good of Man must be God himself, so, to the will of God, there could be no other object than the Divine goodness itself. So far then as all things done in the universe were the actions of God, they were referable to the great law of good, original in the nature of the Divine Being. Nothing evil, as such, could be referable to God, because what was evil could not be conceived to be the object of Will at all, much less of the perfect | N 2 180 LECTURE IV. Divine will. It was wrong therefore, according to the Scholastic doctrine, to speak of the predestina- tion of evil. The wicked might be said to be pre- destined to punishment, but not to the evil com- mitted by them. This was only the result of their improper exercise of their own will; through which, as individuals, they missed the good designed for them by God; and, in thus missing it, simned against the benevolent constitution of God. Good would surely follow, whatever might be the actions of the individual, however evil these might be in their immediate result, since nothing else but goodness could be the object of the Divine Will. God there- fore could not be said to wi/l the evil action of the sinner; though He might “permit” it, in order to that ultimate good which He educes out of it. The use of the word Permission may be remarked here; as it has passed into modern use, and is employed still to remove the objection arising from saying, that God appoints or decrees evil. Taken in its popular sense, it only removes the difficulty a step further; as it still leaves the question, why God does not interfere to prevent the evil done and suffered in the world. But the scientific use of it, by Aquinas, seems to be, to avoid making evil an object of volition; and yet not to exclude it from the cognizance and control of Divine Providence as an event ". Reprobation accordingly, in the Calvinistic sense, had no place in the Scholastic theology. Predesti- nation, regarded as the sole primary cause of all our u Note J. LECTURE IV. 181 actions, as they are moral and Christian—as they have any worth in them, or any happiness—was as- serted in that Theology in the most positive man- ner; though different Doctors varied in further ex- positions of its nature*. But Reprobation, as it implies a theory of the moral evil of the world, I think I may confidently say, is no part of the Sys- femY. The term, indeed, is derived to us from the Schoolmen; and so far they are chargeable with having perplexed theology with the disquisitions arising out of it. But, had they employed the term to denote an antecedent will, on the part of God, of the sin and misery of the wicked, they would have contradicted that philosophy, from which they drew their speculation on the subject. Whether it becomes us to theorize at all on the subject, is another question. But, if there must be theory, the Schoolmen were so far right, that they simply endeavoured to trace the Divine Goodness, as manifested by Nature and Revelation, to its pri- mary cause in the Divine Being. Their theory in- culcated the great truth, that the apparent anomalies of the world were in reality instances of the same general law; that the evil actually found in nature, was not the design of God, or the effect of any Prin- ciple of Evil. This is their Predestination. And they assert Election accordingly, in the same man- ner, as part of Predestination. Election, according x Note K. y Aquinas, Sum. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xx1II. art. 3.— Note L. N 3 182 LECTURE IV. to them, is an analysis of Predestination, considered as a moral act: since, where there is good willed, there must be the love, and consequently the choice of the persons so predestined ”. Looking indeed back to the origin of the question of Divine Agency in the Latin Church, to the cha- racter and conduct of Augustine, who gave the first impulse to it; and observing at the same time the mode in which it is explained by the Schoolmen; I cannot but think, that the dogmatic assertion of Predestination is primarily to be understood solely in opposition to Manicheism, and its kindred errors, with which Pelagianism was associated : that the ex- clusive design of it was accordingly, to maintain a theory of Divine Goodness,—to exhibit the moral and religious world in harmony with the physical, that God might be seen as all in all. The Latin Church appears to have felt a constant dread of the influx of Manicheism. The cry of Manicheism was sure to rally defenders round the standard of orthodoxy. The poor sufferers, cruelly executed at Orleans in the XIth century, were murdered under the plea of their profession of Manicheism. The alarm was spread against the rising sect of the Albigenses of Thou- louse, in the following century, on the same ground®. Zz Note M. a The Pelagians seem to have retorted the charge of Ma- nicheism on the Orthodox :— Catholicos Manicheorum nomine criminantur. — Contr. Duas Epist. Pelag. ad Bonifac. lib. ii. Augustin. Oper. tom. vii. p. 286.—Note N. LECTURE IV. 183 Augustine naturally felt a strong antipathy to that error, from which he had, with many painful strug- gles, extricated himself. Whilst the disciple of that gross, material philosophy, he had been accus- tomed to regard Evil as a substantial or corporeal element of the Universe, coordinate with Good. Having once overcome this noxious prejudice of his early creed, he shrank from any approach to it af- terwards, as from an antichristian enemy. We see this in his manner of treating the questions raised by Pelagius. He is constantly viewing them in their connexion with the Manichean doctrines. As a practical man, bent on carrying a point of Church- government, he calls attention to the unpopular consequences of the Pelagian notions; calculating doubtless that the alarm of Manicheism would come with full force from one, able to speak, from his own experience, of its delusions. The antipathies of Augustine descended, with his doctrines, to the Schoolmen. Following his foot- steps, they sought only to set forth his views of the Divine Agency, as of every other question of theo- logy, with theoretic precision. It would appear, accordingly, that the Scholastic doctrine of Providence, and of Predestination as a part of Providence, is opposed to philosophical no- tions of Providence current in the early ages of the Church. In speaking indeed of the Divine Power, Aquinas expressly points this out. “« There have been some,” he says, “as the “‘ Manichees, who said that spiritual and incorporeal N 4 184 LECTURE IV. “ things are subject to divine power, but visible * and corporeal things subject to the power of a “contrary principle. Against these then we must “say, that God is in all things by his Power. “Ὁ There have been others again, who, though they “believed all things subject to divine power, still * did not extend divine Providence down to these * lower parts: in whose person it is said, in Job “ xxii. ‘ He walks about the hinges of heaven, and “ ¢ considers not our concerns >’ And against these “it was necessary to say, that God is in all things * by his Presence. ‘There have been again others, “ who, though they said all things belonged to the “ Providence of God, still laid it down, that all “ things were not immediately created by God; but “ that He immediately created the first creatures, “and these created others. And against these it “was necessary to say, that He was in all things “ by his Essence °.” These are the theories, accordingly, which should be studied, in order to have a right conception of the definition of Predestination, as given in the Scholastic writers, and from them derived to modern Theology. But, if this be the case, the most important ele- b Job xxii. 13, 14. ‘“‘ And thou sayest, How doth God know? “can He judge through the dark cloud? Thick clouds are a “‘ covering to Him, that He seeth not; and He walketh in the “* circuit of heaven.” © Aquinas, Sum. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. vim. art. 3. LECTURE IV. 185 ment for a right judgment of the doctrine, as pro- fessed by our Church, has been generally overlooked. Divines have been anxious to shew, that our Re- formers were not of the same opinion on this sub- ject as Calvin. It is evident, however, that the statement in our Articles could not have been ex- pressly opposed to Calvinistic views. For such an opposition would imply, that the theories opposed were prevalent at the time; whereas they were maintained at their greatest height after the com- position of our Article. Theory is met by counter- theory, when the language of erroneous speculation has begun to infect the orthodoxy of the Church. A speculation, indeed, may have been in exist- ence—may have been growing,—as many of the Trinitarian theories were, before they obtained the names by which they are now known. So un- doubtedly was, what is now.called Calvinism. Still it would not be opposed by a dogmatic statement, until the profession of the theory was become no- torious, and troublesome to the leading Clergy of the times. : It has been often observed of our XVIIth Ar- ticle, that, whilst it declares a predestination to Life and Glory, it is reserved on the subject of Reproba- tion, speaking on this point in the language of prac- tical admonition¢. It is no little confirmation of ἃ The allusion at the end of the Article to the “ Will of God” should be particularly noticed, as illustrative of the train of thought throughout it, and also the correction of the expression by the terms joined with it :—‘‘ that Will of God is to be fol- 186 LECTURE IV. this view, that it coincides exactly with the theory of Divine Agency, developed in the reasonings of the Scholastic Philosophy. From observing this coincidence, I should conclude, that our Reformers, feeling themselves called upon by the state of opinion, to make some authoritative statement on the sub- ject, and led also to speculate on it, from their own education in the theories of Scholasticism; returned to the original mode in which the truth had been theoretically propounded. They saw, at least, the moderation of that language: the notions involved in it, were their philosophical creed: and they wisely preferred it to the extreme views of some of their contemporaries. Consistently with this notion of Predestination, Grace is set forth by the Scholastic writers as the “ Effect of Predestination,” or Predestination as the “ Preparation of Grace.” Both indeed are spoken of as Divine “ ordinations” to the Life Eternal °, and are equally characteristic therefore of the Di- vine Agency, as taught in the Scholastic Theology. But, the Pelagian controversies have given a more Christian emphasis to the term Grace, by its employ- ment as the antagonist statement to the anathe- matized doctrines of Pelagius; and made it equiva- lowed, ‘‘ which we have expressly declared unto us in the Word ‘* of God.’ These last words call us from the theoretic sense of the ‘‘ Will of God” to the practical one, of the precepts con- tained in Scripture. € Aquinas, Sum. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. xxtv. art. 3.—Note O. LECTURE IV. 187 lent practically to the whole of Gospel-truth. So that, in fact, it more properly represents the part of God in the scheme of human salvation, than any other term of Theology. Amidst the copious matter of inquiry, which a term, so pregnant with theological interest, presents to our hands, I confine myself to what belongs more strictly to the notion of Divine Agency—the point particularly selected for illustration in the pre- sent Lecture. First then I would call attention to the word Grace itself. The sense, which the discussions of Pelagianism have impressed on the term, is par- ticularly to be noticed. The dogmatic manner in which we now speak of “the grace of God,’— placing it in contrast with the powers of human nature, or with nature in general,—conveys the idea of something positive in God, something that admits of explanation as to what it is,—of definition, and distribution into its various kinds. We hear of grace operating and cooperating; grace preventing and following; grace of congruity, grace of con- dignity. But how erroneous is the conception pro- duced in the mind, by these several modes of speak- ing? When we try the notion of Grace by a sur- vey of the Scripture-dispensations, what is it but a general fact, a summary designation of the various instances of benevolent, pitiful condescension on the part of God, to the wants and helplessness of man? It is thus that “grace and truth” are said 188 LECTURE IV. to come by Jesus Christ. The mission of Christ to the world was the strongest instance of the be- nevolent exertion of God for our good. Thus St. Paul speaks of the grace of God having appeared unto all men, in sending his Son into the world, characterizing by the word grace this act of heavenly interposition. ‘Thus, too, we are said to be “saved “ by grace;” the Apostle alluding, evidently, as be- fore, to the act of Christ’s coming into the world and dying for our sins. Again, we are desired to pray for “‘ grace,”—and grace is said to be “ given” to us. These last instances convey a dogmatic impression ; but when we consider them more strictly, they resolve themselves into concise modes of speaking, adapted to the purpose of giving a distinct and striking view of the fact to which reference is made. We pray, that is, that God will graciously help us ; and, in acknowledging the gift of grace, we deny our own sufficiency, and declare that what we do good, is of God working in us both to will and to do. The word Truth is subject to the like erroneous conception; but here we are not apt to fall into the realism of supposing something in God positively denoted by the term: since it has not been equally the occasion of religious dispute. It is then from Scholasticism that we have derived this positive sense. Those subdivisions which I have referred to, of “ preventing” and “ following” grace, grace “ operating” and “ cooperating,” and others which our Church has not adopted; are expressly taken from the Scholastic Theology. Grace is LECTURE IV. 189 treated of in this system, as something “ infused *” into the soul, by virtue of which the sinner is jus- tified, and the operation of which on the heart it is endeavoured to trace through the stages of its process &. The order of ideas pursued, may be stated gener- ally as the following. Grace is first communicated to the soul of man in baptism, as an infused prin- ciple superadded to his natural powers,—as the seed of a new birth regenerating the soul. Hence is obtained the primary impulse, the original motive or efficient cause, by which the sinner is set forward on the course of the Life eternal. This produces in him a motion towards God; in which state it is called “a preventing” and an “ operating” grace ;—prevent- ing, as it precedes all motion on the part of man ;— operating, as it is the sole mover or motive prin- ciple. The soul of man being thus set in action towards God, is brought to feel its own sinfulness. But, though it has received this divine seed, — this element of holiness and future happiness,—still the natural powers are unable to expand and mature the germ, that it may grow to the life everlasting. The progress of the soul must therefore be sustained by him, who gave it the principle of spiritual f Aquinas, Summa. Theol. Prima IIde. & One of the questions discussed by Aquinas is, Utrum Gratia ponat aliquid in Anima. 8. Theol. Prima Ide. qu. cx. art. 1. which he decides in the affirmative—Note P. 190 LECTURE IV. life. The desire of holiness and the hatred of sin are implanted: but the temptations to which the weakness of the flesh exposes the regenerated soul, must be resisted by continued divine assistances, by grace following and cooperating. And the soul, contemplated in this state of progress, is said to be endued with the “grace of perseverance.” And when, at last, the course in which the soul has been proceeding through this continued divine aid, is completed; still grace is needed, that it may obtain remission of sins—a pardon of that guiltiness which even repentance cannot obliterate from the soul. Finally, by grace, it is glorified in the presence of God. Such is an analysis of the progress of the soul enjoying the “habitual gift of grace,” as taught by the School divines. It is justification, if the pro- cess of grace be considered in its effect on the sinner. It is predestination, if it be contemplated in God himself, as the effect of his eternal Love. It is Salva- tion, if the antecedent agency of the Son of God be the point from which the process is viewed. It is sanctification, if it be referred to the operation of the Holy Spirit, whose “ gift” it is, and whose peculiar office it is, thus to move and quicken the soul '. h The καρτερία of Aristotle—the power of holding out against temptations from pain—is what Augustine and the Schoolmen understood chiefly by Perseverance. The transition of the word into a symbol of mystical doctrine, is among the curious instances of the disguise of Aristotle’s philosophy under terms of Theology. Aquin. S. Theol. Prima IIde. qu. crx. art. 10. i Note Q. LECTURE IV. 101 In examining this account of the nature of Grace; whilst we fully acknowledge the general truth im- plied in it, that all our salvation is of the free gift and goodness of God; we may clearly perceive, that the mode of thinking is founded on _princi- ples of ancient physical philosophy: in which, ac- cordingly, we must seek the account of our tech- nical language on the subject of Divine Agency. I. The doctrine of Transmutation was a vital principle in Aristotle’s Philosophy. According to this doctrine, any object in nature might be trans- muted into another—the actual form of any thing, not depending on its being constituted of any par- ticular substance or matter, but on the presence of its constituent properties. When those properties were removed by the presence of other natures, with which they could not coexist, the thing itself was changed. It passed into that other form, to which these new qualities belonged. I shall have occasion to illustrate this point further, when I come to speak of the doctrine of Transubstantiation, into which it enters more particularly. I allude to it only now, for the sake of illustrating the notion, by which our Christian state under the influence of Grace is described. If it be allowed, that the state of holiness and perfection to which the Gospel seeks to bring us, is a state for which we are not fit in our present condition, evidently we must undergo some change, some special adaptation for that glory which we are destined to receive. The qualities then, to 192 LECTURE IV. speak in terms of the ancient philosophy, of that form which we are to assume, must be brought to our present nature. The holiness of the Gospel state must be superinduced on the intrinsic unholi- ness in which we now stand. In a word, we must be transformed. 'The old things must pass away, and all must become new!. We must cease to be what we were, and be new creatures. On this prin- ciple, then, the presence of the grace of God is indis- pensably necessary to render us meet for the in- heritance of the saints. It comes and displaces that previous form of unrighteousness which once was our nature. Thus is it true both scripturally and philosophically ; “ Except ye be converted, and “ become as little children, ye cannot inherit the “kingdom of heaven.” As we have borne “ the “image of the earthy,” we must also bear “the “image of the heavenly.” We must be “ ¢rans- “formed” by the renewing of our mind—Christ must be “ formed” in us. II. But the proper and full solution of the lan- guage adopted by Augustine, and after him by the School Divines, in the Doctrines of Grace, is to be found in the refined Materialism of the ancient 1 Baptismus adhibetur hominibus in hac vita, in qua homo potest transmutari de culpa in gratiam: sed descensus Christi ad inferos, exhibitus fuit animabus post hanc vitam, ubi non sunt capaces transmutationis predicte. Et ideo per baptismum pueri liberantur a peccato originali et ab inferno: non autem per descensum Christi ad inferos. Aguin. S. Theol. IlItia P. qu. 111. art. 7. LECTURE IV. 193 theological philosophy of Naure. According to Aristotle, Nature was in itself an instinctive prin- ciple of motion and rest. It was a vast system of distinct powers, ever exerting themselves, and real- izing by this activity the various forms of physical being. But what was it that sustained this activity? what was it that kept Nature in this state of effort— in this restless pursuit of that perfection of being, in which alone it could rest—throughout the various things of the universe? It was the great Principle of Beauty and Goodness—the abstract perfection of the whole Universe—the Chief Good—which ani- mated and moved each member in the system of Na- ture. The great struggle of the whole,—the effort of each particular thing in Nature,—was ; to attain to this ultimate form of beauty and _ perfection. There could be no quiescence in any thing, so long as it had not accomplished its utmost effort, in order to the attainment of this End—this Final Cause, of all its motion. This pure abstraction of Excellence pervaded all things alike—the inanimate as well as the animate—the irrational no less than the rational. All in their measure felt its influence "—the transi- tory things of the world aiming at its immortal excel- lence by successive productions and reproductions of themselves; and the durable, as the heavenly bodies, attaining more perfectly to a perception of the Di- vine Principle, by their invariable and endless re- volutions. In rational Beings, it was the great End m The idea may be traced in the language of Hooker, at the end of the 1st book of the Ecclesiastical Polity. O 194 LECTURE IV. to which all their desires tended, the Active Cause of all their activity,—that gratification which they pursued more or less rightly and fully, as their passions were governed, and their intellect was cul- tivated ;—the real happiness aimed at under all the manifold and capricious disguises of pleasure. Here then was the Divinity of the philosophic system of the Universe. Hence its designation, in the language of Aristotle, as the Fvrst Mover, itself unmoved ;— that which being itself invariable, impassible, eter- nal, acted on, and moved all things, from the great- est to the least. Hence, too, we find the Schoolmen speaking of the Deity, as pure Act—pure Energy —Power, whose development and operation were coinstantaneous with, and inseparable from, its ex- istence. This was a system of Theism, which trembled on the verge of Pantheism—of a system, that is, which sinks individual existence in the vague notion of One instinctive Universal Divine Being. And it was soon, we find, so perverted by the Stoics, and by the Alexandrian School, in which the Pla- tonic doctrine of Ideas assumed this modification. Its ready transition, also, into a system of Fatalism is sufficiently apparent. The connexion of all the motions in the universe with the First Mover, ex- hibits the analogy of a chain of links depending from the Divine Being, in a series of perpetual con- nexion. It becomes a doctrine of Necessity, or Fate, or Destiny, according as the peculiar views of the philosopher impart to it their shade. LEC TURE IV. 195 Theories of this kind, we know, were extremely prevalent at the time when the Pelagian controver- sies were agitated. In the Vth century, indeed, vigorous efforts were made to restore the modern Platonism to its empire in the Church, and in the Schools. The publication at that period of the mystic Treatises of the Pseudo-Dionysius, was an effort of this kind. During this age too, Proclus, the distinguished disciple of the Alexandrian school, presided in the school of Athens. In the VIth century, Simplicius and others were employed in accommodating the theories of Platonism to those of Aristotle, and forming, out of the union, an Eclectic Philosophy, in which the dogmas of Alexandria were the dominant principles. At the same time, Boethius, at Rome, was engaged in the like labour. We see also, at the opening of the VIIth century, the prevalence of a doctrine of mystic connexion between the things of the world and their great pri- mary Cause, in the conjoined Unitarianism and Fatalism of the Mahometan Creed. In the IXth century again, we find the pantheistic philosophy attracting the notice of the Western Church, by the fame of Erigena, the eminent advocate of the Theory in its boldest form. But the adoption of Aristotle’s system of nature, in its more genuine principles, introduced a more express reference to the doctrine of Motion, in the language of the Schools, on the subject of Grace. The material analogies were then fully introduced, as a means of explaining those invisible motions O 2 196 LECTURE IV. which the Spirit of God works on the soul. In this system, neither was the Deity identified with the individual acted on, nor was the individual annihi- lated in the Deity". The distinctness of the divine agent and the human recipient was maintained; in accordance with the Scripture revelation of God, as a sole Being, separate in his nature from the works of his Providence and his Grace. Still the notion of Him as an Energy—as a moving Power—entered into all their explanations of the Divine Influence on the soul. So far they were strictly Aristotelic. But, with this exception, the Platonic notion of a real participation of Deity in the soul of man per- vaded their speculations. Aristotle’s idea of hu- man improvement and happiness was rather, that of a mechanical or material approach to the Divine Principle—an attainment of the Deity as an end of our Being. We see a great deal of this in the scho- lastic designations of the progress of man in virtue and happiness. Plato’s view, on the other hand, was that of assimilation, or association with the Divinity. This notion more easily fell into the expressions of Scripture, which speaks of man as created in the mage of God; of our future state as déke that of the angels of God; and which holds out to us an example of Divine Holiness for our zmitation. n In saying this, | must make an exception with respect to the language of some Scholastic writers: as, for instance, that of Abelard; whose expressions, in his ‘ Introduction to Theo- “logy,” are decidedly pantheistic; identifying the Holy Spirit with the Anima Mundi of the Stoics. LECTURE IV. 197 The pantheistic notion then of a participation of Deity, or an actual Deification of our nature®, is the fundamental idea of the operation of Grace according to the Schoolmen. The Aristotelic idea of motion— of continual progress—of gradual attainment of the complete form of perfection—is the law, by which this operation of Grace is attempted to be explained. Expressions of Scripture also coincided with this view; so far as our state in this world is spoken of, as a going on towards perfection—as a grow- ing in grace; and we are exhorted to be unmove- able, always abounding in the work of the Lord ?. In fact, this system, made up of Platonic and Aris- totelic views, was regarded as sanctioned by the Apostle, in his application of that text of philosophy: “ In him we live, and move, and have our being 4.” The soul, it was conceived, might be transformed by the operation of motives extrinsic to itself; by im- pulses from evil spirits; as also by the Spirit of God: it might assume the “form of godliness,” without ο Aquin. Prima IIde, qu. cx11. art. 1. Donum autem gratie excedit omnem facultatem nature create, cum nihil aliud sit, quam quedam participatio divine nature, que excedit omnem aliam naturam: et ideo impossibile est, quod aliqua creatura gratiam causet. Sic enim necesse est, quod solus Deus deificet, communicando consortium divine nature, per quandam simi- litudinis participationem ; sicut impossibile est, quod aliquid igniat, nisi solus ignis. P 1 Cor. xv. ἑδραῖοι γίνεσθε, dperaxivntror,—agreeably to Aris- totle’s description of the virtuous character, βεβαιῶς, ἀμετακινήτως, ἔχων, one, not to be changed by any disturbing force from its present course. 1 Acts xvii. 28. ἐν αὐτῷ yap S@pev, καὶ κινούμεθα, Kal ἐσμέν. ὋΣ 3 198 LECTURE IV. γ᾽ “the power.” But, when the work of Grace was complete in the soul, the form of godliness was the Energy of power coming down from the Father of lights and Author of all goodness. Accordingly, by the Schoolmen, the natural powers and capacities of men are regarded as the materials on which the Divine Grace operates. The freewill of man, as we shall see hereafter, is not impaired by this supernatural action’. Their idea rather is, that the will of man thus obtains its proper free- dom, is enabled to act freely, unimpeded by those obstacles which the corruption of nature places in its way. Still, the notion throughout, on which they proceed, is that of material impulse, of gradual pro- gress and alteration, from a state of alienation to one of holiness and perfect conformity with God. To turn, however, from these speculations, in themselves, to the view of the Divine Agency, which the study of them brings before us. First, I would observe, the importance of the con- r oTim. iil. 5. ἔχοντες μόρφωσιν εὐσεβείας, τὴν δὲ δύναμιν αὐτῆς ἠρνη- μένοι. The notion of Hnergy may also be perceived in the language of St. Paul; as in Eph. iii. 20. ‘‘ the power that worketh in us”— τὴν δύναμιν τὴν ἐνεργουμένην ev nypiv—Also Eph. i. 11. “* who work- “eth all things after the counsel of his own will’—rod ra πάντα ἐνεργοῦντος κατὰ τὴν βουλὴν τοῦ θελήματος αὑτοῦ. 5.51 bene considerentur que dicta sunt: aperte cognoscitur, quia cum aliquid dicit Sacra Scriptura pro gratia, non amovet omnino liberum arbitrium, neque cum loquitur pro libero arbitrio excludit gratiam, &c. Anselm. De Concord. Grat, et Lib. Arb. Op. tom. iii. p. 278. LECTURE IV. 199 sideration, that the theory of the Divine Predestina- tion, on which our doctrinal statement is founded, is a much more simple one than is commonly supposed. It is not at all concerned with explaining the origin of Evil. It is only a theory of God’s mercy in Christ, deduced from its originating cause in the Being of God. I have already pointed out this. I repeat it now, as it is a view of the subject on which I am desirous of fixing your attention. A theory of Re- probation is, on the other hand, a theory of the origin of Evil; and, so far therefore from being deducible from our doctrinal statements on Predesti- nation and Grace, is the very doctrine to which these statements are opposed: unless we are to suppose that a philosophical theology, in which the framers of our Articles had been trained, had no influence on their minds. But the exact accordance of our Article on Predestination, with what appears the true Scholastic notion of the subject, is, to me, ample evidence, that this notion was the doctrine de- signed. I am not prepared, at the same time, to vindi- cate those statements in their theoretic points, as the proper way in which the Divine Predestination and Grace should be apprehended by the Christian. These are truths, it cannot be too often repeated, which concern more the heart than the intellect; and, in defining which accordingly, every attempt, however exactly and piously worded, must fail ; much more, any theory of them drawn from ante- cedent speculations on the Nature and Will of God. O 4 200 LECTURE IV. To Scholasticism indeed, though the theories of Predestination and Grace, which it taught, are of a less complex form than is commonly supposed, we may trace the origin of those idle questions, with which this department of Theology has been vexed; such as, whether Predestination is certain ; whether there is Assurance of salvation; whether the number of the Elect is fixed *; whether all are pre- destined. These, and similar questions incidental to the general inquiry, have been naturally laid hold of by theologians, following the example of the Doc- tors of the middle age, from whom they received the speculation itself. And this effect shews the evil of any speculation at all on the subject. It only marks out the lines of future disputation. If these truths are to be defined, the only legitimate mode is, the laborious, historical, experimental one, formed on a comprehensive and accurate study, un- der the guidance of that selfsame Spirit, whose ways we are exploring, of every fact of Nature and Scrip- ture, and the collection of these into a general law of the Divine Procedure. But this is the work of a Christian life; it is a process of induction which can only be carried on, where there is a disposition x The different opinions on this point, were: 1. that as many should be saved of men, as had fallen of angels; 2. as many of men, as of angels who had stood in their obedience ; 3. as many of men, as of fallen angels; and besides, as many, as the whole number of angels created. Aquinas refers to these different opinions, and wisely concludes, that the number of the elect, to be placed in supreme happiness, is known to God alone. Sum. Theol. Prima Pars, qu. XXIII. art. 7. LECTURE IV. 201 and an activity, in doing the Divine Will, and obey- ing the Divine Motions. Otherwise we are but tracking the arrow through the air, or the keel of the vessel through pathless waters. But the assertion of them in the theoretic form, as primary truths concerning the Divine Being, can never be free from objection. We have then, as it were, placed in our hands, the great Original Reasons of things—the first definitions, from which all other truths are, of course, conceived to be deducible ; and nothing inconsequent to them can, without the greatest difficulty, be admitted. Whatever we do then concede to the independent perceptions of our reason, it is with a kind of resignation to a mystery that overwhelms the faculties—a resignation, very different from that of the heart bowed down before God. The truths, theoretically stated, are so es- sential to the very zdea of God, that we adopt them immediately, as self-evident axioms; and we expect, in the theology raised upon them, the demonstrative- ness of truths deduced from unquestionable pre- mises. The dominion of a Logical Theology is here, accordingly, particularly to be dreaded. Its delusions are fostered, by the nature of the prin- ciples themselves, on which it is here exercised. Experience has shewn, how ready the minds of men are, even at this day, to treat the question of Divine Agency, as a matter pregnant with consequences, or inferences, rather than as one of simple, moral acqui- escence and obedience. Even the piety of men turns from its own proper task, to minister to the appe- “ 202 LECTURE IV. tite of speculation. The desire to establish the name of God, as first in the thoughts, involves them in paradox on every subordinate subject. Let it then be examined by such persons, whether, little as it may have been thought, they have not been pur- suing the necessity and cogency of logic, in their theological opinions ; whether the notions of Divine Agency, on which they so insist, are not merely the connexions of conclusions and consequences with assumed hypotheses and definitions. With respect then to the doctrines expressive of Divine Agency, I would observe, as I did of those concerning the Trinity, the difficulties belonging to them arise from metaphysical speculations. Here, they are the result of the primary ideas, which the mind combines together in its complex idea of God. Or, it would be more correct, perhaps, to speak of them, as the result of these several ideas in them- selves ;—as of priority, necessity, power, will; all mere abstractions of the mind, and, as such, capable of being discerned in their consequences and contra- dictions; but very fallacious tests of what is con- clusive, or inconclusive, in facts out of the region of the mind itself. The whole philosophy of the Schools on the subject of Divine Agency, let it be remembered, ts founded on an application of pro- cesses in the mind to processes in nature. And our technical language on the subject has been inherited from the Schools. I only wish it then to be con- sidered, whether our difficulties may not be as- LECTURE IV. 203 cribed to our false philosophy more than to our Religion. Could we read the language of the Apostle Paul, on which so much stress is commonly laid, as de- cisive of this question,—without prejudice,—without thinking of the volumes of controversy which have been employed on it, or the arguments that we have heard,—I feel persuaded, that we should draw no speculative doctrines of Divine Predestination and Grace from his Epistles. We should only see the Apostle declaring the same fact, which all Nature and Revelation proclaim; that our God is a “ God *“ very nigh unto us;” whose goodness is as un- changeable as his Being; and who will surely per- fect those counsels of love, in which he gave his Son, from everlasting, for the salvation of man. St. Paul’s references to the Divine Agency are all of this character. They suggest to us thoughts of God, on all occasions of our life, in all difficulties of our temporal and spiritual condition. Are we de- jected and despairing of our spiritual life? ‘ God,” we are assured, “will not forsake his elect, whom He “ς hath foreknown.” He has blessed us; He has mercifully revealed his salvation to us: we have an earnest then, that He, who is unchangeable, has not lightly begun a good work in us, but will most surely accomplish it. ‘“ Why art thou so disquieted, “ἐς my soul?” says the anxious inquirer. ‘“ Hope “thou in the Lord,” is the answer; “ He is thy “helper and defender :” “a very present help in * time of trouble.” Ascribe your salvation to God, 204 LECTURE IV. and you rest on a rock which the rains and the storms shall assail in vain. Are we again proceed- ing on our way cheerfully in the hope of everlasting life? “ Work out your salvation with fear and * trembling, for it is God that worketh in you, both “ [0 will and to do.” Be encouraged to proceed ; for you are armed with a strength not your own, and a work that is of God, cannot come to nought ; and yet “ with fear and trembling ;” for the respon- sibility of a work to which God has set his hand, is an heavy one,—that should make the heart serious amidst its gladness. These are the words, with which one Christian would naturally comfort and encourage another. And such, accordingly, may well be conceived the stress of the Apostle’s asser- tions respecting Grace and Predestination. It is the Charity that “ never faileth,’” which he is in- culcating throughout, where many have errone- ously thought that he was proclaiming the wonders of the Divine knowledge. Banish the scientific no- tion of Predestination and Grace; for nothing can come of it, but the confidence of mere reason, and a false enthusiasm, that fashions the idol before which it prostrates itself. Take up the truths as the Di- vine Law of Love, and you will find in them some- thing more than that fixedness and quiescence, which is sought in the abstractions of Theory; you will find rest and peace to the soul IN JESUS CHRIST. LECTURE V. THE PELAGIAN CONTROVERSIES. JUSTIFICATION. Ἢ δὼ ὁ yA Sauna δὲν ἐδ f ἐπι Ὁ he ‘ Ay δὴ SUMMARY. Trutus of Divine and Human Agency necessarily qualify each other—Human Agency, as viewed in the Scholastic system, the continued action of the First Cause—Justification, the law of Divine Operation in the Salvation of Man—Sketch of the Chris- tian scheme involved in this principle—Theory of Human Agency concerned first in accounting for Resistance to the Di- vine Will—Ditliculty, as felt in ancient philosophy, was to re- concile the fact with the certainty of Science—Schoolmen adopt Aristotle’s practical views of human nature—Application of the term Corruption founded on his physical philosophy—Theory of the Propagation of Sin maintains the universality of the prin- ciple of Corruption—Objections of Pelagius and Celestius to this theory—Error, both of the Orthodox and of the Pelagians, in speculating on the nature of Original Sin—Concupiscence—the application of this term to Original Sin, derived from ancient divisions of the soul— Materialism involved in the Specula- tion.—Doctrine of Original Sin, the counterpart to the doctrine of the Incarnation—Disputes between the orthodox and the Pelagians turn on the force of the terms Nature and Person— Connexion between the heresies of Nestorius and Pelagius— Distinction between the effect of Adam’s sin, and the sin of subsequent parents on their posterity—View of the Christian life, as a change, coincides with this theory of Original Sin— Faith, the zzfused element of the new life—Doctrinal statements of Justification by Faith, to be interpreted by the light of Scholastic notions involved in it—Scholastic Notion of Free- will, not opposed to Necessity, but to the Force of sin, in en- slaving the will—Introduction of the theory of Justice into the Christian Scheme—Notion of Merit to be understood in con- nexion with this theory; as also of Merit of Condignity, Merit of Congruity—Peculiar views of Repentance, as a compensa- tion for offence—of Punishment and Satisfaction, as applied to the Sacrifice of Christ—of Self-Mortification and Supereroga- tion—drawn from this theory of Penal Justice. Inefficacy of Repentance to remove guilt, and need of Atone- ment, illustrated by these speculations—Debasing effect of Scho- lastic theory of Expiation—True view of Human Agency to be found in simple practical belief of the Atonement—Union of Strength and Weakness, implied in this doctrine, coincident with facts of human nature—Mischievous effect of speculative discussion of the subject—Moderation and forbearance of lan- guage on the subject most accordant with the spirit of Pro- testantism. Joun I. 12, 13. But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name: which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. Ὅσοι δὲ ἔλαβον αὐτὸν, ἔδωκεν αὐτοῖς ἐξουσίαν τέκνα Θεοῦ / ral 7. ᾿Ὶ ΝΟ ἊΨ» 3 Co ‘A b) , € γενέσθαι, τοῖς πιστεύουσιν εἰς τὸ ὄνομα αὐτοῦ: ot οὐκ ἐξ aipd- των, οὐδὲ ἐκ θελήματος σαρκὸς, ὀυδὲ ἐκ θελήματος ἀνδρὸς, ἀλλ᾽ a , ἐκ Θεοῦ ἐγεννήθησαν. Quotquot autem receperunt eum, dedit eis potestatem filios Dei fieri, his, qui credunt in nomine ejus, qui non ex sanguinibus, neque ex voluntate carnis, neque ex voluntate viri, sed ex Deo nati sunt. Lat. Vue. LECTURE V. THE consideration of our theological language on the subject of Divine Agency, has tended to shew, that the peculiar technical forms of these doctrines were impressed on them by the ancient Logical Phi- losophy ; from the necessity, as it was supposed, of tracing the series of effects in the conduct of man, to some primary efficient cause, the origin of the motion towards eternal happiness, in the soul of the sinner. I now come to those views of Human Agency, which are contained in the doctrines of Original Sin, Faith, Merit, Repentance, Atonement. And, with respect to these also, I am concerned to point out, both, how they arose out of the established method of Philosophy in the middle age, as ques- tions to be determined, and what are the theories involved in their expression. In a systematic Theology, these two classes of doctrines necessarily qualify each other. The views, either of Divine or of Human Agency, as they are dogmatically stated, involve ideas which in- clude, or exclude, ideas in those of the opposite class. If, for instance, the Divine Predestination is stated strongly, as the everlasting purpose of God, by which the soul of the sinner is freely justified ;—true as the fact is here intended to be described, yet, by inference from this assertion, we destroy the power P 210 LECTURE V. of man in the work of his justification. Or if, on the other hand, the truths of man’s free agency are premised in all their proper force; the abstract state- ment involves the denial of the sole power of God. The perception of such consequences acts on the mind of the framers of Systems of Theology; and, according to the view predominant in their own creed, they place in the foreground the doctrines, from which the notions that they would inculcate may be logically deduced. Such is the nature of all dogmatic statements on these subjects, and which necessarily arises from the speculative force of the terms in which the doctrines are conveyed *. Such, however, was the mode in which the doc- trines, now under our consideration, received their original form. ‘They stand forth, to the view of our speculative reason, with a point and precision given to them by the action of disputation. They excite in us the idea of accuracy of thought, of de- finiteness of conception; and we contemplate them with a fearful suspicion, lest we should err to the right hand, or to the left, in our mode of embracing them. In order, indeed, to the systematic perfection of the Scholastic Theology, it was necessary to adjust the speculative views of the truths of Human Agency, to the previous theories of the Divine. It was essen- tial to this logical method, that they should appear strictly the consequences of the former assumptions. ἃ Note A. Lect. V. LECTURE V. 211 That they were the physical consequences, or natural effects, of the Divine Efficiency, was already ap- parent from the very method of their deduction. We were led up to consider them in God as in their real cause. But when the facts of Divine Agency were expressed in propositions, they were subjected to the test of logical disputation ; and it was neces- sary therefore, to be able to demonstrate the logical connexion of the two classes of propositions, no less than the physical connexion of the two classes of Jacts, respecting Divine and Human Agency. Looking to these two circumstances, we shall see the occasion of the peculiar mode of statement of Original Sin, Faith, Merit, and other doctrines, in which the work of man is contemplated in con- nexion with the work of God; and which, together, constitute the whole Law of the Divine Life of man, characterized by the term Justification. In pursuing the present subject, though we are immediately employed in considering the condition, sentiments, and actions of man, it is Divine Agency, we must observe, that we are tracing throughout: otherwise, we shall lose the real solution of the dogmatic language, on the several points touched in the controversies on which we are now engaged. For such, it should be remembered, is the nature of the Theology which has descended to us, as mem- bers of the Western Church. It is the Science of the Divine Being; in our present subject more parti- cularly, an application of the principles of the Divine P 2 212 LECTURE) ν. Knowledge, to the revealed economy of the world. All that we call human agency, is, in the expression of Scholasticism, the “ Highest Cause,” acting by « secondary” causes. The expression, secondary causes, is familiar to us, but it is strictly Scholastic: it guards the notion of the sole proper agency of God. This notion of the Divine Being was the very essence of Scholasticism—at once its theory and its practice. The Theology of the Schools, as the sub- tile instrument of a Theocratic Power, addressed itself to the study of the principles, by which it could command the elements of social order; to the development of that Primary Energy, which ani- mates and controls the restless course of human operation. Its ambition was, to place the first link of the golden chain, from which the heavens and the earth were hung, in the intellectual grasp of the ruler of the Church; from whom the subject- faithful should devoutly receive the law of action and belief. Whilst therefore those portions of the Pelagian Controversies, on which I am now entering, may, by way of distinction, be classed under the head of Human Agency, and some, perhaps more properly, under the head of Divine Agency in connexion with Human; yet the whole inquiry is a prosecution of the subject of the former Lectures, and more parti- cularly of the last. It is the Divine Energy that we are still employed in investigating,—the operation of that “ Pure Act,” in scholastic phrase, as it works in the actions of man. The Schoolmen, in- LECTURE V. 213 deed, proceeding in regular series, have traced the Divine Energy through the nature and actions of Angelic Beings; and so brought the speculation down to the agency of man. The intelligence and will of angels, and their power of good and evil in the world, are discussed with the same minuteness of speculation, as other parts of their philosophy ; and in strict accordance with the working out of their whole system. Nor is even this part of their system without its interest, in the history of the notions now entertained, on the influence of good and evil spirits, and on the Fall of Man. But the more immediate importance of the views opened, in their speculations concerning Human Agency, calls for the direction of our attention to these exclu- sively, on the present occasion. Justification, then, (for under this general head may be classed all those doctrines which more im- mediately concern the agency of man,) is, in the Scholastic view, the general law, according to which, the Divine Energy operates, or takes effect, in the salvation of man. It is described, by Aquinas, as “ the Effect of Grace Operating.” It is analogous, in the Divine Life of man under the influence of Grace, to the law of Virtue in the natural and moral life of man. And the way in which this appears, is, that we require some supernatural means, in order to that supernatural End, which Christian Ὁ Anselm has a Treatise, De Casu Diaboli, in which he spe- culates concerning the will of the Evil Spirit. P 3 214 LECTURE ν. salvation—the final fruition of God—holds out to our attainment. It is the Divine Goodness indeed, ac- cording to the Scholastic Philosophy, which we in- stinctively aim at, in our natural pursuit of happi- ness; as I lately pointed out. Evidently, however, man, as also all creatures throughout the world, attain to the Divine Goodness naturally, only so far as their constitution admits. The tree cannot reach a stature, or a beauty of foliage, for which there is no provision in its nature. Nor can the moral agent exceed the bounds, which have been assigned to his capacities in adaptation to his pre- sent state. But everlasting happiness, consisting in the enjoyment of the immediate presence of God, is a thing entirely disproportioned to our present fa- culties and capacities. No natural law of adjust- ment of our internal powers can suffice for this transcendant object. Supposing our present capa- cities enlarged and improved, by discipline and cul- tivation, to their utmost perfection, we must still conceive them deficient, when we look to the im- mensity of the object for which they are destined. It is plain, therefore, that mere moral cultivation is not the whole law, by which the eternal perfection of man’s nature is to be attained. Some other principle must be concerned in bringing about the result. There can be no rule of intrinsic propriety or fitness here. It must be a gifted righteousness, by which we tend towards such a perfection of being. Justification, accordingly, is the general law, as I LECTURE V. 215 have said, by which the Divine Energy developes itself in the human agent. It comprehensively de- notes the effect of grace in its whole process; as it regenerates, sanctifies, and glorifies the soul of man. The same process, indeed, may, as I have before observed, be called Sanctification; as referred im- mediately to the Holy Spirit dwelling in the heart of the faithful. But the term Sanctification does not express the moral agency, in the nature of man, by which the Final End is attained. And this seems to be the reason, why the Schoolmen have been so diffuse on the idea of Justification; and why Sanc- tification has remained, more a word of piety and feeling, than a technical term of Theology. It is then, in the Analysis of Justification, that we must explore the principles of Human Agency, re- cognized in the philosophical theology of the schools. The divergency of the law of Divine Agency into the several principles of the Human Constitution, as they were understood and reasoned upon in the phi- losophy of the times, will disclose to us the views of the Schoolmen on the questions of Human Agency ; and account for many expressions on the subject in our systematic theology. Taking then the Scripture facts: that mankind is in a fallen, degraded state; that this state is not an accidental one, attributable to any particular ge- neration of men, or period of the world, but that it be- gan with the beginning of our race; that it is a state Ρ 4 216 LECTURE V. of moral disorder, offensive to God, and excluding from his favour; that we are therefore in a state of danger, as well as of incapacity of happiness; that, however, God has interposed, in mercy, to save us from this danger, and retrieve this incapacity, by giving his Son Jesus Christ to die for us, whose death is our death unto sin, and his resurrection our resurrection to holiness and life everlasting; that Repentance and Faith are the great means, by which the benefits of his Passion are brought home to those to whom they are revealed; that much ac- cordingly is left to us to do, amidst all our natural weakness and helplessness ;—taking, I say, these facts, as a general account of what the Scripture includes under Justification, let us examine into the action of the Scholastic Philosophy on the doctrines raised on them. The difficulty which meets the speculator on Human Agency, in its connexion with the Divine, in the first instance, is, to account for the principle of Resistance to the Will of God, which the facts exhibit. It is not simply a Theory of the Origin of Evil that is here required. This inquiry is satis- fied to a certain point, in the Christian scheme of Salvation; so far as it ascribes the first act of sin, and the actual sins of all men, to the instrumentality of the Evil Spirit®. This circumstance answers the ¢ Deus est universale principium omnis interioris motus hu- mani: sed quod determinetur ad malum consilium voluntas humana, hoc directe quidem est ex voluntate humana, et dia- LECTURE V. 217 question, how sin and death came into the world. But it leaves unexplained the fact, that the will of man does not invariably fulfil the Will of God ; that, instead of tending naturally towards that good which God designs in his creation, it has a dispo- sition and bent towards evil. In the account of this fact must lie the proper, effictent cause of that evil, which has ensued, and ensues, from the temptations of wicked spirits. These temptations only present an occasion of falling. The cause, or motive prin- ciple, of the disorder and misery of the world, must be traced to the will of man himself. The root of the difficulty was, that it seemed im- possible to conceive any Will whatever, as inclined to evil. It was essential to the very nature of Will, according to the established philosophical opinion, as I stated in my last Lecture, that the object of Will should be good; and, according to the theo- logical philosophy, that this object should be ex- clusively the Divine Goodness. - Whilst a difficulty of this kind could not escape the penetrating research of the ancient philosophers, the difficulty to them arose principally from their abstract notions of Science, rather than from ethical theory. It was the immutability of Science, which they were anxious to maintain. ‘They could not conceive any force in the mind, capable of counter- bolo, per modum persuadentis, vel appetibilia proponentis. Aquin. S. Theol. Prima IIde, qu. uxxx. art. 1.—Sap. 2. Invidia diaboli mors intravit in orbem terrarum, is frequently quoted to this purport. 218 LECTURE V. acting that of first, fixed principles. They were anxious to reduce morality to a theoretic precision. But the observed discrepance between the specula- tive and practical conclusions of men, shook their fundamental positions respecting the certainty and imperiousness of Science. Socrates, accordingly, at once denied the fact, that Evil was voluntarily chosen in any case. Aristotle, however, with a more practical wisdom, took the fact as he found it; con- tenting himself with an analysis of it into the gene- ral laws of our nature involved in it;—the existence of propensities, neutral in themselves, but suscepti- ble of good or evil; and varying, according to their exercise, in combination with the rational principle ; so that inordinate, disproportionate indulgence of them, had the power of deteriorating the moral na- ture, and depraving the Will. Whence, he drew his outlines of Virtue from a theoretic state of man; from that superinduced constitution of our internal nature, in which all the propensities were conceived, in perfect adjustment to the real value of their ob- jects; and thus coincident with the principle of Reason; when the Will that is, was firmly and in- variably towards good. The Scriptures gave the Christian Philosopher a clue to the interpretation of this fact, so far as they gave a history of the first transgression, and de- clared its perpetuity and universality in the world. But they gave no particular account of the mode, in which the moral disorder of the world was pro- duced, or of what had rendered it inveterate in the LECTURE V. 219 race of man. They only so far gave the material of future speculation on the subject, as they asserted, that man came perfect from the hands of the Crea- tor, being formed in the Divine Image; and that his iniquity was a subsequent, acquired condition of being. The Schoolmen set themselves to explain both the origin and the perpetuity of the evil; adapting to this purpose the physical and ethical theories of Aristotle. The perfect man of the philosophers’ theory, be- came, in their system, man as originally created in his physical and moral integrity of being: when all the internal principles were in their due proportions to each other, and to the final cause, or End, of the whole, the Divine Goodness. Man, as he is seen in the world, was man in a state of deficiency, or of privation of original righteousness, or justice; of that state, namely, in which all the principles were in their due subordination to God; or, to state it more in the phraseology of the Schools, rightly or- dered towards the Supreme Good. The adoption of this view of Human Nature by the Schools, is the point which immediately calls for our notice, as it explains the word Corruption, in its application to the evil of our moral condition. It is a term of ancient philosophy, denoting the dis- solution of the internal nature of a thing—the un- doing of its actual constitution—not the annihi- lation of a nature, as we are apt to suppose. It is 220 LECTURE V. opposed to Generation, or Production, signifying, that man, as he is evil, is not the work of God, but is unmade, as it were, in what he had been made by God; that he has lost that proper,form, in which he had his being in the intellect and will of God‘. We could not, for instance, apply the word to the noxious disposition of a brute-animal, since there is no de- struction of principle in this case®. The violence of the brute is part of its original constitution, of the form of its being. It only applies to the circum- stances of a creature, in which a different nature has existed, and has undergone alteration, or become degenerate. It is, in itself, no account of an evil, more than of a good disposition. It is simply the transition into another nature or form: and it only obtains a bad sense from the theological notion, that what has passed from that form in which it came from the Creator, must have lost in excellence and worth. In its general use, however, in the ancient physics, it may denote the transition into a nobler nature, as well as into an inferior; as into the form of the tree from the corruption of the seed '. Original Sin, accordingly, is always defined by the Schoolmen in negative terms, as a want of ori- 4 Corrupta, id est, amittentia formam suam.—Aquinas, Sum. Theol. Prima IIde, qu. cxix. art. 1. € Aristot. Ethic. vii. et alib. f St. Paul’s words in 1 Cor. xv. 36. are clearly founded on this philosophical notion: only, to give a rhetorical point to his argument, he substitutes the word ἀποθάνη, instead of that pro- perly expressing corruption. LECTURE V. 221 ginal justice, carentia justitie originalis ; or an in- ordinateness of the desires; or, as in our IXth arti- cle, a fault, and depravation of nature, vitiwm ac de- pravatio nature. The last, indeed, is the most truly technical description of it; expressing, accurately, the peculiarity of the theory, on which the doctrinal statement of Original Sin has been founded. This theory of the Evil of the world involved also other theories of the same Logical Philosophy. The universality of the principle was to be demon- strated. How could it apply, it would be argued, to the case of the infant soul, snatched out of the ac- tual pollutions of the world, as the tender lamb of his flock taken up by the shepherd into his own bosom ? The theorist, not content with referring to the Redeemer’s love, as the simple earnest of the blessedness of the little innocent, sought how to con- nect this fact with the universal need of redemption. It was to be brought, therefore, under the theory of Original Sin. This occasioned the introduction of the term Propagation into the account of the origin of evil. If the corruption of nature descended by * propagation,” then would it exist even in the guileless infant. And the theory, as thus stated, would be the logical correspondent to the doctrine of Grace. If on the one hand all were under Grace ; if it was God that worked all in all; on the other hand all would be concluded under Sin. An uni- versal cause, identical in all instances, would be ex- hibited on each side; a principle of Life and a prin- 222 LECTURE V. ciple of Death, acting invariably, and communicating their nature to the multitude of individuals®. The Pelagians, however, were not satisfied with this account of the matter. Admitting that evil ex- isted in the world, and that the transgression of Adam had been injurious to his posterity ; they still denied its transmission, in the way of an hereditary taint. Pelagius believed, as fully as his opponents, that mankind were in a worse state, in conse- quence of the first sin; but, looking to the moral nature of man, and finding that neither praise nor blame was given for what we are by nature, but for what we do, he held, that, as virtue was not born with us, so neither was vice". He contended, ac- cordingly, for a moral influence of the prevarication of Adam on his posterity; that the first sin was hurtful to the human race; not by propagation, but by example ; non propagine, sed exemplo ; not be- cause they who were propagated from him, drew from him any vice, any fault; but because all that have afterwards sinned, have zmztated him, the first £ Concedat Jesum etiam parvulis esse Jesum, et, ut per eum facta omnia fatetur, per id quod est verbum Deus, ita etiam parvulos ab eo salvos fieri fateatur, per id quod est Jesus, si vult esse ca- tholicus Christianus. Sic enim scriptum est in evangelio: “Εἰ “ vocabunt nomen ejus Jesum; Ipse enim salvum faciet popu- “‘ lum suum:” in quo populo sunt utique et parvuli. Salvum autem faciet a peccatis eorum. Sunt ergo et in parvulis pec- cata originalia, propter que Jesus, i. e. Salvator, possit esse et ipsorum.—Augustin. De Nupt. et Concup, lib. II. ad fin. h Apud August. De Peccat. Orig. lib. 11. p. 217. LECTURE V. 223 sinner!: and that infants were not in the same state as Adam before transgression; because he was capa- ble of obeying a precept, whilst they had not, as yet, the exercise of free-will. Celestius, in like manner, rested the corruption of our nature on moral grounds; arguing that sin was not born in us, but was the fault of the Will‘. Only he went further than his master, in refusing to anathematize those, who said, that the sin of Adam was hurtful to himself alone ; and in asserting, still more expressly, that no infant was under the obligation of original sin. Though the language of the Pelagians did not adequately express the inveteracy of that sinfulness of human nature, which Scripture and the world de- clare with one voice; we must allow, I think, that their grounds were right, so far as they attempted to give a moral account of the fact ; and that their oppo- nents were wrong, so far as they attempted to give a physical or material account of it. The notion of Augustine, indeed, corresponded with the Platonic notion of good and evil, as abstract, a prior? grounds i Pelagius may have been led to this mode of expression by a study of ancient philosophy. We may perceive something like the contrast between the Pythagorean μιμήσις and the Platonic μεθέξις in the opposing theories. The orthodox account for the universality of evil by “ participation” of the common nature ; the Pelagians, on the principle of ““ similitude,” or imitation. k Omne malum quod peccatum definitur, asseritis, non in natura, sed in sola voluntate consistere, &c. Augustin. Contr. Julian. lib. III. p. 323.—Quia non nature delictum, sed volun- tatis esse demonstratur. Celestius, ap. August. de Pec. Orig. II. p- 256. tom. VII. 224 LECTURE ν. of right and wrong in human conduct; as what constituted, by the participation of them in each in- stance, the actual good and evil of the world. The notion of the Pelagians was in accordance with that of Aristotle; who held, that we were endued with capacities of virtue and vice, but that virtue and vice, moral good and moral evil, were only the re- sults of acting, of exercising those capacities well or ill. Their theory of human sinfulness sufficiently accounted for the actual sins of men. It shewed how our nature might be depraved or improved ; that its actual depravation consisted in transgres- sions, like those of the First Parent; but it left unexplained the fendency to sin existing in human nature; a fact evidenced in the difficulty of re- sistance to temptation; in the self-denial which right conduct exacts ;—“ the law warring in the ** members,” as the Scripture calls it. The follow- ing evil example, the assimilating of ourselves to the first transgressor, is only one mode by which this evil tendency finds its way into our conduct, and betrays itself. In itself it is something beyond, and more intimate with our feelings. It had been well, if the orthodox had contented themselves with the name of Original Sin, to designate this moral fact ; and whilst they disclaimed the Pelagian theory of Example, or Imitation, as inadequate to the solu- tion of the fact, themselves abstained from speculat- ing concerning it. But disputation called upon them to define and pronounce. They thus essayed, what neither Scripture had authorized, nor human reason LECTURE V. 295 could reach :—to explain the mode of human cor- ruption; to analyze, by language, the thing denoted by the term Original Sin, when the only subject before them was a general fact, requiring to be simply and clearly stated. The positive manner, in which Augustine declares the transmission of the material element of. corrup- tion from Adam to the whole race of mankind, laid the groundwork of the scholastic discussions on the subject. The idea that prevails throughout these, is, of a positive deterioration of the carnal nature— that, which, according to ancient philosophy, was the seat of the “ affections and lusts,’—the “ con- “4 cupiscible part of the soul.” This part of the soul was considered as intermediate to the material and the purely intellectual; and as inseparable from matter; whilst the intellect alone was the immortal spiritual principle. In the language of ancient phi- losophy, it was spoken of, as at variance with the intellect; in a state of disobedience and faction against the authority of the higher part of our na- ture; as the corruptible principle, that weighed down and impeded the immortal intellect. It was also conceived to be that part of the soul, in which the weakness of man—his want of self-command— is exhibited; and in which were to be explored all those facts, which declare the inconstancy and mutability of human will!. This principle, then, 1 Aristot. Eth. vu. Q 226 LECTURE V. in the constitution of our nature, presented a basis for the physical speculations of the Schools, con- cerning the corruption of man. We may trace this connexion of ideas in the word “ passion ;” which, though properly equivalent to “ affection,” or “ feeling,” has acquired, in modern ideas, the sense ’ of an “ evil affection;” evidently derived from the practice of considering our nature as having its evil resident in the affections™. The expressions of St. Paul, conveying his ideas of the actual depravity of man, in terms of the established philosophy of human nature, were eagerly laid hold of, as confirming this theory of the seat of human frailty. His denoting our corruption, as “ the flesh lusting against the “ spirit, and the spirit against the flesh,” corresponds with the struggle, conceived by the philosopher be- tween the antagonist principles of our nature; and implies also the intimate connexion of the affections with the flesh ™. It was stated, accordingly, that the flesh, the con- cupiscible part of our nature, was vitiated by the m Passio, in lingua Latina, maxime usu loquendi Ecclesiastico, non nisi ad vituperationem consuevit intelligi. Augustin. De Nupt. et Concup. lib. II. E. p. 280. tom. VII. Passiones irascibilis ad passiones concupiscibilis reducuntur, sicut ad principaliores, inter quas concupiscentia vehementius movet, et magis sentitur, ut supra habitum est. Et ideo concupis- centia attribuitur tanquam principaliori, et in qua quodammodo omnes alie passiones includuntur. Aquinas, S. Theol. Prima IIde, qu. Lxxx11. art. 3. in discussing the question, Utrum origi- nale peccatum sit concupiscentia ? n They are λόγοι ἔνυλοι, ““ principles inhering in matter,” ac- cording to Aristotle. De Anima, lib. I. c. 1. LECTURE’ V. 227 sin of the first man; the soul itself not being con- taminated, as being distinct from the fleshly prin- ciple. A deep wound was inflicted, it was said, by the malice of the Devil: the material idea still, we may perceive, running through the description: that wound, being sin, was fatal to our very life. By this sin, our nature being changed for the worse, not only became sinful, but even propagated sin- ners. The evil, indeed, was not a substance in it- self; to assert this, would have been Manicheism ; it was a vitiation of the original flesh, transmitted like hereditary diseases which shew themselves in the body °. It was remitted in baptism to each indivi- dual; the condemnation was removed, by the re- mission of sins, through Christ, obtained in that sacrament. But the evil in itself—the Concupis- cence? in which it existed—still remained in the material nature derived from Adam, and sustained its noxious vitality in the successive generations of men 4, © August. De Nupt. et Concup. lib. II. H. p. 279. tom. VII. P The Schoolmen differ as to the point whether Original Sin is Concupiscence, or simply the Privation of original justice. See the disputes between the Dominicans and Franciscans at the Council of Trent. Fra Paolo’s History, translated by Courayer, lib. IL. p. 273.—I take on this point, as on every other concerned in the present inquiry, what appears to me the pre- valent view,—tbe notion which runs through the system; though the particular definitions of it may differ. q Aristotle was aware of the fact, that the nature of man is subject to hereditary influences; as he remarks, that children appear to derive something from their parents, [ἀπολαύοντα,] in his Politics, lib. VII. c. 16; but he has not speculated about it. Q 2 228 LECTURE V. Our Church, happily, has avoided that extreme dogmatism on the subject, which the scholastic phi- losophy instances; and which some of her own mem- bers would elicit from her language. We find, indeed, the terms of the schools adopted in the Article on Ori- ginal Sin, and a train of thought on the subject follow- ing their speculations. But, in speaking of Original Sin, it does not expressly assert its descent in the way of propagation; it affirms only the general law under which all sons of Adam are born into the world. It does not, in fact, define the nature of the thing, though it appears to do so in terms: it only lays down its effects, their depth, and their universal extent. It is impossible, at the same time, to deny, that its lan- guage on the subject bears the impress of the scho- lastic theories. And those expositors of her doc- trine, who would draw from this article a sentence of what is called the “ total corruption” of our na- ture, appear to me to take an improper advantage of those theoretic expressions". They are, probably, not aware, that they are carrying back the doctrine of the Church into the realism of the scholastic phi- losophy. For what else is the description of a total corruption, but a material theory of the nature so r The strength of the expressions (quam prowxime, and “ very ** far gone’) is to be estimated, by their opposition to that tran- scendant holiness, which human nature may be conceived to possess, whilst as yet instinct with original righteousness, and the perfect image of Divine goodness, Compare the fallen con- dition of man with the scholastic notion of his first state; and no words can be strong enough, to tell the depth to which he has fallen. LECTURE V. 229 corrupted, as of a mass which has undergone a dis- solution and internal alteration, so as to be no longer, in any respect, what it was? though even under this point of view, the modern speculator has ex- ceeded the philosophical basis of his doctrine, in making the prevation total, which the Schools speak of as only partial’. The Schoolmen, however, have not hesitated to speak expressly on the subject in terms of Ma- terialism. They describe the corruption of our nature as the material cause of sin. They speak of all men being 7x the first man: and explain it by saying, that, whatever is in human bodies, existed * materially and in the way of causation,” in the first man. For Adam, according to Peter Lombard, transmitted a portion of his substance to his de- scendants, which has continued the same, only being augmented in bulk by food, without receiving any external addition ; and being continued downwards from him by successive multiplications of itself *. 5. Note A. Lect. V. t Quibus responderi potest, quod materialiter atque causali- ter, non formaliter, dicitur fuisse in primo homine, omne quod in humanis corporibus naturaliter est, descenditque a primo pa- rente lege propagationis, et in se auctum et multiplicatum est, nulla exteriori substantia in id transeunte; et ipsum in futuro resurget. Fomentum quidem habet a cibis, sed non conver- tuntur cibi in humanam substantiam, que scilicet per propaga- tionem descendit ab Adam. Transmisit enim Adam modicum quid de substantia sua in corpora filiorum, quando eos procre- avit; id est, aliquid modicum de massa substantie ejus divisum est, et inde formatum corpus filii, suique multiplicatione, sine rei extrinsece adjectione, auctum est: et de illo ita augmentato Q 3 230 LECTURE V. The identity of the sinful principle was thus strictly maintained by them, in the sense of an original, invariable matter, reproduced under the infinite variety of individual forms in which it was con- tained. This notion, partly physical and partly logical, is the application of Aristotle’s principles of Matter, Form, and Privation. It proceeds on the assumption, that there is some common Nature in all things that we designate material; and that this common nature is only diversified externally by the various forms with which it is invested. It continues in all things, under all their transmutations or transitions, sus- ceptible of every modification which the perpetual flux of sensible things superinduces. Hence, evi- dently, the immortality and invariableness of the principle of corruption; the poison wears not out; the tyrant never dies; for it bears a charmed exist- ence; amidst the fluctuations and revolutions of generations, it preserves its sullen stability and vigour. It is probable then that Pelagius and Celestius intended only to oppose this material theory; and to explain the fact of Human Sinfulness, as I have said, on moral grounds. In the fact itself, as appears, they did not differ from the orthodox: so aliquid inde separatur, unde formantur posterorum corpora: et ita progreditur procreationis ordo lege propagationis, usque ad finem humani generis. Itaque diligenter ac perspicue intelli- gentibus patet, omnes secundum corpora in Adam fuisse per seminalem rationem, et ex eo descendisse propagationis lege, Pet. Lombard. Sentent. lib, II. dist. 30. LECTURE V. 231 far that they were acquitted of heresy, both at Rome and at Jerusalem. But the acute logic of the African divines traced their explanations to the consequences; and their influence was interposed to maintain the uniformity of doctrine in the Church. To form a right conception of the doctrine of Original Sin, we should view it together with the doctrine of the Incarnation, which is its exact coun- terpart. In the theory of the Incarnation, our Lord is described as assuming to his Divinity, not any human being in particular, but manhood, human nature itself. He was made “ man of the substance “of his mother ;” yet without sin,—without the cor- ruption derived to all other sons of Adam, not con- ceived, as He was, by the immediate operation of the Holy Spirit. Much subtile disquisition was em- ployed to shew, how the nature, which He inherited from Adam, was not corrupted ; but such as it ex- isted before the transgression of Adam. The will therefore, it was argued—the principle of motion— in him was perfectly just and good. It was in his power, accordingly, to generate others like himself ; as it was, in the corrupt will of Adam, to generate others in the likeness of his corruption. To this purport were interpreted the words, being “ born in “ Christ,” being “ born of God.” In each case ac- cordingly, both in the benefits of the Incarnation and the Evils of the Fall, all men were collectively regarded as one man; and the blessing and the curse descended, by vital communication, with the heads Q 4 232 LECTURE V. of the race: realism representing each Christian as having a proper physical identity, in the unregenerate state, with Adam; in the regenerate, with Christ, Such undoubtedly was the Scholastic notion funda- mentally, both of the effects of the Fall, and of the Incarnation. This view exactly aceords with the Theory of Grace, which I before stated. It was the Will of God, bringing those, whom He had chosen in Christ, to Himself. This blessed effect took place, when, by the process of justification, the sinner was incorporated into the body of Christ, and made one with Christ. The disputes indeed between the Pelagians and the Orthodox, when traced to their real origin, were disputes as to the force and propriety of the terms Nature and Person, in their application to moral facts. The ostensible difference was concerning Grace; to what periods of the Christian progress in justification, the description of the operation of Grace was appropriate. The Pelagians did not deny that Grace was necessary to the Christian life: at what time the Divine Operation properly as- sumed the name of Grace, was the principal ques- tion with them. But, if we examine the disputa- tions themselves, they turn upon the point, whether Sin is a quality of nature, or an accident of per- sons. The Pelagian account, however, of human depravity, clearly did not correspond with the doc- trine of Grace connected with the Incarnation. The Pelagians, therefore, were regarded as denying that LECTURE V. 233 grace with which their theory of corruption did not logically correspond. Both Pelagius and Celestius disclaimed the imputation; but the logical conse- quence was sufficient for a conviction of heresy. The orthodox, on the other hand, clung to the term Na- ture, as indispensable to the theory of Grace. They confessed, indeed, that sin originated in the will of man: for, to have denied this, would have been to shake their whole theory of Divine Agency. But, in order to secure, as it were, a raft on which the noxious contagion might float down the stream of human generation, they insisted on the term Nature as the only proper designation of the moral fact". It is the same philosophy which has occasioned the distinction of Sin into Original and Actual: the term Actual expressing the personal develop- ment of that sin, which is conceived antecedently to exist in the common nature of all men, and in each individual, consequently, as participating that com- mon nature. The apparent connexion of the heresies of Nes- torius and Pelagius further illustrates this point. We find at the same Council of Ephesus, at which Nestorius was condemned, Pelagianism also attract- ing notice*. There was an evident correspondence between the two heresies in this respect; that they were both disputes about the notions attached to the Terms Nature and Person. Nestorius, in denying u See Anselm. De Conc. Virg. et Pec. Orig.—Note Β, x Note C. 234 LECTURE V. that the Virgin Mary was the mother of God’, and thus separating the personality of Christ as man, from his personality as God, gave ground for the supposition, that Christians were not born of God— made one with the Father and the Son—in that intimate sense which the orthodox doctrine implied. Nestorius, however, appears to have differed from the orthodox principally in this; that he viewed dis- tinctions, which the orthodox regarded as different Natures, under the notion of different Persons. Pelagius, on the other hand, making Original Sin a matter of personal distinction, abandoned that wnzty of nature, in which the invariableness of Human Corruption was conceived to consist. We may further see the importance of the dis- tinction between Nature and Person, in regard to the doctrine of Original Sin, in the Scholastic explana- tion of the reason, why the /vrst Sin only trans- mitted its effects to the posterity of Adam; why subsequent sins, or even those of a man’s immediate Parents, are not equally injurious in their conse- quences. It was contended, in answer to such ques- tions, that it was only the nature of the species, and not the individual peculiarities, that could be transmitted from generation to generation. The first sin of Adam deprived human nature of its ori- ginal justice,—altered its natural constitution ;—but not so the subsequent sins either of Adam or of y To state it more correctly, he objected to the word θεοτόκος, Deipara, as applied to Christ. LECTURE V. 235 others: these were merely personal; did not alter the general nature once corrupted ”. It was a consequence of this notion of Original Sin, that the elements of the Christian Life should be, in the strictest sense, a change, a transformation, a renewal. It was necessary that we should be “born “again.” To counteract that living death within us, a new life from God must be imparted. Hence that view of Faith, in the scholastic system, as an “ Infused principle.” “As in Adam all die, so in “‘ Christ shall all be made alive.” All were corrupted in the flesh by Adam’s transgression; all must be quickened by the righteousness of Christ. If we regard this reasoning as a description of conjoined events in each case, it is undoubtedly scripturally just. The connexion of the universal ruin of man— whatever may be the nature of that ruin—with the sin of the first transgressor; and the connexion of universal salvation—whatever may be the nature of that salvation—with the righteousness of Christ; are facts, which the word of truth has inseparably bound together. The logical deduction, however, of one from the other, is what I am now pointing out. The state of man, under Original Sin, being that of a Privation, he was without that perfect consti- tution of his nature, in which all his principles were, in proportion to each other, and rightly ordered to the final end of them all—the Divine Goodness. This * Aquinas, S. Theol. Prima IIde. qu. Lxxx. art. 1 and 2: —Note Ὁ. 236 LECTURE V. inherent evil must be remedied by the presence of some effectual antidote. Scripture fully revealed that antidote in the perfect righteousness of the Son of God. But, how to apply that righteousness to the individual sinner—how to exhibit its power of transforming and renewing the fallen nature of man —was the question. Here, too, Scripture provided an answer to the real difficulty. It has told us, that, “ by grace ye are saved through faith, and that not “of yourselves; it is the gift of God:” that those who “ believe, and are baptized, shall be saved.” Faith, then, as emanating from the grace of God, and having for its principal object the righteousness of Christ, is the new principle of life in man. Bap- tism indeed is requisite as the “sacrament of faith,” —as the mystical act of the new birth; at once the visible and spiritual incorporation with Christ. But Faith must first come down from above to the soul, and furn it towards God. It is the principle by which the Life and Immortality of the second Adam are generated in the soul. It is the grace of Christ, by which, antecedently to any acts of the Chris- tian life, a spiritual power is given to the soul, and the heir of corruption becomes the child of God 7. It is important to observe accurately this physical notion of Faith, as an infused principle, the orzgin of a new life; because it serves to account for that z Gratia Christi traducitur in omnes qui ab eo spiritualiter generantur per fidem et baptismum. Aquin. S. Theol. Prima IIde, qu. Lxxx1. art. 3. LECTURE V. 237 priority, which is ascribed in such strong terms, in our Articles, to Faith, among the acts of the Chris- tian life. On this view of the case, it appears as inconsequent and absurd to suppose, that any Chris- tian works can be performed without Faith; as to suppose that the natural actions of life can be per- formed before the principle of life exists in us. “Whatever is not of faith” is then literally “ of sin.” It proceeds from that nature in which the seed of corruption exists with unchecked influence—from * the natural man,” which has already displeased God in our first parent, and cannot please God under any modification, but in itself must deserve the wrath of God. Even works that might be called good, as they result from Nature, have then the nature of sin, peccati rationem habent,—belong to that unregenerate principle which is called Sin,—and come into the estimate of our natural disability to please God. Scripture, indeed, asserts the difficulty, the folly, the sinfulness of any endeavour to work out our own salvation on our own strength; and therefore lays such stress on the principle which sends us to the altar of the Cross. But not em- ploying definitions in its delivery of divine truth, it avoids that paradoxical air, which appears in all systematical developments of the nature of Faith. There is one passage, in which it seems to give a logical account of Faith, in the Epistle to the Hebrews; where Faith is described, as “ the sub- * stance (hypostasis) of things hoped, the evidence “ς (elenchus) of things not seen.” But even here, 238 LECTURE V. when the Apostle is speaking in the terms of a logical philosophy, it is not speculative truth that he is engaged in treating, but practical. He is giving that idea of Faith, which may excite in his brethren a principle of conduct, exceeding the narrow range of present things, and expanding itself to those nobler views opened by a revealed hope to the Chris- tian eye. Some judgment may be formed, from these con- siderations, to what extent the difficulties attending the notion of Faith, and of Works done before Justi- fication, may be attributed to the abstract theories preserved in the technical language of Theology. And I would draw attention to those theories, there- fore, as solutions of the difficulties; and as among the illustrations of the important fact, that there exist perplexities in Theology, which do not involve real scriptural difficulties : there arising necessarily a stiffness and positiveness of doctrine, from the very nature of systematic statements. What strivings, indeed, and heart-burnings would have been saved to the Christian world, had the proper negative notion of Faith been strictly guarded: had Faith been cherished in the heart, simply, as the heaven-sent keeper of God’s own sanctuary there, to drive away the proud imaginations of the worldly spirit, and to still the anxieties of the contrite, self- despairing soul. In this sense, Justification by Faith only is the sum of Christianity. View the truth in this broad historical form ; and then, to add to the assertion of it, the necessity of conditions, is LECTURE V. 239 to counteract the proper efficacy of Jesus Christ. But, throw the great Christian Fact into the form of a dogma, and it is immediately acted on by the philosophy of language. It becomes matter of in- quiry, what Justification 15, what Faith zs; and dis- tinctions are introduced, to obviate consequences from this or that statement. Hence too, the importunate comparison between Faith and Works, as to their relative importance ἃ. Faith, being regarded as the infused principle of a new life, does not supersede the natural faculties of man, nor does it destroy the inborn principle of corruption. The infection of evil is in the flesh, and there, as the School Divines explicitly assert, it remains, even in the regenerate. The divine seed is in the higher spiritual part of our nature, and is a new power by which the subjugation of the cor- rupt passions of the inferior part, the lusts of the flesh, is gradually accomplished. By faith in Christ, through baptism, being born of God, we need still to grow in that life, to proceed from our state as babes in Christ, to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ. It is by this procedure, through the continued assistances of grace, that, as we become stronger in the Lord, the offending Adam within us becomes weaker; our holiness and our security a From the scholastic distinction between Implicit and Ex- plicit Faith, we may trace the ,assertion, that the “ Fathers * looked not for transitory promises,” &c. The invariableness and sameness of the object of Faith was thus maintained. 240 LECTURE V. increasing together. So far then from man’s free- will being impaired, by the divine life thus growing within us, under the blessing of Him who first gave it, our freewill is in reality established. Our con- dition, antecedently to these influences, is one of slavery; we are sold under sin—in bondage to the lusts of the flesh: we could not then do what we would, and we did what we would not. But having received the new creation in Christ, we commence the mastery of the rebellious passions; and so long as the spiritual life is cherished within us, our power daily increases. This then is the scholastic notion of free-will. It means a liberty from compulsion, as distinct from a liberty from necessity’. When the Schoolmen assert, in the language of our Article, that we have no power without the grace of God preventing us, that we may have a will, and working with us when we have that will; they mean that we cannot be said to be free to will or to do what we design, so long as we are in the mere state of sons of Adam; that our real power is that command of the passions in obedience to the will of God, which the new life of Faith brings with it. Thus the responsibility of man, instead of being lessened by the consideration of the Divine Influence on his soul, is, in fact, in- creased ; agreeably to the scripture-declaration that, “to whom much is given, of him much will be re- “quired.” In the state of nature, we are powerless Ὁ Libertas a coactione, and libertas a necessitate.—Note E. LECTURE V. 241 against the assaults of temptation—under grace the means of victory are placed in our hands. It appears, that our Article on Free-will is framed with the same view; to declare, I mean, that our proper responsibility, as Christians, commences at the time of our receiving divine assistance. We are apt to suppose, that free-will consists in the circumstance of originating our own purposes ; in not being ac- tuated by any thing extrinsic to ourselves. This, at least, is not the accurate theological sense of the term. It is here the actual power, viewed in itself, at the moment of exertion; the power shewn in doing what we wish, or of doing otherwise, what- ever may have been the inducements to this or that mode of action previously. And this power, evi- dently, is increased, by whatever removes obstacles, by whatever strengthens the reason, and enforces the dictates of conscience. In carrying on our estimate of the effect of the Scholastic Philosophy on the scheme of human agency, involved in our theological language, we should bear in mind the view of human responsi- bility, which is given under the analogies of Scrip- ture. We are described, as subjects owing certain duties of allegiance to a king,—as soldiers enlisted under the Captain of Salvation,—as servants having certain services to perform for a master,—as_ la- bourers having certain works to execute for an em- ployer. By these several analogies does the Gospel strikingly depict to us the condition, under which R 242 LECTURE V. we are placed in the world. The principle through- out is, that our thoughts, our actions, our works, are dues that we owe to God ;—that we are not properly our own ;—that our time and industry are not at our own disposal ;—but that we are under an obligation of working for Him who has bought us, redeeming us from the captivity into which we had been sold, and now employing us in his own ser- vice. Judaism had already taught mankind to re- gard God as a Governor, dispensing rewards and punishments to men, as his subjects, according to the works performed in his service; as they kept, or broke, his commandments, statutes, and ordi- nances. To this description of human agency, in relation to God, Christianity succeeded. A principle of obligation was adopted in the Gospel scheme, ana- logous to that of the Jewish. The service of the Israelite was due, because God had brought them out of the land of bondage, and settled them in his own land, Himself the founder of the colony. The service of the Christian was due, because Christ had interceded for them—had won them out of the hand of the enemy, and given them both liberty and life. Hence the language of that great Christian rule: “ When ye shall have done all those things “ which are commanded you, say, We are unprofit- “ able servants, we have done that which was our “duty’—3 dde/Aguer—which was owing from us, to do. Under such a scheme of human agency, the cha- racter of Justice would be the natural and compre- LECTURE V. 243 hensive description of right conduct. Men would be led to inquire, what the Lord had required of them,—by what inducements he had called upon them to obey,—by what punishments he had threat- ened disobedience; and in regard to themselves, how far they had fulfilled their task, how far they might aspire to his rewards, or had subjected themselves to his punishments. The estimate of these circum- stances appeals to our sense of Justice; to that virtue which dispenses to each his due, both relatively to himself and to other members of the same commu- nity; and which presupposes an authority by which its awards may be distributed and enforced. Judaism accordingly inculcated this leading notion both of Divine and Human Agency. The Israelite was never suffered to forget, that Jehovah was a just God, the Judge of the earth. He was taught to examine himself; whether he had done justly— what was the righteousness of his conduct—whether he had incurred Divine Displeasure by any defect of his duty, or might hope reward from his obe- dience. The Lord reasons with him, whether the Lord’s “ways are not equal, and the ways of his “people wnequal:” whether “ the Judge of all the “earth” would not “do right.” Agreeably to this, Christ is “the Lord our Righteousness,” or “the Lord “our Justice:” and the Apostle speaks of God having shewn his justice in the act of justifying sinners through Christ. We trace, indeed, the same idea in some of the principal terms of Christianity, evi- dently drawn from legal or equitable proceedings RQ 244 LECTURE V. in the dispensing of Justice; as in the terms, Me- diator, Advocate, Intercessor, Justification, Remis- sion, Pardon. It runs through the whole of St. Paul’s exposition of the state of man under the Gospel. The introduction of the notions of Merit and Demerit into Theology, is to be explained on this principle. Original Sin, being a fault of nature, could not indeed, as such, be a personal fault; and yet it subjected the individual man to the punishment of sin; in itself deserving God’s wrath and damnation. The guiltiness of the nature in- volved in it the demerit of the person. Thus, even those who had not personally sinned after the simi- litude of Adam’s transgression, stood personally un- holy in the sight of God, and obnoxious to punish- ment: the offending nature cried aloud for the Divine Wrath. Nor could the Christian, in the most advanced state of Justification, be regarded otherwise than as personally sinful and unholy ; because it is his being essentially and virtually in Christ—his being “accepted in the beloved”—that entirely constitutes his meritoriousness. Though the act of sin may have passed away, the guiltiness still remains; and even his case therefore is one of de- merit. For there is this difference in regard to the application of the merits of Christ to the Christian ; that a personal merit does not result to him indi- > Punishment, pena, as distinct from guilt, culpa. We see this distinction referred to in our XXXIst Article,—‘ in remis- ** sionem peene aut culpe.” LECTURE V. : 245 vidually, from his union with Christ ; as a personal demerit does to the son of Adam, from his being in Adam. The natural unholiness in which he stands before God, excludes the idea of any personal merit in him, whilst, by grace, he is admitted to the glorious privilege of the sons of God. Eternal life remains the gift of God; for the regenerate Chris- tian has still the guilt of that sin, whose wages are death. We attach, at present, an exclusive idea to the term Merit, different from that properly belonging to it as a technical term of Theology. We are apt to regard it as denoting, strictly, praiseworthiness, moral title to reward. We should revert rather to its original meaning, which is to be sought in its connexion with the ancient theories of Justice. It is hence that it has been introduced into the account of Justification. Now the notion of Justice, we know, according to the ancient philosophy, was fun- damentally political. It was conceived to have place only among the members of the same community, personally equal among themselves, and acting under a common authority. It was the rule by which the respective claims of individuals so circumstanced might be adjusted. In order to that comparison which such an adjustment of claims requires, some common measure is required; and this, as applied to each, is the “worth,” or merit of the indi- vidual, the value of his services. Now the first application of the term merit to Christian Theology, appears to have been exactly of this nature. The R 3 246 LECTURE V. great Christian society was viewed by the speculator, in its relation to God as its Governor and Judge. The principle, which Human Authority can apply only to external actions, was applied to the invisible, internal principles of our nature, cognizable by the Divine Authority. It began to be considered what man had done, or could do, in the way of claim on the Justice of God. Then the doctrine of Original Sin came into the consideration on the one hand— that of the Incarnation and Righteousness of Christ on the other;—and the estimate of Merit accordingly was to be drawn from a comparison of what man now is, at once a Fallen and a Saved creature, with what he once was, when perfect from the hands of his Maker. From this comparison would result the conclusion, that man could have no merit whatever in the eye of God. Then only could he earn the reward of happiness, when all the principles of his nature, as originally constituted, tended towards that Divine Goodness which was their real End. Now he entered on his career of service a debtor to the Justice of God, not a claimant on it. He had only merited Punishment by his intrinsic delin- quency. But, in the righteousness of Christ, a title to reward was found. The submission of Christ to the Divine Will had been voluntary; He had earned a recompence for services given to God, with- out a previous debt of service unpaid; and an abun- dant reward was bestowed on Him, overflowing with Divine goodness to the sons of his Love. The expressions, Merit of Condignity, Merit of LECTURE V. 247 Congruity, if examined on this ground, resolve them- selves into less exceptionable modes of describing Human Agency in the work of Justification, than they appear at first sight. With the practical evil of so characterizing any actions of man, I am not now concerned. But their theoretic truth is to be seen, in their consistency with the philosophical no- tion of Merit, as the measure of political justice, and the theological description of it, as the effect of co- operating grace. For, whilst it is his own gifts, which God rewards in those whom He accepts in Christ, He cannot be otherwise than just in bestow- ing these rewards. This requires that the rewarded should be brought under the notion of worthiness ; and should thus have merit of condignity ; relatively, that is, to God, as a yust Judge. Such was the doc- trine understood in those words of St. Paul: ‘“ Hence- * forth there is laid up for me a crown of righteous- “ness, which the Lord, the 77ghteous judge, shall “ give to me in that day?” Merit of congruity, on the other hand, is the work of the Christian viewed relatively to the mercy of God. If God, that is, mercifully rewards, then there must be, as a cor- respondent to this excellent mercy on his part, a ς «© Whoever has Grace,” Aquinas says, “ is on that very ‘““ account worthy of eternal life.” Quicunque enim gratiam ha- bet, ex hoc ipso dignus est vita eterna. Summ. Theol, Prima Pars, qu. XXIV. art. 4. d 2 Tim. iv. 8. τῆς δικαιοσύνης στέφανος, ὃν ἀποδώσει μοι ὁ Κύριος ἐν ἐκείνῃ τῇ ἡμέρᾳ, ὁ δίκαιος κριτής. Aquinas, S. Theol. Prima IIdz, qu. οχιν. art. 3. R 4 248 LECTURE SY. congruity, or suitableness, in the person to whom it is vouchsafed. The two expressions are correlatives to the Grace of God viewed as the gift of a just and merciful Judge °. The doctrine of Repentance, as exhibited in the Theology of the Schools, also takes its expression from Aristotle’s Theory of Justice. Aquinas places it under the head of Commutative Justice, or that exercise of Justice by which due compensation is awarded for an offence committed. It is the pana, the satisfaction, or requital, due for the offence, vo- luntarily taken on himself by the offender, as dis- tinct from the infliction of it by a judge. And the indispensable necessity of it is rested, by Aquinas, on this ground; because an offence against God is in direct opposition to Grace: the goodwill of God, the only cause of goodness in man, is turned from the offender; and God cannot remit the offence without a change of will, which in Him is impos- sible. The offender therefore must himself be turned towards God, by a detestation of the past sin, and a resolution of amendment. In the consideration, however, of this doctrine, we may observe a striking difference in comparison with others relating to human agency. To the reduction of the subject under the head of Penal Justice, may be ὁ The proper sense of Merit may be seen in that fine expres- sion of Tacitus ;—iisque virtutibus iram Caii Cesaris meritus. Agricola, c. 4.—Note F. LECTURE V. 249 ascribed, in great measure, the unscriptural notions and unholy practices which grew up in the Church, in regard to the expiation of offences, and their re- spective criminality. The word pana alone gave opportunity for introducing into religion, all the subtile casuistry and technical distinctions of Civil Law. Hence too the sacramental character with which Repentance has been invested under:the name of Penance‘, the application of a penal code of re- ligion demanding the ministrations of the priest 8. Thus the subject of Repentance, instead of taking its place by the side of Faith, in the discussions of the Schoolmen, is passed over as a doctrine of the Gospel, with slight notice. But, as a Sacra- ment, and a ritual of punishment, it obtains a full consideration. We may perceive the effect of this mode of treating the subject in our Articles: there being none expressly on the doctrine of Repentance ; whilst there is reference to the questions raised on the subject by the Scholastic philosophy, in the Articles which speak of Penance, Purgatory, and Masses. f The translation of the Latin Vulgate has here sanctioned a most important deviation from the simplicity of the Greek ori- ginal, in the use of the terms penitentiam agite, for the simple μετανοεῖτε. & The expression of Aristotle, κολάσεις εἰσιν ἰατρείαι τίνες, Was adapted to the explanation of the efficacy of suffering to expiate guilt. See Aquin. Summ. Theol. Prima Ide, qu. Lxxxvii. art. 7. —unde non habet simpliciter rationem pene, sed medicine. Nam et medici austeras potiones propinant infirmis, ut conferant sanitatem, &c. 250 LECTURE V. The application of the term Punishment to the sacrifice of our Saviour, belongs to the same philo- sophy. It was contended, that an offence being an act of the will, must also be removed by the will; that, whatever indulgence the will had allowed itself, the same ground must be recovered by suffering ; that thus the equality of justice might be main- tained. Hence it would be construed, that the passion of our Lord, being accepted by God as the means of human salvation, must be a punishment (poena) sustained by Him, equivalent to the delin- quency of sinful man. And this further accounts to us for the theological use of the word “ Satisfac- “tion.” It declares the sufferings of Christ to be the voluntary payment, on his part, of what was other- wise not owing from Him, to the Divine Justice 8. Hence too would arise the notion, that self-morti- fication would recommend us to the favour of God: in fact, that, the more voluntarily such chastise- ment of ourselves was undertaken, the more effec- tual would be the compensation for offence. Hence, also, the fond impiety of Supererogation. The compensation might be supposed to exceed the weight of the offence, where the depth of the sor- row for personal Sin might produce an excess of personal infliction. And it might be concluded, that this excess, beyond the requisitions of justice, would redound to the remission of the offences of others ἡ. & Note G. h Aristotle’s idea of taking from the ““ gain,” of the offender, and adding this difference to the ‘ loss” of the sufferer, and LECTURE V. 251 The Reformation opposed a practical check to these refinements of Christian truth. It was an energetic practical amendment that was here needed. And our Church, accordingly, has here declared against the abuses, which had perverted the doc- trine of Repentance; instead of addressing itself to the decision of the speculative nature of Repentance considered as a doctrine of the Gospel. It is to be remarked, however, how strongly the inefficacy of Repentance to wipe away guilt, and re- store the sinner to his lost state, has impressed the minds of those, who have thought on human nature with any depth of philosophy. It is of little pur- pose, to urge the natural placability of the Divine Being, his mercy, his willingness to receive the peni- tent. God, no doubt, is abundantly placable, merci- ful, and forgiving. Still the fact remains. The offender is guilty: his crime may be forgiven, but his criminality is upon him. The remorse which he feels—the wounds of his conscience—are no fal- lacious things. He is sensible of them, even whilst the Gospel tells him,—* Thy sins be forgiven thee— “Go, and sin no more.” The heart seeks for re- paration and satisfaction: its longings are, that its sins may be no more remembered, that the cha- racters in which it is written may be blotted out. Hence the congeniality to its feelings of the notion of Atonement. It is no speculative thought which then taking the mean, in order to obtain the equality of justice, pervades the speculation.—Note H. 252 LECTURE ΨΥ, suggests the theory: speculation rather prompts to the rejection of it: speculation furnishes abstract reasons, from the Divine Attributes, for discarding it as a chimera of our fears. But the fact is, that we cannot be at peace without some consciousness of Atonement made. The word Atonement, in its true, practical sense, expresses this indisputable fact. Objections may hold against the explanations of the term; they are irrelevant to the thing itself denoted by the term. Turn over the records of human crime; and, whether under the forms of supersti- tion, or the enactments of civil government, the fact itself constantly emerges to the view. All concur in shewing, that, whilst God is gracious and merci- ful, repenting Him of evil, the human heart is in- exorable against itself. It may hope—tremblingly hope—that God may forgive it, but it cannot forgive itself. This material and invincible difficulty of the case, the Scripture Revelation has met with a parallel fact. It has said, we have no hope in ourselves ; that, looking to ourselves, we cannot expect hap- piness; and, at the same time, has fixed our atten- tion on a Holy One who did no sin; whose perfect righteousness it has connected with our unrighte- ousness, and whose strength it has brought to the evil of our weakness. Thus Christ is emphatically said to be our Atonement; not that we may attri- bute to God any change of purpose towards man by what Christ has done; but that we may know, that we have passed from the death of sin to the life of LECTURE V. 253 righteousness by Him; and that our own hearts may not condemn us. “ If our heart condemn us * not,” then may we “ have peace with God ;” but, without the thought of Christ, the heart, that has any real sense of its condition, must sink under its own condemnation. The bane of this philosophy of expiation was, not that it exalted human agency too highly, but that in reality it depressed the power of man too low. It was no invigoration of the mind, no cheer- ing of the heart, to masculine exertion, in working out the great work of salvation, by exaggerated, yet noble, views of what man could accomplish. But it checked the aspirings, both of the heart and of the intellect, by fixing them at a standard, that had only the mockery of Divine strength, and not the reality. It brought men to acquiesce in a confession of im- potence, without carrying them at once to the throne of Grace. The ecclesiastical power stood between the heart and heaven. Atonement was converted into a theory of Commutation degrading to the ho- liness of God, whilst it spoke the peace of God in terms of flattering delusion to the sinner. The value of confessions and rites of penance was acknow- ledged ; and, accepting this vain substitute for that assurance of Atonement, which alone can satisfy the longing soul with goodness, men looked no further : their proper power was exchanged for a servile de- pendence on the ministrations of the priest—the presumed all-sufficiency of a man like themselves. 254 LECTURE V. On the other hand, the true scriptural practical view of Human Agency is to be seen in the great truth of Atonement, simply believed and acted on, without the gloss of commentators, or the refine- ments of theorists. These are but attempts ‘to weigh the ocean in the hollow of the hand. Take the truth simply, and what does it mean but that God is infinitely just and merciful, visiting imiqui- ties to the third and fourth generation, and yet shewing mercy to thousands—that we cannot please Him by our works, or our sacrifices, or our prayers, but yet we can do all things, by Christ strengthen- ing us, working for us, offering Himself for us, pray- ing for us. The doctrine declares to us at once how much is out of our power, and yet how much is in our power. And, by combining these two ap- parently contrary facts in one scheme of human agency, it imparts to us the true secret of our Power against the temptations and dangers of the world. For, let it be considered, whether it is not pre- cisely by such a combination of strength and weak- ness, that ability and success in worldly conduct are attained. Every one, who attentively considers the state of the case, must perceive that Revelation has only extended to the spiritual world two classes of facts evidenced in the natural. In every exercise of our minds, in every action or event, are we not conscious that much is left in our own power? Do we not see the fact strikingly displayed in the con- duct of men whom we call great; whose greatness evidently consists in this, that, by dint of their LECTURE V. 255 intellect and moral energy, they bring the train of events into their own power, exercising an arbitrary influence over the voluntary actions of other men ? But again, on the other hand, do we not find, also, a stint and a bound put to this our intrinsic power ? It is equally apparent, that the issues of events are not in the hand of the thinker, or the counsellor, or the agent. There is something like a chain of causes, in the connexion of circumstances themselves—some- thing of an involuntary process in the association and current of our own thoughts. So real is all this,—(and this is the point particularly to be ob- served in illustration of Human Agency, in con- nexion with the Divine,)—that our actual power, in each instance of exertion, depends in great measure on our assumption of this fact—the fact, that things are not in our power ; and our adaptation, consequently, of our conduct to it. For thus we see even the great men of the world have chiefly owed their failure to the circumstance; that they overlooked this clear fact: their former success emboldening them to an exclusive trust in their own power, and closing their eyes to the commanding influences out of their own sphere of action*. Thus are energy and repose, intrepidity and diffidence, magnanimity and humility, at once, inculcated on us in the course of nature. We cannot sleep nor stop, thinking that the con- trolling Power by which events are disposed, will work without us: we cannot lean on our own ac- k Hence prosperity was represented in ancient mythology, as provoking the envy of the Gods. 256 LECTURE V. tivity, trusting that we can work without the power from above. Whoever duly estimates these things, will readily see that Scripture enforces on us no strange thing, when it tells us, that we are “saved *“ by grace,” that “our sufficiency is of God ;” and again, he who “ doeth the will of God, is accepted by * him,” and that every man shall receive according * to his works.” But whoever acknowledges both these principles as the complex Law of Actions under both the spiritual and natural government of God—will, at the same time, see that the truths of human sinful- ness, of Repentance, of Atonement and Satisfaction made for sin, are only varied expressions of this great law; as being declarations of the weakness and the strength of man:—the union of strength and weakness, constituting his real power in the events of time—his justification in eternity. Disputation, however, as we have seen, has not suffered the plain method of Religion to take its course. Speculative statements have been made; and from these, certain consequences have been de- duced: and the Scripture has been searched to verify these deductions. In the pursuit of these discussions, a technical phraseology has been intro- duced: and, to systematize the whole, definitions and explanations have been drawn from the phy- sical and moral sciences, and woven into Theology by the subtleties of Logic. The Reformation, by the blessing of God, has cleared away, from a large portion of Christendom, LECTURE V. 257 those practical mischiefs, of which the speculations on the nature of justification were, partly the cause, and partly the palliation. We still, however, feel the effects of them in the discussions which abound among Protestants, on the questions arising out of this subject. Unscriptural practices were to be as- sailed, against men who possessed an admirable art of polemical defence; and 6y men who had sat at the feet of the Doctors of the Schools. It is nothing strange therefore, that the truth, so maintained, should bear the scars of the conflict through which it had to struggle. It is nothing strange, that the dialectical spirit should have survived among Pro- testants, even on the very points on which Pro- testantism took its firmest stand. It is worthy of our remark, that those Protestants who have advanced to extremes in opposing the errors of Rome; both, those who have opposed them on the ground of Superstition,—and those who have been unreasonably jealous in the cause of Reason,—have adopted more of the specula- tive method connected with those errors, than the more moderate reformer. For what is all that ac- curacy and positiveness, with which some persons state their views of Justification, but the point and precision of theory ? What is all that profession of Rational Religion, with which some maintain the natural efficacy of Repentance, but a dogmatism founded on theory ? We may learn, from these ex- tremes, that, the more indistinct our language is on this sacred subject,—the less of theoretic principle it 5 258 LECTURE V. embodies in it,—the more closely do we imbibe the true spirit of Protestantism ;—the more faithfully do we walk in the path of that Holy Spirit, whose “ways are in the deep,” and whose “ footsteps are ““ not known.” LECTURE VIL. MORAL PHILOSOPHY OF THE SCHOOLS. s 2 oN sei a ἡ ΡΝ Ae, Nae cai L i Hi PEW MAL NT if Le ‘4 ive Nate δὴ On nin a TON RRR RESTS eh § eat ἊΝ ἜΝ ih, ᾽ ΨΥ: q ’ “ ‘ " Pah A : ΣΙ na ἐ Ay ὑγύμν᾽ Sy Adu ΡΥ Κι it! Pee, ort a! ip 4 ὶ i 2 tvs Ry K wy eR ᾿ : Ἢ ' my Min γι: Ὁ ἮΝ ἧ ἬΝ ih μῶ, a Mi J \ ἢ ἀν ala, 9! Ἂ μὲ eM aed iad θα: ΠῚ λον ti ‘oman al tes ἡ as ake tae {ΠῚ teers ara "ἢ ἜΝ mI . hua . "Ὁ ‘ MEE. Ἂν ὯΝ , δ ARI ΠΝ fri, ν᾽ are paar ey ra? ¢- i ‘ ‘ : ᾿ Habe an ΠΟῪ i ᾿ 4 ᾿ ΩΣ ’ Bap v a . ion Rear Π = ‘ A: ee υ ( SUMMARY. No proper Moral Philosophy in the Scholastic System—Con- fusion of moral and religious truth injurious to both—Instance in Paley’s Moral Philosophy—Moral Truth at first taught on the ground of Authority—Platonism influential in blending it with Theology—lInfluence of Christian literature, the Sermons, and legends of the Saints, Ambrose’s Treatise ‘‘ On the Offices of ‘* Ministers,” Gregory’s ‘‘ Morals,” Boethins’ “ Consolation of «« Philosophy’ —Ethical science corrupted by being studied with a view to the power of the Clergy. Schoolmen systematize ethical precepts drawn from practice of the Church—The Treatise ‘‘ Of the Imitation of Christ’”— Plato’s theological account of the Chief Good combined with prac- tical detail of Aristotle’s Ethical Theory—Scholastic moral sys- tem a development of the Divine Energy in man’s internal nature —Aristotle’s notion of Happiness accordant with this view— Scholastic gradations of moral excellence to be traced to this fundamental idea—Hence, also, the importance attributed to the life of contemplative devotion—The doctrine of Perfection —Distinction of Counsels and Precepts—Outline of this double morality seen in the Aristotelic notion of an Heroic Virtue— Coincidence of Aristotle’s theory of Good-Fortune with the superhuman virtue of the Scholastic System—Connexion of ethical doctrine of the Schools with notion of Original Sin— Mortal and Venial Sins—Proper ground of this distinction— Division of Virtue into Theological and Moral, and into Infused and Acquired—Doctrine of Gifts. Origin of questions in Modern Moral Philosophy to be traced to scholastic discussions--Instance in the idea of Moral Obli- gation—Extreme opinions as to the relative importance both of Theology and Ethics—Proper province of Ethics, inquiry into the principles of Human Nature—Revelation only gives new objects to those principles—Importance of regarding the Science of Ethics as in itself independent of Religion. S 3 Marr. XIX. 16, 17. And, behold, one came and said unto him, Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life ? And he said unto him, Why callest thou me good? there is none good but one, that is, God: but if thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments. Kat ἰδοὺ, εἷς προσελθὼν, εἶπεν αὐτῷ: Διδάσκαλε ἀγαθὲ, τί ἀγαθὸν ποιήσω, ἵνα ἔχω ζωὴν αἰώνιον ; Ὃ δὲ εἶπεν αὐτῷ" Τί με λέγεις ἀγαθόν ; οὐδεὶς ἀγαθὸς, εἰ μὴ εἷς, ὁ Θεός. Ei δὲ θέλεις > o -Ἰ Ν Ν [4 Ν τ εἰσελθεῖν εἰς τὴν ζωὴν, τήρησον τὰς ἐντολάς. Et ecce, unus accedens, ait illi; Magister bone, quid boni faciam, ut habeam vitam eternam? Qui dixit ei: Quid me interrogas de bono? Unus est bonus, Deus. Si autem vis ad vitam ingredi, serva mandata. Lar. Vute. LECTURE VI. I COME now to take a more intimate view of the Scholastic Philosophy—its mode of treating the Law written in our hearts, and the influence which it has exercised on the frame, and the language, of Morals, in modern times. This is a department of the in- quiry, not only possessing the highest interest in itself, and demanding for its own sake a much greater attention than it has yet received, but strictly belonging to the history of our theological language. The intellectual and moral instincts of man were regarded, by the School-Divines, as the materials on which the sacred elements of divine truth were to act; and, by this action, to assimilate them to the Divine Nature. It was not an operation merely in the way of instruction, of elevation of sentiment, of purification of feeling, that was here understood ; but an identification, if I may so say, of the divine things, with the purer and nobler principles of our nature. The truths of Revelation were to be steeped into the heart. And the inquiry, therefore, into the Philosophy of Human Life, was pursued by them, as containing the elements and the development of their theological system. It is, in fact, Moral Theo- logy, rather than an account of man’s moral nature ; so that, whilst real truths of morality are alleged, the truths, as such, are overlooked: the illustration of the given Divine Theory is all that is sought in S 4 264 LECTURE VI. them. It is the Life of God in the soul of man, that is presented to our notice. The close connexion of Theological and Moral Truth, has been of serious injury to both depart- ments of human knowledge. The assertion may seem strange; but, when it is fully considered, it will, I think, appear; that Theology and Ethics are entirely distinct in their nature,—in the principles, I mean, on which they are based; and that, therefore, to mix up principles of the one with principles of the other, must tend only to confusion of thought and speculative error on each subject. That they are closely connected in their results and applica- tions, must be fully admitted. But this connexion is only like that of Mathematics with Physics, or Anatomy with Medicine: both, that is, must be taken into account, in the practical application of one or the other. In speculation however, and in their theories, they are perfectly distinct. I. In Theology, human nature is regarded under a single point of view, that of its relation to the Author of its existence. The office of Theology is to solve such questions as these; which cannot but occur to every thoughtful man, as he contemplates himself amidst the vast scenes of the universe: Whence am I? What is my nature and condition here? What my connexion with the past and with the future? Why am I sensible of so much pain or of so much pleasure? What is the great LECTURE VI. 265 end of all these various connexions and relations of events, so entangled and perplexed with each other, and yet, amidst all this apparent disorder, so instinctive with design, and order, and uniformity ? Theology, accordingly, takes man under its survey asa whole. It is not as an intellectual being, or as a moral being, simply, that it regards him, but as a compound of natures; the compound being that he really is, in his animal life, as well as in his life of thought and action: and so proceeds to inform and guide him in those high truths, of which this com- plex system demands the resolution. It acquaints him, that he is the creature of a benevolent and wise God,—that he is living under divine govern- ment,—that he is in a state of discipline,—that his natural weakness has been provided for by divine intercession,—that all things are working together for good; giving him supernaturally so much of the history of God’s special providences, as may be ne- cessary to pierce through the gloom of the present world, and lift up his eyes to the sanctuary, from which alone help can come down to him. II. Moral Philosophy, on the other hand, surveys human nature in its moral and intellectual consti- tuents, as they are related and combined principles of action. Every action that we see outwardly,— every judgement that we exercise within ourselves,— every feeling, as we indulge or contro] it,—presents a moral phenomenon demanding explanation. The questions that arise here, are: Is there any common 266 LECTURE VI. principle, which may give us the Law of these vari- ous facts? What is that principle? Is it instine- tive, or factitious? or is it, in the result, an intel- lectual perception, or a sentiment of the heart, or both united? These, and other such questions, are what properly engage the moral philosopher. But here, it must be seen, we are concerned only with a particular class of facts, and that a very different one from the theological. The inquiry is bounded by a far narrower horizon. The relation of parts, in the internal structure of our moral nature, is what now occupies the attention. It is the little world within us that we are examining: and we are endeavouring to ascertain the springs which set it in motion, and the end to which all combine. The extent of Moral Philosophy, indeed, embraces the views of man’s social and religious nature; and, in these respects, it seems a science of greater compre- hension, than according to the limits which I have stated. But these views belong to the same funda- mental principle, the science of man in his internal nature: since the social and religious instincts are as much parts of that nature, as those which more immediately respect the individual. It is clear, that, if principles of one kind of know- ledge be applied to the facts of another, only con- fusion and error must result. The application is purely hypothetical, though the principles themselves may be perfectly true. This is readily acknowledged in the case of mere sciences. Every one now sees, LECTURE VI. 267 that mathematical theories can be of no avail, to in- terpret the nature of physical facts. But it was not so obvious to the ancient philosopher, who constructed his system of the universe on mathematical or logical data, nor to the physiologists who united medicine with geometry. Nor does it now appear inconsistent to many, to blend together principles of Theology and Morals. The close connexion of these, in their application, is the fallacy that misleads such persons. But a combination of results is, evidently, a very different thing from coincidence in principles. An example may illustrate this. Paley has endeavoured to combine the separate principles of Ethics and Theology, in his Moral Philosophy. He was not satisfied with that kind of certainty, which moral truths appeared to possess. Probably, as a mathe- matician, he exacted, for his own satisfaction, some firm principle, from which the rules of morality might be deduced with logical precision. Sound philosopher as he was practically, he still aimed at a theoretic demonstrativeness in ethical science, of which all sciences conversant about facts must, by their very nature, be incapable. What, then, has been the consequence of this attempt to establish morality on an immovable basis? Instead of es- tablishing morality, it has, in reality, weakened the theory of moral truth. The whole of morality, ac- cording to his view, resolves itself ultimately into Religion. The theological principle, on which he bases his system,—the duty of conformity to the Will of God,—is perfectly just and true in itself. But, in 268 LECTURE Vi. making that principle a ground of morality, he has destroyed the independent character, and, with this, the philosophical truth, of Ethics, as a science of human nature. The broadness of the principle tramples upon the little world of principles, which lie within man himself. It has been often argued ; that, if the theory of Paley were acted on simply, evil might be done with a view to a good result: there is, in fact, no such thing as evil in itself, as there is nothing good in itself, where the tendency of actions is the criterion of their worth. The only error which can be committed then, is a speculative one,—that of not having generalized sufficiently, so as to see, that the conduct pursued, is not, in fact, the Will of God; as not being conformable with the general \aw of the Divine procedure. It must be a return to the consideration, whether evil is not something resting on its own grounds, independently of the mere tendency of actions, that can check the agent, in following up the theological principle by immoral, practical consequences. Paley himself has ingeniously argued against this construction; and successfully; so far as to shew, that the immoral con- sequences do not logically follow from his theory. It must be admitted, that no action, conformable to the Will of God, can, as such, in any case be pro- ductive of Evil. If we assume conformity to the Will of God, as a definition of right, nothing evil can be mmferred from it. But the logical consist- ency is not the point in question. The test of the theory is, its adaptation to human nature. And its LECTURE VI. 269 erroneousness is sufficiently shewn, by its tendency to mislead even the wish to do good. It is the mis- take of acting upon an anticipated result, out of our own power; when the very attainment of that result is, a consequence of having acted previously accord- ing to the laws of our nature. Religion, in truth, begins where morality ends. Let each action be done as it is morally right. We are encouraged then to proceed, for we are sure that it has the sanction of God. Whatever may be the immediate effect of it, we know that God will ultimately re- ward it. Whatever may be its intrinsic imper- fection, we rely on his mercy in Christ, and the grace of his Spirit, to give it a worth not its own, and consecrate it to the doing of his Will. The source of that confusion of Theology and Morals, which I have noticed, is to be traced back to the origin itself of Moral Truth: first of all, in its being handed down in the forms of maxims and proverbs, the traditional wisdom of other days. Moral truths thus rested, in the first instance, on Authority ; being propagated from age to age, as venerable precepts of immemorial usage, or as the sacred sayings of some reputed sage. This mode of their reception imparted to them more of a re- ligious, than of a philosophical, character. They would carry with them something of that awe, which the mystery of their origin, and the names of ancient sages, could not but awaken in the mind. Particularly, when moral truths were conveyed, 270 LECTURE-VI. amidst the political regulations, and the rewards and punishments, of civil enactments,—as they are found in the Pentateuch, and in the extant Polities of early legislators or philosophers,—men would be induced to regard morality as a matter of ordinance ; as what exacted their obedience ; rather than as the internal discipline of their affections. In the next place it should be observed, that, so far as morality was reduced to any system in the ancient philosophy, it was not exempt from that in- discriminate endeavour at scientific exactness, which corrupted the other branches of philosophy. Until the time of Aristotle, indeed, it appears to have been strictly included among the number of demonstrative sciences. For even Socrates, with all his practical excellence as a moralist, still considered Ethics as on a footing with arts and sciences—as what re- quired only to be known, in order to be fully pos- sessed—and as what might be acquired by mere instruction. Aristotle, with a much more sagacious sense, exposed the fallacy of this prevalent idea, and set the example of a truly practical system of Ethics. But his system did not become the popular philosophy of Greece. His writings being long lost to the world soon after his death, the more es- tablished system of Plato maintained its ground on this, as on other points of philosophy. This system, which was chiefly an expansion and adjustment of the Pythagorean speculations, perpetuated that mys- tical form in which the great Master had delighted LECTURE VI. 271 to invest his theories. According to the Platonic doctrine, morality was based on immutable specula- tive principles, the abstract species, the real con- stituents, according to his view, of every thing de- nominated good. This was to take morality out of the sphere of man’s moral nature, and place it ina kind of philosophical pietism. He rejected, accord- ingly, the notion, that man was the “ measure” of moral excellence, and admitted no standard of human perfection below that of the Deity Himself. His religion and his morality, following the Pythagorean train of thought with little variation, coincided in the maxim, that the business of man was the Imi- tation of God. Thus was the confusion of ethical and theological truth begun in that method of phi- losophy, which first obtained the sanction of the Christian Church. The principle of the Imitation of God, so elevating in its conception, and so ac- cordant with the language of Scripture, being found in the volumes of philosophy,—a precedent was es- tablished, for conjoining the two classes of truth in one promiscuous speculation. It is thus that Augustine speaks of Plato’s sys- tem of morals, as the only one compatible with Christianity. Having alluded to the different opin- ions concerning good, which made man himself, more or less, the seat of good: “ let all these,” he says, “ yield to those Philosophers, who have said not * that man was happy, in enjoying the body, or in “ enjoying the mind, but in enjoying God®”.... who « August. De Civ. Dei, lib. VIII. c. 8. 272 LECTURE “VI. have “ determined, that the end of good is, to live * according to virtue; and that this result could be - © to him only, who had the knowledge and imitation εἰ of God” The same tone of thought runs through the Greek Fathers. The noble and seductive language of Plato, respecting the Chief Good, was too strong a tempta- tion to be resisted by the ingenuity of the philoso- phical Christian, accustomed to the theoretic spirit of the ancient masters, and anxious for some fixed, eternal ground, on which moral truth might be rested. The metaphysical abstraction of Plato was thus, with the universal assent of the Schools, em- bodied in the Christian truth of the living God; at once the object of devout contemplation, and the immutable principle of Ethical Inquiry. The state of literature in the Western Church, after the period of Augustine, to the close of the VIIIth century, was such as to confirm the con- nexion already established between Theology and Ethics. The compositions of this time were all of a theological cast. Sermons, and legends of Saints, constituted the mental employment of those, who were the oracles of knowledge to the Christian world. And the Sermons of this period, it should be remarked, were not of a controversial character, directed to the establishment of points of doctrine, but chiefly moral reasonings and exhortations. If Ὁ August. De Civ. Dei, lib. VIII. c. 9. LECTURE VI. 273 we look, for instance, into those of Cesarius °, the most eminent of the Bishops of Southern Gaul during the first half of the VIth century,—and which are a highly favourable specimen of the literature of that day,—we find them consisting of argu- mentative expostulation on the conduct of Chris- tians. The legends of the Saints, the romance of religion, as we may term them, are also practical appeals to the Christian world,—endeavours to in- terest either the imagination, or the feelings, in the energetic pursuit of religious action. Throughout all this period, accordingly, the intermixture of theology and ethics was proceeding. From the adoption, by the Clergy, of the language of ethical exhortation, in the service of religion, the truth, which cultivates the sentiments and rectifies the con- duct, was confounded with that which regenerates and quickens the soul. The same cause, which, in the first dawnings of ethical science, had acted in obscuring its philosophical character—its reception in an authoritative form—dalso acted powerfully within the Church. Moral truth was received from the lips of the venerated ministers of the divine word, and imbibed rather, as the precious dews of heaven falling on the passive soil, than as the heart of one man pouring itself out on the heart of another. The Latins, indeed, were not altogether without some elementary ethical treatises in their own lan- © Cesarius, Bishop of Arles from A.D. 507 to 542; born in 470. His Sermons are printed in an appendix to the Sermons of Augustine, in tom. V. Oper. ed. fol. 1683. T 274. LECTURE VI. guage. The “Offices” of Cicero appear to have been familiarly known to them. But they were not satisfied to derive precepts of morality from a heathen source. They seem to have been fearful of detract- ing from the intrinsic authority of Scripture morals, if they conceded any originality of thought to heathen precepts of duty. Where they acknowledged the correctness of such precepts, they insinuate, at the same time, that it was a wisdom borrowed from the Christian Revelation. Ambrose, accordingly, com- posed a treatise, in three books, after the plan of Cicero’s Offices, on the “ Offices of Ministers ;” sub- stituting the hopes and sanctions of the Gospel for the worldly principles of the Roman philosopher, and the examples of Jewish and Christian devotion for those of Greek or Roman virtue. The work, as is indicated by its title, was designed exclusively for the Clergy*. But the treatise which obtained the greatest popularity, if we may judge from its fre- quent quotation in the Scholastic writings, was “The Morals” of Gregory the Great. Gregory was a fierce opponent of secular learning; and, like Am- brose, was only desirous of supplying the studious Clergy with a manual of ethical instruction, which should supersede the reading of a work of heathen literature. This was no proper attempt, therefore, to d Augustine characterizes this work thus, in writing to Je- rome:—nisi forte nomen te movet, quia non tam usitatum est in ecclesiasticis libris vocabulum Officii, quod Ambrosius noster non timuit, qui suos quosdam libros utilium preceptionum ple- nos, de Officiis voluit appellare. Hpist. XIX. Oper. Tom. II. Ρ. 24..ed. Ato: LECTURE VI. O75 establish a Science of Morals. It was only a trans- fusion of theological doctrine into the technical phraseology of the Ancient Ethics: in itself utterly barren of all sound instruction as to the foundation and nature of human duties. Consequently, it only promoted the confusion, already begun, and sauic- tioned by the practice of the Church, between moral and religious truth ; as embodying that confusion in a text-book, and consecrating it by the authority of a high ecclesiastical name. Nor ought the mention to be omitted in this place of the well-known treatise of Boethius, on the “ Consolation of Philosophy.” It may be de- scribed as a manual of philosophic devotion; the effusion of the piety of an elegant mind, grateful for those literary delights, which had soothed its anxie- ties, and strengthened its resignation. It is import- ant in the history of the ethics of the Schools; as it is a work, which attracted the study of the scholastic theologians, serving as the basis of elaborate com- mentaries: and it tended, accordingly, to promote and establish that contemplative religious character, with which the moral philosophy of the Schools was tinc- tured at its outset. But what contributed, perhaps, more than any thing to this confusion of Theology and Ethics, was, the spiritual power, which the Latin Church had been acquiring, more and more, throughout this period, over the consciences of men. The Church became the dupe of its own ambitious pretension. The laity were brought into captivity to the impe- Es i 276 LECTURE VI. rious sense of their spiritual leaders; from whom, not only the theories of the faith were to be sought ; but also the practical doubts, the heresies of conscience, were to obtain their answer. The exigencies of such a complex and subtile government demanded its own peculiar code of spiritual legislation. A system of moral rules was required, which should be in strict accordance with the theocratic principle, in which the power of the Clergy consisted. They must be such, whose lines should continually terminate in some religious object, and mingle the passiveness of the votary with the active obedience of the subject. They must be enforced by rewards and punishments, to sustain the idea of subjection to the spiritual guide; and these rewards and punishments must be such, as the spiritual arm alone could administer. But. the rules and sanctions of conscience, when thus applied, would evidently lose their nature, as simple laws of morality. Whatever validity they pos- sessed, would result from the principle of spiritual subjection; from the notion, that they were pre- scribed by a Power which held the soul in its grasp. And the assumption of this power, by the Clergy, made them, as I have said, the dupes of their own pretension. As they mistook subtilty of speculative distinctions for theology, so they also mistook casu- istry for moral philosophy, and the indulgences and penances of spiritual discipline for Religion. The monastic institutions, in themselves an effect of the confusion of theology and morality, tended, in their turn, to foster that confusion. The mix- LECTURE VI. 277 ture of ritual and moral precept in these institu- tions, and the blending of the whole under the name of Religion ;—so that those who lived under these systems, obtained the exclusive appellation of the Religious ;—must have forcibly cemented the two ideas of virtue and holiness, as representations of one and the same principle. - The devoutness, the submissiveness, the self-annihilation of the holy re- cluse, commanded the attention of the world; and naturally became, in the popular estimate, equiva- lents for the self-examining conscience and internal convictions of right. The fact, indeed, is, that the right of private judgment, in morality, was as effectually excluded by the spiritual power of the Church, as it was in articles of faith. Both the rule of conduct, and the rule of belief, were to be received implicitly. The questioning of the heart, and of the intellect, were equally superseded. The whole came to this, that Christian perfection was reduced to the surrender of the will; so that nothing enjoined by the command of a religious superior, was either wrong or impossible®. The labours of the Schoolmen, in Morals, gave a speculative harmony and perfection to the system which had grown out of the practice of the Church. In constituting an exact science of Theology, it was their part to collect the fragments of ethical juris- diction, which lay scattered in the sermons, and le- e Note A. Lect. VI. Tio 278 LECTURE VI. gends, and institutions, and discipline of the Church; and to mould them, in accordance with the language of Scripture, and the theories of their theology. Professed works of ethics were composed by some of them: and commenting on the Ethics of Aristotle became part of the labours of the Schools. but, though this exercise of powerful minds on moral truth, could not but elicit some scattered lights on the subject, ethical science may still be regarded as having slumbered through the darkness of the middle age. The proper character of it, indeed, is seen in the devotional work which appeared in the XVth century, the celebrated treatise by Thomas a Kem- pis, of the “ Imitation of Christ.” This work was a vigorous effort of that moral study which had been cultivated in the Church, to extricate itself from the fetters of a systematic theology; a disen- gagement, as it were, of the spirit of the theological morality, from the forms in which it had been em- bodied. Its great popularity marks, both the bent which previous ethical systems had given to the general taste, and the intrinsic defects of them. It was the ethics of religion that men wanted: and, at the same time, they wanted the pure substance with- out the technical alloy, with which it had been con- founded. To proceed, however, in giving an account of the peculiar character imparted to ethics by the method of the Schools,—I would observe, in the first place, that here also, as in the purely speculative part of their LECTURE VI. 279 system, they united the precision and detail of Ari- stotle’s ethical system, with the fundamental doctrines of Plato. They have taken, that is, as their great principle, Plato’s theological account of the Chief Good. It is established as their point of outset, that, as the inquiry is into the end of all human actions, the mind must first lay hold of that principle itself, —that great end, or Chief Good. On the participation of this, must depend the goodness of all particular actions. And a collection of moral rules, accordingly, directed to the good or happiness of man, would be deducible as consequences from this their general dea or constituent nature. But, to the Christian moralist, this Chief Good could be no other than God Himself, as revealed in the Scriptures. Indeed, the Scriptures themselves suggested, in some passages, a view of God in accord- ance with this notion; as where the Psalmist says: “ whom have I in heaven but thee? and there is “none upon earth that 7 desire beside thee;” and in the passage which I have already read: “ there *‘ is none good but one, that is, God.” Whilst, then, the notion of God, as the Chief Good, had been originally received into the Church, inde- pendently of Aristotle’s Philosophy, the peculiar modification of that notion by the Schoolmen was obtained from the physical theory of Aristotle, which I had occasion to describe in a former Lecture. I pointed out, that, according to Aristotle, it was the pure principle of Excellence and Beauty that gave T 4 280 LECTURE VI. its perfection to each existing thing: at once the motive principle, and final cause, of all the activity of Nature; and therefore characterized by him, as Energy, intrinsic Activity, or, in the Scholastic translation of the expression, “ Pure Act.” The theories of Divine and Human Agency, as I have endeavoured to shew, were applications of this Principle of Energy to the Divine dealings mani- fested in the salvation of man. It remained yet to develop its workings in the internal mechanism of man’s moral nature; to illustrate here also, that God was all in all; realizing, by His vital operation, the harmony and perfection of the various powers of the soul. How readily the Ethical System of Aristotle fell into this theoretic mould, will appear, if due con- sideration be given to the language, in which Ari- stotle himself has expressed his notion of Human Happiness. His description of it, as Energy, is evidently not an accidental one, but in strict unison with his physical doctrine. He has in view the idea of the soul’s exerting itself by natural efforts, in order to the full development of its powers, and attainment of the End of its Being; when it should have infinitely approximated to, and identified itself, as it were, with, that divinity with which it is instinct. Such, indeed, is his account of Pleasure; which he considers as the indistinct, unconscious pursuit of a divine principle, with which all things are, more or less, instinctively animated. His theory of Happi- LECTURE VI. 281 ness sought only how to conspire with, and aid, these natural tendencies existing in the human soul; so that in each instance of action, in every perception and thought, this pleasure might be attained; and nature thus wrought to its utmost perfection. Transfer this doctrine of the Philosopher to the Christian Schools, and you have the notion incul- cated in the Ethics of the middle age, of the funda- mental principle of morality. God is conceived to be the moving cause of all that effort, which the soul puts forth in reaching after happiness. It is the operation of Divine Goodness, which sets in motion, and carries forward, and invigorates the soul, in order to its perfection of being. The coincidence of the ideas of Virtue and Power‘, in their Ethical System, is an illustration of this notion. For, according to such a philosophy of Human Actions, Virtue would be that state of the soul in which all its faculties were fully exerted: in which there was, not only a tendency towards the Chief Good, but a vigorous and invariable cooper- ation with the Divine Energy—a command, or power, established by the higher principles of our nature, over the inferior animal propensities. From this complex notion of the Chief Good, both as the Deity Himself, and as essentially Energy, or Operation, we may trace those gradations of moral f The word δύναμις is frequently translated by Virtus. The Divine Attribute of “ Power,” is. expressed both by Virtus and Potentia. Our familiar use of the word “ virtually,” is an illus- tration of the same point. 282 LECTURE VI. excellence which the ethical discipline of the Latin Church has established. First, we may remark, Happiness was placed out of the confines of this present world. It could only be sought by abstraction, by self-denial, and a pro- cess of devotedness to the One Supreme Good. The body was an incumbrance to the soul, impeding its motions towards the Principle of Life and Joy, and obscuring its perceptions of its real happiness. Self-denial would, on such a view of the case, con- sist in the mortification of the body; not in the command of the passions, amidst the various occu- pations of life, but in renouncing those occupations altogether—not in disclaiming our own righteous- ness—not in living to men as to God—but in living, as out of the world, and to God alone. This is clearly the effect of holding forth the Deity as the real object of attainment; to be reached by efforts of ardent exertion, and by expansion of the powers of the soul beyond their present limits. The soul becomes virtually its own divinity, when the Deity, towards whom its desires are thus strained, is regarded, in this physical sense, as the great end of its pursuit. Hence the distorted and discoloured view, which human life exhibits by the light of such a theory. The blessings which God has scattered around us, to cheer us on our way, and the active occupations, with which He would have us con- tribute to the mutual benefit of each other, lie in deep shadow, as regions which the sun of heaven never visits. ad Under such a theory, we need not wonder at the LEE€TURE VI. 283 rise of mysticism, or any of the extravagancies of fantastic piety. So long as the attainment of God is proposed as a process of spiritualization, it is perfectly natural, that, in minds of an enthusiastic or melancholy temperament, a violent effort should be made to realize at once, or approach as nearly as possible, the ultimate end of the aspirant soul. The Love of God becomes the sole exclusive prin- ciple of action, not as it is the bond of peace and of all virtues, but as it is in itself the most intense expression of the soul’s effort—the condensation of all the affections and desires into one divine ardour. The frenzied self-devotion of those saints of the East, who passed their lives on pillars or in caverns, and the Quietism’ of Fenelon, were only various instances of the same principle carried to its full extent, under different modifications of personal cha- racter and circumstances. Again, we may observe the influence of Aristotle’s notion of “ Energy” in the speculations by which the Latin Clergy established the superiority of that mode of Life to which they were themselves de- voted, and in the estimation of which, among the members of the Church, their spiritual influence 5. The ἠρεμία of the intellect, according to Plato and Aristotle. —So Duns Scotus, Sent. IIT. dist. xxviii. fol. 56. Licet ergo so- lum infinitum bonum quietet voluntatem; et hoc in quantum infinitum bonum: non tamen oportet quodlibet bonum finitum, secundum gradum suum in bonitate, magis et minus quietare : quia isti gradus sunt accidentales per comparationem ad ex- trinsecum quietandum. 284 LECTURE VI. depended. If Happiness was Energy,—the more in- tensely, and the more purely, the soul might be ex- erted,—the fuller, and the purer, would be the hap- piness attained; the more nearly would the soul be brought to the fruition of God. But no other state of life presented such opportunities; in no other employment was the action so uninterrupted, as in that of the speculative theologian. We find, in fact, the very same arguments employed by them, in asserting the godlike preeminence of the thought- ful solitary above the rest of mankind, which are alleged by Aristotle in favour of the Theoretic Life over the Practical*. The Philosopher, having proved that happiness was, by its nature, “ Energy,” was obliged to explain this idea, consistently with the acknowledged superiority of the intellectual nature of man. He insists, accordingly, that the occupa- tions of the mind were no less really practical, than the business of active life; that the philosopher was as completely energetic in his pursuits, as the man who took a more personal part in the concerns of social life. So that, perfect happiness, according to Aristotle, consisted at once in leisure and in ac- tivity—in that state of life, consequently, which com- prized both; where no worldly avocations should interfere, no pressing calls of personal, or social, de- mands on the time and thoughts, should disturb the busy tranquillity of the intellect'. This was pre- " Aquin. S. Theol. Prima Ide, qu. cLxx1x. CLXxx. CLXXxI.— Note B. ' Aristot. Ethic. X. Polit. VII. 3. Mag. Mor. I. 35. LECTURE VI. 285 cisely such a defence, as would serve the cause of the scholastic theologian. He must command the admiration and respect of mankind, as leading a life to which few could attain; as having approxi- mated, during his earthly career, to the sublime purity, of which the full attainment was necessarily reserved for a higher state of being; when the body should no longer cloy and weigh down the soul. He required to be regarded by mankind in that point of view, in which his participation of a com- mon corrupt nature should least appear,—in which the divine principle of pure and ceaseless energy should be evidently predominant *. Hence was established the doctrine of Perfection. The Christian, who, by cooperating with the in- fused principle of grace, should cultivate the divine principle within him, would regularly advance to- ward that End or Chief Good—the Deity—which was the consummation of his being. The religious devotee, intent only on the immovable End of all human exertions, and not disquieting or interrupt- ing his own progress by vain pursuit of the mutable goods of life, would reach the ultimate object, his perfection, by the most compendious process. The more he lived in theory, the more would the theory of human perfection be realized in him. For here also Aristotle’s philosophy of nature served the purpose of their speculation. In assigning the different classes of Being throughout the universe, k See Hooker, Eccl. Pol. B. 1. s. 11. p. 256—261. 8vo. 286 LECTURE VI. their degrees of approximation towards the uni- versal End which actuated their motions, he ar- gues, that those are the highest and most ex- cellent natures, which attain the ultimate End by the least effort; tending immediately, without any disturbance or variety of movement, towards the Divine Principle. What the heathen Philosopher applied to the visible luminaries of the heavens, was transferred by the Christian speculatist to the invisible hierarchy of the angelic host, and from them, in succession of order, to the saints of God on earth. Angels and holy men accomplished, by direct and immediate methods of operation, the at- tainment of the Sovereign Good; which others reached only by circuitous and interrupted ways, and by a multitude of repeated endeavours. To support this theory of Perfection, many of our Lord’s expressions were adduced: such as; “ if “thou wilt be perfect, go, and sell all that thou “ hast, and give to the poor ;—be ye perfect, as your “ Father in heaven is perfect;—I have many things “to tell you, but ye cannot bear them xow”—that is, as it was interpreted, “ not in your present zm- “ perfect state.” His declaration also concerning some, who had “ made themselves eunuchs for the “kingdom of God’s sake,” was cited to the same purport. As evidences again of the same point, those texts were adduced which speak of the per- fection of Charity, or the Love of God. Charity, according to this theory, is that which at once unites the soul to God; bringing the individual, in whom it dwells, into direct contact with the End of his LECTURE VI. 287 pursuit. St. Paul, therefore, might be conceived to have justly pronounced, that charity was greater than faith and hope: and St. John to have expressed the same truth, when he says; “ that perfect love * casteth out fear;”—and whosoever abideth in love, * abideth in God, and God in him.” Two different tracks of Life were thus pointed out to the pursuit of men by the Moral Theology of the Schools ;—the direct and immediate, but strait path of spiritual abstractedness; and the indirect and vulgar road through the impediments of worldly occupations :—the one adapted for those higher na- tures, for whom the restraints of law were not de- vised,—in whom the divine principle predominated, —in whose hearts the thrones of spiritual power were erected: the other, the walk of inferior souls, blest indeed with divine influence, but still engaged in the commerce of the world, and needing the further aid of admonition and direction from their spiritual superiors. Each mode of life, consequently, had its correspondent Rule. The perfect life was that which conformed to the loftier principle of the Divine Counsels ; whilst the imperfect, that of the mere proficient—of him who was content to tread the humbler path of duties of indispensable neces- sity—was ordered by the Divine Precepts'!. The former would be a system of conduct, derived from ! Aquinas Summa Theolog. Prima IIde, qu. c. art. 2. Et ideo manifestum est, quod lex divina convenienter proponit pre- cepta de actibus omnium virtutum: ita tamen quod que- dam, sine quibus ordo virtutis (qui est ordo rationis) observari 288 LECTURE VI. that state of intimate communion with God, in which the divine life of the soul consisted ;—rules drawn from the relation of Friendship ;—the fulfilment of duties not obligatory in themselves: whereas the latter—the life of Precepts—would be a system of conduct accordant with that state of remoteness from the Divine End, in which the less holy stood ; and a law derived, accordingly, from the strict re- quisitions of Justice. Do we not recognize here the double morality of heathen philosophy,—the strict right,—the wise man of the Stoics,—in the perfect Christian; the proprieties, or offices, as they were called, in the imperfect services of the ordinary Christian, who, whilst mixing in the concerns of the world, yet pur- sues right to a certain extent, according to his capa- city of attainment ™. The outline, however, of this artificial and enthu- siastic distinction may be traced in the ethical sys- tem of Aristotle himself. Aristotle has clearly placed the perfection of man’s nature out of the non potest, cadunt sub obligatione precepti: quedam vero, que pertinent ad bene esse virtutis perfecte, cadunt sub ad- monitione consilii. m Thus Ambrose, in his Treatise of Orfices, expressly says : Hoc etenim κατορθώμα, quod perfectum et absolutum officium est, a vero virtutis fonte proficiscitur. Cui secundum est com- mune officium, quod ipso sermone significatur non esse ardue virtutis ac singularis, quod potest pluribus esse commune... Alia igitur prima, alia media officia. Prima cum paucis, media cum pluribus .... Duplex enim forma perfectionis: alia me- dios, alia plenos numeros habens: alia hic, alia ibi: alia se- cundum hominis possibilitatem, alia secundum perfectionem futuri. De Offic. Ministr. lib. III. c. ii. p. 110. LECTURE VI. 289 sphere of the strictly moral duties. He has spoken of a Virtue beyond the natural capacity of man ; and which he designates an heroic or divine Virtue, as contrasted with the Vice, that degrades man be- low the standard of Human Vice*. In asserting also the preeminence of the purely intellectual life, in the scale of moral excellence and happiness, he reduces the moral virtues to a degree of worth, which may very naturally have promoted the scho- lastic theory of a twofold Virtue. The virtues, simply ethical, he describes, as necessary to the in- tellectually happy man, that he may do his part as man °—may live as a man amongst men. Reflected in the Christian mirror, this picture, from the hand of the philosopher, represents the ascetic pietist, de- scending from the lofty region of devotional con- templation, to the ordinary duties of the weaker and less spiritual brother. There is a curious passage, indeed, in one of his ethical works, in which Aristotle expresses himself still more strongly on that kind of excellence, which is attained, not by dint of human exertion, or by the regular use of the faculties, but is the result of an immediate Divine impulse?. In his system, this Divine impulse is, simply the instinctive force n This is illustrated by the fact, that the first step, in a pro- cess of Canonization, is a sentence from the Pope, declaring that the candidate for saintship had practised Christian virtue in gradu heroico. ο Δεήσεται οὖν τῶν τοιούτων πρὸς τὸ ἀνθρωπεύεσθαι. Ethic. X.c. 8. P Note Β, τυ 290 LECTURE VI. of Nature, operating in such cases not by the or- dinary course: and he refers to it, as an account of what is called good-fortune, or success dispro- portioned to the apparent means employed. This description became, in the scholastic system, the triumphant career of the holy man under the in- fluence of Divine Grace, realizing a perfection of conduct, that transcends the power of human prin- ciples. Connecting, again, this notion of superhuman virtue with that of the principle of Corruption, the Original Sin of man’s nature, we see the peculiar complexion of the Virtue, to which the Schoolmen gave the highest place in the rewards of heaven. It was the Virtue of Conquest,—that by which the fuel (fomes) of Concupiscence—the lust of the flesh—was sub- dued and quenched. For this was the earthly prin- ciple,—that which turned away the soul from God ; the direct contrary, therefore, to the principle of Grace, by which the soul is turned to God. If one was the greatest virtue, the other would there- fore be the greatest vice. Hence, the rigid rule of a life of celibacy was established, as the perfection of morality. And hence, chiefly, that inveterate pre- judice, by which we are disposed even now, to iden- tify moral purity with the converse of sensuality ; overlooking other principles of our nature, no less difficult and no less necessary to be controlled, in order to right conduct and happiness. The distinction of Sins into Venial and Mortal, LECTURE VI. 291 is deduced from the same notion of the Chief Good, Since the whole excellence of the Christian life con- sisted in its direction towards God, as the ultimate object of all its aims; whatever tended to withdraw the soul from this direction, tended towards the death of the soul; or, in the language of the Schools, was a mortal sin. Whatever, therefore, touched the fundamentals of belief, or any express disobedience to the commands of God, was, as they described it, an “ inordinateness” of the affections; it rendered the desires “ inordinate’—put them out of that course, in which they were rightly ordered towards God. Sins of unbelief, of heresy, contumacy in error, im- penitence, rejection of the spiritual authority of the Church, were therefore mortal sins. Venial Sins, on the contrary, were such as were committed in the inferior path of Christian discipline; such as occurred by the force of temptations, acting on the concupiscible part of our nature. The heart might be right towards God, and therefore guiltless of offences destructive to the soul in themselves. Yet, so far as these offences turned the soul towards the changeable goods of the world, they were sins in- jurious to the Christian progress and aim. They came into the class of Venial, on the ground, that here the religious principle was not deficient ; and the circumstances, accordingly, under which they were committed, might be taken into consideration as excuses. These were the sins of frailty and in- firmity, occasioned by the conflict between the evil desires remaining from Original Sin, and the Divine U2 292 LECTURE VI. principle infused into the soul by Grace. In the development of this part of their ethical system, the observations of Aristotle on the force of the desires in counteracting the reason, and on the voluntary nature of actions, were their chief guide and autho- rity. The degrees of extenuation, or indulgence, to different offences in the Venial class, are ascer- tained by the principles of his philosophy. The whole consideration of this subject may be regarded indeed, as the popular ethics of the Schools ; as a system of condescension to the weak- nesses of the subject-disciple; by which, at the same time, the power over his conscience was artfully maintained. The rule, in itself, is a just and sound one, when confined to its proper exercise. Its sphere is, in the intercourse of thought between man and man; to regulate the judgments which each passes on the conduct of another. Indulgence becomes, on this ground, the strict law of right. A sense of our own infirmity, a consideration of the condition of man in the world, of our imperfect knowledge of the heart, a genuine fellow-feeling, are the great principles which here must guide our moral de- cisions. And the several decisions of the heart, framed on these principles, constitute a tacit code of Venial offences, known by the name of Candour, or Equity, or Kindness, or Good-will. The Scho- lastic philosophy converted this law, with great ad- dress, to the service of the ecclesiastical power. To the same principle may be traced the divisions LECTURE VI. 293 of Virtue, into Theological and Moral, and into In- fused and Acquired. The theological virtues are Faith, Hope, and Charity ; each of which has God Himself for its object; Faith, it is stated, having respect to the Divine Truth, Charity to the Divine Goodness, Hope to the greatness of the Divine Om- nipotence and Kindness. The Moral Virtues are those, by which the nature of man is regulated with respect to human things. These are comprehensively denoted by the Schoolmen, under the name of The Four Cardinal Virtues; agreeably to the arrange- ment in the Morals of Gregory, and which seems indeed the most ancient division of Virtue ;—Pru- dence, Justice, Fortitude, Temperance 4. These, to- gether with the theological virtues, making up the mystical number of seven, (which their method de- lighted in tracing out in different objects,) com- prized all the various duties belonging to man, as he respects “ God, his neighbour, or himself.” We readily see the connexion of the Theological virtues, with the perfection of the Speculative Life. Such a system left scarcely any place for the simply Moral virtues; so far as these were employed in the lower sphere of merely human duties. These virtues, how- ever, were consecrated to the divine service, by the distinction between Infused and Acquired Virtue. Acquired Virtue was the simple result of our na- tural instincts, cultivated by exercise and matured 4 Schoolmen refer to Wisdom viii. 7. If a man love right- eousness, her labours are virtues: for she teacheth temperance and prudence, justice and fortitude. u 3 294 LECTURE VI. into habits. But Infused Virtue was, the same moral qualities perfected in us by Divine influence: the theological virtues, in themselves, the gifts of God, being the principles of the Infused virtues, in like manner as the natural instincts are the princi- ples of the Acquired virtues. As the Acquired vir- tues, then, fitted men for human affairs; so the In- fused virtues, it was represented, qualified men to be “citizens of saints and domestics of God.” Their system, we find, provided for the growth and ex- pansion of the seed of divine grace—the element of the heavenly life in the human soul—in a manner analogous to the improvement of our natural moral instincts; by accessions, that is, of the same kind to the original principles. The soul proceeded in the divine life, as in the moral; increasing in favour with God, as, according to the theory of Aristotle, it advances in its natural conquest over the passions. A still further distinction of moral excellence was derived, from the Scripture-declaration of the mani- fold offices of the Holy Spirit, in the sanctification of the human heart. These were the qualities of wis- dom, science, understanding, counsel ;—the effects of the Holy Spirit on the rational principle of the soul : fortitude, piety, fear—the effects of the Holy Spirit on the affections. They were denominated the Seven Gifts of the Spirit; the enumeration being drawn from that passage of Isaiah, which declares the Spirit of the Lord, as “ resting,” and “as the Spirit of “ wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel 9 LECTURE VI. 295 “and might, the Spirit of knowledge and of the “ fear of the Lord.” As Gifts they differed from the Infused Virtues, in being higher means of perfection, immediate divine instincts,—dispositions prompting to follow the divine motions, and carrying man at once to acts beyond those of human virtue. In the further development of their Ethical System, the Schoolmen closely follow the method of Aristotle’s Ethics throughout. Aquinas, in par- ticular, has illustrated the application of Aristotle’s principles to Christian morality, with an admirable comprehension of the subject, and sometimes, with a knowledge of human nature, which, though briefly and darkly intimated, has scarcely been surpassed by the modern philosopher. On the moral por- tion of his great argument, he seems to feel his strength more than elsewhere; and, though still encumbered with the armour of his technical sys- tem, exerts a more independent power. For, though he explains the formal divisions of Virtue received in the Church, he still pursues the in- quiry into all the different heads of Aristotle’s more copious enumeration, and shews their consistency with the tenour of Christianity. This portion, indeed, of the labours of Aquinas, is particularly interesting to the inquirer into the history of Moral Philosophy, and of its connexion with Theology. It shews to what extent, our phraseology on moral sub- jects, has been derived from the Latin versions of Aristotle’s expressions of moral ideas; and how τ 4 296 LECTURE VI. deeply we are indebted to the Scholastic Philosophy, for its transfusion of the valuable theories of that philosopher, into this department of science. By looking, indeed, to this source, we find the origin of the whole of the questions which have engaged the attention of the modern ethical philo- sopher, as well as of our ordinary language on moral subjects. The question of the nature of Moral Obligation, and the very use of the term Ob- ligation, are derived from this source. [0 is strictly connected with that view of Justification, which I endeavoured to explain in my last Lecture. In con- sequence of Original Sin, man comes into the world a debtor to Divine Justice. He is under an obliga- tion to punishment, on account of his deficiency from that form of Original Justice, in which he rendered to God all that service of love, which the great good- ness of God demanded. Hence our terms, due, and duty, as employed to express right conduct. But the use of these words has created, at the same time, a speculative difficulty, which does not properly be- long to the subject. Philosophers, we find, have been anxious to solve the question,—why man is obliged to the performance of right; and have sought, accordingly, for some enforcement of virtue, beyond the simple fact, that virtue is a perfect law in itself. Religionists, accordingly, have drawn down an unnecessary force from the law of God, considered as the rewarder and punisher in a future state; whilst the irreligious have had unholy recourse to the arm of social power. The truth is, that the term Obliga- LECTURE VI. 297 tion is a religious one; introduced into Morality by that peculiar connexion, which the speculative Theo- logy of the Schools established, between Religion and Morality. The Divine Law, the principle of the Divine Being Himself, was to be traced downwards in its operation on fallen man; and its powerful ef- ficacy was to be asserted, as well as its transcendant goodness, in the blessing, and in the vengeance, with which it was accompanied. The subject on which I have been discoursing, is much too large even to be touched adequately, in the compass of a single Lecture. My object, how- ever, is chiefly to point out the origin of that pre- judice, by which the distinct provinces of Theology and Morality have been popularly confounded: and I therefore confine myself to such a view of the Scho- lastic Ethics, as exhibits its connexion with Theology. It is in this respect, that the ethical system of the Schools has been injurious to Moral Philosophy ; whilst it has conferred important benefit, as I have observed, by its introduction into modern language of the practical science of Aristotle ;—an effect, that each individual has unconsciously experienced, in the tone which education and society have given to his mind. What is more familiar to us, I may ask, before we have begun to reflect on the words which we employ, than to speak of the motives and the _ ends of actions? But, in using these terms, we are speaking in the theories of what we are apt to re- 298 LECTURE VI. gard, as an absurd and exploded philosophy, of no interest to ourselves. It is to the technical language, indeed, of the School-Ethics, that we may ascribe the extrava- gance of those Modern Philosophers, who have re- duced all actions to the necessity attributed to mo- tion consequent on impact, or to the results produced by the powers annexed to material nature. The origin, indeed, of this modern “ necessity,” is pre- cisely the realism, of the Schools. Actions have been analysed mentally into motives and ends, and this mental distinction has been converted into forces and effects. Consequently, the very distinction be- tween rational and material agents has been con- founded, by such a mode of philosophizing. For it is the characteristic of the former, that they are agents in themselves,—endued with a principle of and there- motion intrinsically, in their own nature, fore spontaneous and variable in their course of action :—whilst the latter, having no such principle in themselves, depend for their actions on their re- lations to other objects. The influence of the scholastic blending of Theo- logy and Ethics is evidenced in the very general confusion of thought still observable on this point. There are two extreme opinions on the subject: that on the one hand, which regards ethical principles, as unholy and forbidden ground to the Scriptural re- ligionist; as enervating and debasing the sacred LECTURE VI. 299 truth ; that on the other hand, which considers no system of religious truths obligatory on the be- lief and the conduct, unless it can be reduced to some principle of our moral nature. Evidently, the limits, and proper department, of these two great portions of our moral instruction, are not attended to, in these extreme views. Too much is ascribed to Theology in the one, too much to Mo- rality in the other. According to the former, we can do nothing to the glory of God, unless his glory is the object immediately present to our thoughts in each action. According to the latter, the truth of human nature is disparaged, by the endeavour to kindle the natural sentiments of the heart with the celestial fire of the altar. The distinct provinces of intellectual and revealed knowledge have often been remarked, with a view to silence the objections of such speculators. But I think this account of the matter by no means meets the difficulty of the case, which arises as much from an improper estimate of the moral, as of the intellectual powers; and that a further answer to it should be sought, in a just view of the relation of Moral Philosophy to Theology. Morality then, it should be observed, is the sci- ence of our own internal nature. It ascertains all those principles by which we are actuated in our sentiments and conduct, and establishes the general law in which they all agree. Its office is throughout one of discovery. The existence of these principles is assumed; and the facts, both of our observation and our consciousness, are examined, with a view te 300 LECTURE VI. their discovery. But all these inquiries are only satisfied to lead to another, which is quite beyond the province of the moralist to answer, as to the ultimate reference of all this complex machinery which we have been studying; whether it is a whole in itself, or there is something beyond it, in which it originated, and to which it tends. The Christian Revelation has answered this, by shewing the refer- ence of these principles to the invisible, eternal world; giving us an account of their origin in the dispensations of Providence, and the ultimate effect, in a future life, of their present observed tendencies. We should observe, then, that it is only results of which Revelation informs us, the ultimate relations and effects of what we have already ascertained, or are able, by inquiry of ourselves, to ascertain. It is highly important to observe this; because our popular language on the subject confounds the dis- tinction, between the principles of our conduct and the results to which they tend. We are apt to speak of Religion, as supplying fresh motives of con- duct. But, in fact, the principles of our moral na- ture are the motives, the only motives to actions, as, to use an imperfect analogy, the springs and wheels of a machine are the motives to its action: and the truths of Christianity are presented to those principles, as objects towards which they should tend. There is thus infinite room for addition to our actual moral improvement, by the presentation of new and more glorious objects to our moral prin- ciples; whilst, at the same time, there is no addition LECTURE VI. 301 of even a single new moral fact to the history of our internal nature. Results may be unfolded to us, utterly beyond the reach of all conclusions from observation and consciousness; and these results may open objects to our faith, and, through faith, to all the principles of our nature; whilst the prin- ciples themselves are unchanged, and unchangeable, so long as man, and the world around him, are what they are. But this confusion of sesudts with the motives of conduct takes place, when the religious principle is substituted as the spring of action: as, when it is argued, that no action can have any moral value, except it be done zmmediately, and exclusively, on a motive of glory to God. The glory of God supplies, indeed, the great religious centre of our actions: they are incomplete and irreligious, if they terminate in worldly objects. But our actions must still be performed according to the laws of our nature. They must originate within us; they must be morally right in themselves, in order to their sanctification in the great object, which Religion holds out to our view. Christianity, in fact, leaves Ethical Science, as such, precisely where it found it: all the duties which Ethical Science prescribes, remain on their own foot- ing; not altered or weakened, but affirmed and strengthened by the association of Religion. And, so independent is the Science of Ethics, of the support, and the ennobling, which it receives from Religion, that it would be nothing strange, or objectionable, in 302 LECTURE VI. a Revelation, were we to find embodied in its lan- guage, much of the false Ethical Philosophy, which systems may have established 4. This, I conceive, would appear to those, who bear in mind the real distinctness of Religion and Moral Science, nothing more objectionable, than the admission into the sa- cred volume of descriptions involving false theories of Natural Philosophy. There is greater affinity to revealed truth in the nature of Moral Philosophy ; because it has, in common with Religion, the hap- piness of man for its object: but a coincidence of object is different from an actual agreement in the means employed. Holiness, separation from the world, devotion, stillness of the thoughts and the af- fections, are the means of Religion :—Ethics are all activity, all business. Neither will answer the pur- pose of the other: both are indispensable to the per- fection and happiness of human nature. Let those, then, who would endeavour to substitute one for the other, either Theological Truth for Moral, or Moral for Theological, reflect whether they are not bringing into competition two classes of truth which have no rivalry with each other. Let them think, whether religion may not be true and obli- gatory, though it may touch on points beyond the sphere of their moral anticipations: and whether the 4 In consequence of incorporating all Science with Theology, and making Theology itself a Science, the notion arose, that nothing could be true in any science that was not accordant with the Scripture.—Quicquid enim in aliis scientiis invenitur, veritati hujus scientie repugnans, totum condemnatur ut falsum. Aquin. Summ. Theolog. Prima Pars, qu. 1. art. 6. LECTURE VI. 303 theory of morality may not remain, amidst all the light of Revelation, a valid philosophy of life, soli- citing zn itself, their earnest study, in order to a right appreciation of religious truth. Nothing is more wanted in these days, than an accurate acquaintance with the truths of Ethics, to disperse the clouds, which the prejudices of theological theory spread over human nature. Doctrines in Religion are ad- vanced, which could not hold their ground for a moment, if Moral Philosophy were duly studied, and its truths were practically applied, as a basis of Christian truth. It would be seen, that, in many instances, men were maintaining positions at vari- ance with indisputable facts of the human consti- tution, and rashly overthrowing, at once, the evidence and the application of the sacred truth which they would advocate. LECTURE VII. THE SACRAMENTS. hii ant ἢ ih / vt ota γᾷ nm ik ᾿ νὴ il ii ἫΝ vs ΣΉΝ ἌΝ ἐγ ΒΕ. sa vil ἐμ ΛΝ «ΚΝ ὟΣ ay tis te ie ro vin ai τὰ a ae cae ete lah on sais a, (heli al eas Ὧν δὶ ipa ie δ | Bs Waid, Teh εἰ 4“ Vinh le ‘ ath Ls wm 4 τὴ ΝΥΝ ‘Tes Ng ut ᾿ Ὅν ive ' ” y at ὴ 7 1 { " ᾿ 7 4 i 4 mC ALLA ee ” Bi) es ᾿ : SUMMARY. Docrring of the Sacraments a continuation of the Scholastic scheme of Divine Agency—Separate nature of the soul and body assumed throughout the speculation—The Sacraments viewed as the means of supporting and renovating the life of the Soul—General notion of them founded on the belief in secret influences—Belief in Magic auxiliary to this notion— Connexion of Sacramental Influence with the doctrine of the Incarnation—Agitation of the subject in the IXth century in connexion with Alexandrian Philosophy—Difference of opinion as to whether the Sacraments were signs or instruments—Pre- cision of language respecting the Eucharist in particular—Pre- eminence assigned to this Sacrament attributable to the esta- blished theory of Sacramental Influence—Doctrine of Intention —Question of the effect of the Vice of the Minister on the efficacy of the Sacrament—Notion of impressed Character at- tributed to some of the Sacraments—Evident superiority of Baptism and the Eucharist in comparison with the res-—Rough form of the early Controversies on the Sacramental Presence of Christ —The terms Substance and Species not taken at first in a strict metaphysical sense—Aristotelic Philosophy of Mat- ter and Form, Substance and Accident, introduced to perfect the theory of the Sacraments—This exemplified particularly in Transubstantiation—Connexion of this doctrine with the power of the Church enforces the assertion of the mystical virtue of the consecrated elements—Physical theory of Transmutation applied to the establishment of the Presence of Christ—Con- nexion with this, of the notion of the mysterious efficacy of certain words—Realism involved in the further use of the no- tions of Substance and Accident in the account of Transub- stantiation—The theory of the doctrine at variance with popular representations of it. General reflections on the abuse of the doctrine of the Sacra- ments in the Scholastic System—its repugnance to the spirit of Christianity—Necessity of vigilance against the temptations to refinement on this subject. ᾿ς ὦ Luxe VIII. 43—48. And a woman having an issue of blood twelve years, which had spent all her living upon physicians, neither could be healed of any, came behind him, and touched the border of his garment: and immediately ‘teas issue of blood stanched. And Jesus said, Who touched me? When all denied, Peter and they that were with him said, Master, fhe multitude throng thee and press thee, and sayest thou, Who touched me? And Jesus said, Somebody hath touched me: for I perceive that virtue is gone out of me. And when the woman saw that she was not hid, she came trem- bling, and falling down before him, she eeleren unto him before all the people for what cause she had touched him, and how she was healed immediately. And he said unto her, Daughter, be of good comfort: thy faith hath made thee whole ; go in peace. > Ν lal Kal γυνὴ οὖσα ἐν ῥύσει αἵματος ἀπὸ ἐτῶν δώδεκα, ἥτις εἰς > x 7 “ \ 7 > Μ Cry) a ἰατροὺς προσαναλώσασα ὅλον τὸν βίον, οὐκ ἴσχυσεν ὑπ᾽ οὐδ- los “ 3, lal / evos θεραπευθῆναι, προσελθοῦσα ὄπισθεν, ἥψατο τοῦ κρασπέ- δου τοῦ ἱματίου αὐτοῦ: καὶ παραχρῆμα ἔστη ἡ ῥύσις τοῦ αἵματος 3. σι ΡΝ aD (495) Diag PCR / / eo. 7, αὐτῆς. Καὶ εἶπεν ὁ ᾿Ιησοῦς" Τίς ὃ ἁψάμενός μου; Αρνουμέ- ΤΣ , aed νων δὲ πάντων, εἶπεν ὁ Πέτρος, καὶ οἱ per αὐτοῦ: ᾿Επιστάτα, » / οἱ ὄχλοι συνέχουσί σε καὶ ἀποθλίβουσι, καὶ λέγεις" Tis 6 ἁψά- 7 ς Wir) n> ee, , PASE σιν. ἐς Rint OF pevos pou; O δὲ ᾿Ιησοῦς εἶπεν" “Haro μου tis’ ἐγὼ yap ἔγνων cal > a a δύναμιν ἐξελθοῦσαν aw ἐμοῦ. ᾿Ιδοῦσα δὲ ἡ γυνὴ ὅτι οὐκ ἔλαθε, 3 an a 7 a δ τρέμουσα ἦλθε, καὶ προσπεσοῦσα αὐτῷ, δι᾿ ἣν αἰτίαν ἥψατο αὐ- τοῦ ἀπήγγειλεν αὐτῷ ἐνώπιον παντὸς τοῦ λαοῦ, καὶ ὡς ἰάθη ΄- «ε > a παραχρῆμα. Ὃὧ δὲ εἶπεν αὐτῇ: Θάρσει, θύγατερ᾽ ἡ πίστις σου σέσωκέ σε. πορεύου εἰς εἰρήνην. Et mulier queedam erat in fluxu sanguinis ab annis duo- decim, quze in medicos erogaverat omnem substantiam suam, nec ab ullo potuit curari: Accessit retro, et tetigit fimbriam vestimenti ejus: et confestim stetit fluxus sanguinis ejus. Et ait Jesus: Quis est qui me tetigit ? Negantibus autem omnibus, dixit Petrus, et qui cum illo erant: Preeceptor, turbe te comprimunt et affligunt, et dicis: Quis me teti- git? Et dixit Jesus: Tetigit me aliquis; nam ego novi virtutem de me exiisse. Videns autem mulier quia non la- tuit, tremens venit, et procidit ante pedes ejus: et ob quam causam tetigerit eum, indicavit coram omni populo, et quem- admodum confestim sanata sit. At ipse dixit οἱ: Filia, fides tua salvam te fecit; vade in pace. Lar. Vuue. LECTURE VII. THE preceding views of the Scholastic system have presented the action of a subtile system of Materialism, commencing with the Divine Grace infused into the soul, and working itself out by the various principles of human nature. The Will of God, regarded as the primary cause of all activity, has been traced, as it takes effect in the operations of the Christian soul, and raises up the fallen child of Adam to the perfection of the sons of God. It can hardly have escaped observation, that, in the course of these explanations of the process of Grace, an entire distinctness has been assumed for the soul, as the living and thinking principle of man’s nature. It was the established doctrine, that the soul was infused into the body, as I have before observed. The body, or the flesh, was conceived to be fitly disposed for the reception of the soul; and then the soul, being infused, gave the form of Human Nature. An evident reason of this opinion is to be seen in the anxiety to maintain the proper incorruptibility of the soul. If the soul were not generated, it could not be corrupted. It might, indeed, be infected ; be subjected to guilt and punish- ment by its union with a corrupt flesh; but, being created fresh by the hand of God, immediately, in each instance of a human being, it was, in itself, a divine principle, independent of the corruptible body x 3 310 LECTURE VII. with which it was associated. Hence it was said, that original sin produced a deformity of the soul. It destroyed that due constitution of the principles of man’s fleshly nature, which disposed it perfectly for the reception of the soul. The expression itself of Form, as applied to the soul, was derived from Aristotle ; the separate creation, and infusion of it into the body, were modifications of the Platonic theory of its preexistence. The Scholastic doctrine, combining both these principles, made the ground- work of a system, which developed the process of the soul towards a state, when the flesh should no longer be an obstruction to its energy, and it should appear in its proper nature and perfection, as the Jorm of the human being. This notion of the separate existence of the soul has so incorporated itself with Christian Theology, that we are apt, at this day, to regard a belief in it as essential to orthodox doctrine. Even in main- taining that such a belief is not essential to Chris- tianity, I may incur the appearance of impugning a vital truth of religion. I cannot, however, help viewing this popular belief as a remnant of scho- lasticism. I feel assured that the truth of the Resur- rection does not depend on such an assumption ; that the Life and Immortality of man, as resting on Christ raised from the dead, is a certain fact in the course of Divine Providence; whatever may be the theories of the soul, and of its connexion with the body. Accordingly, instead of a general simple acknow- LECTURE VII. 911 ledgment of the Salvation of the Gospel, we have seen, how the process of Grace has been traced by the Latin theologians, as it repairs the natural defects of the soul, and brings it into union with Christ ὃ. The theory of the Sacraments, on which I now enter, proceeds on the same view of Human Salva- tion. It is an account of the application of the Passion of Christ to the healing of the soul—a col- lection of remedial measures, by which its languors and infirmities may be relieved and strengthened. The Incarnation of Christ is regarded as the pri- mary efficient cause of health to the soul: dispensed by the several Sacraments as the instrumental and secondary causes. As the Incarnation itself was an union of the Divine Word with human nature, so the Sacraments, according to the theoretic view of the Scholastic philosophy, were mystical unions of words with sensible things, by which the real Pas- sion of Christ was both signified and applied to the soul of man—the visible channels, through which virtue was conveyed from Christ Himself to his mystical body, the Church. The doctrines of Original Sin and of the Incar- a What our Lord says, in answer to Martha’s declaration, “1 know that he shall rise again,” when he proclaims Himself the Resurrection and the Life, is to this point. The Jews, then, entertained a philosophical belief of a future state. Our Lord tacitly reproves an assurance on such grounds, by his strong reference to Himself; ‘‘ J am the Resurrection and the «¢ Life; whosoever believeth in me, shall live, though he die,” &c.—Note A. Lecture VII. xX 4 312 LECTURE VII. nation represented mankind under two extremes of individuality: as one with Adam in sin; as one with Christ in perfect righteousness. An account was wanted of the union of these two extremes—a bridge, by which the mind might pass from one theory to the other. This was presented in the doctrine of the Sacraments. They brought the two extremes into connexion. They connected fallen man with regenerate man, marking, as it were, the several stages of transition, from the state of cor- ruption to that of glory. Theologians have not been content to rest on the simple fact of the Divine Ordinance, appointing certain externa] rites as es- sential parts of Divine service on the part of man, available to the blessing of the receiver. But they have treated the Sacraments as effusions of the vir- tue of Christ, physically quickening and strengthen- ing the soul, in a manner analogous to the invigor- ation of the body by salutary medicines. The word Sacrament itself, as understood in the Latin Church, is founded on this notion. Though derived from the military oath of the Romans, and so far bearing the mark of that derivation, as it denotes a solemn pledge of faith on the part of the receiver,—in its established theological use it corre- sponded more properly with μυστήριον of the Greeks. It expressed, at first, accordingly, any solemn, mys- terious truth of Religion; and afterwards, by the usage of the Schools, was appropriated to those acts in particular, by which grace was conceived to be imparted to the soul, under outward and _ visible LECTURE VII. 313 signs. The definition indeed, given in the Catechism of the Church of England, is exactly what the Scho- lastic theory suggests; so far, at least, as the lan- guage of it characterizes the nature of a Sacrament. It is, in the subsequent application of this definition, that the Church of England has modified and im- proved on the fundamental idea of the Scholastic doctrine ; whilst the idea itself is preserved, as being part of the very texture of technical theology ἢ. It was, however, in just logical connexion with this theory, that the Latin Theology deduced the Seven Sacraments of the Church of Rome. They are applications of the Passion, or the Priesthood of Christ, as it is otherwise expressed by the School- men °, to Christians, either individually, or as mem- bers of the Christian Society. On the first ground, the rites of Baptism, Confirmation, the Eucharist, Penance, Extreme Unction, obtain their sacramental nature; on the latter, the rites of Orders and Ma- trimony come into the same estimate. The great Christian community, both as a whole and in its parts, must be kept animate with the Divine Grace flowing from Christ its head Baptism confers the grace of Regeneration, the new spiritual life, by which man becomes the child of God. Confirmation gives the increase of that Life. By the Eucharist it is Ὁ Invisibilis gratiz visibile signum, is the usual definition of a Sacrament in the school-writers. The words are drawn from Augustine.—Note B. ὁ Ad primum ergo dicendum, quod per omnia Sacramenta fit homo particeps sacerdotii Christi, &c. Aquin. Sum. Theol. III. Pars, qu. uxt. art. 6. 314 LECTURE VII. strengthened and vivified: by Penance, recruited from the effects of sin: Extreme Unction removes the last relics of the sinful nature, preparing the soul for its departure. These, then, are the influences of Christ’s passion on Christians, in their personal ca- pacity. But the Christian Society needs to be sup- ported, both in its natural and in its spiritual exist- ence. The grace annexed to Matrimony supports the natural life, in order to the spiritual; since the Christian must first be born into the world, that he may afterwards be regenerated in Christ. The sa- crament of Orders, analogous to Matrimony in the spiritual community, is the grace of Christ’s pas- sion, continuing the vital succession of Ministers, the living instruments, through whom all grace is imparted to the Church ¢. Rightly, then, to understand the doctrine of the Sacraments in general, we must look to the theory of secret influences on which it is based, the mys- terious power, conceived to belong to certain things, or actions, or persons, of effecting changes not cog- nizable by the senses, and changes, as real as those apparent to observation. It is true indeed, that, in the Christian application of this theory, the power was not conceived to belong intrinsically to the things themselves. They were only subordi- nate, instrumental causes, by which the Divine Agency accomplished its ends. Christ was held to be the sole primary cause of Grace, however d Note C. LECTURE VII. 315 given. In this respect, the mystical philosophy of secret agents in nature was christianized. But, though it might thus be denied, that any proper efficacy was attributed to the symbol employed in the administration of a Sacrament, still its power of communicating grace instrumentally, was asserted in the strongest manner. Illustration was drawn from the manner in which any instrument of .art per- formed its work. The artist, or workman, was properly the executor of it, as the designer of the result: the instrument executed it, according to its adaptation, as an instrument, to produce the result ©. The general belief in Magic, in the early ages of the Church, may sufficiently account for the ready reception of such a theory of Sacramental influence. The maxim of Augustine, Accedit verbum ad ele- mentum, et fit Sacramentum, appears to be, in fact, an adaptation of the popular belief respecting the power of incantations and charms, to the subject of Religion. The miracles themselves, indeed, of our Saviour were supposed to act in this manner, even by those who did not impute them to the agency of evil. His word, or His touch, was sought for by persons acknowledging in faith the reality of his mission. “ Say in a word only,” said the Cen- turion, “and my servant shall be healed.” The woman, who forced her way through the crowd, fully trusted that she should be made whole, if she could touch but the hem of the garment of Jesus. And our Saviour, whose condescension was shewn F Note): 316 LECTURE VII. even to the prejudices of his faithful followers, often accompanied the working of his miracles with sig- nificant actions. In the instance of the woman, in- deed, thus suddenly cured, He is described as having perceived that some one had touched Him, by the fact, that virtue had gone out of Him ;—a mode of speaking, characteristic of the prevalent idea con- cerning the operation of Divine Influence, as of something passing from one body to another. The physical philosophy received in the Schools, was in itself favourable to this doctrine of sacra- mental efficiency. Nature being regarded as a sys- tem of powers inherent in matter, it would be easily conceived, that these powers might be secretly di- rected by that Sovereign Will which gave them being. As they operated visibly in various ways through the Divine Word, so they might also act invisibly for the production of spiritual effects. The Word which spoke things into being, could surely influence the mode of their operation. This doctrine, however, of the Sacraments ap- pears to have subsisted in the Church without ques- tioning, and consequently without much precision of opinion on the subject, until the agitation of the controversies respecting the nature of Christ®. These 9. Ratramn was engaged in a controversy on the manner of Christ’s Birth. Paschase also wrote on the same point in opposition to Ratramn. The coincidence of this controversy with that on the Eucharist, further illustrates the connexion of the points disputed in each.—Note E. LECTURE VII. 317 would evidently affect the notion of a communicated virtue derived to the powers of nature from his Person. If, according to Nestorius, God and man were not united in one Person in Jesus Christ, it might naturally be inquired, whether the “ Virtue “of his Passion,’ obtained sacramentally, flowed from the Divinity or from the Humanity ; since his Passion was thus considered as distinct from his Divine Nature. Accordingly, at the Council of Ephesus, two opinions on this article were con- demned: one asserting “the flesh of the Son of “ man,” to mean some one among men, into whose flesh and blood the earthly substance of bread should be changed ; the other asserting, that the individual, whose flesh and blood should have this salutary efficacy, should be some eminently holy person—the temple of God—in whom God should dwell in the truest sense. Whether, indeed, such opinions were actually held in the form here stated, may be doubted. But it seems evident, from the notice itself of dif- ferent opinions on the Eucharist in the time of Nes- torius, that the popular notion of sacramental in- fluence, was affected by his theory of the Incarna- tion. The communication of secret virtue by the sacramental symbol, seemed to be broken in its first link, if the Divinity were separated from the Hu- manity of Christ: and speculation exerted itself to f J have taken this account from Lanfranc, De Corp. et Sang. Domini, c. xvi. p. 242. Oper.—Note F. 318 LECTURE VII. find a stay, on which the sacred chain might be fastened. Afterwards, the Alexandrian Philosophy, as re- vived by Erigena, seems once more to have awakened the opinions of speculative men on the question of Sacramental influence. The Eucharist again, as the most complex subject of disquisition, was the point of the general question, to which at- tention was particularly directed. There is no ex- tant work of Erigena on the subject, though we find allusions, in subsequent writers, to his doctrine, set forth, as it seems, in some express treatise. There remain, however, other treatises of the same period, those of Paschase and Ratramn, of which I have had occasion to speak before: and these, though entirely confined to a discussion of the Eucharist, indicate a general agitation of the question concern- ing the manner, in which grace was communicated by the Sacraments. That inquiry should have been directed to the presence of Christ in the consecrated bread and wine, seems to have been only accidental, from the circumstance, that the celebration of the Eucharist was more identified with Divine worship than the other Sacraments. It appears that the Alexandrian Philosophy re- vived the question, by removing all actual power from nature, and reducing all natural effects to the sole agency of the Deity. There would be, accord- ing to this philosophy, no real instrumentality in the Sacraments. All would be the immediate action LECTURE VII. 319 of the Deity. The virtue attributed to the sacred symbols would therefore vanish. They would not contain Christ’s passion by real participation in themselves. They could only act as the representa- tives, or signs, of his presence, not as the causes, or enstruments, of his operation on the soul. The popular and orthodox doctrine, however, was, that the Sacramental influence was a power of cau- sation. Accordingly at this period, when disputation began again to be the pastime of theologians, the notion was strenuously opposed, that the Sacrament of the Eucharist was a sign only, and not the actual presence of the crucified body of Christ. The or- thodox, indeed, maintained that it was a sign, so far as it consisted of visible symbols; but they further contended, that a real efficacy must be im- puted to the operation so signified. The collision, however, of adverse statement, forced them into a precision of language, which, probably, but for the force of controversy, would have had no place in this department of theology. It is no inconsider- able evidence of this observation, that the precision of language has occurred on that particular Sacra- ment, which was the immediate matter of discus- sion,—the Eucharist. The nature of Christ’s pre- sence in Baptism might have been attempted, no less, to be defined: but here the point is left com- paratively open to opinion; whilst, respecting the Eucharist, the path of orthodoxy is rigidly marked out to the disciple of the scholastic theology. The opposition of controversy, whilst it led the 320 LECTURE VII. orthodox to assert an actual presence of the incar- nate Christ, under the sacramental symbols of bread and wine, made them charge their adversaries with holding the Sacraments to be only s7g2s,—memo- rials of Christ’s passion, and not the actual oblation. And this may account for the pointed expression in our Article, that “the Supper of the Lord is not “ only a sign of the love which Christians ought to “‘ have among themselves, but rather is a Sacrament “of our Redemption.” In denying an actual com- munication of Christ to the sacred emblems, it be- came necessary to guard against the construction of asserting a merely commemorative rite, and thus evacuating the Sacrament of its holy burthen of Grace. For neither Ratramn, in opposing the doc- trine of Paschase, nor afterwards Berenger, in ad- vocating the views of Erigena against Lanfranc 8, appear to have held, that the Eucharist was nothing more than a sign. Ratramn, indeed, distinctly as- serts a real presence, though he does not admit a presence of the crucified body of Christ in the con- secrated bread and wine. It is a real and true pre- sence that he asserts ;—the virtue of Christ acting in the way of efficacious assistance to the receiver of the Sacrament. The Church of England doc- trine of the Sacraments, it is well-known, is founded on the views given by this author. Cranmer and Ridley are said to have studied his work together, and to have derived their first ray of light on the subject from that study ". & Note 6. h Note H. LECTURE VII. 321 The relative importance of the Eucharist, in com- parison with the other Sacraments, and, indeed, with the whole doctrine and ritual of Christianity, in the system of the Church of Rome, may be drawn from this primary notion of sacramental efficiency. It may well be asked, why this sacred rite should stand so preeminent in the scheme of Christianity. I do not say, that it ought not to hold a principal station among the observances of a holy life. But it is the doctrinal supremacy given to it, to which I refer. View it, as it exists in the Roman Church, and it is there found absorbing into it the whole, it may be said, of Christian worship. There, the ministers of religion seem to be set apart chiefly for this sacred celebration: it is the spiritual power of their office—the essence of their priesthood. If we ask then, why this particular Sacrament should have attained this superiority over all other rites of Chris- tianity, we may find an answer in the Scholastic theory. Whilst the other Sacraments, recognized by that theory, participate of the virtue of Christ’s passion, this is the passion itself of Christ,—the whole virtue of his priesthood mystically repre- sented and conveyed. The priesthood of Christ comprehending in it the whole of Christianity, the rite by which that priesthood was especially signi- fied, would become the great act of human ministra- tion, when the notion was once established of an instrumental causality attached to the use of the sign. The importance which this Sacrament ob- tained, appears, accordingly, to have increased, in Ὁ 322 LECTURE VII. proportion as controversy more explicitly shaped the doctrine, giving a greater point and boldness to the assertion of a real oblation of Christ. It was freely admitted, that Christ was offered once for all on the Cross; that henceforth He is seated at the right hand of the Divine Majesty, to die no more. But the sacrifice performed by the priest was still a real offering of Christ; as being the appointed chan- nel, through which the expiatory virtue of the Great Sacrifice descends in vital efflux from the person of the Saviour i. The necessity of a general “ Intention” on the part of the priest administering a Sacrament, to “do “‘ what the Church does, and intends,” by that Sa- crament, is founded on the same mystical construc- tion of the rite, as an actual communication with Christ Himself. Inanimate things, so far as they act instrumentally in communicating the virtue of Christ’s passion, act simply according to the laws of their nature, moved by the impulse given to them externally. But the human agent, the animated in- strument* of the sacramental Virtue, being in him- self a principle of motion, operates by the moral, and therefore variable, power of freewill, in pro- ducing the mystical result. This doctrine led, of course, to many questions on the point; such as, whether the forgetfulness of the Priest, the omission of any expression, the variation of words in the form of consecration, would affect the validity of the i Note E. k Aristotle’s ἔμψυχον ὄργανον. LECTURE VII. 323 Sacrament. These difficulties, however, were skil- fully evaded, by resolving the personal individuality of the Priest into the general abstract personality of the Church. As officiating in the Sacrament, he appeared in the person of the Church. The ques- tion then only was, whether the general intention of the Church was fulfilled in the act of consecra- tion. Whatever arose from the mere person of the priest as an individual man, could not vitiate the rite |. Hence, though the nature of man, as a volun- tary agent, was included in the theory of the Sa- craments, the personal vice of the officiating mi- nister could not impede the due consecration of the rite. The Church itself could not err. He there- fore, in whom the person of the Church was vested, if only it was his design to act in that ca- pacity, and to do the work of the Church, could not fail in the performance of the rite. The mys- tical virtue was brought down to the sacred ele- ment, though the lips were unholy that pronounced the transforming benediction. Thus it was argued, the baptism of Judas was valid, because it was per- formed with the authority of Christ; whilst the baptism of John was not valid, as not being the act of the Church ™. We are ready, indeed, ourselves to admit, that the vice of the Minister does not impede the effect of the Sacrament. For it is evident, that, where the Faith of the receiver is the true consecrating 1 Note F. m Note G. Y 2 324 LECTURE VII. principle,—that which really brings down Christ to the heart of each individual,—the personal delin- quency of him who administers it, cannot deteriorate the Sacrament itself. ‘There seems, indeed, scarcely sufficient reason for the introduction of an express article on the subject, when it is once fully understood on Protestant grounds. We see, however, the occa- sion of it, in the Scholastic theory of the Sacraments. The immediate occasion, indeed, in the case of our Articles, was, the canon of the Council of Trent upon the subject. But the importance attributed to the point by so distinct a notice of it, belongs to the re- condite philosophy of sacramental influence. An authority and sanctity were to be maintained for the Church, as the sole and certain instrument of sa- cramental grace, against all objection to the indi- vidual agents, to whose hands her rites should be intrusted. It was an admirable expedient, indeed, of ecclesiastical policy, thus to rest the power of the Church on the purity and indefectibility of an ab- straction. Religious imagination was sustained on the picture of the Church, as the great Mother of the Faithful, cherishing her beloved children in her pure bosom; whilst her many-handed agents in the world were securing their hold on the consciences of men, by that prerogative of veneration which they enjoyed in her person™. Realism here be- " We should observe the confusion of ideas prevalent in the early Church on the subject of Baptism. The Church was con- sidered as “ the body of Christ.”” The Church also was ‘‘ the “mother of the faithful.” Hence, being baptized, and being LECTURE VII. 325 came an effectual means of power. The Clergy being regarded in their collective character, as re- presentatives of the person of the Church, exhibited an uniform, undying, principle of operation. The stability and eternity of a Theory were substituted for the variable and conflicting views in religious belief and action, which the actual facts of the Church presented. The same principle was applied to the body of the Faithful at large; as, for instance, in the ad- ministration of Baptism to Infants, the scholastic ground on which the validity of such baptism is asserted, is, that the Faith of the Church is ac- cepted, instead of that of the individual®°. The will of the Infant is incapable of putting any bar to the reception of the rite; and the intention of the Church therefore, it is alleged, fully avails in its behalf. Such, then, is the characteristic idea which per- vades all the Sacraments, according to the enume- ration of them given by the School-authors, and adopted by the Church of Rome. But it should be remarked, that of the seven, whilst all were held to made a “ member of the body of Christ,” and being ‘‘ incor- “‘ porated” into the Church, became equivalent expressions. Hence too the Church was said to ‘‘ generate” sons by baptism. Augustin. contr. Donatist. I. c. 10. et alib. © By Canon XIII. of Sess. VII. of the Council of 'Trent, the Faith of the Church is stated to be the ground on which infants are baptized. This accords with the language of Augustine.— Note H. Υ 8 326 LECTURE VII. be means of Grace, and divinely instituted, the two, which we hold exclusively as Sacraments, were considered as of more imperative obligation on the Christian world at large. Baptism, Confirmation, and Orders, indeed, were distinguished from the rest in this respect ; that they were conceived to im- press a Character on the Soul—an indelible mark, by which the Soul is consecrated to the service of God. Hence it was maintained that these rites could never be repeated. Though Baptism might have been administered by the hands of a heretic, yet, if the rite had been performed, it was enough. The Christian “ character” had been impressed, and the baptized was already a member of the Church. Cyprian, in his zeal against heresy, had main- tained the contrary ; requiring, that those who had been baptized by heretics should be rebaptized by the orthodox’. But the opposite doctrine pre- vailed in the Church, and was established by the authority of Augustine. It gave, in fact, to the Church a power over all who had once been bap- tized, whether within or without her pale; so that the spiritual terrors might be applied to such per- sons, to compel them to the faith in which they had been baptized’. We may perceive a trace of the P Note I. 4 See this in the Council of Trent, Sess. Sept. de Bapt.—Si quis dixerit hujusmodi parvulos baptizatos, cum adoleverint in- terrogandos esse, an ratum habere velint, quod Patrini eorum nomine, dum baptizarentur, polliciti sunt, et si se nolle respon- derint, suo esse arbitrio relinquendos, nec interim pcena ad Christianam vitam cogendos, nisi ut ab Eucharistie, aliorumque LECTURE VII. 327 scholastic doctrine of “ impressed character,” in the scrupulous care shewn by our Church in the Bap- tismal Service, to ascertain whether Baptism has been already performed rightly; and in the provi- sion (itself a scholastic one) of conditional Baptism, in cases where doubt may exist of its previous due administration *. The doctrine of Baptism, indeed, was what na- turally attracted the attention of the Church in the early ages. Its connexion with the doctrine of Ori- ginal Sin brought it into prominent notice, during the Pelagian Controversies. And, before the rise of these controversies, we see the extravagant opin- ion entertained of its sacramental power, in the prac- tice of delaying the reception of it until the approach of death’. So that the indispensable necessity of Baptism had been established, before the period of Scholasticism. Both Pelagius and Celestius main- Sacramentorum perceptione arceantur, donec resipiscant, ana- thema sit. Canon xiv. r It is suggested by the Cardinal Caietan, in his commentary on the Summa of Aquinas, Ida IIde, qu. 1. art. 3. ed. Antuerp. 5. Augustine’s account of the delay of his own baptism illustrates this. Feeling himself dangerously ill in his youth, he eagerly demanded baptism. He recovered; and it was postponed, for the reason that, if he should live, he would contract fresh im- purity. — Et conturbata mater carnis mez, quoniam et sem- piternam salutem meam carius parturiebat corde casto in fide tua, jam curaret festinabunda, ut sacramentis salutaribus ini- tiarer et abluerer, te Domine Jesu confitens in remissionem pec- catorum, nisi statim recreatus essem. Dilata est itaque mun- datio mea, quasi necesse esset, ut adhuc sordidarer, si viverem; quia videlicet post lavacrum illud, major et periculosior in sor- dibus delictorum reatus foret. Confess. lib. I. c. 11. Y 4 328 LECTURE VII. tained the necessity of Baptism. The orthodox dif- fered from them, in asserting that, without baptism, none could be saved. It was allowed, indeed, by the Schoolmen, that the wish (votum) to receive bap- tism might avail, in a case of impediment to the actual reception of it: as also in regard to the Eu- charist. The blood of martyrdom too was supposed to flow with regenerating efficacy. For thus had the holy Innocents been baptized in blood: the sword of the murderer consecrating them to the Saviour, for whom they unconsciously suffered. But, as no wish, or vow, of receiving the rite could be conceived by the Infant, it was impossible that, dying unbaptized,—humanity may shrink at the recital of such a tenet,—it could escape the punish- ment due to Original Sin. The Eucharist also, though not regarded of the same absolute necessity as Baptism, was a rite, which could be omitted, with safety, by none who were capable of desiring it. In fact, these two or- dinances, amidst all the scholastic subtleties with which they are surrounded, bear evident marks of being considered, as of an higher origin, and a more divine import’. They are clearly the Sacra- ments of the primitive Church, whilst the rest have t Unde manifestum est, quod sacramenta ecclesie specialiter habent virtutem ex passione Christi, cujus virtus quodammodo nobis copulatur per susceptionem sacramentorum. In cujus signum, de latere Christi pendentis in cruce, fluxerunt aqua et sanguis, quorum unum pertinet ad baptismum, aliud ad eucha- ristiam, que sunt potissima sacramenta. Aquin. Summa Theol. IIItia Pars, qu. Ux11. art. 5. LECTURE VII. 329 obtained that rank through the ingenuity of theo- logians, seeking to give a numerical perfection to their system in all its parts, and to trace out a minuteness of correspondence in the Sacraments to the Seven Virtues, and Seven Gifts of the Spirit. Peter Lombard, I believe, was the first who assigned that number to the Sacraments ”. The controversies of the [Xth and XIth centuries exhibit the theory of the Sacraments, in what may be called an unfinished state. They are only the commencement and outline, of what was afterwards worked out by the introduction of the philosophy of Aristotle into the subject. The disputes had been, whether there was a real Divine efficacy in the consecrated symbols themselves, so that they were no longer the same as before consecration ; or whether they remained the same in themselves, and yet possessed a mystical efficacy, in the act of being received. The point in controversy is, in what sense, the words “ 7eally” and “ truly” are to be under- stood, when affirmed of the presence of Christ. Both parties affirm that Christ is really and truly present in the Eucharist ; both affirm that a change is worked on the Bread and Wine by consecration, so that they then are verily and indeed the Body and Blood of Christ. But on one side it is denied, that this re- ality and truth are to be sought in the Bread and u The question of the Number of the Sacraments was one of considerable perplexity at the Council of Trent. Courayer, translat. of Sarpi, tom. I. p. 376. 330 LECTURE VII. Wine; or that the change is a physical one, though real as to efficacy or virtue. On the other side, it is contended, that this reality and truth of the Di- vine presence, must be in the consecrated elements themselves; or otherwise they are mere signs with- out any latent virtue. But in this case, the Sacra- ments of the New Law, (as the Christian sacraments were termed, in contrast with the types and ordi- nances of Judaism,) would be inferior to those of the Old Law. For the latter, it was admitted, were the shadows of Christ—they contained Christ in the way of anticipation :—whereas the latter would be thus reduced to empty Signs. The word Substance, we may observe, was em- ployed in these controversies; but it was not used in that exact metaphysical sense, in which we find it employed in the Trinitarian controversies, or which it acquired in the course of the Scholastic discussions. The Latins of the [Xth century were infants in philosophy, compared with their pre- decessors of the [Vth century. They understood, accordingly, at this period, by Substance, chiefly the gross idea, which we commonly attach to the term, when we speak of the Substance of any thing, mean- ing the principal or most important part of it. The idea of Substance, as the support or basis of acci- dents, was not familiarly recognized, it seems, by the Latin of the middle age, until the revived study of Aristotle had once more restored it to that sense. The like observation is to be made with regard to the word Species, as it was employed in the sacra- LECTURE VII. 331 mentarian controversies of the [Xth and XIth cen- turies. It was not then restricted to a metaphy- sical sense, but rather simply expressed the physical objects themselves, to which it was applied. The species of bread and wine, that is, were not the abstract natures of bread and wine, but the com- pound things themselves, as really existing. The term, as introduced into this subject, was derived to the Latin Church, not from philosophy, but from the ordinary forms of Roman exaction of tribute; according to which, certain articles were to be fur- nished to the government in the species—the arti- cles themselves—as distinct from their equivalent in money *. It remained then for Jater discussion, for the rest- less, penetrating spirit of Scholasticism, to analyze, by the philosophical power of language, the oper- ation of Grace in the Sacraments. The subtile spe- culations about matter and form, substance and accident, were accordingly introduced, to establish and perfect the theory of instrumental efficiency ascribed to the rites themselves. And it is upon these speculations that the doctrine of the Sacra- ments, and in particular of Transubstantiation, is maintained in the Church of Rome even now; amidst all the accessions of light from improved science, which the world has obtained since the days of Scholasticism. A review of any of the defences of Transubstantiation, which have been put forth in x Note I. 332 LECTURE VII. the course of the last few years, will convince any one how completely bound up with the theories of substance and accident, and matter and form, that tenet is; and that, consequently, the tenet and the theories must be false or true together. But if, as is the fact, those theories are mere assumptions in physics, not resting on observation, but distinctions, existing only in the mind, and applied to the ana- lysis of external objects; it must appear, that the process of Transubstantiation is entirely an as- sumed one, and that it ought to be discarded as an idol, at once, of religion and of philosophy. We hear it sometimes stated, as if Transub- stantiation were a dogma suddenly introduced into the Church ;—as if Innocent III. and the IVth Lateran Council, had, by the declaration of the ar- ticle, accomplished a triumph over human reason and sound religion. But this appears to me a very mistaken view of the doctrine. It has a much deeper origin; growing, in fact, out of the natural Realism of the human mind. It was a gradual extension of the same principle which corrupted the doctrines of the Trinity and of Divine Grace, to the doc- trine of the Sacraments. The principle floated down the stream of the philosophical Theology of the Schools; and, from time to time, fastened itself round each projecting point that met its course. That the doctrine of the Eucharist in particular, should have been the principal occasion of the speculation concerning the Sacraments in general, may be ac- counted for, in the importance which that Sacra- LECTURE VII. 333 ment had assumed in the practice of the Church. The sacrificial character of the Church-minister was especially involved in it. And the leading Clergy, accordingly, were peculiarly sensitive to any opin- ion, which seemed to examine too closely, the mi- raculous virtue claimed for the rite. From the time of Erigena, there had been constant endea- vours, to attain more exact ideas of the. nature of the sacrifice performed in the Eucharist, on the one part; whilst, on the other, a fear lest the authority of the Church should be shaken, called forth de- fenders of the miraculous import of the consecra- tion. The treatise of Paschase was a bold attempt to settle the doubts and speculations of the time, by a strong and confident assertion of the power as- sumed for the ministration of the priest. It did not, however, settle the question even in the Church itself. Not only did Ratramn freely discuss the mode of Christ’s presence ; but differences of opinion must have existed generally, when we find Leothe- ric, Archbishop of Sens, charged with heterodoxy on the subject, in the very commencement of the XIth century ; and afterwards, in the course of the same century, Berenger appearing the forward advocate of the moderate doctrine’. The obstinacy, indeed, with which Berenger resumed his profession of the obnoxious opinion, argues the general interest taken in the question, as also the support and countenance which he must have obtained from others, agreeing in his views, though not equally ready to encounter y Note J. 334 LECTURE VII. the persecution, attendant on a more open dissent from the orthodox rule. When the Schools took up the formal discussion of the doctrine of the Sacraments, the general the- ory was to be adjusted to those views of the Eu- charist, which the progressive realism of orthodoxy had created. It was to be shewn, how the actual conversion of the Bread and Wine into the Body and Blood of Christ took place, according to recog- nized physical principles, the supposed agents in producing the result. I have already had occasion to point out the extent, to which the theory of Transmutation was carried in the physical system of Aristotle. It was conceived to be a sufficient account of all the variety of appearances which Nature exhibits. The forms of things were continually coming and receding in the ceaseless flux of sublunary nature; contraries expelling contraries ; whilst a common matter sub- sisted, the same in all things, and becoming all things, as the various forms of things successively acted on it. I have pointed out all this nearly in the same manner before. But the notions of Form and Matter require to be more particularly noticed, in reference to our present subject, in their con- nexion with the mystical philosophy of the Divine Word. A Christian Philosopher could not adopt such a theory of Nature, (for in itself it was strictly atheistic ; it described Nature as an omnipotent en- ergy in itself, working out its own instinctive ten- LECTURE VII. 335 dencies,) without modifying it by the principles of his Theology. He did not therefore conceive these forms, in nature, to be independent of the Di- vine Reason or Word. Interpreting those passages of Scripture which speak of things made by the Word of God, as denoting expressly the creative efficacy of the Second Person of the Trinity, he connected the communication of forms to matter with the Word of God throughout; that is, he conceived the Divine words uttered, to carry that mystical creative force, which belonged to the Divine Word as existing in the Trinity”. Hence it was, that certain words, accompanying the celebration of a Sacrament, were said to be the Form of the Sa- crament. In a manner analogous to the original formation of all things by the Divine Word acting on matter, it was conceived, that the sacred words pronounced by the Priest came with power to the element or matter, and imposed on it a mystical or sacramental form*. Thus a Sacrament has been described as consisting of matter and form :—the matter being the water, or the bread and wine; or, in Confirmation, the chrism; in Penance, the contrition of the penitent: the form, the particu- lar words of consecration uttered by the priest. Hence, too, the use of the word Element itself, to denote the consecrated bread and wine; these being viewed, like the four imagined elements of the ma- * Aquinas, Sum. Theol. [tia Pars, qu. Lxxxvitt. art. 4.— Note K. a The priest is therefore said, conficere Sacramentum. 336 LECTURE VII. terial world, as the bases of the sacred natures into which they were transformed. A certain matter and certain form are thus considered as indispens- able to a Sacrament”. This part of the theory of Transubstantiation applies to all the Sacraments in common. But it did not fully explain that point in which the Eu- charist differed from all other Sacraments, as being the whole virtue of Christ’s priesthood, whereas the others were only participations of that virtue. It was to be further shewn, therefore, with regard to this, how the esse, or substance, of Christ, was brought down to the consecrated elements. This was, in fact, the establishment of the term Zvansub- stantiation as the orthodox language of the Latin Church. Christ had been asserted to be substan- tially present in the Eucharist during the contro- versies of the IXth and XIth centuries. But, as I observed, the term Substance was not yet commonly interpreted in its proper metaphysical sense. The increasing acquaintance with Aristotle’s Philosophy subsequently to that period, both demanded and suggested a further and more minute explanation. The term Substance now came to be viewed in its logical and metaphysical sense, as the support of accidents,—as that nature of a thing which may be Ὁ Hence the inquiries in our Baptismal Service. ‘ With ‘‘ what matter was this child baptized?” “ With what words ‘* was this child baptized?” ‘ Because some things,” it is said, < essential to this Sacrament may happen to be omitted through eHASEE. LECTURE VII. 337 conceived to remain, when every other nature is re- moved or abstracted from it—the ultimate point in analysing the complex idea of any object. The term Accident, on the other hand, denotes all those ideas which the analysis excludes, as not belonging to the mere Being or Nature of the object. But by the fallaciousness of Realism, both Sub- stance and Accident being understood to denote parts in the physical composition of bodies, the: applica- tion of this doctrine to the presence of Christ in the Eucharist, was naturally suggested. If Substance and Accident were parts of things, they might be conceived in a state of separation. The substance of any thing might be present, whilst the accidents were absent : and the substance of one thing might be changed for the substance of another, whilst the accidents remained. It being admitted, then, that there was a trans- forming power in the words of Consecration; whilst, at the same time, it was evident, that no visible or sensible change was wrought on the bread and wine; it was urged, that the change had taken place in the substance of the sacred elements. The Substan- tial Forms of bread and wine were no longer in ex- istence, at the instant that the words of Consecration were completed; but they were displaced by the Sub- stance of Christ. The accidents of-bread and wine,— the taste and colour, and other such qualities,—were not supposed, indeed, to be in Christ “ as zn their * subject ;’ though they evidently remained after the change of the substance, to which they had be- Ζ 338 LECTURE VII. longed. In general, however, the accidents are re- presented, in the mystical phraseology of Platonism, as outward veils, under which the real spiritual sub- stance of Christ is latent ”. This explanation raised a number of minute ques- tions, as to the mode of coexistence of accidents with a substance not belonging to them, and of their ex- istence out of a subject; as to whether the accidents of the bread and wine possessed the power of nourish- ing; and the like. The discussion of such points ex- actly suited the genius of the Scholastic Philosophy, and at length matured the theory of the Eucharist, as professed in the Latin Church, under the name of 'Transubstantiation. In no point is the prodigious influence, which the Scholastic Philosophy has had on the world, more apparent, than in this particular article. Antece- dently to experience, we might have regarded it as impossible, that a doctrine so abstruse,—so remote from religion when viewed in its source,—not ap- pealing to any sentiment of the heart,—not capti- vating the judgment by the sublimity of its con- ception,— should have become a corner-stone of faith to a large proportion of the Christian world. I do not speak of its absurdity ; for it is clearly not z The ingenuity with which the scholastic system is brought into unity, should not pass unobserved here. As Christ has not, in the scholastic view of the Eucharist, the forms of flesh and blood, it might seem that Transubstantiation did not pre- serve the man. Still this could not be the case; since it was determined that forma substantialis hominis is anima rationalis. LECTURE VII. 339 absurd, if, by that expression, we mean its incon- sistency with reason. It is, on the contrary, per- fectly consistent with reason, if we grant the hypo- theses in philosophy on which it is founded. And, even in those hypotheses themselves, there is nothing intrinsically absurd. We can only say, with our present light in physical science, that they are un- philosophical and untrue. The abstruseness of the speculation is what I remark, considered together with its popularity. It proves, how entirely sub- jugated the human understanding has been, to the imperious reason of the Church-leaders of the middle age. The doctrine was shaped to meet the cavils and disputations of the spiritual body among them- selves, that no dissentient leader of a party might produce schism in the Church; but that, whilst the living oracles of faith all spoke one language, a de- _ lusive consistency might pass for the singleness of truth with the multitude of the faithful. If the disputatious leader of opinion were silenced, it was enough to secure the assent of the sequacious herd of believers. Sometimes, indeed, expedients were adopted to interest the imagination in favour of the dogma, by descriptions of miraculous appearances of flesh and blood, or of an infant, in the celebration of the Eucharist ἃ, But the resort to these methods of proof, shews, that the doctrine of Transubstan- tiation, in its speculative form, was not adapted to conciliate the attention of the vulgar, but rather the logical armour of the Church, in its contests with a Note K. Z 2 340 LECTURE VII. logical opponents. For these alleged miracuious appearances were at variance with the proper spe- culative notion of the Real Presence. These led the people to believe, that it was the passible body of Christ locally present in the elements: whereas the philosophical doctrine was, that the substance of Christ only was present—that nature by which He is the Christ; and which might be represented in an infinity of instances, whenever the sacrifice of the Eucharist should be offered; without being mul- tiplied in itself, or without being broken and divided in itself, however the consecrated elements should be physically separated into parts. The proper doc- trine of the Real Presence was a logical unity—an ens unum in multis ;—an idea, quite beyond the reach of the unscientific intellect. The violence again with which the Cartesian philosophy was at- tacked, still further shews how closely implicated was the doctrine of sacramental influence with the ancient metaphysics. That philosophy was no di- rect attack on Transubstantiation : but as rejecting the Aristotelic theory of Matter and Form, and therefore evidently militating with the established notion of Transubstantiation, it had to bear the brunt of opposition from the Schools. The polemi- cal discussions which it occasioned, are monuments of the keen anxiety, with which the shadowy out- works of the doctrine were guarded, against the assaults of a novel method of philosophy. Had the doctrine been simply rested on the Divine Word, it would have had nothing to fear; but, cased as it LECTURE VII. 941 was in metaphysical armour, it sensitively shrank from collision with the weapons of an Ideal Philo- sophy ἢ. Briefly, however, to review in conclusion that doctrine of the Sacraments, which we have been considering. It appears, that the simplicity of Scripture truth has been altogether abandoned, in the endeavour to raise up, on the solemn ordinances appointed by our Lord, for the edification, and charity, and comfort of his Church, an elaborate artificial system of mystical theurgy. In the views of the Scholastic system which have previously occupied our attention, the Divine Being and Agency were the leading ideas. God Himself was displayed as the great subject ;— his power, wisdom, and goodness, as developed in his own Being, and as diffused in the works of his Providence and Grace. The speculation was human; but the burthen of it was divine. But, though it is the same thought prolonged here also, it must be ob- served, that the divine argument here is subordinate to the human agency involved in it. The history of the Sacraments, in the Scholastic system, is, God working by the instrumentality of man. The theory is of the divine causation; but the practical power displayed, is, the sacerdotal: the necessary instru- ment for the conveyance of Divine Grace, becoming in effect the principal cause. Surely it requires no research into ecclesiastical By Notek: Ζ 8 342 LECTURE VII. history or philosophy, to see that so operose a sys- tem is utterly repugnant to the spirit of Christianity. Contemplate our Saviour at the Last Supper, break- ing bread, and giving thanks, and distributing to his disciples; and how great is the transition from the institution itself to the splendid ceremonial of the Latin Church? Hear Him, or his Apoaies exhorting to Repentance; and can we suppose tl 6 casuistical system to which the name of Penance ha been given, to be the true sacrifice of the broken and contrite spirit? Or, if we think for a moment of Jesus Christ, taking the little children in his arms, and blessing them, and declaring that “ of ‘** such is the kingdom of God;” and then revert to the minute inquiries, as to the state of infants dying unbaptized ;—do we not seem, to have exchanged the love of a Brother, for the cold charities of strangers to our blood, not knowing the heart of man, and dealing out a stinted measure of tender- ness, by the standard of abstract theory, and the law of logical deduction ? Thanks to the Christian resolution of our Re- formers, they broke that charm which the mysti- cal number of the Sacraments carried with it, and dispelled the theurgic system which it supported. We are not, perhaps, sufficiently sensible of the ad- vantages, which we enjoy through their exertions in this respect—exertions which cost them so many painful struggles, even to the bitterness of death. They have taken our souls out of the hand of man, to let them repose in the bosom of our Saviour and LEC TURE: VII. 343 our God. We have been enabled thus to fulfil the instruction of Scripture, to “ come boldly to the «throne of Grace,” and ask of Him who gives liber- ally, and denies to none. The perplexities and dis- tress of heart, of which we have been relieved, none perhaps can now adequately conceive. We must ask of those, who have experienced the false comfort of that officious intercession of the sacramental sys- tem. | of the Latin Church. They will tell us, that, “under that system, they knew not the liberty of the Gospel. They were unhappy without resource. Their wounds were opened, but there was none to heal ©. But, though we are free from the yoke which the Sacramental ritual imposes on members of the Roman Communion, we still require watchfulness against the temptation to refine on the subject, and lest we enslave ourselves to a kind of priestcraft in our own minds. The tendency to raise questions about Baptism, in modern times, is an evidence of this spirit of refinement. Men are not content with the simple declarations ;—“ Repent, and be bap- “ tized :”—* Except a man be born of water and the “ Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God :” “ Go, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the ‘name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost :’— nor will they acquiesce in the duty of conforming their practice to these Scriptural injunctions. But it is thought by some, that the question must further be decided, whether Baptism is in all cases equivalent to Regeneration. They propose a’ ques- © Note M. Z A 344 LECTURE VII. tion, that is, as to the intrinsic efficacy of the rite ;—a difficulty, which practical Christianity by no means calls upon us to decide, and the decision of which, after all, can be only speculation. In regard, indeed, to both the Sacraments, singleness of heart is the only human means that we pos- sess, of apprehending their true import. “ He “ which hath said,” observes Hooker, “ of the one ὯὭ Sacrament; ‘ Wash, and be clean;’ hath said con- “cerning the other likewise; ‘ Eat, and live” If “ therefore,” he continues, (I quote his words for their general application to the whole subject of the Sacraments,) if “ without any such particular «“ς and solemn warrant as this is, that poor distressed “ woman, coming unto Christ for health, could so * constantly resolve herself; ‘ May I but touch the ““ «skirt of his garment, I shall be whole ;’ what ““ moveth us to argue of the manner how life should “ come by bread; our duty being here but to take “‘ what is offered, and most assuredly to rest per- “ suaded of this, that, can we but eat, we are safe ἢ «| .. What these elements are in themselves, it a ““ skilleth not; it is enough, that to me which take “‘ them, they are the body and blood of Christ: his “ promise in witness hereof sufficeth: his word he “ knoweth which way to accomplish: why should “ any cogitation possess the mind of a faithful com- * municant, but this; O my God, thou art true! Ὁ “ my soul, thou art happy ¢?” 4 Eccl. Pol. V. 67. LECTURE VIII. NATURE AND USE OF DOGMATIC THEOLOGY. SUMMARY. Examination of the nature and use of Dogmatic Theology sug- gested by previous inquiry—Confusion of thought on the subject, evidenced in popular statements of the relation between Faith and Reason—also in attempts to settle the necessary points of belief—Discussion of the Scholastic principles: 1. that whatever is first in point of doctrine is therefore true; and 2. that the logical consequence of any doctrine is necessarily true—The former principle, a remnant of Scholastic view of Theology as a demonstrative science—Universality and ubiquity of belief no tests of divine truth—The principle only true when strictly con- fined to Scripture facts—Contrast of the earlier and later Chris- tian writers in the tradition of doctrine—The preference for earliest authorities inconsistent with the principle which es- tablishes doctrines by logical consequences—Symbolical nature of language in its application to Theology—Unscriptural doc- trines must result from the method of logical deductions—Ne- cessity imposed in such a case of answering all objections— Impossibility of maintaining thus the principle of Authority— Progressive accumulation of doctrines by such a mode of pro- ceeding—Truth of Fact confounded with Truth of Opinion in the Scholastic method—No dogmas to be found in Scripture itself—Dogmas therefore to be restricted to a negative sense, as exclusions of unscriptural truth—Articles and Creeds not necessarily to be dispensed with, because imperfect —Their de- fence however not to be identified with that of Christianity— Use and importance of Dogmatic Theology to be drawn from its relation to Social Religion. Sum of the whole inquiry—Present interest of it—Scholas- ticism the ground of controversial defence to the Church of Rome —Remunants of it in Protestant Churches in the state of Con- troversy, and in the importance attributed to peculiar views of religious truth—Result of the examination sufficient to prove the force of Theory on our Theological language—The impres- sion from this fact-not to be transferred to the revealed truths which are real parts of sacred history—Real beneficial effect of honest search into the truths of Divine Revelation. JEREMIAH XXIII. 28. He that hath my word, let him speak my word faith- fully. What is the chaff to the wheat? saith the Lord. TBI FBIM. NN DTT ay a7 WN TYTN Qui habet sermonem meum, loquatur sermonem meum vere. Quid paleis ad triticum? dicit Dominus. Lat. Vute. LECTURE VIII. THE examination in which I have been engaged, involves the consideration of two principles of Theo- logy: 1. That whatever has been originally esta- blished in Religion is true; whatever is subsequent, or may be shewn to have arisen at any particular period during the progress of the Gospel, is cor- rupt; 2. That whatever may be deduced by ne- cessary inference from any established proposition, must also be true. These principles were employed by the School-divines in two ways: either to prove the affirmative of any point; or to demonstrate the erroneousness of any assumed truth. I purpose now calling your attention to a discussion of these fun- damental principles; and, from this discussion, to deduce the nature and use of Dogmatic Theology. The consideration of our Religion, under this last point of view, is naturally brought before the mind, by the inquiries which I have been pursuing into the effect of Scholasticism on our theological lan- guage. For the question arises: If a technical statement of the Sacred Truth necessarily involves so much of human theory—if, as has been shewn, the Christian doctrines, in their mode of expression, carry so much of the speculation of an antiquated philosophy ;—how far are all human formularies of faith to be admitted; and what is the ground, on 350 LECTURE VIII. which they rest their pretension to be received by the Scriptural Christian ? The discussion on which I am now entering, is an arbitration of the point, where Divine Truth ends, and Human Truth commences; or, where the certainty of Divine Fact ceases, and the pro- bability of Opinion takes its rise, in matters of Re- ligious belief and conduct. For it is the confusion of the limits of these two things, that brings per- plexity into the subject; occasioning fallacious in- ductions from one ground of assent to the other. The dialectical theologian calls upon us to receive his sentences, as the voice of God which none can gainsay ; building the necessity of pious submission on the theoretic necessity of demonstrative argu- mentation: or, on the other hand, he appeals to our reason, and insists on our accepting, as irrefragable conclusions, what no conclusion of reason can es- tablish, and what ought to rest solely on the autho- ritative Word of God. Hence it is that writers, in different ages of the Church, have been so often employed in debating the respective provinces of Faith and Reason. A confusion of thought has been constantly prevalent on the subject. The very circumstance of treating Faith and Reason as distinct principles, is an evi- dence of this confusion: as if the assent to Divine Truth could be an act of Faith, in any way distinct from an act of Reason. The mischief of such a statement of the case is, indeed, too apparent from LECTURE VIII. 351 experience. The indolent, or the sensitive, mind, readily seizes on a distinction, which, to the one, saves the trouble of thought and diligent examin- ation,—to the other, supplies a pious sentiment for the acceptance of any wild, or even repulsive doc- trines of religion. To say; this is of Faith,—that is of Reason,—peremptorily silences all suspicions and misgivings of the judgment and the heart. Persons are thus led to overlook the analogy of God’s deal- ings with his creatures; and to imagine, that the truths of the world of Grace are to be received and judged, by a different set of principles from those which are applied to the ordinary providences of God. On this hypothesis, there is nothing so extravagant that may not be admitted as part of Divine Truth. Indeed, the more extravagant any proposed doctrine is, the more attractive should it be, on such a principle, to the religious inquirer: since it is then, a more striking exemplification of the contrast supposed between truths of Faith and Reason. Many a devout and excellent mind, I fear, has been seduced from sober religion, by this specu- lative distinction between Faith and Reason: or, at least, where fanatical doctrine has been adopted, it has furnished a defence, against which, all attempts to convince of error have been necessarily unavailing. What, however, has been at bottom the real object of all these inquiries, is, to ascertain the distinction between dogmas and facts of Religion. Men have found both rested on the same footing. They have 352 LECTURE VIII. felt perplexed at the evident discrepance between the two things so associated ; and their prejudices, not suffering them to make the requisite separation, they have applied themselves to laying down limits, be- yond which human reason could not proceed. Thus it is sometimes stated, that Reason is concerned about the evidence of Religion, Faith about the things revealed ;—a distinction, which leaves the real matter of dispute altogether untouched; since it is about the various things themselves proposed to our belief, that we want a criterion. It appears to me, that such a mode of stating the case is further highly objectionable; on the ground that we may be thus led to ascribe to Tradition the authority of Scripture, and to receive the Truth of Man, with the deference due only to the Truth of God. The want of a proper satisfaction on this ques- tion, is evidenced also in the floating state of opinion, as to what doctrines are to be regarded necessary to be believed and professed, and what may be vari- ously held without danger to salvation*. The dis- putes on these points are remnants of the scholastic spirit, which reduced all religion into theoretic dog- mas. ‘The comparative importance of theories may be reasonably examined ; for, as such, they may be viewed in their relations and consequences. The re- lation of any particular theory to the Divine Being a See Bramhall’s ‘‘ Schism Guarded,” Works, fol. 1677. pp. 400—402.—Stillingfleet’s ‘* Rational Account,” ἕο. Works, fol. 1709. vol. iv. pp. 5t—54.—Note A. Lecture VIII. LECTURE VIII. 353 immediately, or its consequence as affecting our pri- mary notions of the Divine Being, will, of course, render that theory one of principal importance; that is, in religious conduct, of indispensable necessity in order to salvation. But, when we have once sepa- rated matters of religion into simple facts divinely revealed, and theories of divine truth founded on those facts; there can be no question of relative importance in what we receive as purely divine. The theology resulting from such an estimate, is either altogether entirely worthy of our acceptance, or is open to the strict examination of our reason as to its probability. Between facts, all of which are admitted to be real signatures of God in his dealings with man, there is no comparison, no choice. All must be equally received and followed as true. It is not for us to decide, what instances in the display of God’s providences, are more or less important. To overlook any one in the con- struction of a religious system, would be as unphi- losophical as it would be impious. But, so far as doctrines are deductive statements—conclusions drawn from the facts, or words, of Divine Reve- lation, —they may be examined by that reason which deduces them. It being granted that they follow from the data of Scripture, it is to be seen, whether they are such as ought to have been de- duced ; whether they have the support of evidence, from their general accordance with Scripture,—from the concurrent opinion of the wise and the unpre- judiced,—and from other considerations of this kind. Aa 354 LECTURE VIII. And the degree of evidence, resulting from such considerations, must decide the theological truth and relative importance of such conclusions. Let us inquire then, in the first instance, into that principle of the Scholastic Theology :—that whatever is originally established as a point of doc- trine, is therefore true; whatever has subsequently arisen, is corrupt »:—and let us see, whether it has not had a considerable influence in producing that confusion of thought, which we find existing on the subject of Dogmatic Theology. Justly to examine this principle however, ΤῊΝ us take it as it is stated by the great authority on this point, Vincent of Lirins: according to whom the test of orthodoxy is; that a doctrine should have been be- lieved in all places, and in all times, and by all men‘; and any doctrine accordingly, which does not bear these marks of catholicity, must be heretical. Now it appears to me, that the principle itself, current as it is in the language of Protestants, is a relic of that Philosophy, which sought, with such anxious search, for a speculative certainty to > Tertullian states it thus, using it as a decisive argument against the heretic: Hanc regulam ab initio Evangelii decucur- risse, etiam ante priores quosque hereticos, nedum ante Praxeam hesternum, probabit tam ipsa posteritas omnium hereticorum, quam ipsa novellitas Praxee hesterni. Quo pereque adversus universas hereses, jam hinc prejudicatum sit; Id esse verum, quodcumygue prius, id esse adulterum quodcumque posterius. Adv. Praz. 11. p. 501. © Commonitorium, p. 317. ed. Baluz. Quod ubique, quod sem- per, quod ab omnibus, creditum est. LECTURE VIII. 355 moral facts; finding no rest until it had reduced the variable truth connected with human life, to the same exactness which belongs to truth purely me- taphysical. The eternity and immutability attri- buted to the theorems of science, would, in such a state of philosophy as that of the primitive and middle ages of the Church, seem to be still more appropriately the characteristics of that Wisdom which descended from above. For the wisdom given by Revelation was, as I have throughout been en- deavouring to shew, conceived, in the theory of the Schools, to be a demonstrative science, established by necessary links of dependence on primary truths concerning God. Theology, accordingly, was a sci- ence on a footing with other sciences, or rather with what we now call the exact sciences, as contrasted with sciences resting on observation and experience. But an assumption of the nature of Theology so erroneous, naturally led to the assumption also of a test of its truth, founded on the fundamental miscon- ception. The universality, and the ubiquity of be- lief, were thus applied to the case of theological doctrine, as equivalents, in this instance, to the eternity and immutability of the principles of scien- tific demonstration. These views of divine truth were, at least, approximations to the certainty be- longing to pure science. And hence the truth which, in its proper nature, and in order to its due recep- tion, appeals to the candour, the fairness, the piety of the individual Christian, was brought under the iron sway of speculative argumentation. In short, Aa 2 356 LECTURE VIII. the belief of man, the rebellious, uncontrollable prin- ciple of his nature, was subdued to that passive obedience which the imperative force of reason in itself exacts. But it is only an assumption, as I further would proceed to shew, that universality and ubiquity are thus made the tests of religious doctrine. No uni- versality or ubiquity can make that divine, which never was such. It is a mere prejudice of veneration for antiquity, and the imposing aspect of an unani- mous acquiescence, (if unanimous it really be,) which make us regard that as truth, which comes so recom- mended to us. Truth is rather the attribute of the few than of the many. The real Church of God may be the small remnant, scarcely visible amidst the mass of surrounding professors. Who then shall pronounce any thing to be divine truth, simply be- cause it has the marks of having been generally or universally received among men ? If we go back to the primitive age of Apostles and Evangelists, the acknowledged inspired teachers of our Religion, who received their instructions by the hearing of the ear and the seeing of the eye, and the handling of the Word of Life, and to whom God spoke in the thoughts of their hearts; there can be no doubt that the principle holds to the fullest extent. T’o doubt it then, is to raise a ques- tion, whether there has been a case of inspiration, or to what extent inspiration may be regarded as a ground of authority. Assuming, however, that there is a clear case of inspiration established in re- LECTURE VIII. 357 gard to our sacred Books,—that they are a com- plete volume of inspiration,—and that this inspiration extends to all matters pertaining to the kingdom of God, which we are concerned to know,—it follows, that whatever is recorded in those books is. indis- putably true; and that nothing independent of these books, or not taken from them, can possess the same authority,—not to say in degree only,—but even in kind. For this is divine truth; whatever is dis- tinct from it, is human. So that, in the history of doctrines, when we look to their Scriptural source, we may affirm, that whatever is first is true, what- ever is of a subsequent period is corrupt. But, the moment that we step out of this sacred inclosure, the maxim proves to us a most fallacious guide. In fact, the reverse of it is much nearer to the truth. For, if we consider what the state of things was, when the first inspired teachers disap- peared from the world, we shall find it extremely adverse to the maintenance and propagation of the truth as it was purely inspired. Take first into view the novelty of the case. The new leaven of divine truth was just infused into the mass of complex human opinions; those opinions, the results of associations and habits, not only di- versified in themselves, but fundamentally heathen or Jewish, discordant with the spirit of the Gospel. What chance could a pure religion have had in such a state of things, of being generally simply received, as a collection of divine truths? Would not those obstacles, that we know to have existed Aa3 358 LECTURE VIIE in the minds of the Apostles, antecedently to their divine illumination, exist at least equally in the minds of first converts, not enjoying the like illu- mination from above? The ear of the world was not attuned to the songs of Sion; and, though in some honest and good hearts, finely sensible to the touch of the Holy Spirit, they may have awakened concordant emotions, yet, in very many instances, the immortal sounds would be lost in the dissonant murmurs of irreligious thoughts and feelings. To suppose it otherwise, is to go against the analogy of all similar cases. It is to suppose, that knowledge could be obtained without previous training; that the air of divine truth could be commonly breathed, amidst an atmosphere charged with heathen pro- faneness, and the carnal prejudices of Judaism. But, not to dwell on these presumptions of the state of the case; what is the fact, when it is dis- passionately considered, as to the immediate suc- cessors of the Apostles ? Take even the very period when the Apostles themselves were teaching; when the Holy Spirit Himself went about with those chosen vessels of divine truth, putting into their hearts and mouths what they should say. At this very period, the most wild theories were incorpo- rated with Christianity: the hearer of an Apostle sought to obtain from him with money the power of the Spirit, the strength itself of the Apostle’s labours in the Gospel. But to come to the period of the Apostolic Fathers. Whatever praise we may assign to them for their ardour and firmness as be- LECTURE VIII. 359 lievers, can we justly ascribe to them the merit of accurate expositors of Christian Truth? Imparti- ality, I think, requires us to say otherwise. Were we to endeavour, indeed, to form a system of divi- nity out of these writers, it would be found neces- sary to explain away many of their positions and expressions, in order to bring them into accordance with the admitted truths of Scripture. As evidences of the essence and spirit of the Gospel, as it was handed down from its outset, they are invaluable ; as testimonies of the earnestness of individuals,—of their Christian character and Christian hopes,—the writings are also highly interesting and important: but as authorities decisive of what is true or what is false in theological statement, they are in reality less valuable than the writings of a subsequent age. The remark may be extended to the Fathers of the IIIrd and IVth and Vth centuries, in compa- rison with each other. Compare Tertullian at the end of the IInd century, with Augustine at the end of the IVth, and this difference is readily perceiv- able. In Tertullian, we see nothing of the deliber- ation, the accuracy, the thoughtful sedulity of Au- gustine; but he at once rudely throws out his thoughts, as if dealing blows on his adversary, and caring nothing but for the force with which he strikes. Augustine is strenuous in his dogmatism ; but he is prudent at the same time, subduing the vehemence of the personal combatant, into keeping with the art of the theological diplomatist. Whilst, then, from Tertullian, we should gather many ex- Aa 4 360 LECTURE VIII. pressions of Scriptural truth inconsistent with the truth itself; in Augustine, the systematic caution with which he writes, acts in some measure as a security against such a perversion. And the later writer, accordingly, is the more authentic oracle of what is true, or what is false, in theology, than the earlier. The Montanism, indeed, of Tertullian has served as a practical caution against the abuse of his authority. Otherwise, perhaps, we should have seen his doctrines quoted with that reverence, which prejudice ascribes to his place in the roll of ecclesi- astical tradition. Justin Martyr and Origen, at the distance of about an hundred years from each other, are instances to the same point. Origen had a far more capacious mind than the Syrian martyr—a far greater penetration of thought ;—combining a philosophical power of discerning analogies with an acuteness of logical deduction. Origen, no doubt, must be read with a very severe scrutiny: we must be ever on our guard against the enthusiasm of spe- culations, raised on the stores of a vast erudition, and tinged with the many-coloured hues of Oriental and Greek philosophy. But, at the same time, he is, I conceive, a much more important author than Justin, the nearer to the Apostolic times, in order to the decision of a disputed point of theology. The comparison, indeed, of Justin and Origen illustrates the case forcibly; since, in respect of piety and Christian feeling, both have powerful claims on our love and veneration. Both were sincere Christians in their writings and in their actions. And yet, LECTURE VIII. 361 _ viewing them as equal in this respect, we cannot rest on the authority of Justin, with the confidence due to the inquisitive spirit of Origen. And yet I do not mean that either Augustine or Jerome, or any other ecclesiastical writers, are, be- cause they are later, more truly excellent as Church authorities. I speak only relatively, as examining the position, whether the most ancient are, as such, the most valid authorities in doctrine. The later writers have, indeed, their peculiar danger—the danger arising from their greater art and tact in the management of controversy. It was only, indeed, about the commencement of the [Vth century, that Christians began to appear at the Schools established by the Emperors. And it is from that period that Christian Literature pro- perly commences. Previously it was heathen phi- losophy, accommodated to the delivery of Christian Truth: so that from those who undertook the de- fence or explanation of Christian doctrines, the Truth received a large portion of alloy in its transmission. Consequently the earlier Fathers are, in reality, much less ¢nstructive than the later. There is one excellence that they possess in the contrast with the later,—a far more valuable excel- lence indeed than that of mere exactness of theo- logical statement,—the greater piety, and Christian spirit, of some of the primitive Christian Fathers, as compared with some of the later, whose authority is chiefly employed in the Church. Had the reverence to antiquity been rested on this ground, no com- 362 LECTURE VIII. plaint could have been made. It is, as if we were drinking of the pure fountain, near its rise, before it was rendered turbid in its passage into the world. For the same reason, the errors of the primitive Fathers are much less dangerous in their effect than those of their successors. Their errors are left loose and indefinite on the surface of their Christian system. The Fathers of the Vth century incor- porated their errors with the Gospel itself. But practical Christianity, and dogmatic Christianity, are two very different things. And conclusions belong- ing to the one, have been improperly transferred to the other. Not only again was the early Christian literature generally defective; but the language itself, in which Christian doctrines should be expressed, was yet to be formed. The terms in which the truth was to be appropriately signified, required to be acted on by the force of usage, like all other significant ex- pressions. It was yet to be ascertained, what proper meaning the tacit convention of theological writers should affix to them. The latitude with which some of the most important terms of Theology, as swb- stance, nature, person, were used in the earlier writers, is a sufficient evidence of this. None, in- deed, of the strictly technical terms may be said to have been settled in their use, until controversy had given them their mould and temper. ‘To seek, ac- cordingly, among the earlier Fathers of the Church, for authorities by which conflicting doctrines may be decided, is often only to embarrass ourselves with LECTURE VIII. 363 an unsettled phraseology; or to extort from words a sense which they could not have at the time when they were written. The method, like the torture of the ancient judicial investigations, forces the indi- vidual expressions thus examined, to confess what they do not mean,—to disburden themselves of a burden, with which they have not been charged 4. From these considerations it may be concluded, that the principle is at least a very doubtful one, which would lead us to ascribe any peculiar au- thority in the decision of religious truth, to the declarations of the primitive Christian writers ; Christian writers, I say, as distinct from the In- spired Authors, to whom alone that deference is due. But, have the advocates themselves of this prin- ciple adhered to it in fact? Have they not rather completely departed from it, in their adoption of that other principle of their theology; that whatever is logically deducible in the way of consequence from any given divine truth, must also be true ? Let us then proceed to examine this point, both in itself, and in its connexion with the other assump- tion of Scholasticism. That the principle in itself is most fallacious, must appear from what I have, on a former occa- sion, stated, respecting the nature of a Logical Theo- logy. It was shewn, that the terms of all theological propositions are mere assumptions in their applica- tion to Theology,—-a symbolical language, derived ‘ Note B. 364 LECTURE VIII. from the operation of the mind about the objects of the natural world. Hence it is evident, that con- clusions drawn from these terms, are nothing more than further connexions of that symbolical language: and that there the proper use and application of them is terminated. The interpretation of them to denote new facts in the Divine scheme of things, is perfectly arbitrary ; as hypothetical, indeed, as if we had at once assumed the facts themselves to which we apply them. It is like starting from an inaccurate algebraic statement, and working out results by the established rules of calculation. It is like making every circumstance in an emblem or metaphor, the ground of scientific deduction. Only the delusion of applying an ingenious instru- ment to the solution of the case, makes the ap- parent solution seem satisfactory. The cogency and perspicuity of logic are mistaken for the certain and clear discovery of religious truth. This ob- servation cannot be too much insisted on; as the practice is, by no means, restricted to the days of scholasticism ; but is to be met with every day, both in writings and in conversation. We cannot be too often reminded, that the terms employed in theolo- gical discussion are no classifications of theological ideas and terms. They are simply the superscrip- tions, or labels, by which we denote several classes of facts, respectively placed under them, as it were. This is the nature of language as applied to nature. Still more so is it, when language is applied to Theology. LECTURE VIII. 365 In the scholastic ages, indeed, theologians looked more to the consequence than to the position itself. The method of theology then pursued, being essen- tially argumentative; the deep-thoughted eye learned to dive to the lowest point of any given principle, and, with unwearied vision, to seize the most remote deductions, as if they were present on the surface. The heretical disputant in vain fluttered and shifted his position. The serpent-gaze of the subtile logi- cian was still watching the tendency of all his efforts, and bound him by an irresistible fascination to the spot from which he was anxious to escape. It is this circumstance, it may be remarked by the way, which renders it so very difficult to ascer- tain the precise shades of opinion, by which differ- ent heresies are distinguished. Consequences have been imputed as principles of belief; and the dis- putants on each side not questioning the fairness of the imputation, an ambiguity has resulted in regard to the original tenets opposed. But the great mischief of adopting this rule in Theology, appears in the fact, that no purely Scrip- tural truth can be maintained consistently with its admission. The theologian who is influenced by it, will be ever solicitous against exposing his doctrine to the censure of the captious objector. What a temptation then is here, to the minute adjustment of doctrines to the cavils of the theorist ? The pain- ful pursuit of the dogmatist will be to attain that precise form of expression, which shall obviate, as far as possible, every objection that may be raised 366 LECTURE VIII. from the existing state of knowledge in the different departments of science. He must be prepared to Shew, that this, or that notion, is implied, or ex- cluded, in his doctrine, as the case may require. Nor is this all. He must be further able to de- monstrate, that his collection of doctrines coheres as a system; that no assertion is made on one head, that may not be strictly reconciled with an- other, and with every other. Here again, then, his mind must be kept intent on a process, very dif- ferent from that of the mere follower of Revela- tion. He must be engaged in giving a theoretic perfection to his enunciations of the sacred truth ; in regulating the terms of one proposition, so as to accord with the terms of another; and that the whole system may appear compacted of harmonious parts. Such a theology is inevitably driven to abstrac- tions—to the subtile inventions of the mind itself— in its statements of Scripture-truth. The simple facts of Revelation must, by their nature, be open to objections, and, it may be said, to unanswerable objections ; because these facts belong to an order of things, of which we do not directly know the general laws. The more indeed we approximate to a knowledge of these general laws, the more will such objections disappear. But as we never can ar- rive, in this state of our being, at a proper know- ledge of them; numerous anomalies, the evidences in truth of our real ignorance of the subject, must always exist. For, what is the explanation of an objection but a demonstration, that an apparent LECTURE VIII. 367 anomaly resolves itself into some general fact better known? It is only where the mind has exactly framed to itself the ideas comprized in any given doctrine, or expression of doctrine, that it can de- monstrate the inconsequence of all objections what- ever. Objections may be equally futile against the bare revealed facts: but they cannot be decisively proved to be so; since the facts are not founded on any precise estimate of ideas involved in them: and in regard to these, therefore, objections may be suffered to stand, without any detraction from our theology. The case, on the other hand, of a meta- physical theology imperatively demands their solu- tion. Is it then for a moment to be supposed, that the simplicity of the Faith can be held, where such a principle of Theology is recognized? Is it not evident rather, that the Faith, as it is in Christ, must be corrupted? The conclusions of human reason will naturally be intruded on the sacred truth. The fact will be accommodated to the theory: and exactness of theological definition will usurp the place of the plain dictates of the Holy Spirit. The instances adduced, in the course of the present Lectures, of the Scholastic mode of establishing doc- trines, abundantly illustrate these observations. The principle of Consequences was, indeed, the life and soul of the Scholastic system, as such. Scholasticism only adopted the principle of Authority, so far as it artfully insinuated itself into the established Church 368 LECTURE VIII. system; maintaining the unity and infallibility of the Church, amidst its own unauthorized, adven- turous theology “. For we may observe how impossible it was, to adhere to the simple principle of authority in fact, whilst theological truth was pursued by pro- cesses of argumentation. A system of truth so formed would necessarily be progressive. Fresh objections against particular parts of the system would arise from time to time, as the state of know- ledge varied, and as curiosity was attracted to points of controversy. But it was not competent to the Scho- lastic theologian, to avoid the determination of such questions. He was assailed within his own terri- tory. His own arms were hurled against him. His logica] theology could no longer stand, if the hostile consequences were not fenced off. The necessity of the case would call upon him constantly to proceed in the decision of questions; and thus to add to his number of doctrines; until at length he would be found, far to have exceeded the narrow base of the prescriptive Theology with which he commenced. Hear the testimony of Augustine to this effect : «* Many things,” he says, “ were latent in the Scrip- “ tures; and, when heretics were cut off, they agi- “tated the Church of God with questions. The d The principle of authority (to adopt an illustration sug- gested by a friend) acted as the barrier in the lists of ancient tournaments. The combatants might use every art and device within the lists : but when either of them was pressed against the immovable fence, he was not allowed any attempt to break through or overleap it: he must surrender, or perish. LECTURE VIII. 369 “latent things were opened, and the Will of God “was understood.... Many therefore, who were “ excellently qualified for discerning and handling “the Scriptures, were latent in the people of God, “and did not assert the solution of difficult ques- * tions, when no calumniator threatened. For, was ““ the subject of the Trinity perfectly treated, before “ the barkings of the Arians? Was the subject of “ Repentance perfectly treated, before the opposition “ of the Novatians? So, neither was the subject of * Baptism perfectly treated, before the contradiction “ of the rebaptizers, who were put out. Nor con- * cerning the very unity of Christ were the state- “ments exactly drawn out, until after that the se- *‘ paration began to annoy the weak brethren. So *‘ that those who had the skill to treat and resolve ““ these points, to prevent the perishing of the weak “thus solicited by the questions of the impious, “drew forth, and made public, by discourses and “ disputations, the hidden things of the Law °.” It is expressly acknowledged, we find, that doc- trines grew under the hands of disputants: that even the most sacred articles of the Trinity, and of the Incarnation, only gradually reached their perfect dogmatic expression. I might multiply quotations to the same purport, from various writers of the Scholastic age. I may, indeed, sum them up by . stating it as their uniform confession, that the speculations of “ heresy,”—in other language, the conclusions of human reason,—forced the Church 6 August. in Psalm. LIV. tom. viru. p. 177. quarto ed.— Note C. Bb 370 LECTURE VIII. into successive adoptions of additional doctrinal statements; that is, unless a particular enunciation of sacred truth had been sanctioned by the Church on each occasion, ‘“ the calumny of heretics could “ not have been quieted ἵν That articles, indeed, might become doctrines at one time, which had not been so at another, is ad- mitted, in the distinction drawn by Aquinas between what is heresy, and what is not. The same opinion, if held antecedently to the determination of the Church, would not be heretical: it was so, when once the Church had pronounced 8. It appears, then, that the Church-leaders, in the endeavour to maintain at once an authoritative and an argumentative Theology, incurred the error of confounding truth of Fact with truth of Opinion. It is the nature of the truth of Fact, to admit no additional certainty from the progress of discussion. If a fact, indeed, is questionable, then may discus- sion, and subsequent inquiry, establish it with an evidence, which it did not appear originally to pos- sess. Such a fact partakes of the nature of the Truth of Opinion. But the facts of the Scripture- records are assumed not to belong to this class, by all who acknowledge the divine character of our f Note D. ¢ Non enim, ut quisque primum in fide peccarit, hereticus dicendus est; sed qui, Ecclesiz auctoritate neglecta, impias opiniones pertinaci animo tuetur. Catechism. ad Parochos, p. 80. Rome, 1761.—Note E. LECTURE VIII. 371 sacred books. Any fact, therefore, that is found expressly written in the Bible, must be regarded, by virtue of its sole and primary existence there, to be ascertained with an evidence to which no further proof can add reality. We may indeed, and we often do, bring confirmation to Scripture-facts, by historical or philosophical evidence. But this is always done on the assumption for the - purpose of argument, that the fact so established is antece- dently questionable; and with the view of proving the divine authority of the whole Revelation. Take the fact as a portion of an authentic history of God’s providences; and it appears to the eye graven with an iron pen on the rock, in characters as bold and strong as the rock itself. But the Truth of Opinion is of a nature to be modified, and improved, and established, by the course of time,—by the pro- gress of civilization, and arts, and knowledge,—by accessions of experience,—by the conflict of judg- ments. Here also there is occasion for personal in- fluence and authority, in guiding the minds of indi- viduals. It would be quite unreasonable in mat- ters of opinion, for those duly conscious of their own disadvantage for the formation of just views, whether from natural incapacity, or the want of experience, or defect of skill in any particular sub- ject, to reject the conclusions of the wise and the experienced. As the great philosopher himself ob- serves; “one ought to attend to the undemonstrated “ assertions of the wise, more than to the demon- *“ strations of others.” It is essential indeed to the Bb2 372 LECTURE VIII. truth of Opinion, that it be held as variable ; that one should be always open to new light,—to new con- viction. Whereas a fact of the Gospel is such, that, were an Angel from heaven to preach to us any thing different from it, our ears must be stopped to the sound; we must reject it as untrue. Now the Scholastic Philosophy, in its construction of a theological system of Christianity, necessarily overlooked this very important distinction. It boldly stepped beyond the bare facts of Scripture, in the assumption of theoretic conclusions from them, as the principles of its theology; and then retired upon the authority of that Scripture, from which it had presumptuously departed ; demanding the certainty of fact, for the dictates of progressive, varying, opinion. Had it called upon the Faithful to respect the learning, the zeal, the piety, the candour of the Master in Theology; had it insisted on a patient, docile hearing of opinions, hoary with age, and con- secrated by venerable names in Church-History ; it would have recognized a sound theory of Tradi- τοι ἢ. But we should not then have had dogmas intruded into the place of Religion, and arbitrations of doubts forced on the conscience of believers, as the voice of the Holy Spirit speaking by the minis- ters and stewards of the divine mysteries. It might have been supposed, that the very discus- h Reasonings from authority, when thus regulated, are coin- cident with probabilities. See the opening of Aristotle’s Topics. The word ἔνδοξον expresses such coincidence. LECTURE VIII. 373 sion of religion in the form of doubts, would have palpably shewn the impropriety of proposing truths so obtained, as matters of Revelation; since the truths of religion were thus exhibited as appeals to the reason of man. A doubt is, by its nature, rela- tive to human reason; and the settlement of it by argument, is a simple decision of human reason. If the conclusion be received on the authority of the reasoner in his sacerdotal character; the previous doubt and the argumentation are perfectly irrelevant. So anomalous, indeed, is the mode of proceeding in the Scholastic development of Christian Theo- logy, that it is only capable of solution, as appears to me, from the fact noticed at the commencement of these Lectures; that the Scholastic system was a prolonged struggle between Reason and Authority. The effort throughout is, to maintain both princi- ples. But the method of Theology being originally founded in speculation and resistance to mere au- thority, we find traces of this beginning, in the com- promise of principles which the maturity of the system displays. It is ratiocination that triumphs; and Logic domineers over Theology. The previous discussion has, I trust, prepared the way for the conclusions, which I wish now to submit to your consideration, as to the nature and use of Dogmatic Theology. It is evident, I think, from the inquiry which I have been pursuing, on the whole, as well as more immediately from the preceding observations, that Bb3 914 LECTURE VIII. the doctrinal statements of religious truth, have their origin in the principles of the human intellect. Strictly to speak, in the Scripture itself there are no doctrines. What we read there is matter of fact: either fact nakedly set forth as it occurred; or fact explained and elucidated by the light of inspiration cast upon it. It will be thought, perhaps, that the Apostolic Epistles are an exception to this observ- ation. If any part of Scripture contains doctrinal statements, it will, at any rate, be supposed to be the Epistolary. But even this part, if accurately considered, will not be found an exception. No one perhaps will maintain, that there is any new truth of Christianity set forth in the Epistles; any truth, I mean, which does not presuppose the whole truth of Human Salvation by Jesus Christ, as already determined and complete. The Epistles clearly im- ply that the work of Salvation is done. They repeat and insist on its most striking parts; urging chiefly on man, what remains for him to do, now that Christ has done all that God purposed in behalf of man, before the foundation of the world. Let the experiment be fairly tried: let the inve- terate idea, that the Epistles are the doctrinal por- tion of Scripture, be for a while banished from the mind: and let them be read simply as the works of our Fathers in the Faith—of men who are com- mending us rather to the love of Christ, than open- ing our understanding to the mysteries of Divine Knowledge: and, after such an experiment, let each decide for himself, whether the practical, or the theo- LEGTURE? VILL 375 retic, view of the Epistles, is the correct one. For my part, 1 cannot doubt but that the decision will be in favour of the practical character of them. The speculating theologian will perhaps answer, by adducing text after text from an Epistle, in which he will contend that some dogmatic truth, some theory, or system, or peculiar view of divine truth, is asserted. But “ what is the chaff to the, wheat ?” I appeal, from the logical criticism of the Apostle’s words, to their Apostolical spirit—from Paul philo- sophizing, to Paul preaching, and entreating, and persuading. And I ask, whether it is likely that an Apostle would have adopted the form of an epi- stolary communication, for imparting mysterious pro- positions to disciples, with whom he enjoyed the opportunity of personal intercourse; and to whom he had already “declared the whole counsel of * God ;” whether, in preaching Christ, he would have used a method of communicating truth, which implies some scientific application of language,—an analysis, at least, of propositions into their terms,— in order to its being rightly understood? And I further request it may be considered, whether it was not, by such a mode of inference from the Scripture-language, as would convert the Epistles into textual authorities on points of controversy, that the very system of the Scholastic Theology was erected. Dogmas of Theology then, as such, are human authorities. But do I mean to say by this, that Bb 4 376 LECTURE VIII. they are unimportant in Religion, or that they are essentially wrong, foreign to true Religion, and in- consistent with it? I wish rather to establish their importance and proper truth, as distinct from the honour and verity of the simple Divine Word. We have seen how Doctrines gradually assume their form, by the successive impressions of con- troversy. The facts of Scripture remain the same through all ages, under ail variations of opinions among men. Not so the theories raised upon them. They have floated on the stream of speculation. One heresiarch after another has proposed his modifica- tion. The doctrine, so stated, has obtained more or less currency, according to its coincidence with re- ceived notions on other subjects,—according to the influence possessed by its patrons, or their obstinacy against persecution. Nearly the whole of Chris- tendom was, at one time, Arian in profession’. At one time, Pelagianism seemed to be the ascendant creed of the Church*. In such a state of things, it was impossible for the Scriptural theologian, even if not himself susceptible of the seductive force of a Logical Philosophy, to refrain from mingling in the conflict of argument. Orthodoxy was forced to speak the divine truth in the terms of heretical speculation; if it were only to guard against the novelties which the heretic had introduced. It was the necessity of the case that compelled the orthodox, as themselves freely admit, to employ a phraseology, i Note D. k Note E. LECTURE VIII. 377 by which, as experience proves, the naked truth of God has been overborne and obscured. Such being the origin of a Dogmatic Theology, it follows, that its proper truth consists in its being a collection of negations; of negations, I mean, of all ideas imported into Religion, beyond the ex- press sanction of Revelation. Supposing that there had been no theories proposed on the truths of Christianity ; were the Bible, or rather the divine facts which it reveals, at once ushered into our notice, without our knowing that various wild no- tions, both concerning God and human nature, had been raised upon the sacred truths; no one, I con- ceive, would wish to see those facts reduced to the precision and number of articles, any more than he now thinks of reducing any other history to such a form. We should rather resist any such attempt as futile, if not as profane: or, however judiciously such a selection might be made, we should undoubt- edly prefer the living records of the Divine Agency, to the dry and uninteresting abstracts of human com- pilers and expositors. But, when theoretic views are known to have been held and propagated; when the world has been familiarized to the language of these speculations, and the truth of God is liable to corruption from them; then it is, that forms of ex- clusion become necessary, and theory must be re- torted by theory. This very occasion, however, of the introduction of Theory into Religion, suggests the limitation of it. It must be strictly confined to the exclusion and rejection of all extraneous notions 378 LECTURE VIII. from the subjects of the sacred volumes. Theory, thus regulated, constitutes a true and valuable phi- losophy,—not of Christianity, properly so called,— but of human Christianity,—of Christianity in the world, as it has been acted on by the force of the human intellect. This is the view which I take, not only of our Articles at large, but in particular, of the Nicene and Athanasian Creeds, as they stand in our Ritual, or are adopted into our Articles. If it be admitted that the notions on which their several expressions are founded, are both unphilosophical and unscrip- tural; it must be remembered, that they do not impress those notions on the Faith of the Christian, as matters of affirmative belief. They only use the terms of ancient theories of philosophy,—theories current in the Schools at the time when they were written,—to exclude others more obviously injuri- ous to the simplicity of the Faith. The speculative language of these Creeds, it should be observed, was admitted into the Church of England as established by the Reformers, before the period, when the genius of Bacon exposed the emptiness of the system, which the Schools had palmed upon the world as the only instrument for the discovery of all Truth. At such a time, accordingly, the theories opposed in the ori- ginal formularies of the orthodox, would be power- fully felt as real obstacles to a sound belief in Chris- tian Truths; and the terms, declaring the orthodox doctrine, would be readily interpreted by the exist- ing physical and logical notions. The minds of LECTURE VIII. 379 men would be fully preoccupied with the notions of matter, and form, and substance, and accident ; and, when such notions had produced misconception of the sacred Truth, it would be a necessary expedient, to correct that misconception by a less exceptionable employment of them !. If this account of the origin and nature of Dog- matic Theology be correct, surely those entirely per- vert its nature, who reason on the Terms of doc- trines, as if they were the proper ideas belonging to Religion ; or who insist on interpretations of ex- pressions, whether as employed by our Reformers, or the primitive believers, in a positive sense; with- out taking into their view, the existing state of theology and philosophy at the different periods of Christianity. Creeds and Articles, without such pre- vious study, are as if they were written in a strange language. The words, indeed, are signs of ideas to us, but not of those ideas which were presented to the minds of men, when the formularies were writ- ten, or when they were adopted by the Church. But here the question may be asked, how far on these grounds Creeds and Articles may be retained, when the original occasion for them has ceased ? The answer of Hooker will readily occur to many ; that, the occasion having ceased, it by no means follows, that the statements themselves should no longer be of use™; a fact that may be illustrated 1 Note F. m Eccles. Polity, Ὁ. V. 42. p. 167, &c. vol. II. 8vo. ed. 1807. 380 LECTURE VIII. by several analogies. But the case of Articles is a peculiar one in this respect; that the result itself is conceived to be an evil, or, at least, an alternative to avoid an evil: it being admitted to be better, except by way of antidote against heretical doc- trine, that there should be no other Articles but the Word of God itself. It appears to me, then, that the occasion for Articles will probably never cease. Were the Realism of the human mind a transient phenomenon, peculiar to one age, or one species of philosophy, and not, as is the fact, an instinctive propensity of our intellectual nature; then it might be supposed, that the unsoundness of a metaphysical and logical Theology being once fully admitted, the cumbrous machinery might be removed, and the sacred truth allowed to stand forth to view, in its own attractive simplicity. But such a result seems rather to be wished, and prayed for, by a sanguine piety, than reckoned upon in the humbling calculations of human _ experience. In the mean time, it were well to retain, amidst all its confessed imperfections, a system of tech- nical theology, by which we are guarded, in some measure, from the exorbitance of theoretic enthu- siasm. It would be a rashness of pious feeling, that should at once so confide in itself, as to throw down the walls and embankments, which the more vigilant fears of our predecessors have reared up around the City of God. In the present state of things, such a zeal for the Faith would look more like the ostentatiousness of Spartan courage, than LECTURE VIII. 381 the modest discipline of the soldiers of Christ, trust- ing in his arm for success, and yet availing them- selves of all natural means of strength, which their reason points out. The force, indeed, of History must always act on a literary age; and an influence is exercised, by former speculators, on the opinions and conduct of their successors. We cannot therefore conclude ; that, because the original occasion of Creeds and Articles has ceased, there are actually no existing prejudices of a like kind, kept alive by the tradition of former opinions, to be obviated by the like theo- retic statements. At the same time, we must not suppose, that the same immutability belongs to Articles of Religion, which we ascribe properly to Scripture-facts alone. As records of Opinions they are essentially variable. It is no impeachment of their truth, to regard them as capable of improvement,—of more perfect adapta- tion to the existing circumstances of the Church at different periods. As to the difficulty and hazard of any actual alteration, I have nothing to say. I do not presume to say, that alteration is actually required. I am merely addressing myself to the general question, as to the capacity of improvement in Church-Creeds and Articles, with the view of suggesting a right theory of the subject. To deny the essential variableness of such documents, is, to admit an human authority to a parity with the au- thority of Inspiration. It is to incur the imputation, 382 LECTURE VIII. which members of the Roman Communion have sometimes brought against the Church of England ; that, professing to make the Scriptures the sole Rule of Faith, we have inconsistently adopted another Rule of Faith in the deference paid to our Articles. It is a temptation, indeed, to which the members of any particular communion of Christians are pecu- liarly exposed—to identify the defence of the formu- laries of the Communion with the defence of Chris- tianity. It is like securing the fortifications of the city, instead of looking to the strength and discipline of its garrison as the main resource. As belonging to a Communion, we must be able to shew that we have good reason for our preference. And it is enough for this purpose, to prove that our Church is truly Scriptural in its basis, walking in the foot- steps of the Holy Spirit, and drinking of the pure fountain of inspiration. This is the sole proper notion of the infallibility of a Church. For it is an infallibility not its own, but of God present with it. We are not called upon, to defend every parti- cular expression which has been adopted into its formularies. This would be, to make it infallible 2 itself. It would be to suppose, that a fortress, strong in its internal resources, must fall, because some of its outworks are not impregnable. And we may find indeed at last, that, by such a proceeding, we are tenaciously cleaving to means of defence, which the present state of religion and knowledge entirely supersedes: as we might suppose the inhabitant of LECTURE VIII. 383 a castle fortified in feudal times, imagining himself safe amidst his walls, against assaults from modern inventions in the art of war. The use and importance then of Dogmatic Theo- logy are to be estimated, from its relation to the Social Profession of Christianity. It is, in regard to Christianity, what political institutions are in regard to the social principles of our nature. As these principles are the real conservative causes of human society ; and political institutions are the supports and auxiliaries; so are the dogmas of Theology en- forcements by external barriers, of the saving, quick- ening truths of the Gospel. The imperfection of man is equally the occasion of both. Were all men just, the social instincts would develop themselves, without the artificial methods of civil government. So, were all the humble disciples of Christ, Christian sentiment would speak in its own accents, and not be constrained to learn the foreign tongue of tech- nical theology. The case appears to be this. The agreement of a community in certain views of Scripture-facts is presupposed. The problem be- fore the Dogmatic Theologian is, to preserve that agreement entire; to guard it from a latitudinarian- ism which would virtually annul it; and to prevent its dissolution by innovators, either within or with- out the religious society. The anathemas of Creeds and Councils can only be justified on this ground. They are the penalties of social Religion. The authority of the Church, which has prescribed any particular collection of Articles to its members, by 384 LECTURE VIII. the use of these invisible sanctions, calls upon them, not to profess its doctrines lightly and unadvisedly ; but to bear in mind the awful responsibility at- tached to matters of divine Revelation; and that it is about these they are engaged, when they set their hand to Articles or any professions of doctrine. I have now completed the inquiry which I pro- posed, into the influence of the Scholastic Philosophy on our Theological Language; at least to the ex- tent which the present occasion permitted ; and suf- ficiently, I trust, to the establishment of the fact; that this Philosophy is the basis of all our most im- portant technical terms, and modes of thinking, both in Religion and in Ethics. I have also, in this last Lecture, discussed the principles of Authority and of Reason, which the Scholastic system embodied in itself; and have endeavoured to draw the line of dis- tinction, between a legitimate combination of them in a system of Dogmatic Theology, and that arrogant method of universal speculation, which, commencing with the confusion of all human truth, ends in the confusion of Divine Truth with human. Nor let it be supposed, that the speculative Theo- logy into which I have been examining, is a thing of another day—a mere matter of curiosity to the literary or ecclesiastical historian. I should have failed indeed in the present attempt to bring the subject before you; if this should be the impression LECTURE VIII. 385 from it. Scholasticism indeed has passed away, as to its actual rude form, in which it appeared in the middle age. But its dominion has endured. In the Church of Rome, indeed, it still holds visible sway; clothed in the purple of spiritual supremacy, and giving the law of Faith to the subject-con- sciences of men. Those who are at all acquainted with the public documents of that Church, as esta- blished by the Council of Trent, or with its con- troversial writers, will attest the general observation ; that it is the metaphysics of the Schools, which form the texture of the Roman Theology, and by which that system is maintained. In the destitution of Scripture-facts for the support of the theological structure, the method of subtile distinctions and reasonings has been found of admirable efficacy. It eludes the opponent, who, not being trained to this dialectical warfare, is not aware, that all such ar- gumentation is a tacit assumption of the point in controversy ; or is perplexed and confounded by the elaborate subtilties of the apologist. No argument indeed from fact can suffice against the artifice of distinctions. The expert metaphysician is ready with some new abstraction, as soon as he is assailed with an adverse position or consequence; and the objector feels himself entangled in meshes, against which his strength, however superior, is wasted in unavailing efforts. The resistance, which the Roman Church has shewn against improvements in Natural Philosophy, is no inconsiderable evidence of the con- nexion of the ecclesiastical system with the ancient ας 386 LECTURE VIII. Logical Philosophy of the Schools. There has been a constant fear, lest, if that philosophy should be exploded, some important doctrines could not be maintained *. But, though the sorceries of the Scholastic Theo- logy have been dispelled where the light of Re- formation has been received; yet the transformations of religious truth, which they effected, could not at once be reversed by the same effort of improvement. The minds of men had been trained to think and speak of divine things, in the idiom of Scholasti- cism. So that, not only the reformer in Philosophy, but the reformer in Religion also, was compelled to use the phraseology of the system which he assailed. Thus, through its technical language, has Scholasti- cism survived even in Protestant Churches. Clearly, we may trace its operation in the controversies agi- tated among Protestants about Original Sin, Grace, Regeneration, Predestination ;—all which, when strictly considered, are found to resolve themselves into disputes concerning the just limits of certain notions, — into questions of the exactness of pro- posed definitions. So again, it is not uncommon to find, even among our own theologians, one doctrine insisted on, as necessary to be admitted im order to the reception of another. Original Sin, for instance, is not unfrequently inculcated, as es- sential to be believed to the fullest extent, in order to an acceptance of the truth of the Atonement: as if the truth of either doctrine were a matter of logical n Note G. LECTURE VIII. 387 deduction, or dependent on the truth of the other: whereas, in the correct view, each is an ultimate fact in the revealed dispensations of God, resting on its own proper evidence. Once acknowledging, indeed, the reality of the Christian Revelation, we are bound to refer the whole of Human Happiness to the me- diation of Christ; though the Scriptures had been entirely silent respecting the fact of the intrinsic sinfulness of man. And conversely ; we should have been under an obligation of acting, as feeling our- selves under sin, and naturally incapable of hap- piness; had the Scriptures simply stated our incapa- city and misery, without revealing the mercies of the Atonement. The real state of the case then is, that the spirit of Scholasticism still lives amongst us: that, though we do not acknowledge submission to its empire, we yet feel its influence °. At the time, indeed, when Luther raised his voice against the corruptions sanctioned by the Roman Church, the complaint was, that the spiritual lessons of Scripture were become a dead letter. There were however, even at that time, men of deep and fami- liar acquaintance with Scripture, the votaries of an ardent and sincere piety. Their religion, however, was inaccessible to the poor, and the illiterate, and the busy. It was the privilege of the theologian,— of the holy and speculative recluse. The mass of ° The practice itself of preaching from Texts of Scripture is aremnant of Scholasticism. At the time of the Reformation it was carried to the most absurd excess.—Note H. eve 2, 388 LECTURE VIII. the people indolently, or superstitiously, reposed on the sanctity of their Fathers in religion; and sought their rule of faith and conduct, in devout attendance on the vicarious ministrations of the man of God. In a word, Religion was become ἃ professional thing. None could be truly and properly religious, but those who were versed in the logic and casu- istry of a scientific theology. Therefore it was, that Luther so vehemently proclaimed the great doc- trine of Justification by Faith alone; setting himself against that divorce of Theology and popular Reli- gion, by which the Gospel had in effect been unevan- gelized and desecrated. And are there not still traces amongst us, of a separation between the religion of the few and the religion of the many? The delusion indeed has passed away in its theoretic form; that true religion can consist in any thing but in holiness of active life,—in an habitual conduct conformed to the example of our Lord Jesus Christ. But the principle of that separation, against which the Re- formation was directed, is still seen in that enthu- siasm, which, even in these days, loves to diffuse itself in sentimental religion ;—which spends the strength of devotion in holy thoughts,—the lux- ury, like the Scholastic Piety, only of the pure, the cultivated, the sensitive, and the ardent mind. It is now an enthusiasm of the heart, rather than of the intellect. But the principle is still the same. Re- ligion is converted into Theological Contemplation. The examination which I have been pursuing, LECTURE VIII. 389 has led me over much entangled ground; from which I can hardly hope to have extricated myself, in a way to satisfy the views, or scruples, of all whom I address. But the peculiar difficulty of forming just estimates of controversial statements, —and of seizing the shifting lights of philosophical theories, as they have passed over the truths of Revelation, and given to them their various hue, —will obtain for me, I trust, a patient and candid construction of opinions expressed. It would ill be- come me, indeed, to dogmatize on a subject, in which I am directly engaged in illustrating the injurious effects of Dogmatism in Theology ; and especially before an audience, from some of whom I should rather expect the judgment of a point, than endeavour to impose my own opinion. It must be admitted, I think, on the whole, that the Force of Theory has been very considerable in the modifica- tion of our Theological language. And I would submit to your reflection, whether that force has been sufficiently allowed for, either in our general profession of Christianity, or in our controversies on particular articles of Doctrine ? But, however successfully I may have established the desired conclusion ; there may, I fear, remain in some minds,—where there has existed an indiscrimi- nate veneration of the names and terms attached to Christianity, as of parts of the holy religion itself,—a painful impression of mistrust,—a suspicious reason- ing with themselves ; that, either the argument must Ces 390 LECTURE VIII. be erroneous, or they have followed cunningly-devised fables—the imaginations of the sophistical wisdom of this world—as the Gospel of Truth? For the sake of such persons, I would once more call attention to the divine part of Christianity, as entirely distinct from its episodic additions. Whatever may have been the motives and conduct of successive agents em- ployed in its propagation from age to age; whatever may have been the speculations of false Philosophy on the facts of Christianity ; those facts themselves are not touched ;—they remain indisputable, so far as any objections on such grounds can avail. These facts form part of the great History of mankind: they account for the present condition of things in the world: and we cannot deny them without in- volving ourselves in universal scepticism. There can be no rational doubt ; that man is in a degraded, disadvantageous condition,—that Jesus Christ came into the world, in the mercy of God, to produce a restoration of man,—that He brought Life and Immortality to light by his coming,—that He died on the Cross for our sins, and rose again for our justification,—that the Holy Ghost came by his promise to abide with his Church, miraculously as- sisting the Apostles in the first institution of it, and, ever since that period, interceding with the hearts of believers. ‘These, and other truths con- nected with them, are not collected merely from feats or sentences of Scripture: they are parts of its re- cords. Infinite theories may be raised upon them; but these theories, whether true or false, leave the LECTURE VIII. 391 facts where they were. There is enough in them to warm and comfort the heart; though we had assurance of nothing more. It is an excellent effect indeed of unprejudiced theological study,—a reward, it may be called, of our honesty in the pursuit,—that our sensitiveness to particular objections diminishes, as we advance in the investigation. If there are any therefore, whose anxiety for the sacred cause has been awakened by any observations in the course of the present Lec- tures; I exhort them to proceed, fearless of any ultimate shock to the real truth of Christianity by the most searching investigation. The knowledge of the speculations, which have mingled with the statement of the truth, cannot but be, in the result, of the greatest service. It will enable the theolo- gical student to see, that objections against the theo- retic parts of doctrines (and objections are prin- cipally of this kind) are no objections against the fundamental doctrines themselves—the revealed facts —which are really and in themselves, independent of those theories. And,—what is of even still greater, far greater, importance to him as a Christian,—it will inculcate on him candour, forbearance, charitable construction of the views of others, an humble and teachable disposition towards God. cc4& promi uae poigadihg hil | ΕΣ τ ολαίναιίν sted ' nade menue) Piast at HR uh AL. μιρληυπομήτ ae ie mh pseu ik ar vial, wet, cout nice ΓΝ uakayanbistie Ρ ον γεν utes, ἀν Bia Wen ha ab ih ΠΥ ΠΝ Ὑπ8 ; ἣν Haaeliivy ἀν ὐαύναΣ Ὗ | cenit ΓΝ ΤΕ ΤῊ ᾿ 4 “an τ BE slinahonn ΠῚ "a ΠΤ τὰ ἐλ} ἴω Grin Ἢ id wb iin Ae sienna atl i ’ tis bas ΜΠ ayaa 4% it ga νγοὴν νου. wave ἢ ls Bama olilect asada ieee 102 oli ben Nia we abelian ὩΣ "ἡ oF i np ide Ye ω AES TAS ull ἴα ee y ROO aaah: wee ean iad ARE, Laine ΝΗ > vo eo Vs bi Pres ad fh Ue a ΚἊΝ ἥδ ἫΝ ' APPENDIX. NOTES. . ver: ἐν a at ’ 5 a) 4 ἊΝ A AS iy ae ee ἢ γεν soe } Wad ἘΜῈ ea m1 ἐν a3! ἧδε; : νυν ier ie BH. Dy os wie aril thee Tete ty le Ma ar) ᾿ ap hha 214 ἈΝΕ era pear tae 2 ms οὐ yen Cart et As ae sie sed ebay MR a ete Ray oc χα seein aoe elgg hat Perera iy a. 3 1a SO RE at ye CP ite Sky if ros in sciGly 2%: ; by ᾿ a Pie = NT ΜῊ Qua oad ἫΝ iv Aeon a τὺ: | ‘OE Poe, WR utes : Ἂν Wis cal | re MISES SE He rte ΑΘ es Span igi Me BA ἰδῆ τὶ Mi a 9 Wer ρα be Lip πὴ 3.32 ΠΥ = ΩΝ ite 2 Ae τ Ὁ Aer Sew Ee a we Kon: he sat $s ἣν ἐν ᾿ ἐκ et nay aii, ΚΩ͂Ν aye ee uke ἢ ΤΩ ως Suh! re Nov ΕΒ Hite, Aha ES Aen ce ph eae: dite : a Wi” ead) A CRT) tub Peon Ἄν εν He ἀρὰν; ΐ νυ at ay os = ed e as Soi τ es rises 3 : treet ’ al Ἢ ΔΗ͂ a, >» ee a Mis OM) fey ΤΣ Pays | AT ie “| ily oie Cis ae Nadi 5 a ae VBR aS ἘΝ ΣΥΝ τὲ Ss Pry a + enh Bie ἐῶ a i? Bits ᾿ ΕΣ ΚΙ ἀψναν ALNe yd ira ies), Us ἀπ wee 7 lay. Soe ms Huta aah a ἐν A ; υἱ ἌΝ Ton re dtaeaeavhs ΚΤ ΕΝ ἡ ἀρνα τ μη τ. phir gh He Sep and hii eae pit op ἐν ἢν ᾿ et Stes bal Sar reat pli!) Tiel hPa iene Nb a “4 ἢ: i rpahy εἴ. ny Ἂν x a = { a ° poe ee “ibe ΤᾺ ὶ Ν᾿ Ἢ ἕ ἵ ney | 4“ ὶ age, fe a f Ἷ ἢ APPENDIX. LECTURE I. NOTE A. p. 17. I HAVE translated the following epistle of Jerome, wish- ing to give the general reader a more obvious view of the style of intermingled address and authority which appears in it; and which affords a fair specimen of the general cha- racter ofthe writer: though it is impossible by translation, to present a full idea of the art of the composition; as the very collocation of the words is studied, both to please the ear and give point to the expressions. Jerome* to Damasus Ὁ. Since the East, jarred by inveterate fury of the people among themselves, tears piecemeal the Lord’s tunic ‘* with- “out seam and woven from the top;’’ and foxes exter- minate the vine of Christ¢; so that, amidst ‘ the broken “cisterns that hold no water‘,” it may with difficulty be discovered, where is the “ sealed fountain, and the in- “closed garden: I have, therefore, thought it right to consult the chair of Peter, and the faith approved by apo- stolic lips; demanding my soul’s food from the same source now, whence formerly I took on me the vestments of Christ ©. Nor, in truth, could the vast expanse of liquid element, a Fieronymi Opera, ed. Erasmi, 1565. tom. If. p. 131. b Damasus, a Spaniard by birth; Bishop of Rome from A. D. 367 to A. D. 384. Jerome had been his ecclesiastical secretary. © Cantic. il. 15. ad Jerem. ii. 13. e Alluding to his ordination at Rome, or more probably to his baptism there. 396 APPENDIX. and the interjacent length of lands, restrain me from searching for the precious pearl. Wherever the carcase is, there are the eagles gathered together. The patrimony being squandered by an evil offspring, with you alone is preserved uncorrupted the inheritance of the fathers. There the earth with fruitful glebe returns an hundredfold the pure seed of the Lord: here, overwhelmed in the furrows, the wheat degenerates into darnel and wild oats. Now in the West the sun of justice rises; but in the East, that Lucifer who had fallen, has placed his throne above the stars. You are the light of the world; you the salt of the earth; you the vessels of gold and silver: here the vessels of clay, or wood, await the rod of iron and eternal con- flagration. Although therefore your greatness deters me, still your kindness invites me. From a priest I ask the victim of salvation; from a shepherd the protection of the sheep. Let invidiousness droop: let the ambition of the Roman summit recede. It is with the successor of the fisherman, and the disciple of the cross, that I am speak- ing. For my part, except as following Christ, I associate no firstf in communion with your Blessedness ; that is, with the Chair of Peter: on that rock, I know, the Church was built. Whoever without that house has eaten of the lamb, is profane. If any one is not in the ark of Noah, he will perish when the flood prevails. And because for my of- fences 8, I have migrated to that solitude which parts Syria from the adjacent Barbarian confines; and I am unable always to ask the holy thing® of the Lord from your Sanc- tity, at such intervening spaces; I therefore follow your colleagues here, the Egyptian Confessors ; and lurk, my- self a little bark, under ships of burden‘. I know not Vitalis; Meletius I reject; I am ignorant of Paulinus Κ. f To shew that He did not give precedence to the Patriarch of Antioch. & As doing penance by self-mortification. h Erasmus explains this of the body of Christ, or the Eucharist. i As contrasting his own affected littleness with the full-freighted sanctity of the Egyptian monks. k All, bishops of the Arian party at Antioch. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 397 Whoever gathers not with you, scatters: that is, who is not of Christ, is of Antichrist. Now therefore, alas! after the Nicene faith, after the Alexandrian decree made in concurrence with the West, the novel expression of three hypostases is exacted of me, a Roman man, by the Arian Prelate and the people of the Campé!. Who are the Apostles, I pray, that have handed down such things? Who is the new master of the nations, —the Paul,—that has taught them? Let us ask them; what they conceive can be understood by three hypostases. Three persons subsisting, they say. We answer, that we so believe. The sense is not enough; they are importu- nate for the term itself: because some unknown poison lurks under the syllables. We exclaim, if any one con- fesses not three hypostases, or three enhypostata,—that is, three subsisting persons,—let him be anathema. And because we do not get words by heart, we are judged here- tical. If any one however, understanding by hypostasis, usia, does not say, one hypostasis in three persons, he is alien from Christ. Yet under this confession, we are, equally with you, branded with the cautery of the Union™. Determine if it is your pleasure, I beseech you; I shall not fear to say three hypostases: if you order it, let a new faith be framed after the Nicene; and let us who are the orthodox confess in like words with the Arians. The whole school of secular literature knows nothing else by hypostasis, but τοῖα. And who, I ask, with sacri- legious mouth will proclaim three substances. One and sole is the nature of God, which truly 56. For, what sub- 1 The curve of the coast of Cilicia, so called. m The familiar name for Sabellianism. Union however scarcely gives the same idea as the Latin Unio. The term Cautery is borrowed from the practice of branding a mark on the young soldier.—So again he says in an epistle to the Presbyter Mark: Hereticus vocor, homusion predicans trini- tatem. Sabellianz impietatis arguor ; tres subsistentes, veras, integras, per- fectasque personas, indefessa voce pronuntians. .. . Quotidie exposcor fidem ; quasi sine fide renatus sim. Confiteor ut volunt; non placet. Subscribo 5 non credunt. Opera, tom. II. p. 315. 398 APPENDIX. sists, hus not from any other; but is its own. Other things which are created, though they seem to be, are not; because at one time they were not; and that which has not existed, may again not exist. God alone, who is eternal,—that is, who has no beginning,—holds truly the name of Essence. Therefore also to Moses from the bush, he says, “ I am «ὁ that Lam ;” and again, “ He that is sent me.’ There existed truly then, angels, heaven, earth, seas. Yet how does God vindicate to Himself properly the common name of Essence? But, because that nature alone is perfect, and one Deity subsists in three persons; which truly ex- ists, and is one nature; whoever says, that three are,— that is, that three hypostases are,—that is, wst@ ;—under the name of piety, attempts to assert three natures. And if this be so, why are we by walls separated from Arius; when in perfidy we are coupled with him? Let Ursicinus" be joined with your Blessedness; let Auxen- tius° be associated with Ambrose. Far be this from the Roman Faith. Let not the religious hearts of the people imbibe so great a sacrilege. Let it suffice us to say; one substance, three persons subsisting, perfect, equal, co- eternal. Let there be no mention of three hypostases, with your leave; and let one be held. It is of no good sus- picion ; since, in the same sense, the words are dissentient. Let the traditional mode of belief suffice us. Or, if you think it right, that we should say three hypostases with their interpretations, we refuse not. But believe me, poison lurks under the honey: an angel of Satan has transfigured himself into an angel of light. They interpret hypostasis well; and when 1 say, that I hold what they themselves expound, I am judged heretical. Why so anxiously do they hold one word? Why do they lurk under an am- biguous expression? If I so believe, as themselves affect to think ; let them permit me also to speak their own sense in my own words. * An Arian competitor with Damasus for the papal see. ° Arian Bishop of Milan, predecessor of Ambrose. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 399 I therefore beseech your Blessedness, by the Crucified One, the Salvation of the world,—by the homoousion Tri- nity,—to give me authority by your letters, either to for- bear saying, or to say, the hypostases. And lest perhaps the obscurity of the place in which I am living, may es- cape your search, be so gracious as to transmit your writ- ings by your letter-carriers, to Evagrius, the presbyter, who is well known to you; at the same time, to signify with whom I should communicate at Antioch: since the people of the Campé, coupled with the heretics of Tarsus, are only ambitious that, supported by the authority of your communion, they may proclaim three hypostases in the ancient sense. NOTE B. p. 17. After the death of Auxentius, the city of Milan was thrown into commotion by the contending factions of the Arians and the Orthodox; each seeking to elect as suc- cessor to the see, a man of their own party. Ambrose ap- pears in the Church, in his capacity of Prefect of Italy, to quell the disturbance: when suddenly, according to his biographer Paulinus, the voice of an infant in the crowd called out the name of Ambrose. The name was received as an happy omen by the assembled multitude, and spread from mouth to mouth, until the uproar of acclamation pro- claimed the choice of the people to have fallen on the Pre- fect himself. He leaves the Church, ascends the tribunal of justice, and tries the constancy of his electors, as Pau- linus proceeds to relate, by a severity unusual in him, the question by torture. Still the people continue their ac- clamations, “ Thy sin be upon us;” “ Thy sin be upon ‘us ;”—thus silencing any scruples of his conscience. He attempts further to decline their importunity by flying from the city at midnight ; and his escape being prevented, afterwards conceals himself in a private house. But all being unavailing, the reluctant Prefect at length con- sents to take on him the burden of the sacred office, 400 APPENDIX. and ascends the step to the honours of his future saint- ship. We may not unreasonably suspect in this instance, a dissimulation like that of some civil rulers, who have de- clined in appearance, a proffered crown, the real object of their ambition. This is the more likely, when we find, according to the same authority, Probus, the Preetorian Prefect, by whom Ambrose was sent to quell the com- motion at Milan, instructing him to “ go and act, not as “ judge, but as bishop:’ and hailing afterwards, in the election of Ambrose, the fulfilment of his word P. Ambrose himself thus speaks of his own election. Quam resistebam ne ordinarer, postremo cum cogerer, saltem ordinatio protelaretur! Sed non valuit prescriptio, prevaluit impressio. Tamen ordinationem meam occiden- tales episcopi judicio, orientales etiam exemplo, probarunt. Et tamen neophytus prohibetur ordinari, ne extollatur su- perbia. Si dilatio ordinationi defuit, vis cogentis est: si non deest humilitas competens sacerdotio, ubi causa non heret, vitium non imputatur. dmbros. Epistol. 1(Χ1Π. Oper. tom. τι. p. 1037. Dicetur enim: Ecce ille non in ecclesia nutritus sinu, non edomitus a puero, sed raptus a tribunalibus, abductus de vanitatibus szculi hujus, a preconis voce ad psalmistie adsuefactus canticum, in sacerdotio manet, non virtute sua, sed Christi gratia, et inter convivas mense celestis re- cumbit. Serva, Domine, munus tuum; custodi donum quod contulisti etiam refugienti. Ego enim sciebam quod non eram dignus vocari episcopus ; quoniam dederam me seculo huic, &c. Ambros. De Penit. lib. 11. Oper. tom. τι. p- 432. Unus enim verus magister est, qui solus non didicit quod omnes doceret: homines autem discunt prius quod doce- ant, et ab illo accipiunt quod aliis tradant. Quod ne ipsum quidem mihi accidit. Ego enim raptus de tribunalibus, » Ambrosii Vit. per Paulinum.—The work is addressed to Augustine. Pau- linus, the author, was a deacon, and notary, or secretary, to Ambrose. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 401 atque administrationis infulis, ad sacerdotium, docere vos coepi, quod ipse non didici. Itaque factum est ut prius docere inciperem, quam discere. Discendum igitur mihi simul, et docendum est; quoniam non vacavit ante discere. Ambros. De Offictis Ministror. 1. c. 1. The instance given by Gregory Nazianzen, of a similar election, is the following one. ‘Qs δ᾽ εἰς πλείους τοῦ δήμου διαιρεθέντος, καὶ ἄλλων ἄλλον προβαλλομένων, ὅπερ ἐν τοῖς τοιούτοις φιλεῖ συμβαίνειν, ὡς ef ov BN ΄ , BY δ Noe, St 3 ἕκαστος ἔτυχεν ἢ φιλίας πρός τινας ἔχων, ἢ πρὸς θεὸν εὐλα- Betas, τέλος συμφρονήσας 6 δῆμος ἅπας, τὸν πρῶτον παρ᾽ αὐτοῖς ” 7] Ν >! / + Ν “ / 7 eva, βίῳ μὲν ἐξειλεγμένον, οὔπω δὲ τῷ θείῳ βαπτίσματι Ka- τεσφραγισμένον, τοῦτον ἄκοντα συναρπάσαντες, καὶ ἅμα στρα- τιωτικῆς χειρὸς συλλαβομένης αὐτοῖς τηνικαῦτα ἐπιδημούσης ΡΝ Ν cos oo \ “ 5 , if . ἐπὶ TO βῆμα ἔθεσαν, καὶ τοῖς ἐπισκόποις προσήγαγον. τελεσθῆ- 5 4 Ν cal a / 5 7 5 > 7] vat τε ἠξίουν, καὶ κηρυχθῆναι, πειθοῖ βίαν ἀναμίξαντες" οὐ λίαν μὲν εὐτάκτως, λίαν δὲ πιστῶς καὶ διαπύρως. KavTavOa οὐκ ἔστιν >’ “- “ 2 7, ΞΙ 7 Ν / εἰπεῖν, ὃν τινα εὐδοκιμώτερον ἐκείνου, καὶ θεοσεβέστερον, δι- id e / 7 Ν oe \ cal “ ς Ι ἐδειξεν ὁ καιρός. τί γὰρ γίνεται; καὶ ποῖ προῆλθεν ἡ στάσις ; 3 , e >! / IN \ / By Ν ἐβιάσθησαν, ἥγνισαν, ἀνεκήρυξαν, ἐπὶ τὸν θρόνον ἔθεσαν, χειρὶ μᾶλλον, ἢ γνώμῃ, καὶ διαθέσει πνεύματος. κ. τ. Χ. Orat. XIX. Mentioning a recurrence of these contentions, he adds : Καὶ ἡ στάσις ἣν, ὅσῳ θερμοτέρα, τοσοῦτῳ Kal ἀλογωτέρα. Οὐ γὰρ ἠγνοεῖτο τὸ ὑπεραῖρον, ὥσπερ οὐδ᾽ ἐν ἄστρασιν ἥλιος, ἀλλὰ καὶ λίαν ἐπίδηλον ἣν, τοῖς τε ἄλλοις ἅπασι, καὶ τοῦ λαοῦ μάλιστα τῷ ἐγκρίτῳ τε καὶ καθαρωτάτῳ, ὅσον τε περὶ τὸ βῆμα, καὶ ὅσον ἐν τοῖς καθ᾽ ἡμᾶς Ναζαραῖοις" ἐφ᾽ οἷς ἔδει τὰς τοιαύ- Ν lay ΄ A Ψ 5 \ ION μὴν Ων τας προβολὰς κεῖσθαι μόνοις, ἢ ὅτι μάλιστα" καὶ οὐδὲν ἂν ἣν lal 3 12 / 2. Ν Ν “ Ἵ Ν ταῖς ἐκκλησίαις κακόν: ἀλλὰ μὴ τοῖς εὐπορωτάτοις τε καὶ δυ- , ΕΝ a v4 RWS) , \ 7 53... χσι , νατωτάτοις, ἢ φορᾷ δήμου Kat ἀλογίᾳ, καὶ τούτων αὐτῶν μά- Ἴ a > a ςς ΄ N ῃ 5) Ν λιστα τοῖς εὐωνοτάτοις. νῦν δὲ κινδυνεύω τὰς δημοσίας ἀρχὰς εὐτακτωτέρας ὑπολαμβάνειν τῶν ἡμετέρων, αἷς ἡ θεία χάρις lal δ ἐπιφημίζεται, καὶ βελτίω τῶν τοιούτων διοικητὴν φόβον, ἢ λό- γον. Orat. XIX. Oper. ed. Par. 1609. pp. 308. 310. Jerome admits the right of the people to call to the clerical office, when, in writing to Rusticus, he says :— pd 402 APPENDIX. et te, vel populus, vel pontifex civitatis, in clerum ele- gerit. Hieron. ad Rustic. Monach. Oper. tom. τ. p. 47. NOTE C. p. 18. The following passage gives a lively picture of the occu- pations of Ambrose. Non enim querere ab eo poteram, quod volebam, sicut volebam, secludentibus me ab ejus aure atque ore catervis negotiosorum hominum, quorum infirmitatibus serviebat. Cum quibus quando non erat, quod perexiguum temporis erat, aut corpus reficiebat necessariis sustentaculis, aut lec- tione animum. Sed cum legebat, oculi ducebantur per paginas, et cor intellectum rimabatur, vox autem et lingua quiescebant. Szpe, cum adessemus, non enim vetabatur quisquam ingredi, aut ei venientem nuntiari mos erat, sic eum legentem vidimus tacite, et aliter numquam: seden- tesque in diuturno silentio, (quis enim tam intento esse oneri auderet?) discedebamus, et conjectabamus eum parvo ipso tempore, quod reparande menti suze nansciscebatur, feriatum ab strepitu causarum alienarum, nolle in aliud avocari, et cavere fortasse, ne auditore suspenso et intento, si qua obscurius posuisset ille, quem legeret, etiam expo- nere necesse esset; aut de aliquibus difficilioribus discep- tare questionibus, atque huic operi temporibus impensis, minus quam vellet voluminum evolveret; quamquam et caussa servandee vocis, que illi facillime obtundebatur, pot- erat esse justior tacite legendi. Quolibet tamen animo id ageret, bono utique ille vir agebat. -dugustin. Confess. Ὑ1:5: Ambrose however amply testifies to his own influence. Quasi vero superiore anno, quando ad palatium sum pe- titus ; cum presentibus primatibus ante consistorium trac- taretur; cum imperator basilicam vellet eripere; ego tunc aulz contemplatione regalis infractus sim, constantiam non tenuerim sacerdotis, aut imminuto jure discesserim ? Nonne meminerunt, quod ubi me cognovit populus pala- NOTES TO LECTURE I. 403 tium petisse, ita irruit, ut vim ejus ferre non possent ; quando comiti militari cum expeditis ad fugandam multi- tudinem egresso obtulerunt omnes se neci pro fide Christi. Nonne tunc rogatus sum, ut populum multo sermone mul- cerem ὃ sponderem fidem, quod basilicam ecclesiz nullus invaderet? Et cum pro beneficio meum sit officium pos- tulatum; tamen quod populus ad palatium venisset, mihi invidia commota est. In hanc igitur invidiam me redire desiderant. Revocavi populum, et tamen invidiam non evasi; quam quidem invidiam ego temperandam arbitror, non timendam.... Quid enim honorificentius quam ut imperator ecclesiz filius esse dicatur? Quod cum dicitur, sine peccato dicitur, cum gratia dicitur. Imperator enim intra ecclesiam, non supra ecclesiam est: bonus enim im- perator querit auxilium ecclesiz, non refutat. Epist. ΧΧΙ. Oper. tom. 11. col. 871—873. The whole epistle is worth attention, as an evidence of the high tone which the Latin Church-leader could as- sume. In Epistle XXII. addressed to his sister, we have an account of the finding of the bodies of the martyrs Gervase and Protase, and of the wonder-working power attributed to them, of such timely service to Ambrose in the defence of his church at Milan. NOTE D. p. 22. The letter of Volusian to Augustine is chiefly remark- able, as shewing the easy familiarity with which doubts on the most important doctrines could be proposed to Au- gustine without offence. This letter is that of a young man, freely stating some difficulties started in conver- sation respecting the Incarnation, and asking a solution of them from one, whose character and opinion were felt to be entitled to entire respect. Jerome also was open to inquiries from his followers and admirers; as we perceive from his epistles to Paula and Eustochium, dis- cussing scripture-difficulties. But he seems to have re- quired a more implicit devotion to his authority; a refer- pd2 404 APPENDIX. ence to him as to an oracle of scriptural interpretation, and not merely the arbiter of controversy. Augustine appears to great advantage, in point of affability and good- humour, in the contrast with him, in the correspondence which passed between them on Jerome’s translation of some passages of the Bible. Augustine addressed to him three letters, before he could obtain an answer. In re- plying, Jerome complains of what Augustine had called questions, as reprehensions of his works; and of the length to which he must proceed, were he to answer them to his wish. Pretermitto, he says, salutationis officia, quibus meum demulces caput; taceo de blanditiis, quibus repre- hensionem mei niteris consolari4. Again, in a subsequent epistle, charging Augustine with dispersing throughout Italy some strictures on his translation of a passage in the Epistle to the Galatians, he says: Nonnulli familiares mei et vasa Christi, quorum Hierosolymis et in sanctis locis permagna copia est, suggerebant, non simplici a te animo factum, sed laudem atque munusculos et gloriolam populi requirente, ut de nobis cresceres; ut multi cognoscerent, te provocare, me timere; te scribere ut doctum, me tacere, ut imperitum; et tandem reperisse gui garrulitati mee modum imponeret, &c.‘ He entreats Augustine to let him rest in his old age; senem latitantem in cellula la- cessere desine ; but tells him also that he still has power, and may be roused to conflict. Augustine’s reply, though managed with art, is calm and softening. It appears, by the subsequent correspondence, to have produced the effect which he desired. ‘The affectionateness of the character of Augustine, is evident, from the manner in which he speaks in his Confessions, of his mother, Monica, and of his friends, Alypius and Nebridius. NOTE E. p. 22. I have already referred to the correspondence between a Epist. XI. in Augustin. Oper. ed. 4to. tom. II. fol. 14. ® Epist. XIII. fol. 18. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 405 Augustine and Jerome. Augustine’s name was known throughout the whole worlds. Questions were brought to Jerome on various matters from Italy, from Spain, from Africa, from Greece, from Gaul, and from the ex- tremities of Germany. Paulinust, Bishop of Nola, was an- other principal link in the communication between mem- bers of the Latin Church in the [Vth century. The case of Vigilantius shews how quickly intelligence was conveyed from remote places. A presbyter at the foot of the Pyre- nees ventures to declaim against the abuses’ which had crept into the Church, against the honours at the tombs of martyrs, against prayers for the dead, and the austerities and frivolities which had usurped the place of Christian discipline. Two neighbouring presbyters, Riparius and Desiderius, send his writings through the hands of an- other brother, Sisinnius, to Jerome. The principles of this reformer were not confined to himself, but were ad- vocated by some bishops, and the contagion appeared to be spreading. The acrimony of Jerome was immediately called into action; and he pours forth a torrent of invec- tive, the fruit of a night’s lucubration, against the un- happy Vigilantius, or ‘‘ Dormitantius,” as he parodies the name. This letter, or pamphlet, was transmitted by the same Sisinnius, who was employed by Jerome on other occasions in the like service; and who, proceeding first to Egypt, would diffuse the intelligence also in that part of the world ¥. The rapid circulation of the several epistles which passed between Augustine and Jerome, is evident, from the no- tices of the circumstance which occur-in the course of them*. But the Pelagian Controversy is a still more s Episcopus in toto orbe notissimus. Hieronym. dugustino. Ep. XI. Augustin. Oper. 4to. tom. II. fol. 41. Ὁ Paulinus, born A.D. 354: died in 431. " 4dv. Vigilant. Hieronym. Oper. ed. Erasm. tom. II. p. 120. x Thus Jerome refers to the circulation of the tracts of Ruffinus against himself. Et unde oro te librorum tuorum ad me fama pervenit? Quis eos pd3 406 APPENDIX. striking illustration of the fact. The occasion of the con- troversy is given by a monk of Britain. It is quickly propagated in the cities of Africa, in Sicily, Rhodes, and other islands of the Mediterranean. Orosius, a Spanish presbyter, is sent by Augustine to Palestine, to Jerome, to communicate with him on the subject. Pelagius and Celestius are found pleading their cause successively at Carthage, at Rome, and at Jerusalem. And throughout the agitation of the subject, a quick succession of com- munications is kept up between Africa, Gaul, Italy, and Syria. ‘The messenger was always, I believe, one of the clergy; and the journeys were not to be accomplished without danger. Still there was no break in the chain of correspondence. The travels of most of the leading men of the Church of the [Vth century, should further be noticed in reference to this point. Athanasius is found in the West, Hilary of Poitiers in the East. Augustine perhaps was an exception after his succession to the see of Hippo. He says of him- self in comparison with others, in writing to his own peo- ple: Ilud enim noverit dilectio vestra, nunquam me ab- sentem fuisse licentiosa libertate, sed necessaria servitute ; qu szepe sanctos fratres, et collegas meos, etiam labores transmarinos compulit sustinere ; a quibus me semper non indevotio mentis, sed minus idonea valetudo corporis ex- cusavitY. Hpist. CXXXVIII. Oper. tom. 11. ed. 4to. fol. 198. His authority was sufficiently powerful from his own seat of government. ‘This spirit of personal exertion de- scended to their successors in the Latin Church of the middle age. It is surprising with what readiness distant and perilous journeys were performed by Churchmen of the XIIth and XIIIth centuries. John of Salisbury de- scribes his own exertions in that way. Siquidem Alpium Rome? quis in Italia, quis in Dalmatia disseminavit? Apolog. adv. Ruffin. Hieronym. Oper. tom. II. p. 231. y His health had suffered from his labours as a rhetorician. Confess. IX. Ὁ: ὩΣ NOTES TO LECTURE I. 407 juga transcendi decies, egressus Angliam: Apuliam se- cundo peragravi. Dominorum et amicorum negotia in Ecclesia Romana sepius gessi: et emergentibus variis causis non modo Angliam, sed et Gallias multoties cir- cumivl 2. NOTE F. p. 23. Sulpicius Severus speaks of the number of nobles who were in the monastery of St. Martin, near Tours. Mollior ibi habitus pro crimine erat; quod eo magis sit mirum necesse est, quod multi inter eos nobiles habeban- tur, qui longe aliter educati, ad hanc se humilitatem et patientiam coegerant: pluresque ex his postea episcopos vidimus ἃ, St. Martin himself had served as a soldier in his youth. The old aristocratic classes, at the period of the Vth century, were so reduced in numbers and influence and character, that there was no counterbalancing power against the Clergy. Whoever indeed of those classes possessed any energy or ambition, found his only sphere of action in the offices of ecclesiastical government. Prefects of pro- vinces, military commanders, men of landed property, literary men, men of the world, some of these but newly converted, became bishops. Concessions were even made to their philosophical opinions, where it was desired to obtain the support of a man of talent and reputation. The case of Synesius is a striking illustration of this. He had his objections even on the article of the Resurrection. And he declines undertaking the office of a bishop, un- less he may be permitted to retain his philosophical scruples. He will concur in the public services of Chris- tianity, provided he may philosophize according to his own taste. The people of Ptolemais had elected him for their bishop. He candidly states his sentiments on the . subject. He refuses to put away his wife, or to live with her in secresy, on the ground that it would be an offence Zz Metalogic. \ib. 111. p. 838. a Vit. B. Mart. c. το. pd4 408 APPENDIX. against piety and morality. ᾿Ἐμοὶ τοιγαροῦν, ὅ re θεὸς, ὅ τε J ω c Ἂς \ ° 3 / νόμος, ἣ τε ἱερὰ Θεοφίλον χεὶρ, γυναῖκα ἐπιδέδωκε. προαγο- ρεύω τοίνυν ἅπασι, καὶ μαρτύρομαι, ὡς ἐγὼ ταύτης οὔτε ἀλλο- , f yx ε Ν Een Ὰ / Ἂν, τριώσομαι καθάπαξ, οὔτε ὡς μοιχὸς αὐτῇ λάθρα συνέσομαι. τὸ ν᾿ N ef ᾽ Ν τ Soe a Are) N ΄ὔ μὲν γὰρ ἥκιστα εὐσεβὲς, τὸ δὲ ἥκιστα νόμιμον" ἀλλὰ βουλη- σομαί τε καὶ εὔξομαι συχνά μοι πάνυ καὶ χρηστὰ γενέσθαι παι- dia. He mentions also his fondness for sports, and his aversion to the details of an official situation ; pathetically lamenting over his loved dogs and his bow, which he would be forced to relinquish. ᾿Επεὶ καὶ φιλοπαίγμων ὧν, ὅς ye παιδόθεν αἰτίαν ἔσχον ὁπλομανεῖν τε Kal ἱππομανεῖν πέρα τοῦ δέοντος, ἀνιάσομαι μέν" τί γὰρ καὶ πάθω, τὰς φιλτάτας κύνας 5Δ.7 Qe τι , , i 7 Ne esk ἀθήρους ὁρῶν, καὶ τὰ τόξα θριπηδέστατα᾽ καρτηρήσω δὲ, ἂν 5 , ae \ , N > , Ν Pa ἢ ἐπιτάττῃ θεός" καὶ μισόφροντις ὧν, ὀδυνήσομαι μὲν, ἀνέξομαι δὲ, δικιδίων, καὶ πραγμάτων, λειτουργίαν τινὰ ταύτην, εἰ καὶ cad » ΟΝ cal 2. , Ν 2 2 Lf IOS βαρεῖαν, ἐκπιμπλὰς TO θεῷ" δόγματα δὲ οὐκ ἐπηλυγάσομαι, οὐδὲ στασιάσει μοι πρὸς THY γλῶτταν ἣ γνώμη. Willing however as he is to make some sacrifices, he resolutely refuses, we find, any compromise of his opinions. On this point he explicitly says: Χαλεπόν ἐστιν, εἰ μὴ καὶ λίαν ἀδύνατον, > Ἂς XX oS) / ΗΝ 5 ’ 3 / /, εἰς ψυχὴν Ta Ov ἐπιστήμης εἰς ἀπόδειξιν ἐλθόντα δόγματα σα- λευθῆναι. οἷσθα δ᾽ ὅτι πολλὰ φιλοσοφία τοῖς θρυλλουμένοις / ΡΣ / , 5 / Ν \ 3 πὶ / τούτοις ἀντιδιατάττεται δόγμασιν. ἀμέλει τὴν ψυχὴν οὐκ ἀξιώσω ποτὲ σώματος ὑστερογενῆ νομίζειν" τὸν κόσμον οὐ φήσω καὶ τἄλλα μέρη συνδιαφθείρεσθαι: τὴν καθωμιλημένην ἀνάστασιν « i Ay po. soe Ὁ“ Ν fal / a a » ἱερόν TL καὶ ἀπόῤῥητον ἥγημαι, καὶ πολλοῦ δέω ταῖς τοῦ TAI- θους ὑπολήψεσιν ὁμολογῆσαι. νοῦς μὲν οὖν φιλόσοφος ἐπόπτης “Ὁ 5 a n n , fal / 5 , / ὧν τἀληθοῦς, συγχωρεῖ TH χρείᾳ τοῦ ψεύδεσθαι. ἀνάλογον yap ἐστι φῶς πρὸς ἀλήθειαν, καὶ ὄμμα πρὸς λημὴν" καὶ ὀφθαλ- Ἂν "} Ν δ >) / p) 2 , ~ lal 5 μὸς εἰς κακὸν ἂν ἀπολαύσειεν ἀπλήστου φωτός. 7 τοῖς ὀφθαλ- μιῶσι τὸ σκότος ὠφελιμώτερον, ταύτῃ καὶ τὸ ψεῦδος ὄφελος a ΄ "2 : \ \ Ro ΑΕ ΔΝ a 51 5 ΄ εἷναι τίθεμαι δήμῳ" καὶ βλαβερὸν τὴν ἀλήθειαν τοῖς οὐκ ἰσχύουσι ἐνατενίσαι πρὸς τὴν τῶν ὄντων ἐνάργειαν. εἰ ταῦτα καὶ οἱ τῆς καθ᾽ ἡμᾶς ἱερωσύνης συγχωροῦσιν ἐμοὶ νόμοι, δυναίμην ἂν ἱερᾶ- σθαι, τὰ μὲν οἴκοι φιλοσοφῶν, τὰ δὲ ἔξω φιλομυθῶν᾽ εἰ μὴ δι- δάσκων, ἀλλ᾽ οὐδὲ μέν τοι μεταδιδάσκων, μένειν δὲ ἐῶν ἐπὶ τῆς προλήψεως, εἰ δέ φασιν οὕτω δεῖν καὶ κινεῖσθαι, καὶ δῆλον NOTES TO LECTURE I. 409 εἶναι τὸν ἱερέα ταῖς δόξαις, οὐκ ἂν φθάνοιμι φανερὸν ἐμαυτὸν ἅπασι καθιστάς" δήμῳ γὰρ δὴ καὶ φιλοσοφίᾳ, τι πρὸς ἄλληλα 5 τὴν μὲν ἀλήθειαν τῶν θείων ἀπόῤῥητον εἶναι δεῖ: τὸ δὲ πλῆθος ἑτέρας ἕξεως δεῖται2Ζ. Notwithstanding this avowal, he be- came afterwards Bishop of the new Cyrene, or Ptolemais. We may observe the mixture of heathenism and Chris- tianity, of seriousness and frivolity, which appears in some of the bishops of this period. Their civil stations, or their talents, carried them to the post of dignity in the great Christian society forming around them; but they were still, in their pursuits and manners, the representatives of a degenerate Greek or Roman civilization. Sidonius Apol- linaris, Bishop of Auvergne A. D. 471, is a favourable spe- cimen of the superior clergy of that day. Succeeding to a line of progenitors who had held high offices in the Em- pire, and son-in-law to the Emperor Avitus ἃ, himself a pre- fect and patrician, he was elected to the episcopal dignity, before he even belonged to the clerical order. His ele- vation however to the spiritual charge made no alteration in the man. He pursued his favourite pastimes, his po- etical pleasantries, and his social diversions, with the same good-humour and enjoyment as before. He has given in- deed, in one of his epistles, an amusing account how the interval, in a long religious ceremony at the tomb of St. Justus, was employed by himself and other ecclesi- astics, in lively conversation and in various games, among which was that of the ball, (sphere,) in which he took the lead >. Of the sort of person required for a bishop in the West- ern Church, Sidonius gives an excellent idea in another epistle, where he describes his selection of a person to that office for the people of Bourges, who had _ placed the appointment in his hands. The following passage of z Synesii ad Fratrem, Ep. CV. p. 386. ed. 8vo. Paris, 1605. a Cui pater, socer, avus, proavus, prefecturis urbanis, pretorianisque, magisteriis palatinis, militaribusque, micuerunt. Sidonii Epist. 111. p. 7. » See his Epistle to Eriphius. Sidonii Oper. lib. V. p. 148. 410 APPENDIX. the speech, which he reports to a friend as delivered by him on the occasion, shews particularly that it was a man of the world that was wanted.—Si quempiam nominavero monachorum, quamvis illum Paulis, Antoniis, Hilarionibus, Macariis, conferendum, sectatz anachoreseos prerogativa comitetur, aures ilico meas incondito tumultu circumstre- pitas ignobilium pumilionum murmur everberat conque- rentium: Hic, qui nominatur, inquiunt, non episcopi, sed potius abbatis complet officium; et intercedere magis pro animabus apud ccelestem, quam pro corporibus apud ter- renum judicem potest. .dd Perpetuum, p. 191. NOTE G. p. 24. Jam tum pium adolescentis animum offendebat mun- dus, qui ea tempestate Christianos ethnicis habebat ad- mixtos. Unde fieri necessum erat, ut qui Christum profi- tebantur, plerique titulo magis quam vita essent Christiani : et vere plis mentibus, pie vivendi votum adesset verius quam facultas .... ad hee clericorum et episcoporum sta- tum, quod hos quoque volentes, nolentes, honos, opes, et negotia mundi, involverent, ac transversos raperent, gravis- simis periculis obnoxium esse. Et multorum vita displice- bat, jam tum prisca illa pietate sacerdotum ad tyrannidem ac fastum degenerante. Hieronym. Vita per Erasm. Et nunc, cum maxime discordiis episcoporum turbari aut misceri omnia cernerentur, cunctaque per eos odio, aut gratia, metu, inconstantia, invidia, factione, libidine, ava- ritia, adrogantia, desidia, essent depravata : postremo plures adversum paucos bene consulentes, insanis consiliis et per- tinacibus studiis certabant: inter hec plebs Dei, et opti- mus quisque probro atque ludibrio habebatur. Sulpic. Sever. Hist. Sacr. Il. c. 41. ed. Clerici, 1709. The bishops originally received the whole revenue of the diocese, and dispensed a maintenance from it to the presbyters ;—a circumstance, which kept the inferior clergy in a state of great dependence on the superior; ren- dering their subsistence and comfort extremely precarious, NOTES TO LECTURE I. 411 whilst it exposed them to suffer from the personal avarice and luxurious expenditure of the bishop to whom they happened to be subject. They could not quit the place where they had been once appointed, and were completely at the bishop’s disposal. Council of Orleans, A. D. 511. c. 14,15. Council of Valentia in 524. ¢. 6. The Abbot of Cluny, being requested to intercede in ob- taining a prebend for Astralabius, the son of Abelard, re- plies: Astralabio vestro vestrique causa nostro, mox ut facultas data fuerit, in aliqua nobilium ecclesiarum pree- bendam libens acquirere laborabo. Res tamen difficilis est: quia, ut spe probavi, ad dandas in ecclesiis suis prebendas, variis objectis occasionibus, valde se difficiles prebere episcopi solent. dbelardi Oper. p. 345. NOTE H. p. 27. In rhetorica tamen sese studiosius exercuit, degustatis omnibus, sed his precipue que propius ad eam conferant facultatem, historia, cosmographia, et antiquitatis notitia: partim quod intelligeret apud Latinos ad id usque temporis pene infantem esse theologiam, et ob hanc causam per- multos a divinorum voluminum abhorrere lectione; sperans futurum, ut plures sacris literis delectarentur, si quis theo- logiz majestatem, dignitate sermonis equasset: partim ut esset aliquando quod ethnicis objici posset, Christianos ut infantes et elingues despicientibus. Hieronym. Vit. per Eras. Jerome has sketched the character of some of the Latin writers in the following passage: Tertullianus cre- ber est in sententiis, sed difficilis in loquendo. Beatus Cyprianus instar fontis purissimi, dulcis incedit et placi- dus; et cum totus sit in exercitatione virtutum, occupatus persecutionum angustiis, de scripturis divinis nequaquam disseruit. Inclyto Victorinus martyrio coronatus, quod intelligit, eloqui non potest. Lactantius quasi quidam flu- vius eloquentie Tulliane, utinam tam nostra confirmare potuisset, quam facile aliena destruxit. Arnobius ine- AUD) ΤΣ APPENDIX. qualis et nimius, et absque operis sui partitione confusus. Sanctus Hilarius Gallicano cothurno attollitur, et a lec- tione simpliciorum fratrum procul est. ‘Taceo de ceteris, vel defunctis, vel etiam adhuc viventibus, super quibus in utramque partem post nos alii judicabunt. 4d Paulinum, Oper. tom. 1. p. 104. NOTE 1. p. 28. In the West the monastic spirit was strongly counter- acted by social needs ;—by the necessity of combination in order to mutual aid and protection. Monachism there was in its institution essentially social. Not so in the East, where it originated in an enervated state of society, and acted as a relief to the more energetic spirits, from the monotony and languor of ordinary life. Accordingly, when the Latin world approached more nearly to that condition, in which the Eastern portion of the Empire was in the IVth century ;—when civilization, that is, having reached a certain point, began to degenerate in the West, as in the VIth and VIIth centuries ;—the monachism of the West began to resemble more closely that of the East. It was then adopted more as a resource from society ; though still the social character originally impressed on it, continued to modify it there. The first impulse to monachism in the West appears to have been occasioned, by the residence of Athanasius at Rome, with two of the Egyptian monks in his train, and by the publication of his Life of St. Antony. The popu- larity of this romantic piece of biography may give us a fair idea of that state of religion, in which such puerilities of narration could pass for the adventures of saintly chi- valry, or could be employed as stimulants to religious action. Jerome’s imagination readily caught the spirit of this work, and diffused it in his own lives of Paul, Hila- rion, and Malchus, so beautifully executed after the Atha- nasian model. He was surrounded at Rome by a number of matrons of noble rank, who waited on his teaching with NOTES TO LECTURE I. 413 devout and fond attention. Marcella, one of these, was the first to make the profession of a monastic life at Rome. The example was followed by Paula, who founded the monastery for men at Bethlehem, over which Jerome pre- sided; and three others at the same place for women ©. A monastery existed at Milan under Ambrose. See Hie- ronym. Vit. per Erasm.—Athanasii Vit. p. 36. Oper. tom. 1. Paris, 1698.—dugustin. Conf. VIII. c. 6. NOTE J. p. 29. Votorum nulla vincula, nisi que sunt cujusque pure Christiani. Denique si quem forte sui instituti poenitentia cepisset, tota demum pcena erat inconstantie nota. Cu- jus rei si quis fidem requirat, legat Hilarionis vitam: legat institutionem monachi ad Rusticum, et item ad Paulinum: legat in epistola cujus initium: Audi filia: descriptum triplex apud AXgyptios monachorum genus. Quin inter alia preestabat et heec commoda illud vite genus. Hujus pretextu honestius licebat ad affinium et cognatorum vin- culis temet excutere, gravi nimirum onere ei cui nihil dul- cius ocio studiorum. Etenim qui monachum erant pro- fessi, a publicis functionibus, a muniis et officiis imperialis aul, prorsus habebantur excusati. Postremo minus pate- bant episcoporum quorundam jam tum insolentium tyran- nidi. Jam hic titulus, nec a functione clericatus quicquam remorabatur: et ex nullo ordine sepius deligebantur epi- scopi. Nec aliud quicyuam erat tune monachi professio, quam prisce libereeque vite meditatio, ac pure Christi- ane. Hieronym. Vit. per Erasm. Gregory Nazianzen thus describes the life of the Egyp- tian solitaries: Τοῖς yap ἱεροῖς καὶ θείοις τῶν Kar "Αιγυπτον ς Jerome prettily describes his loved retreat: In Christi ergo villa, ut supra diximus, tota rusticitas est. Extra psalmos, silentium est. Quo- cunque te verteris, arator stivam tenens, alleluia decantat. Sudans messor, psalmis se avocat, et curva attondens falce vinitor, aliquid Davidicum canit. Hec sunt in provincia carmina; he, ut vulgo dicitur, amatorie cantiones. Ad Marcellam. Oper. tom. 1. p. 130. 414 APPENDIX. / \ φροντιστηριοις φέρων ἑαυτὸν δίδωσιν" οἱ κόσμου χωρίζοντες Eav- Ν \ ‘ 7 5 , n val ͵ “Ὁ τοὺς, καὶ τὴν ἔρημον ἀσπαζόμενοι, ζῶσι θεῷ πάντων μᾶλλον n / TOV στρεφομένων ἐν oopatt’ οἱ μὲν τὸν πάντη μοναδικόν τε καὶ ἄμικτον διαθλοῦντες βίον, ἑαυτοῖς μόνοις προσλαλοῦντες καὶ a a \ a ΄ n τῷ θεῷ, καὶ τοῦτο μόνον κόσμον εἷδότες, ὅσον ἐν TH ἐρημίᾳ γνωρίζουσιν. οἱ δὲ νόμον ἀγάπης τῇ κοινωνίᾳ στέργοντες, ἐρημικοί τε ὁμοῦ καὶ μιγάδες, τοῖς μὲν ἄλλοις τεθνηκότες ἀνθρώποις καὶ πράγμασιν, ὅσα ἐν μέσῳ περιφέρεται στροβοῦντά τε καὶ στρο- / Ν ’, ces a 3 4 a 5 βούμενα, καὶ παΐζοντα ἡμᾶς τοῖς ἀγχιστρόφοις μεταβολαῖς, ἀλ- / “ λήλοις δὲ κόσμος ὄντες, καὶ τῇ παραθέσει τὴν ἀρετὴν θήγοντες. Orat. ΧΧΙ. p. 384. ed. Paris, 1609. NOTE K. p. 34. The monasteries of Lerins and St. Victor, and the city of Marseilles, were the great nurses of freedom of thought at the period of the Pelagian controversy. It was in this part of Gaul, as is well known, that Semi-Pelagianism took its rise; where, at least, from the influence of a more cultivated and liberal taste, a reaction took place, after the sentence of Augustine had been adopted in all its hardness by the Church. It is curious, that the same portion of the Gallic Church should have supplied the antagonist-state- ments to the extreme views of Augustine, which, in the IXth century, sent forth the champions of his authority on the question of Predestination. But we may observe that, in both cases, the Southern Gauls advocated a freedom of individual opinion against the arbitrary dictate of mere authority. In the case of Semi-Pelagianism, Augustine’s decisions were not yet become a rule of faith; and the effort was to resist the imposition of them on the reason of individuals. In the Predestinarian controversy, the op- position was to the Northern Church of Gaul, which had crushed with the hand of power an individual of their own body, on account of his having freely expressed his opinions in regard to the views of Augustine. Augustine indeed was now become an established authority of the NOTES TO LECTURE I. 415 Church ; so that the vindicators of the right of reason ap- peared, accidentally, as the assertors also of the principle of authority. NOTE L. p. 35. John Scotus Erigena is one of the most remarkable per- sons in the history of the middle age. He was quite the meteor of the [Xth century; as no one of his contempora- ries appears to have approached him, in the depth of his learning, or the acuteness of his philosophy. Nor has any one had greater influence by his writings; however he may have been cried down by some of his own times, who either envied his reputation, or were startled by the strangeness of his theories. When his name had survived that opposition, it was embalmed in honourable memory as that of a Christian philosopher ; and the Church shewed a disposition to claim him for its own’. He gave the great impulse to that method of Translations, to which the Latin literature was entirely indebted for what it possessed of the Greek philosophy, by his translations of the works attributed to Dionysius the Areopagite, and the scholia of the philosopher Maximus. Two original works of his are extant; one a short tract on Pre- destination, (that referred to in the Lecture,) and a con- siderable treatise, intitled Περὶ φύσεων μερισμοῦ, founded chiefly on the writings of the Pseudo-Dionysius. We find also a work on the Eucharist by him, alluded to by other writers °; and he is spoken of as the “ patriarch” of the 4 Arnoldus Wion de eo in Ligno Vite honorifice meminit: notatque in Martyrologio Romano quod excudebatur anno 1580, ei locum et decus suum integrum constitisse, a quo tamen sequentes editiones martyrologii eum penitus detraxerunt. Eo fato mihi natus fuisse Joannes videtur, ut hominum de se judicia semper alternantia subiret. Anastasius Bibliothecarius virum per omnia sanctum predicat; alii ut mendacem, ineptum, dementem, he- reticum differunt. Testimonia de Joan. Scot. Erig. De Divis. Natur. ed. Gale, Oxon.—Baronius speaks of him by the terms sancta anima. ¢ Particularly by Berenger, in the following Epistle to Lanfranc. Pervenit ad me, Frater Lanfrance, quiddam auditum ab Ingelranno Car- notensi: in quo dissimulare non debui ammonere dilectionem tuam. Id 416 APPENDIX. controvertists on that subject; but doubts have been en- tertained whether he actually wrote any treatise on it. The treatise on the “ Division of Natures” is an ex- tremely curious monument of his peculiar genius, and of the times when it was composed. It is perhaps the most scientific development of the system of Pantheism which has ever appeared. It regularly deduces all existence from the reality of the Divine Being—the only Nature, accord- ing to him, that has any proper objective reality. Viewed as a whole, it illustrates the vast, but delusive power of the ancient metaphysics as an instrument of speculation : the ingenuity and subtilty with which the thread of con-- nexion is carried through the series of phenomena, giving the plausibility of a real Divine Philosophy. ‘The dryness of the abstract disquisitions pursued in the work, requires no ordinary patience of attention to go through its details. But it is not unworthy of that attention, on the part of those who would fully study the history of the human mind, or the state of opinion in the Church of the IXth century. It is composed in the form of a dialogue between the Master and the Disciple; the proper dialectical method of philosophizing. His great learning, particularly his knowledge of lan- guages, the Greek, the Hebrew, and the Arabic, appears to have been acquired by travels. Ireland was in high repute in his time for its learned men. But he was not satisfied to learn there only, but visited every place, and made inquiries of every one, where information might be autem est, displicere tibi, imo hereticas habuisse, sententias Joannis Scoti de Sacramento Altaris, in quibus dissentit a suscepto tuo Paschasio. Hac ergo in re si ita est, Frater, indignum fecisti ingenio quod tibi Deus non asper- nabile contulit, preeproperam sequendo sententiam. Nondum enim ideo sategisti in divina Scriptura cum tuis diligentioribus. Et nunc ergo, Frater, quantumlibet rudis in illa Scriptura, vellem tantum audire de eo, si oppor- tunum mihi fieret, adhibitis quibus velles vel judicibus congruis vel audito- ribus : quod quamdiu non sit, non aspernanter aspicias quod dico, si here- ticum habeas Joannem, cujus sententias de Eucharistia probamus, habendns tibi est hereticus Ambrosius, Hieronymus, Augustinus, ut de ceteris taceam. Bulei Hist. Acad. Par. tom. 1. pp. 410. 507. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 417 obtained respecting works of philosophy. He is said to have commented on both Plato and Aristotle. For his interpretation of Aristotle, indeed, he has the express praise of Roger Bacon. William of Malmesbury has transmitted one or two interesting particulars respecting this distinguished man. He is described as a person of diminutive stature, and of a lively, facetious disposition; living in great familiarity with Charles the Bald. This last fact is shewn by the following anecdotes. Assederat ad mensam contra regem ad aliam tabule partem: procedentibus poculis consumtisque ferculis, Ca- rolus fronte hilariori, post quedam alia, cum vidisset Jo- annem quiddam fecisse, quod Gallicanam comitatem offen- deret, urbane increpuit, et dixit : “quid distat inter Sottum “et Scottum?” Retulit 1116 solenne convitium in auctorem, et respondit: “tabula tantum.” Interrogaverat rex de mo- rum differenti studio: responderat Joannes de loci distante spatio. Nec vero rex commotus est; quod, miraculo sci- enti ipsius captus, adversus Magistrum nec dicto insur- gere vellet; sic eum usitate vocabat.—Item cum rege convivante minister patinam obtulisset, que duos pisces pregrandes, adjecto uno minusculo, contineret, dedit ille Magistro, ut accumbentibus duobus juxta se clericis de- partiretur. Erant illi gigantee molis; ipse perexilis cor- poris. Tum qui semper aliquid honesti inveniebat ut le- titiam convivantium excitaret, retentis sibi duobus, unum minorem duobus distribuit. Arguenti iniquitatem parti- tionis regi, “‘ imo,” inquit, “ benefeci et seque; nam hic ἐς est unus parvus,” de se dicens, et duos grandes pisces tangens; itemque ad eos conversus, “ hic sunt duo magni ‘* clerici immensi, et unus exiguus,”’ piscem nihilominus tangens. Willem. Malmesb. in lib. v. De Pontific. Jo. Scot. Erig. De Divis. Nat. ed. Gale, fol. Oxon. 1681. 418 APPENDIX. NOTE M. p. 35. The case of Gotteschale exhibits a most gross instance of persecution. He was a monk of the order of St. Bene- dict, and of the convent of Orbais, devoted to learning and religious exercises, and especially studious of the writings of Augustine. He was not ordained until his fortieth year; and afterwards went on a pilgrimage to the shrines of the Apostles Peter and Paul. On his return he visited the house of a Count Everard, in Piedmont, where he met other religious persons, who were hospitably entertained by the Count according to the custom of the times. Among these was Nothingus, Bishop of Verona. In a conver- sation with him, Gotteschale entered on the question of the Divine Predestination ; and contended that, according to the doctrine of Augustine, there was a twofold. predes- tination—a predestination to life, and a predestination to death. This conversation was subsequently communi- cated to Hinemar, Archbishop of Rheims, the metropolitan to whose authority Gotteschalc was subject. His doc- trine was condemned as heretical. According to the rule of St. Benedict, he was sentenced to be scourged; and by a formal decree of a Council imprisoned, and bound to perpetual silence. Durissimis verberibus te castigari, et secundum ecclesiasticas regulas ergastulo recludi, auc- toritate episcopali decernimus ; et ut de cetero doctri- nale tibi officlum usurpare non preesumas, perpetuum si- lentium ori tuo virtute «terni verbi imponimus: are the words of the sentence against him. He was mercilessly beaten, according to this sentence; and in that exhausted state, almost expiring, he was forced to throw into the fire a defence of his doctrine, which he had prepared to present in the next Council. The rigour of the imprison- ment was extended to the long period of twenty years. But his mind was not to be subdued by these acts of violence; and he died in his prison, in the monastery of Hautvilliers, a martyr to his opinions. The Church of Lyons indeed did itself honour by its remonstrances against NOTES TO LECTURE I. 419 the persecution of the unhappy monk; but it had no power to check them against the will of the imperious Hincmars. NOTE N. p. 37. Of the general restlessness of the public mind about this period, we may form a fair estimate from the extent of Abelard’s popularity, amidst all the objections and charges brought against him. The fact is thus noticed by himself: Accidit autem mihi ut ad ipsum fidei nostree fundamentum bumane rationis similitudinibus disseren- dum primo me applicarem, et quendam theologiz tracta- tum de Unitate et Trinitate Divina, scholaribus nostris componerem, qui humanas et philosophicas rationes requi- rebant, et plus que intelligi quam que dici possent ef- flagitabant : dicentes quidem verborum superfluam esse prolationem, quam intelligentia non sequeretur, nec credi posse aliquid nisi primitus intellectum, et ridiculosum esse aliquem aliis preedicare, quod nec ipse, nec illi quos doce- ret, intellectu capere possent: Domino ipso arguente quod ceci essent duces cecorum. Quem quidem tractatum cum vidissent et legissent plurimi, coepit in commune omnibus plurimum placere, quod in eo pariter omnibus satisfieri super hoc questionibus videbatur. Et quoniam questiones istee pre omnibus difficiles videbantur, quanto major ex- stiterat gravitas, tanto solutionis earum censebatur major subtilitas. Unde emuli mei vehementer accensi Conci- lium contra me congregaverunt», &c. The fact is further shewn in the following observations, which occur in a letter of consolation addressed to Abelard himself: Roma suos tibi docendos transmittebat alumnos: et que olim omnium artium scientiam auditoribus solebat infundere, sapientiorem te se sapiente transmissis scholaribus mon- strabat. Nulla terrarum, nulla montium cacumina, nulla concava vallium, nulla via, difficili licet obsita periculo, et & Vindic. Predest et Grat. Histor. et Chronic. Synops. in Collection of Tracts of the 1Xth century, on Grace and Fredestination, by Manguin, h Abelardi Opera, p. 20. 4to. Paris, 1616, Ee2 420 APPENDIX. latrone, quo minus ad te properarent, retinebat. Anglorum turbam juvenum, mare interjacens, et undarum procella terribilis, non terrebat ; sed omni periculo contempto, au- dito tuo nomine, ad te confluebat. Remota Britannia sua animalia erudienda destinabat. Andegavenses, eorum edo- mita feritate, tibi famulabantur in suis. Pictavi, Vvas- cones, et Hiberi; Normania, Flandria, Theutonicus, et Suevus, tuum calere ingenium, laudare, et predicare assi- due studebat. Przeterea cunctos Parisiorum civitatem ha- bitantes, et intra Galliarum proximas et remotissimas par- tes, qui sic a te doceri sitiebant, ac si nihil discipline non apud te inveniri potuisset. Ingenii claritate, et suavitate eloquii, et lingue absolutioris facilitate, nec non et scien- tie subtilitate permoti, quasi ad limpidissimum philoso- phie fontem iter accelerabant *. It was evidently the support which Abelard ἘΠῚ from influential persons in the Church, that saved him from the extreme violence of persecution. Securus est tamen, observes Bernard, quoniam Cardinales, et Clericos curiz, se discipulos habuisse gloriatur, et eos in defensione preteriti et presentis erroris adsumit, a quibus judicari timere de- buit, et damnari!. The Pope Celestine II. had been a pupil of Abelard. Bernard addresses an Epistle to him, intimating that af- fection for the man ought not to extend to affection for his errors ™. NOTE O. p. 37. It was objected to Abelard, that there was no occasion for such reasonings as his at that particular time, since heretics were in a great measure repressed. He points out, accordingly, that there was no lack of heresy to call the attention of theologians even then; indicating, in fact, the rebellion which the system of the Church, at once k Fulcon. Prior. Ep. ad Abelard. Oper. p. 218. 1 Bernard. Ep. XIV. p. 299. Abelardi Oper. m Ep. XIIL. p. 297. Abelardi Opera. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 421 intolerant and speculative, had produced among both think- ing men and enthusiasts. Nullos in tantam olim insaniam prorupisse hereticos quisquam audierit, quanta nonnulli contemporaneorum nos- trorum debacchati sunt: Tanquelmus quidam laicus nuper in Flandria, Petrus Presbyter nuper in Provincia, ut ex multis aliquos in medium producamus. Quorum quidem alter, Tanquelmus scilicet, in tantam se erexerat dementiam, ut se Dei filium vocitari atque decantari, et a seducto po- pulo, ut dicitur, templum edificari sibi faceret. Alter vero ita fere omnem divinorum, sacrorum, et ecclesiastics doc- trine institutionem enervarat, ut multos rebaptizari co- geret ; et venerabile Dominice signum crucis removendum penitus censeret, atque altaris ; sacramentum nullatenus celebrandum esse amplius astrueret. Sed nec magistros divinorum librorum, qui nunc maxime circa nos pestilen- tie cathedras tenent, pretereundos arbitramur, quorum unus in Francia, alter in Burgundia, tertius in pago Ande- gavensi, quartus in Bituricensi, multa Catholicz fidei, vel sanctis doctrinis adversa, non solum tenent, verum etiam docent ®. He proceeds then to state the several wild speculations on the Trinity and the Incarnation started by these individuals. Irregular but strong efforts were made at this period towards a reform of the Church, as we may see from the following passage; in which no doubt a colouring has been given to the circumstances, by the orthodox view of them, and in order to prepare the scene for the introduction of the Saint who works the transformation. In partibus Tolosanis Henricus quidam olim monachus, tune apostata vilis, pessime vit, perniciose doctrine, verbis persuasilibus gentis illius occupaverat levitatem, et ut preedixit Apostolus de quibusdam, in hypocrisi loquens mendacium, fictis verbis de eis negociabatur. Erat autem hostis ecclesiz manifestus, irreverenter ecclesiasticis dero- gans sacramentis pariter et ministris. Nec mediocriter in " Abelardi Introduct. ad Theelog. lib. 11. Opera, p. 1066. Ee3 422 APPENDIX. ea jam malignitate processerat. Sic enim de eo scribens pater venerabilis ad principem Tolosanum, inter cetera ait: “4 Passim inveniebantur jam ecclesiz sine plebibus, “ς plebes sine sacerdotibus, sacerdotes sine debita reveren- ** tia, sine Christo denique Christiani; parvulis Christiano- “ rum Christi vita intercludebatur, dum baptismi gratia ne- “‘ gabatur. Ridebantur orationes oblationesque pro mortuis, *¢ sanctorum invocationes, sacerdotum excommunicationes, «ς fidelium peregrinationes, basilicarum edificationes, dierum «ς solennium vacationes, chrismatis et olei consecrationes, et * omnes denique institutiones ecclesiastice spernebantur.” Hac necessitate vir sanctus iter arripuit, ab ecclesia re- gionis illius seepius jam ante rogatus, et tunc demum a reverendissimo Alberico Hostiensi Episcopo, et legato se- dis Apostolic, persuasus, pariter et deductus. Veniens autem cum incredibili denotatione susceptus est a populo terre, ac si de coelo angelus advenisset. Nec moram facere potuit apud eos, quod irruentium turbas reprimere nemo posset, tanta erat frequentia diebus ac noctibus adven- tantium, benedictionem expectantium, flagitantium opem. Predicavit tamen in civitate Tolosa per aliquot dies, et in ceteris locis, que miser ille frequentasset amplius, et gravius infecisset, multos in fide simplices instruens, nu- tantes roborans, errantes revocans, subversos reparans, subversores et obstinatos auctoritate sua premens et op- primens, ut non dico resistere, sed ne assistere quidem et apparere presumerent. Czeterum etsi tunc fugit hereticus ille et latuit, ita tamen impeditz sunt vie ejus et semitze circumsepte, ut vix alicubi postea tutus, tandem captus et catenatus Episcopo traderetur. In quo itinere plurimis etiam signis in servo suo glorificatus est Deus, aliorum corda ab erroribus impiis revocans, aliorum corpora a lan- guoribus variis sanans. Est locus in regione eadem, Sarlatum nomen est illi, ubi sermone completo, plurimos ad benedicendum panes, sicut ubique fiebat, Dei famulo offerebant. Quos ille elevata manu, et signo crucis edito, in Dei nomine benedicens : NOTES TO LECTURE I. 423 “4 In hoc,” inquit, “ scietis vera esse quee a nobis, falsa que “ab hereticis suadentur; si infirmi vestri, gustatis pani- ‘bus istis, adepti fuerint sospitatem.” Timens autem venerabilis Episcopus Carnotensium magnus ille Gaufri- dus, siquidem presens erat et proximus viro Dei; “ si “¢ bona,” inquit, “fide sumpserint, sanabuntur.”’ Cui pater sanctus de Domini virtute nil hesitans; “non hoc ego “ dixerim,” ait, “ sed vere qui gustaverint sanabuntur: ut ‘¢ proinde veros nos et veraces Dei nuncios esse cognos- cant.” Tam ingens multitudo languentium, gustato eodem pane, convaluit, ut per totam provinciam verbum hoc divulgaretur, et vir sanctus per vicina loca regrediens, ob concursus intolerabiles declinaverit, et timuerit illo ire. Vit. 5. Bernardi, lib. Ill. c. 5. NOTE P. p. 39. Non ideo Romam pergere volui, quod majores questus, majorque mihi dignitas, ab amicis, qui hoc suadebant, pro- mittebatur; quamquam et ista ducebant animum tunc meum: sed illa erat causa maxima et pene sola, quod au- diebam, quietius ibi studere adolescentes, et ordinatiore disciplinze coercitione sedari, ne in ejus scholam, quo ma- gistro non utuntur, passim et proterve irruant; nec eos admitti omnino, nisi ille permiserit. Contra apud Cartha- ginienses foeda est et intemperans licentia scholasticorum. Irrumpunt impudenter, et prope furiosa fronte perturbant ordinem, quem quisque discipulis ad proficiendum insti- tuerit. Multa injuriosa faciunt, et mira hebetudine, et punienda legibus, nisi consuetudo patrona sit °. Sedulo ergo agere coeperam, propter quod veneram ut docerem Rome artem rhetoricam, et prius domi congre- gare aliquos, quibus et per quos innotescere coeperam ; et ecce cognosco alia Romie fieri, quze non patiebar in Africa. Nam revera illas eversiones a perditis adolescentibus ibi non fieri, manifestatum est mihi. Sed subito, inquiunt, ne mercedem magistro reddant, conspirant multi adolescen- ° Augustin. Confess. lib. V. c. 8. Ee4 424 APPENDIX. tes, et transferunt se ad alium, desertores fidei, et quibus, pre pecuniz caritate, justitia vilis est P. The violent disturbances which sometimes occurred among the students, prove the imperfect state of the dis- cipline of the Universities of the middle age. The alarm produced by a tumult at Oxford in the XI[[th century, when the brother of the Pope’s Legate was killed by a bowshot, diminished the numbers of the University from 30,000 to 60004. In the election to professorships, there was often the utmost contention of party-feeling. At Paris, for in- stance, the original custom had been for the different na- tions, (the students being distributed according to the nations to which they belonged,) to elect a reader in ethics, who held the office for two years. Launoy states the reason for the alteration of the custom to have been, the outrages committed at such elections. Sed propter insolentias, perpetrataque in hujusmodi electione homici- dia, cessavit talis lectio; et, novo condito statuto, quilibet Artium Regens specialem suis scholasticis facit ethicorum lectionem, a quibus in fine cursus moderata pro labore suo recipit stipendia'. Yet, with all these irregularities, a strict obedience to the word of a spiritual superior was both inculcated and enforced. By the rule of St. Benedict, no difficulty, or even impossibility, enjoined on any member of the frater- nity by the superior, was to be declined. He might humbly and patiently represent the state of the case to the su- perior, without offering resistance or contradiction. But if the prior still persisted in his order, the disciple was to feel convinced that it must be so, and with trust in the Divine assistance, must obey. His personal existence was to be merged in that of the community. He was neither to give, nor receive any thing, without the order P Augustin. Confess. lib. V. c. 12. 4 Pegge’s Life of Bishop Grossetete, p. 85.—Henry’s History of Great Britain, vol. IV. p. 478. t Goulet. Parisiens. Theology. in Launoii de Varia Aristotelis Fortuna, c. 10. Par. 1662. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 425 of the superior, to whom he was to consider both his body and his will as entirely subjects. Such rules as these, it was found practicable to enforce. There are many instances of their having been obeyed to the very letter of the injunction. John Duns Scotus pre- sents a striking instance of the imperative force of such obligations. In the year 1308 he was lecturing at Paris. He had retired to some fields out of the town with his dis- ciples, for the sake of recreation. Letters are brought to him there from the Minister General of the Order of St. Francis, to which he belonged,—obedientiales litere, as his biographer expresses it,—desiring him to transfer himself to Cologne. Immediately, with a blind and prompt obe- dience, ceca et prompta obedientia, bidding farewell to those present, he proceeds straight-forward on his way to Cologne, without returning home to collect his books and writings, or salute the brothers. Those that were present, asked him, why he did not go to the Convent to bid fare- well to the brothers. His answer, adds the biographer, was worthy of the man. “ The Father-General orders to go to “‘ Cologne, not into the Convent to salute the brothers t.” NOTE ΘΟ. p. 39. Jerome gives a satirical description of some of the Clergy of his time. Sunt alii, (de mei ordinis hominibus loquor,) qui ideo presbyterium et diaconatum ambiunt, ut mulieres licentius videant. Omnis his cura de vestibus, si bene oleant: si pes laxa pelle non folleat. Crines calamistri vestigio ro- tantur: digiti de annulis radiant: et ne plantas humidior via spargat, vix imprimunt summa vestigia. Tales cum videris, sponsos magis existimato, quam clericos. Hp. ad Eustoch. Opera, tom. 1. p. 144. Sulpicius Severus speaks in the following terms of re- probation. s Reg. δ. Bened. c. 68, c. 33. τ J. Duns Scoti Vita a Luca Waddingo. p. 11. Scoti Opera. 426 APPENDIX. Et nunc, cum maxime discordiis Episcoporum turbari aut misceri omnia cernerentur, cunctaque per eos, odio, aut gratia, metu, inconstantia, invidia, factione, libidine, avaritia, adrogantia, desidia, essent depravata: postremo plures adversum paucos bene consulentes, insanis consiliis, et pertinacibus studiis, certabant: inter hec plebs Dei, et optimus quisque, probro atque ludibrio habebatur. Hist. Sacr. lib. Il. c. 51. A little later, Sidonius Apollinaris, in giving an account of the character and occupations of a country-gentleman of his time, seems to have had a design of throwing censure on some members of his own profession by the contrast. The description in itself is beautifully executed, though not without marks of the affectation of the writer. The concluding remarks give the application: Qua industria viri ac temperantia inspecta, ad reliquorum quoque censui pertinere informationem; si vel summo tenus vita ceteris talis publicaretur. Ad quam sequendam, preter habitum, quo interim presenti seeculo imponitur, omnes nostre pro- fessionis homines, utilissime incitarentur. Quia, quod pace ordinis mei dixerim, si tantum bona singula in singulis erunt, plus ego admiror sacerdotalem virum, quam sacer- dotem". Indeed in other passages he has not scrupled to cha- racterize some individuals by still more express deline- ation. For instance, in the following account of three competitors for a vacant see. Que quidem triumviratus accenderat competitorum : quorum hic antiquam natalium prerogativam, reliqua des- titutus morum dote, ructabat: hic per fragores parasiticos, culinarum suffragio comparatos, Apicianis plausibus inge- rebatur: hic apice votivo si potiretur, tacita pactione pro- miserat ecclesiastica plausoribus suis prede predia fore *. The corruption was only aggravated by the state of con- fusion and ignorance which ensued in the following cen- « Sidon. Apollin. Oper. lib. ΓΝ. Ep. IX. x Lib. IV. Ep. XXV. p. 125. ed. Sirmond. NOTES TO LECTURE 1. 427 turies. In the XIth and XIIth centuries, it appears to have reached its height, as is evidenced by numerous tes- timonies. Among these, I may select the following from Abelard, a contemporary witness, and in himself, in great measure, a type of the times in which he lived.—Quid dicturi sunt quidam moderni sacerdotes in die judicii, qui ordinem sacerdotalem susceperunt, sed inordinate vivere non erubescunt? Quidam vero in conviviis et potationibus cum vulgo prorsus indocto, pravis moribus corrupto, tota die sedent, fabulantur, et que dicenda non sunt turpiter operantur. Lanis gregis Dominici superbe vestiuntur, lacte pascuntur, et oves fame et penuria verbi Dei moriuntur. Transeunt festa, transit integer annus, quod nec unum ver- bum de ore ipsorum egreditur, quo plebs sibi commissa erudiatur, de malo corrigatur, ad bonum revocetur, et in bono confirmetur. Cotidie tamen se Deo prestare obse- quium arbitrantes; verba divine laudis jubilant, immo si- bilant, et audientes, et intendentes sono vocis, gestu cor- poris scandalisant, non edificant.... Sunt autem quidam predicatores, qui sicut zizania in agro Domini a Diabolo sunt seminati, qui totum mundum cum suis philacteriis peragrant, et indoctum vulgus et peccatis oneratum, ver- bis mendacibus beatificant, dicentes, ‘* Pax pax, cum non ‘sit pax Y.” Erat autem Abbatia illa nostra, ad quam me contuleram, secularis admodum vit atque turpissime. Cujus Abbas ipse, quo ceteris prelatione major, tanto vita deterior atque infamia notior erat. Quorum quidem intolerabiles spur- citias, ego frequenter atque vehementer, modo privatim, modo publice, redarguens, omnibus me supra modum one- rosum atque odiosum effeciZ.... Me de alieno eductum monasterio ad proprium remisit; ubi fere quotquot erant olim jam ut supra memini, infestos habebam; cum eorum vitze turpitudo et impudens conversatio me suspectum penitus haberent, quem arguentem graviter sustinerent 4. ¥ Abelardi Oper. p. 364. z Ibid. p. 19. a Ibid. p. 25. See also John of Salisbury, Metalogicus, I. c. 4. 428 APPENDIX. NOTE R. p. 41. Launoy, in his treatise entitled De Varia Aristotelis Fortuna in Academia Parisiensi, has given a collection of citations from different authors who have reprobated the Scholastic method of theology. He gives Luther’s de- finition of Scholasticism: Scholastica Theologia est ea, que a Parisiorum Sorbona, mixtione quadam ex divinis eloquiis, et Philosophicis rationibus, tanquam ex Centau- rorum genere biformis disciplina, conflata est; and, on the other hand, that of Hangest, a theologian of Paris: Scho- lastica Theologia est divinarum Scripturarum peritia, re- cepto quem Ecclesia approbat sensu, non spretis ortho- doxorum Doctorum interpretationibus et censuris, ac in- terdum aliarum disciplinarum non contempto suffragio >. Speaking of Abelard to the Pope Innocent, Bernard of Clairvaux says: Habemus in Francia novum de veteri magistro theologum, qui ab ineunte «tate sua in arte dia- lectica lusit, et nunc in Scripturis sanctis insanit. Olim damnata et sopita dogmata, tam sua videlicet quam aliena, suscitare conatus, insuper et nova addit. Qui dum om- nium que sunt in coelo sursum, et que in terra deorsum, nihil preter solum nescio quid nescire dignatur, ponit in colum os suum, et scrutatur alta Dei, rediensque ad nos refert verba ineffabilia, que non licet homini loqui. Et dum paratus est de omnibus reddere rationem, etiam que sunt supra rationem, et contra rationem presumit, et con- tra fidem. Quid enim magis contra rationem, quam ra- tione rationem conari transcendere? Et quid magis con- tra fidem, quam credere nolle quicquid non possit ratione attingere ὃ ὃ NOTE 5. p. 41. Illius sententicz ventilate sunt a concilio Romano quod Alexander III. habuit. . . . Hee altercatio ad plures annos b Cap. 12. 8vo. Paris, 1662. © Bernardi Abbat. ad Innoc. Ep. XI. p. 277. Abwlardi Oper. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 429 duravit. ...Id demum consecuti sunt, ut ex Sententiis Lombardi postea fieret indiculus nonnullarum que minime docerentur. He ad calcem Sententiarum designantur hoc modo: Articuli in quibus Magister Sententiarum com- muniter non tenetur 4, Sub illud tempus Lutetic fuit e Sancti Victoris czno- bio, Galterus prior, qui Petrum Abelardum, Petrum Lom- bardum, Petrum Pictavinum, et Gilbertum Porretanum, hereseos insimulaverit, quod Trinitatis, et Divine Incar- nationis, mysteria, spiritu censerent Aristotelico ©. NOTE T. p. 41. Ad annum 1231, Gregorius IX. provinciale Concilium, quo proscribuntur Aristotelis opera, his verbis temperavit. ...* Ad hec jubemus, ut Magistri Artium unam lec- * tionem de Prisciano, et unam post aliam, ordinarie sem- ** per legant: et libris illis naturalibus, qui in Concilio “6 provinciali ex certa scientia prohibiti fuere Parisiis, non * utantur; quousque examinati fuerint, et ab omni erro- ‘‘rum suspicione purgati. Magistri vero, et scholares * theologiz, in facultate quam profitentur se studeant “ἐ Jaudabiliter exercere: nec Philosophos se ostentent ; sed “ἐ satagant fieri Theodidacti: nec loquantur in lingua po- “ἐ puli, linguam Hebreeam cum Asotica confundentes: sed “ de illis tantum in scholis questionibus disputent, que “ὁ per libros theologicos, et Sanctorum Patrum tractatus, ** valeant terminarif.”’ NOTE U. .41. Albert and Aquinas have been thought to have been excepted from this general regulation. But there is no reason for such a supposition. They were probably pro- tected under the shelter of the Dominican Order to which they belonged, and which the successive Popes were disposed to favour, as a support to their own influence, in 4 Launoii de Var. Aristot, Fortun. p. 71. 6 Ibid. p. 69. f Rigord. in Vita Philip. August. Launoii de Var. Aristot. Fortun. c. 6. 430 APPENDIX. those factious times, when the interests of the Italian states were distracted between the civil and ecclesiastical powers. But the true account of the case, in regard to Albert and Aquinas, appears to be, that, until their writings appeared, the proper philosophy of Aristotle, in physics and meta- physics, was not understood. ‘These portions of his phi- losophy were known only under the disguise which they had worn in the commentaries of the Arabians, and in their amalgamation with the mysticism of the New-Platonic School. Aquinas, indeed, particularly opposed himself to the Averroism of his times :—the doctrines of the cele- brated Ebn Roshd, or Averroes, of Cordoba’, having then obtained a considerable popularity among the spe- culating theologians of the Schools, in the want of more immediate communication with works of Greek philo- sophy. NOTE V. p. 43. This may be sufficiently seen from the following pas- sages. Hoc primum vestram sanctitatem monens et postulans, ut doctrinam beatissimi Patris Augustini absque illa du- bitatione undequaque doctissimi, sanctarum Scripturarum auctoritati in omnibus concordissimam ; quippe nullus Doc- torum abstrusa earum scrupulosius rimatus, diligentius ex- quisierit, verius invenerit, veracius protulerit, luculentius enodaverit, fidelius tenuerit, robustius defenderit, effusius deseminaverit; vestri Pontificatus tempore, commento quo- dam impugnari non permittatis. Hpist. Prudentii ad Hincmar. Remens. et Pardulum Laudunens. Episcop. A.D. 849. p.114. Relictis sacris authoritatibus ad dialecticam confugium facis. Et quidem de mysterio fidei auditurus, ac respon- surus que ad rem debeunt pertinere, mallem audire ac * He flourished in the XIIth century. h In the collections of writers on Grace and Predestination of the IXth century, by Manguin, 2 vols. 410. Faris. NOTES TO LECTURE I. 431 respondere sacras authoritates, quam dialecticas rationes. Verum contra hac quoque nostri erit studii respondere, ne ipsius artis inopia me putes in hac tibi parte deesse: for- tasse jactantia quibusdam videbitur, et ostentationi magis quam necessitati deputabitur. Sed testis mihi Deus est, et conscientia mea, quia in tractatu divinarum literarum, nec proponere, nec ad propositas respondere cuperem dia- lecticas questiones vel earum solutiones. Etsi quando materia disputandi talis est, ut hujus artis regulis valeat enucleatius explicari, in quantum possem per-quipollen- tias propositionum tego artem, ne videar magis arte, quam veritate, sanctorumque Patrum authoritate, confidere. Lan- franc. De Corp. et Sang. Dom. c. 7. p. 236. Even Erigena is obliged to speak with the greatest deference of Augustine. Augustinus piissimus doctrine pater, pulcherrimum exemplar eloquenti, acutissimus ve- ritatis inquisitor, studiosissimus liberalium artium magis- ter, providentissimus animorum excitator, humillimus per- suasor. De Predest. c. 18. NOTE W. p. 46. Anselm, speaking of his own work, says: Quam ergo spe tractans nihil potui invenire me in ea dixisse, quod non Catholicorum patrum, et maxime Beati Augustini, scriptis cohereat. Quapropter si cui videbitur, quod in eodem opusculo aliquid protulerim, quod aut minus novum sit, aut a veritate dissentiat; rogo ne statim me aut ut presumptorem novitatum, aut falsitatis assertorem excla- met: Sed prius libros Beati Augustini de Trinitate dili- genter perspiciat, deinde secundum eos opusculum meum dijudicet. Prefatio in Monolog. So more expressly Peter Lombard says: Ecce tribus illustrium virorum testimoniis, scilicet, Augustini, Hilarii, atque Ambrosii, in eodem concurrentibus revelatione Spi- ritus Sancti in eis loquentis, pie credere volentibus osten- ditur, &c. Lib. Sentent. 1. Dist. 19. 432 APPENDIX. - LECTURE II. NOTE A. p. 57. 5 Hn ὅτε ἤκμαζε TA ἡμέτερα, Kal καλῶς εἶχεν" ἡνίκα TO μὲν περιττὸν τοῦτο καὶ κατεγλωττισμένον τῆς θεολογίας καὶ ἔντεχ- νον, οὐδὲ πάροδον εἶχεν εἰς τὰς θείας αὐλάς" ἀλλὰ ταυτὸν ἣν, if Ν vA > » ἡ cad “ fas / ψήφοις TE παίζειν τὴν ὄψιν κλεπτούσαις τῷ τάχει τῆς μεταθέ- σεως, ἢ κατορχεῖσθαι τῶν θεατῶν, παντοίοις καὶ ἀνδρογύνοις » Ν Ν Ἄν / δ 549 + 4 \ Avylopact, καὶ περὶ θεοῦ λέγειν τι καὶ ἀκούειν καινότερον καὶ , 5 PNAS a We 25) ἊΝ a , Sey) 5 περίεργον᾽ τὸ δὲ ἁπλοῦν τε καὶ εὐγενὲς τοῦ λόγου εὐσέβεια ἐνο- μίζετο. ἀφ᾽ οὗ δὲ Σέξτοι, καὶ Πύῤῥωνες, καὶ ἡ ἀντίθετος γλῶσσα ὥσπερ τι νόσημα δεινὸν καὶ κακόηθες ταῖς ἐκκλησίαις ἡμῶν εἰ- σεφθάρῃ, καὶ ἡ φλυαρία παίδευσις ἔδοξε, καὶ ὅ φησι περὶ ᾿Αθη- ναίων ἣ βίβλος τῶν Πράξεων, εἰς οὐδὲν ἄλλο εὐκαιροῦμεν, ἢ λέγειν τι καὶ ἀκούειν καινότερον. Greg. Naz. Orat. ΧΧΙ. Υ̓ 5 Διάπτυέ μοὶ Tas ἐνστάσεις, καὶ Tas ἀντιθέσεις, τὴν νέαν εὐ- 9 2 σέβειαν, καὶ τὴν μικρόλογον σοφίαν" καὶ διάπτυε πλέον, ἢ τὰ τῶν ἀραχνίων νήματα; μυίας μὲν κρατοῦντα, σφηξὶ δὲ ῥηγνύ- μενα, οὔπω λέγω δακτύλοις, οὐδὲ ἄλλῳ τινι τῶν βαρυτέρων σω- μάτων. ev δίδασκε φοβεῖσθαι μόνον, τὸ λύειν τὴν πίστιν ἐν τοῖς , Σ b) ὃ \ ε θῆ λ a ’ Ν / € r , : σοφίσμασιν" οὐ δεινὸν ἡττηθῆναι oy, od yap πάντων ὁ λόγος δεινὸν δὲ ζημιωθῆναι θεότητα, πάντων γὰρ ἡ ἐλπίς. Orat. XXIII. NOTE B. p. 57. With all his objections to subtilties in theology, Gre- gory Nazianzen still shews a disposition to encourage spe- culative questions, where they are proposed by the ortho- dox. In Oration XLV. Gregory praises Evagrius the monk, for having sent some speculations and questions on the subject of the Trinity, to him for solution. He as- sumes there the propriety of laying down a definition of the Deity, and proceeding from that to the demonstra- tions :—O τοίνυν ἐστὶ θεὸς, πρότερον ὑποστησόμεθα" καὶ εἶθ᾽ οὕτως ἐπὶ τὰς ἀποδείξεις ἀκριβῶς ἥξομεν. He professes also NOTES TO LECTURE II. 433 “" not to rest the proof of his point on mere undemonstrated faith, but on exact argument ;—Ov πίστεως ἀναποδείκτου 7 5 / na ἊΨ ’ 3 / - /, IO’ φαντασίαν ἀπορίᾳ τῆς ἀποδείξεως ἀλόγως προϊσχόμενος, οὐδὲ μύθων παλαιῶν μαρτυρίαις τὸ σαθρὸν τῆς πεποιθήσεως ἑαυτοῦ καλύπτειν πειρώμενος, ἀλλὰ ἕητήσεως ἀκριβοῦς κατανοήσει, καὶ λογισμῶν ὀρθότητι, τὴν τοῦ θεωρήματος πίστωσιν εἰς τοὐμφανὲς προτιθέμενος. NOTE C. p. 59. Thus too, among the qualifications for the office-of a bishop enumerated in the Epistle to Titus, is this: that he should be able to “ convince the gainsayers,” τοὺς ἀντι- λέγοντας ἐλέγχειν : an expression being also used here, drawn from the art of the logician. The use of the word ἐρωτάω may be contrasted with αἰτέω in John xvi. 23. Καὶ ἐν ἐκείνῃ τῇ ἡμέρᾳ ἐμὲ οὐκ ἐρωτήσετε οὐδέν. ἀμὴν, ἀμὴν, λέγω ὑμῖν ὅτι ὅσα ἂν αἰτήσητε τὸν πατέρα ἐν τῷ ὀνόματί μου, δώσει ὑμῖν. Also in ν. 26. ᾿Εν ἐκείνῃ τῇ ἡμέρᾳ ἐν τῷ ὀνόματί μου αἰτήσεσθε" καὶ οὐ λέγω ὑμῖν, ὅτι ἐγὼ ἐρωτήσω τὸν πατέρα περὶ ὑμῶν. ‘The one expression seems properly to denote asking for information or argument ; the other, that a favour may be obtained. Other citations occur to the same purport; with the appositeness of which we shall not so readily concur: as Jerome’s appeal to the opening of the book of Proverbs, which speaks of the understanding of ‘ discourses and artifices of words, pa- “rables, and obscure discourse, sayings and enigmas ;” as descriptive of the office of dialecticians and philoso- phers'. Nor shall we be disposed to sanction an inter- pretation, attributed to Augustine, of our Lord’s direction: “ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; “knock, and it shall be opened unto you,” in the follow- ing manner: ‘ask by praying; seek by disputing; knock ‘by asking, that is, by interrogating :—petite orando ; i Hieronym. Op. tom. I. p. 326. Ep. adv. Mag. Orat. Rom. εἴ 434 APPENDIX. ~ ** querite disputando ; pulsate rogando, id est, interro- “ gandok.” NOTE D. p. 60. Clemens Alexandrin., Stromat. lib. I. referred to in Pe- tavii Dogm. Theol. Prolegomena, c. 4. p. 13. Ipsum quippe Dei filium, quem nos Verbum dicimus, Greci λόγον appellant, hoc est, divinz mentis concep- tum, seu Dei sapientiam vel rationem. Unde et Augus- tinus in libro queestionum octoginta trium, capite quadra- gesimo quarto: “ In principio,’”’ inquit, “ erat Verbum, *¢ quod Greece λόγος dicitur.”” Idem in libro contra quin- que hereses: “ In principio erat Verbum. Melius Greci “ἐ λόγος dicunt: λόγος quippe Verbum significat et ratio- “nem.” Et Hieronymus ad Paulinum de divinis scrip- turis. ‘ In principio erat Verbum: λόγος Greece multa “ὁ significat. Nam et verbum est, et ratio, et supputa- ‘* tio, et causa uniuscujusque rei, per quam sunt singula, “ que subsistunt. Que universa recte intelligimus in « Christo.” Cum ergo Verbum Patris Dominus Jesus Christus λόγος Greece dicatur, sicut et σοφία Patris ap- pellatur: plurimum ad eum pertinere videtur ea scientia, que nomine quoque illi sit conjuncta, et per derivationem quandam a Adyos Logica sit appellata: et sicut a Christo Christiani, ita a λόγος Logica proprie dici videatur. Cujus etiam amatores tanto verius appellantur philosophi, quanto veriores sint illius sophize superioris amatores. Qu pro- fecto summi Patris summa sophia, cum nostram indueret naturam, ut nos vere sapientiz illustraret lumine, et nos ab amore mundi in amorem converteret sui, profecto nos pariter Christianos, et veros effecit philosophos. Qui cum illam sapientize virtutem discipulis promitteret, qua refel- lere possent contradicentium disputationes, dicens; “ Ego “* enim dabo vobis os et sapientiam, cui non poterunt re- “ς sistere adversarii vestri;’ profecto post amorem sui, k Abelard Epist. 1V. p.240. Opera, citing Augustin. de Misericordia. I have not however been able to find any such passage in Augustine. NOTES TO LECTURE II. 435 unde veri dicendi sunt philosophi, patenter et illam ra- tionum armaturam eis pollicetur, qua in disputando sum- mi efficiantur logici. .. . Quis denique ipsum etiam Do- minum Jesum Christum crebris disputationibus Judeos ignoret convicisse, et tam scripto quam ratione calumnias eorum repressisse: non solum potentia miraculorum, ve- rum virtute verborum fidem plurimum astruxisse? Cur non solis usus est miraculis, ut heec faceret, quibus maxime Judei, qui signa petunt, commoverentur: nisi quia proprio nos exemplo instruere decrevit, qualiter et eos, qui sa- pientiam querunt, rationibus ad fidem pertraheremus ? Abelardi Ep. \V. Oper. p. 241 and 328. NOTE E. p. 60. Nihil ergo theologum impedire potest, quo minus sin- cere ac germane philosophiz, et dialectice, presidiis, munitiorem et ornatiorem habeat divinam scientiam. Sed nec ἐριστικὴν illam et σοφιστικὴν funditus aspernabitur: non ut ea sic utatur, quomodo heeretici ac reliqui hostes eccle- sie, ad oppugnandam veritatem; sed ad propugnandam potius; et ad illorum perplexos nodos, ac laqueos ejusdem unde implicati sunt, artis ope solvendos. Petavii Dog- mata Theol. Prolegomena, c. 4. p. 14. Petau, in confirmation of the above, cites the following passage of Damascenus. Πᾶς yap τεχνίτης δεῖται καὶ τινῶν ὀργάνων πρὸς τὴν τῶν ἀπο- τελουμένων κατασκευήν. πρέπει δὲ καὶ τῇ βασιλίδι ἄβραις τισὶν ὑπηρετεῖσθαι. λάβωμεν τοίνυν τοὺς δούλους τῆς ἀληθείας λό- yous, καὶ τὴν κακῶς αὐτῶν τυραννήσασαν ἀσέβειαν ἀπωσώμεθα: καὶ μὴ τῷ καλῷ κακῶς χρησώμεθα: μὴ πρὸς ἐξαπάτην τῶν ἁπλουστέρων τὴν τέχνην τῶν λόγων μεταχειρισώμεθα: ἀλλὰ εἰ καὶ μὴ δεῖται ποικίλων σοφισμάτων ἡ ἀλήθεια, πρός γε τὴν τῶν κακομάχων, καὶ τῆς ψευδωνύμον γνώσεως ἀνατροπὴν τούτοις ἀποχρησώμεθα. Damasc. Dialectic. ς. 1. To the same purport may be adduced what the Scho- lastics say of the mendacium officiosum. See Thomas Aqui- nas, Summa Theol. Secunda Secunde, qu. cx. art. 2 et 4. Ff2 436 APPENDIX. The question respecting the mendacium officiosum was touched in a correspondence between Jerome and Augus- tine. NOTE FE. p. 61. Χριστὸν δὲ ἠγνοήκασιν" od τι at θεῖαι λέγουσι γραφαὶ ζη- a 2) 2 we. a ral Bi 3) Ν cad b) , TOUTES, ἀὰλ ὁποῖον σχῆμα συλλογισμοῦ Els τὴν τῆς ἀθεότητος εὑρεθῇ σύστασιν, φιλοπόνως ἀσκοῦντες" κἂν αὐτοῖς προτείνῃ τὶς ε \ a on 9 / , / ‘\ ῥητὸν γραφῆς θεϊκῆς, ἐξετάζουσι πότερον συνημμένον ἢ διεζευγ- μένον δύναται ποιῆσαι σχῆμα συλλογισμοῦ. καταλιπόντες δὲ τὰς ἁγίας τοῦ θεοῦ γραφὰς, γεωμετρίαν ἐπιτηδεύουσιν" ὡς ἂν ἐκ τῆς γῆς ὄντες καὶ ἐκ τῆς γῆς λαλοῦντες, καὶ τὸν ἄνωθεν ἐρχόμενον 5 a 3 vA a Τὰ ὅ lal , ἀγνοοῦντες. EvkAetons γοῦν παρὰ τισιν αὐτῶν φιλοπόνως γεω- μετρεῖται. ᾿Αριστοτέλης δὲ καὶ Θεόφραστος θαυμάζονται" Ta- ληνὸς γὰρ ἴσως ὑπό τινων καὶ προσκυνεῖται. οἱ δὲ ταῖς τῶν ηνὸς γὰρ ρ ἀπίστων τέχναις εἰς τὴν τῆς αἰρέσεως αὐτῶν γνώμην ἀποχρώ- μενοι, καὶ τῇ τῶν ἀθέων πανουργίᾳ τὴν ἁπλῆν τῶν θείων γρα- pov πίστιν καπηλεύοντες, κι τι AX. Husehius, Eccl. Hist. lib. V. c. 28. p. 160. ed. Amstzelod. 1695. NOTE G. p. 61. Thus Tertullian: Miserum Aristotelem, qui illis dialec- ticam instituit, artificem struendi, et destruendi, versipel- lem in sententiis, coactam in conjecturis, duram in argu- mentis, operariam contentionum, molestam etiam sibi ipsi, omnia retractantem, ne quid omnino tractaverit. Hine ile fabule. . . . Quid ergo Athenis et Hierosolymis? quid Academiz et Ecclesiz ? quid hereticis et Christianis ὃ Nostra institutio de porticu Solomonis est, qui et ipse tradiderat, Dominum in simplicitate cordis esse queren- dum. Viderint, qui Stoicum, et Platonicum, et Dialec- ticurma Christianismum protulerunt. Nobis curiositate opus non est post Christum Jesum, nec inquisitione post Evan- gelium. TZertull. De Presc. Her. c. 7. p. 205. The commentator on this passage of Tertullian refers to Gregorius Beticus Episcop. Elliberitan., who lived in the minority of Valentinian III, during the government NOTES. TO LECTURE II. 437 of Placidia, and who was an opposer of Arianism, com- plaining of Aristotelis artificiosa argumenta: and again, ubi nunc sunt illa impia vestra sophismata que . NOTE W. p. 88. The different applications of the Scriptures have been thus deduced by the Scholastic writers. Auctor sacre scripture est Deus, in cujus potestate est, ut non solum voces ad significandum accommodet (quod etiam homo facere potest) sed etiam res ipsas. Et ideo, cum in omnibus scientiis voces significent, hoc habet pro- prium ista scientia, quod ipse res significate per voces, etiam significant aliquid. Illa ergo prima significatio qua voces significant res, pertinent ad primum sensum, qui est sensus historicus, vel literalis. Illa vero significatio, qua res significatee per voces, iterum res alias significant, dici- tur sensus spiritualis, propter quod sensus spiritualis super literalem fundatur, et eum supponit. Hic autem sensus trifariam dividitur. Sicut enim dicit Apostolus ad He- bros vil. “ lex vetus figura est nove legis:” et ipsa nova lex, ut dicit Dionysius in Ecclesiastica Hierarchia, est figura futuree glorie. In nova etiam lege ea que in capite sunt gesta, sunt signa eorum que nos agere debemus, Secundum ergo quod ea sunt veteris legis, significant ea Ὁ Hieronym. Ep. ad Ctesiph. Evasmi Scholia, p. 258. NOTES TO LECTURE III. 457 que sunt nove legis, sensus est allegoricus. Secundum vero quod ea que in Christo sunt facta, vel in his que Christum significant, sunt signa eorum que nos agere de- bemus, est sensus moralis; prout vero significant ea que sunt in eterna gloria, est sensus anagogicus. Aguinas, Summa Theol. Prima Pars, qu. τ. art. 10. LECTURE III. NOTE A. p. 104. "THE residence of Athanasius at Rome for so consider- able a portion of time, is a very important point in ecclesi- astical history. Who can say, how much the orthodoxy of the Western Church may be attributable to that circum- stance? So restless a spirit, we may be sure, was not unoccupied in the sacred cause during the interval. And yet respecting any actions performed by him at that time, there is a profound silence. Qui tantum otii nactus, (says the biography,) quid gesserit, edideritve, altum ubique silentium. But this silence is an extremely expressive one. According indeed to his own account it was not an indolent one. ‘ Applying myself wholly to the Church,” he says, ‘‘ for of this only had I any thought, I enjoyed “ leisure for the councils: Kal τῇ ἐκκλησίᾳ τὰ κατ᾽ ἐμαυτὸν ““ παραθέμενος, τούτου yap μόνον μοι φροντὶς ἦν, ἐσχόλαζον “ταῖς συνάξεσι“.᾿ ‘To a person, whose heart and eye were alive to all that was passing in the Church at that time, this leisure devoted to the councils must have been a period full of reflection and instruction. To watch the different leanings of controversy, the conflicts of private and party feeling, the intrigues of ecclesiastical diplo- macy, the shifts of subtile argumentation, which were dis- played on the theatre of the public councils, was an effort ¢ Athanas. Oper. tom. I. p. 297. 458 APPENDIX. of attention not unworthy of the powers of Athanasius ; nor could it be unproductive of results as to the future decision of theological questions. I do not observe it expressly said any where, that he employed himself in learning the Latin language, though Gibbon has so stated it. But I conceive the fact of his learning the theological language of the Latin Church, is borne out, by what Gregory Nazianzen has said of his tact in reconciling the dissensions produced by a difference of terms between the Greeks and Latins. Having touched on the verbal variations which occasioned so much discord in the doctrines of theologians, Gregory adds, concerning Athanasius: Ταῦτ᾽ οὖν ὁρῶν καὶ ἀκούων ὁ μακάριος ἐκεῖνος, καὶ ὡς ἀληθῶς ἄνθρωπος τοῦ θεοῦ, καὶ μέγας τῶν ψυχῶν οἶκο- νόμος, οὐκ φήθῃ δεῖν παριδεῖν τὴν ἄτοπον οὕτω καὶ ἄλογον τοῦ λόγου κατατομὴν, τὸ δὲ παρ᾽ ἑαυτοῦ φάρμακον, ἐπάγει τῷ ἀῤ- ῥωστήματι. πῶς οὖν τοῦτο ποιεῖ; προσκαλεσάμενος ἀμφότερα τὰ μέρη, οὑτωσὶ πράως καὶ φιλανθρώπως, καὶ τὸν νοῦν τῶν λεγομένων ἀκριβῶς ἐξετάσας, ἐπειδὴ συμφρονοῦντας εὗρε, καὶ οὐδὲν διεστῶτας κατὰ τὸν λόγον, τὰ ὀνόματα συγχωρήσας, συν- δεῖ τοῖς πράγμασι. Orat. ΧΧΙ. p. 396. Some light is reflected on the character of Athanasius, from the description of the Egyptian monks, Ammonius and Isidorus, who accompanied him to Rome. The au- stere taste of Ammonius would not suffer him to look at the memorials of the greatness of the city in her classic times; but the only attractions for him at Rome were the shrines of Peter and Paul. So resolute too was he against all worldly honour, even connected with spiritual duties, that when on some occasion the episcopal dignity would have been forced on him, he not only fled away, but in order to disable himself for the office, (no maimed person being admissible to the priesthood,) cut off one of his ears. The other, Isidorus, it is added, was no less conspicuous for piety and abdication of the changeable things of the world ἃ, 4 Vita S. Athanasii, p. 36. Opera, Paris, 1698. NOTES TO LECTURE III. 459 NOTE B. p. 106. Dehinc post aliquot annos, cum Hincmarus in Ecclesia Remensi vetustissimum et receptissimum hymni ecclesi- astici hunc versiculum; “Te Trina Deitas Unaque pos- ‘“cimus:’’ cantari vetuisset; ipse Ratramnus volumine non modice quantitatis ad Hildegarium Meldensem Epi- scopum edito, ex libris S. S. Hilarii et Augustini de Tri- nitate veterem Ecclesie traditionem confirmavit. Jau- guin. Dissert. Hist. c. 17, cited in an edition of Ratramn’s treatise on the Body and Blood of the Lord, p. 185. Religiosi 5. Benedicti diu multumque reluctati sunt huic immutationi. Ibid. p. 29. NOTE C. p. 108. I give the following passage as an illustration of this mode of philosophizing carried to its natural extreme. Tanta enim, divine virtutis excellentia, in futura vita omnibus qui contemplatione ipsius digni futuri sunt, ma- nifestabit, ut nihil aliud preter eam, sive in corporibus, sive in intellectibus, eis eluceat. Erit enim Deus “ omnia ‘in omnibus :” ac si aperte Scriptura diceret ; solus Deus apparebit in omnibus. Hine ait sanctus Job: “ et in “9 carne mea videbo Deum.” Ac si dixisset; in hac carne mea que multis tentationibus affligitur, tanta gloria futura erit, αὖ quemadmodum nunc nihil in ea apparet, nisi mors et corruptio: ita in futura vita nihil mihi apparebit, nisi solus Deus, qui vere vita est, et immortalitas, et incor- ruptio. Ac si de sui corporis felicitate talem gloriam pro- misit, quid de sui spiritus dignitate existimandum est ? presertim cum, ut ait Magnus Gregorius, Theologus, cor- pora Sanctorum in rationem, ratio in intellectum, intel- lectus in Deum; ac per hoc tota illorum natura in ipsum Deum mutabitur. Joan. Scot. Erigen. de Divis. Natur. libs 1..Ὁ: 11. pas: e Bertram, or Ratram, concerning the Body and Blood of the Lord, in Latin, with a new English translation, 8vo. London, 1688. 460 APPENDIX. NOTE D. p. 110. Sicut dicit enim Anselmus; processio personarum est ante processionem creaturarum, sicut causa ante effectum, et sicut e«ternum ante temporale, et sicut exemplar, ante exemplatum. .” We see plainly in this passage of the philosopher a warrant for the notion of divinely-inspired Virtue, as of a principle with which the reason itself of man had no proper con- cern; but animating the agent by an instinctive efficacy, and promoting his success in a way beyond his own con- sciousness or intentions. These divine instincts, regarded in their effects on the human subject, assumed in Scholastic phraseology the forms of good Dispositions, Preparations, Conversion of heart. They were termed Dispositions, so far as the agent was thereby fitly disposed for the operation of grace; since the matter on which any power has to act, must be of a suitable nature in order to that action. Preparation expressed the previous operation of the Spirit, rendering the agent susceptible of divine impressions, both at the commencement of his Christian life, and for his habitual progress in that lifec. Conversion denoted the efficacy of the Spirit in producing the change of the soul towards God, the proper end of its being, by a series of effects ad- justed successively to that end. These terms are all dif- ferent views of the process of that energy which is working in the soul and bringing it to God—parts of the history of that alteration which it undergoes in putting off the form of the sinful Adam, and putting on the glorious form of the sons of God. b Aristot. Eth. Eudem. lib. VIL. c. 14. tom. II. p. 289. Du Val. ¢ Aquin. Summa Theol. Prima Secunde, qu. C1X. art. 6. qu. XLII. art. 2. NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 517 LECTURE VII. NOTE A. p. 311. I HAVE before spoken of the refined materialism, which, particularly in regard to the nature of the soul, was the early and general tenet of theologians. In the IXth cen- tury controversy revived on the nature of the soul as on other subjects. Ratramn of Corbey was employed in writ- ing a book De Anima, at the instance of Odo, Bishop of Beauvais, in reply to the fanciful theory, drawn probably from the New-Platonists, of a monk of the same convent, who maintained that all men had but one and the same soul. Another evidence of the sort of physical speculation which was afloat at this period is, that the same writer is said to have been engaged in an inquiry concerning the fabled race of the Cynocephali, “‘ whether they be truly “ἐ men of Adam’s seed, or brute creatures 4.” Are we not disposed even in these days to rest too much on the natural or metaphysical arguments for a future state, and to imagine that the Christian Faith is compro- mised by a denial of the immateriality of the soul? I by no means intend to deny its immateriality. The soul is undoubtedly immaterial in this sense; that it is only to confound distinct phenomena, to identify the facts of con- sciousness with those of external observation, as Priestley has done, in his attempt to establish the material nature of the soul. The two classes of facts are clearly distinct and different, and they ought therefore, in philosophical accu- racy, to be distinguished by different names. But we go beyond the basis of the facts, when we assume, in our ab- stract arguments for the natural immortality of the soul, its separate existence apart from the body. There is no observation which shews that the living powers, (to use 4 Ratramn’s Treatise on the Body and Blood of the Lord, in Latin and English, 8vo, 1688. 1,18 518 APPENDIX. the phrase of Butler,) the powers of thought, and will, and action, exist otherwise than in connexion with a bodily system. However little the bodily system may be called into action during the exertion of these living powers, however it may in some instances be an obstruction to their energy, and however actively they may energize in the very moment of the decay of this system, still it is always in connexion with the bodily system that the living powers are displayed: and we are not authorized therefore speculatively to conclude their future existence, independ- ently of their union with such a system. But what mat- ters this to the Christian, who is fully assured, that, because Christ lives, he shall live also; that, “as by man came «ς death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead.” I would say, in the words of Nemesius, Ἡμῖν δὲ ἀρκεῖ πρὸς ἀπόδειξιν τῆς ἀθανασίας αὐτῆς, ἡ TOV θείων λογίων διδασκαλία, τὸ πιστὸν ἀφ᾽ ἑαυτῆς ἔχουσα, διὰ τὸ θεόπνευστον εἶναι. If we sincerely rely on the clear evidence given of Christ raised from the dead, as a certain fact in the course of Divine Providence, and believe the connexion of our own immortality with that fact, we may surely regard all merely philosophical inquiries on the subject, as fair matter of dis- putation, without offence, and without any fear whatever for the stability of the real Christian doctrine of the Resur- rection of the dead. NOTE B. p. 313. Sacrificium ergo visibile invisibilis sacrificii Sacramen- tum, i. e. sacrum signum est. dugustin. De Civ. Det, lib. Χ δε δι Sacramentum est sacre rei signum. Dicitur tamen sa- cramentum etiam sacrum secretum, sicut sacramentum divinitatis : ut sacramentum sit sacrum signans: sed nunc agitur de sacramento secundum quod est signum. Item sacramentum est invisibilis gratie visibilis forma. Lom- bard. Sent. lib. IV. dist. 1. ἐς T remember there be many definitions of a sacrament © De Natura Hominis, c. 2. p. 93. ed. 8vo. Oxon. 1671. NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 519 “ἴῃ Austin: but I will take that which is most fit to this ** present purpose. A sacrament is a visible sign of in- “visible grace.” Ridley’s Disput. at Oxford. Foxe’s Keel. Hist. vol. 11. p. 1619. NOTE C. p. 314. Sicut in vita naturali primum est generatio: deinde se- quitur nutritio, et roboratio, et sanitatis perditee reparatio: et hec quatuor pertinent ad quamlibet personam singula- rem: preter hee autem requiritur aliquid pertinens ad communitatem, quo aliquis constituatur in gradu neces- sario ad aliquem actum necessarium communitati: et ita spiritualiter ad completam perfectionem extensive opus esse adjutorium aliquod pertinens ad generationem spiri- tualem: et 24° aliquid pertinens ad nutritionem, 3° per- tinens ad roborationem: 4° ad separationem post lap- sum: preter hec autem, 5° requiritur aliquid esse quo exiens finaliter preeparetur: quia vita ista spiritualis que- dam via est ordinans, ut bene vivens in ea, de ipsa sine impedimento transeat ad aliam pro qua preparatur. Hee ergo quinque requirantur tanquam adjutoria necessaria persone cuicunque pro se. Ad bonum autem communi- tatis observantis istam legem, requiritur et multiplicatio carnalis: quia ista presupponitur bono spirituali: sicut natura gratie: et multiplicatio spiritualis aliquorum in ista lege. Sic ergo congruum fuit septem adjutoria con- ferri observatoribus legis evangelice, in quibus esset per- fectio, non tantum intensiva, sed etiam extensiva, et suf- ficiens ad omnia necessaria pro observantia hujus legis. Hec autem sunt, ut dicit magister in litera; baptismus pertinens ad generationem spiritualem: eucharistia neces- saria ad nutritionem: confirmatio ad roborationem: pce- nitentia ad lapsi reparationem: extrema unctio ad finalem preparationem : matrimonium ad multiplicationem in esse nature vel carnali: et ordo ad multiplicationem in esse gratie vel spirituali. Jo. Duns Scot. in Lib. Sent. IV. L1l4 520 APPENDIX. dist. 2. qu.1. Also Aquinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. LXV. art. 1. Ibi autem debet medicinale remedium homini adhiberi, ubi patitur morbum. Et ideo conveniens fuit, ut Deus per quedam corporalia signa homini spiritualem medici- nam adhiberet. dquinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. υΧ1. art. 1. The term Salvation has evidently been founded on this analogy, so much insisted on by the Scholastic writers, and indeed suggested by Scripture, between the state of the soul under sin, and that of the body under disease. It has now however almost lost its original sense, and is commonly understood as if it denoted some particular ob- ject, or state, out of the soul itself. But the original meaning seems more consistent with the tenour and spirit of Christianity ; which leaves the nature of our future hap- piness in the most indistinct form, and directs the believer to look for the kingdom of God within himself. NOTE D. p. 315. Aquinas, having adduced the opinion of some who as- serted that the sacraments operated by virtue of the Will of God, annexing certain benefits to the use of them, ina manner analogous to the beneficence of a king who should promise to give an hundred pounds to any one presenting a leaden penny, objects to this doctrine as reducing the sacraments to mere signs, and thus states his own view of the subject. Et ideo aliter dicendum, quod duplex est causa agens, principalis et instrumentalis. Principalis quidem operatur per virtutem suze forme, cui assimilatur effectus; sicut ignis suo calore calefacit. Et hoc modo nihil potest. cau- sare gratiam, nisi Deus. . . . Causa vero instrumentalis non agit per virtutem suze forme, sed solum per motum quo movetur a principali agente: unde effectus non assimilatur securi, sed arti que est in mente artificis. Et hoc modo NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 521 sacramenta nove legis gratiam causant. ... Ad secundum dicendum, quod instrumentum habet duas actiones : unam instrumentalem, secundum quam operatur non in virtute propria, sed in yirtute principalis agentis: aliam autem habet actionem propriam, que competit 5101 secundum propriam formam: sicut securi competit scindere ratione sue acuitatis, facere autem lectum, in quantum est instru- mentum artis. Non autem perficit instrumentalem ac- tionem, nisi exercendo actionem propriam: scindendo enim facit lectum. Et similiter sacramenta corporalia, per pro- priam operationem, quam exercent circa corpus quod tan- gunt, efficiunt operationem instrumentalem ex virtute di- vina circa animam: sicut aqua baptismi, abluendo corpus secundum propriam virtutem, abluit animam, in quantum est instrumentum virtutis divine: nam ex anima et cor- pore unum fit. Et hoc est quod Augustinus dicit ; quod corpus tangit, et cor abluit. dguinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. LX. art. 1. NOTE E. p. 316. “ The occasion of his writing, was news out of Germany, “ς (as I guess from New Corbey, which had much corre- “ς spondence with this Corbey in France, of which it was ‘“‘a colony,) that some in those parts held strange opinions “ς touching our Saviour’s birth, as though He came not out «ὁ of his mother’s womb into the world, the same way with “other men. In opposition to that doctrine, Ratramnus «ὁ asserts, that Christ was born as other men, and his Virgin “ὁ mother bare Him, as other women bring forth, to use “ Tertullian’s words, patefacti corporis lege. Those whose “ opinions he confutes, were, perhaps, some of those no- ἐς vices, for whose use Paschasius had written his book of “ς the Sacrament, and who had not only imbibed his doc- «ὁ trine touching the carnal presence of Christ therein, but “ς might have also heard the manner of our Saviour’s birth “ without opening his mother’s womb, alleged to solve “¢ an objection against it: for our adversaries of the Church 522 APPENDIX. “ of Rome now say, that it is no more impossible for one “ body to be in two places, than for two bodies to be in “one; which they conceive must have happened in our “ς Saviour’s birth, as also in his resurrection, and coming “into his disciples, the doors being shut. This might “¢ provoke Paschasius to write against our Author, as well “as zeal for the blessed Virgin’s integrity.” Editor of Ratramn, p. 14. 8vo. London, 1688. NOTE. F. p. 317. Ex quibus Domini verbis ortz sunt duz hereses anti- quis temporibus. Et in hoc quidem consenserunt omnes, quod panis et vinum in veram filii hominis carnem, verum- que ejus sanguinem converterentur. Sed quis esset iste filius hominis, non omnes eamdem sententiam tenuerunt. Quidam arbitrati sunt, hunc oportere intelligi, quemlibet hominem sive justum sive peccatorem, in cujus carnem ac sanguinem conversa terrena substantia sumeretur in remissionem peccatorum. Alii arbitrati sunt, non hunc esse de turba quemlibet hominem, sed virum justum, sanc- tificatum, a communi hominum vita per suz vite celsitu- dinem segregatum, qui templum Dei esset, qui divinam in se habitationem verissime possideret. In hujus carnem ac sanguinem comimutari posse panem vinumque altaris, heretica pertinacia delirabant. Factum est hoc paucis annis post obitum beati Augustini, tempore Celestini Pa- pe, et Cyrilli Alexandrini Episcopi, quibus precipienti- bus, atque annitentibus, indicta ac celebrata est, Synodus Ephesina, una de quatuor quas beatus Gregorius in Epi- stola ad Patriarchas fatetur se ita suscipere, complecti, et venerari, quemadmodum quatuor Evangelia Domini nostri Jesu Christi. In qua synodo damnate sunt utreque su- perius comprehensz lethales pestes, roborata est fides, qua credimus panem converti in eam carnem, que in cruce pependit, vinumque in eum sanguinem, qui de pendentis in cruce latere emanavit. Denique ducenti qui eidem con- cilio interfuere Episcopi, inter cetera de hoc Sacramento NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 523 sic scripserunt; et Nestorio Episcopo quasi hereticorum capiti transmiserunt. “Ad benedictiones,” inquiunt, ‘ mys- “ς ticas accedimus, et sanctificamur, participes sancti cor- “ΚΞ poris, et pretiosi Sanguinis Christi omnium nostrum Re- “ἐς demptoris, effecti: non ut communem carnem percipi- “ἐ entes, quod absit, nec ut viri sanctificati et verbo con- *‘juncti secundum dignitatis unitatem, aut sicut divinam *‘ possidentis habitationem, sed vere vivificatricem, et ip- ‘‘ sius verbi propriam factam. Vita enim naturaliter ut “ Deus existens, quia proprie carni unitus est, vivificatri- “< cem eam esse professus est. Et ideo quamvis dicat ad “nos; Amen, amen, dico vobis, nisi manducaveritis car- “ἐ nem filii hominis, et biberitis ejus sanguinem ; non tamen “eam, ut hominis unius ex nobis, existimare debemus: «ς (quomodo enim juxta naturam suam vivificatrix esse “caro hominis poterit?) sed ut vere propriam ejus fac- “tam, qui propter nos filius hominis, et factus est, et vo- “ catus.”” Et circa finem concilii: ‘Si quis non confitetur «ὁ carnem Domini vivificatricem esse, et propriam ipsius * Verbi Dei Patris, sed velut alterius preter ipsum con- <¢juncti eidem per dignitatem, aut quasi divinam haben- “ς (18 habitationem, ac non potius vivificatricem esse, quia ‘ facta est propria Verbi vivificare valentis, anathema sit.” Quid manifestius audire desideras, si studiosum nove con- tentionis animum studio antique pacis omittas? Non est, ut sancta synodus definit, heec caro alicujus de vulgo ho- minis, non justi et sanctificati hominis, sed potius cui ipse unitus, id est, incarnatus est Dei et hominis, &c. Lan- franc, Lib. De Corp. et Sang. Domini, c. xvii. p. 242, 243. NOTE G. p. 320. See the Letter of Berenger to Lanfranc, p. 415, note: in which it appears that Berenger maintained, that the authorities of Ambrose, Jerome, and Augustine, were on his side. Augustine indeed uses expressions which mili- tate with the notion of any actual change in the sacred elements, as the following: Nonne semel immolatus est 524 APPENDIX. Christus in seipso, et tamen in sacramento non solum per omnes pasche solennitates, sed omni die populis immola- tur: nec utique mentitur qui interrogatus eum responderit immolari. Si enim sacramenta quandam similitudinem earum rerum, quarum sacramenta sunt, non haberent, om- nino sacramenta non essent. Ex hac autem similitudine plerumque etiam ipsarum rerum nomina accipiunt. Sicut ergo secundum quendam modum, sacramentum corporis Christi, corpus Christi est, sacramentum sanguinis Christi, sanguis Christi est, ita sacramentum fidei, fides estf. The controversial tract of Lanfranc against Berenger, is no favourable specimen of the polemical talents of Lanfranc ; nor can we form from it any just notion of the sacra- mental doctrine of Berenger. He is very inferior to An- selm in strength and acuteness of reasoning, resembling rather the unscientific controvertists of the IXth cen- tury; vehement like them too, in calling for authorities on the point in dispute, and declaiming against the in- troduction of dialectical subtilties into theology, though not scrupling to employ them in support of what he con- ceives the orthodox doctrine. It was a natural miscon- ception, if not a trick of controversy, to charge the oppo- nents of a doctrine of the corporal presence with reducing the Sacrament to a merely commemorative sign. Nothing can be concluded therefore against Berenger on this head, from the antagonist representations of Lanfranc. It is plain, from the following passages of Ratramn, that he maintained a Real Presence in the Eucharist; whilst he directly opposes the doctrine of a substantial presence in the consecrated elements. At ille panis qui per sacerdotis ministerium Christi cor- pus conficitur, aliud exterius humanis sensibus ostendit, et aliud interius fidelium mentibus clamat. Exterius quidem panis, quod ante fuerat, forma pretenditur, color ostendi- tur, sapor accipitur: est interius longe aliud multo pre- tiosius, multoque excellentius, intimatur; quia cceleste, ® Augustinus Bonifucio, Ep. XXI111. Opera, tom. II. fol. 28. NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 525 quia divinum, id est, Christi corpus, ostenditur ; quod non sensibus carnis, sed animi fidelis contuitu, vel aspicitur, vel comeditur. Vinum quoque quod sacerdotali consecra- tione Christi sanguinis efficitur sacramentum, aliud super- ficie tenus ostendit, aliud interius ostendit. Quid enim alind in superficie quam substantia vini conspicitur. Gusta, vinum sapit: odora, vinum redolet: inspice, vini color intuetur. At interius si consideres, jam non liquor vini, sed liquor sanguinis Christi, credentium mentibus, et sapit dum gustatur, et agnoscitur dum conspicitur, et pro- batur dum odoratur. Hec ita esse, dum nemo potest ab- negare, claret quia panis ille vinumque figurate Christi corpus et sanguis existit. Non enim secundum quod vide- tur, vel carnis species in illo pane cognoscitur, vel in illo vino cruoris unda monstratur, cum tamen, post mysticam consecrationem, nec panis jam dicitur nec vinum, sed Christi corpus et sanguis. Bertram, or Ratram, on the Body and Blood of the Lord, in Latin and English, c. 9, 10. 8vo. 1688. Si ergo nihil est permutatum, non est aliud quam ante fuit. Est autem aliud, quoniam panis corpus, et vinum sanguis Christi, facta sunt. ... Et si nihil permutationis pertulerunt, nihil aliud existunt, quam quod prius fuere. . . . Corporaliter namque nihil in eis cernitur esse permu- tatum.. . . At quia confitentur et corpus et sanguinem Dei esse, nec hoc esse potuisse nisi facta in melius commuta- tione, neque ista commutatio corporaliter, sed spiritualiter, facta sit; necesse est jam ut figurate facta esse dicatur ; quoniam sub velamento corporei panis, corporeique vini, spirituale corpus Christi, spiritualisque sanguis existit.. .. Hine etiam et Sacramenta vocitantur, quia tegumento cor- poralium rerum, virtus divina secretam salutem accipientium fideliter dispensat. . .. At nunc sanguis Christi quem cre- dentes ebibunt, et corpus quod comedunt, aliud sunt in specie, et aliud in significatione: aliud quod pascunt cor- pus esca corporea, et aliud quod saginant mentes eterne vite substantia. ... Exterius igitur quod apparet, non est 526 APPENDIX. ipsa res, sed imago rei: mente vero quod sentitur et intel- ligitur, veritas rei. Ibid. c. 13, 14, 15, 16. 48. 69. 77. NOTE H. p. 320. Ridley, in a conversation in the Tower recorded by Foxe, thus speaks of Ratramn, or Bertram, as he calls him. “ Sir,” said I, “ it is certain that other before these have “ written of this matter, not by the way only and obiter, ‘¢as doth for the most part all the old writers, but even «ς ex professo, and their whole books intreat of it alone, as “ Bertram.” ‘ Bertram,” said the secretary: “95 what man ““ was he, and when was he, and how do ye know?” &c., with many questions. ‘Sir,’ quoth I, “41 have read his ἐς book: he proponeth the same which is now in contro- ἐς versy, and answereth so directly, that no man may doubt “‘ but that he affirmeth that the substance of bread re- ‘¢ maineth still in the Sacrament: and he wrote unto Ca- “rolus Magnus.” ‘ Marry,’’ quoth he, ‘“ mark; for there “isa matter.” ‘ He wrote,” quoth he, ““ ad Henricum, ςς αῃᾷ not ad Carolum: for no author makes any such “ mention of Bertramus.” ‘ Yes,” quoth I, “ Zrithemius ‘© in Catalogo Illustrium Scriptorum speaketh of him. «ς Trithemius was but of late time: but he speaketh,” quoth I, “ of them that were of antiquity. Here, after “ much talk of Bertram,” &c. Fove’s Eccl. Hist. vol. 1]. p- 1590. Again in his Disputation at Oxford, Ridley, appealing to the authorities of Cyprian, Augustine, Hilary, and others, as conformable to his view of the Eucharist, to shew that he held it to be more than a mere sign, concludes with that of Ratramn: “ Finally with Bertram,” he says, “ (which was the last of all these,) I confess that Christ’s «ὁ body is in the Sacrament in this respect, namely (as he “ὁ writeth) because there is in it the Spirit of Christ; that “ὁ is, the power of the Word of God, which not only feed- “ eth the soul, but also cleanseth it. Out of these I sup- “ pose it may clearly appear unto all men, how far we NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 527 “are from that opinion, whereof some go about falsely to ‘* slander us to the world, saying, we teach that the godly “and faithful should receive nothing else at the Lord’s “ὁ table, but a figure of the body of Christ.” Ibid. p. 1609. “1 have also for the proof of that I have spoken, what- “‘ soever Bertram, a man learned, of sound and upright “¢ judgment, and ever counted a Catholic for these seven “hundred years until this our age, hath written. His “ὁ treatise, whosoever shall read and weigh, considering the “time of the writer, his learning, godliness of life, the “ὁ allegations of the ancient fathers, and his manifold and “ς most grounded arguments, I cannot doubtless but much “ marvel, if he have any fear of God at all, how he can with ** good conscience speak against him in this matter of the “ς Sacrament. This Bertram was the first that pulled me “ by the ear, and that first brought me from that common «ς error of the Romish Church, and caused me to search “ς more diligently and exactly, both the Scriptures and the “ἐς writings of the old ecclesiastical fathers in this matter. *¢ And this I protest before the face of God, who knoweth “ {16 not in the things I now speaks.” Ibid. p. 1610. NOTE E. p. 322. Respondeo dicendum, quod (sicut dictum est) sacra- mentum operatur ad gratiam causandum per modum in- strumenti. Est autem duplex instrumentum; unum qui- dem separatum, ut baculus; aliud autem conjunctum, ut manus. Per instrumentum autem conjunctum movetur instrumentum separatum, sicut baculus per manum. Prin- cipalis autem causa efficiens gratiz est ipse Deus, ad quem comparatur humanitas Christi, sicut instrumentum con- junctum; sacramentum autem sicut instrumentum sepa- ratum. Et ideo oportet quod virtus salutifera a divinitate Christi, per ejus humanitatem in ipsa Sacramenta derive- tur. Aquinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. τιχττ. art. 5. & It is strange that this treatise of Ratramn, which had such influence on our Reformers, should not be more familiarly known. It ought to be re- published. 528 APPENDIX. NOTE F. p. 323. Ad primum ergo dicendum, quod instrumentum inani- matum non habet aliquam intentionem respectu effectus : sed loco intentionis est motus quo movetur a principali agente. Sed instrumentum animatum, sicut est minister, non solum movetur, sed etiam quodammodo movet seip- sum, in quantum sua voluntate movet membra ad operan- dum. Et ideo requiritur ejus intentio, qua se subjiciat principali agenti, ut scilicet intendat facere quod facit Christus et Ecclesia. Ad secundum dicendum, quod circa hoc est duplex opinio. Quidam enim dicunt, quod requiritur mentalis intentio in ministro, que si desit, non perficitur sacra- mentum: sed hunc defectum in pueris, qui non habent intentionem accedendi ad sacramentum, supplet Christus, qui interius baptizat: in adultis autem qui intendunt sa- cramentum suscipere, supplet illum defectum fides et de- votio. Sed hoc satis posset dici quantum ad ultimum effectum, qui est res et sacramentum; scilicet quantum ad characterem, non videtur quod per devotionem acceden- tis posset suppleri: quia character nunquam imprimitur nisi per sacramentum. Et ideo alii melius dicunt, quod minister sacramenti agit in persona totius Ecclesiz, cujus est minister. In verbis autem que profert, exprimitur intentio Ecclesia, que sufficit ad perfectionem sacramenti, nisi contrarium exterius exprimatur, ex parte ministri, vel recipientis sacramentum. Ad tertium dicendum, quod licet ille qui aliud cogitat, uon habeat actualem intentionem, habet tamen habitua- lem, que sufficit ad perfectionem sacramenti: puta, cum sacerdos accedens ad baptizandum, intendit facere circa baptizandum quod facit Ecclesia. Unde si postea in ipso exercitio actus, cogitatio ejus ad alia rapiatur, ex virtute prime intentionis perficitur sacramentum: quamvis stu- diose curare debeat sacramenti minister, ut etiam actualem intentionem adhibeat. Sed hoc non est totaliter positum NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 529 in hominis potestate; quia preter intentionem, cum homo vult multum intendere, incipit alia cogitare, secundum illud Psal. xxxix. Cor meum dereliquit me. dquinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. LXxtv. art. 8. The word “ Intention,” as introduced into the doctrine of the Sacraments, it should further be observed, is the completion of the theory of causation in that subject. We have the efficient cause in Christ himself communi- cating his virtue to the sacrament,—the material cause in the emblems employed,—the formal cause in the words uttered,—and lastly, the final cause determining the parti- cular effect, in the intention of the officiating minister. The intention is strictly the οὗ ἕνεκα of Aristotle. Un- less this were assigned, no reason would be given for the particular effect ; and it must be regarded there- fore as casual—must be placed among those effects which, as not knowing their reason, we ascribe to chance. Sed contra est, says Aquinas in the article quoted above, quod ea que sunt preter intentionem, sunt casualia: quod non est dicendum de operatione sacramentorum. Ergo sacra- menta requirunt intentionem ministri. NOTE G. p. 323. Illud tamenu quod est sacramenti effectus, non impetra- tur oratione Ecclesiz vel ministri, sed ex merito passionis Christi, cujus virtus operatur in Sacramentis: ut dictum est. Unde effectus sacramenti non datur melior per me- liorem ministrum: aliquid tamen annexum impetrari po- test recipienti Sacramentum, per devotionem ministri. Nec tamen minister illud operatur, sed impetrat operandum a Deo. Aquinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. txiv. art. 1. Respondeo dicendum, quod, sicut dictum est, ministri Ecclesia instrumentaliter operantur in sacramentis, eo quod quodammodo eadem est ratio ministri et instrumenti. Sicut autem supra dictum est, instrumentum non agit se- cundum propriam formam aut virtutem, sed secundum virtutem ejus a quo movetur. Et ideo accidit instrumento, Mm 530 APPENDIX. in quantum est instrumentum, qualemcunque formam vel virtutem habeat, preter id quod exigitur ad rationem in- strumenti: sicut quod corpus medici (quod est instrumen- tum anime habentis artem) sit sanum vel infirmum: et sicut quod fistula per quam transit aqua, sit argentea vel plumbea. Unde ministri Ecclesia possunt sacramenta conferre, etiam si sint mali. Jhid. art. 5. Potest autem aliquis operari per instrumentum carens vita, et a se separatum, quantum ad corporis unionem, dummodo sit conjunctum per quandam motionem: aliter enim operatur artifex per manum, et aliter per securim. Sic igitur Christus operatur in sacramentis, et per bonos tanquam per membra viventia, et per malos tanquam per instrumenta carentia vita. Ibid. Respondeo dicendum, quod, sicut supra dictum est, quia minister in sacramentis instrumentaliter operatur, non agit in virtute propria, sed in virtute Christi. Sicut autem per- tinet ad propriam virtutem hominis charitas, ita et fides: unde sicut non requiritur ad perfectionem sacramenti, quod minister sit in charitate, sed possunt etiam peccatores sa- cramenta conferre, ut supra dictum est, ita non requiritur ad perfectionem sacramenti fides ejus; sed infidelis potest verum sacramentum prebere, dummodo cetera adsint, quee sunt de necessitate sacramenti. Ibid. art. 9. Respondeo dicendum, quod intentio ministri potest per- verti dupliciter. Uno modo respectu ipsius sacramenti: puta cum aliquis non intendit sacramentum conferre, sed derisorie aliquid agere. Et talis perversitas tollit verita- tem sacramenti, precipue quando suam intentionem exte- rius manifestat. Alio modo potest perverti intentio mi- nistri quantum ad id quod sequitur sacramentum : puta, si sacerdos intendat aliquam feeminam baptizare ut abutatur ea; vel si intendat conficere corpus Christi, ut eo ad ve- neficia utatur. Et quia prius non dependet a posteriori, inde est, quod talis intentionis perversitas veritatem sacra- menti non tollit, sed ipse minister ex tali intentione gra- viter peccat. Ibid. art. 10. NOTES TO LECTURE VIL. 531 NOTE H. p. 325. Regeneratio spiritualis, que fit per baptismum, est quo- dammodo similis nativitati carnali, quantum ad hoc, quod sicut pueri in maternis uteris constituti, non per seipsos nutrimentum accipiunt, sed ex nutrimento matris susten- tantur: ita etiam pueri nondum habentes usum rationis, quasi in utero matris Ecclesie constituti, non per seipsos, sed per actum Ecclesize salutemi suscipiunt. .. . Sicut Au- gustinus scribens Bonifacio dicit, in Ecclesia Salvatoris parvuli per alios credunt, sicut ex aliis que in baptismo remittuntur peccata traxerunt. Nec impeditur eorum sa- lus, si parentes sint infideles: quia, sicut Augustinus di- cit, eidem Bonifacio scribens, offeruntur parvuli ad_perci- piendam spiritualem gratiam, non tam ab eis, quorum gestantur manibus (quamvis et ab ipsis si et ipsi boni fide- les sunt) quam ab universa societate sanctorum atque fide- lium, &c. Aguinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. LXvin. art. 9. NOTE I. p. 326. Cyprianus autem nullo modo sacramentum conferre he- reticos posse credebat: sed in hoc ejus sententia non tene- tur. Unde Augustinus dicit: Martyrem Cyprianum, qui apud hereticos, vel schismaticos, datum baptisma nolebat cognoscere, tanta merita usque ad triumphum martyrii secuta sunt, ut charitatis qua excellebat luce, obumbratio illa figuraretur, et si quid purgandum erat, passionis falce tolleretur. Aquinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. xv. art. 9. Et nunc quoque cum in unum convenissemus, tam pro- vincie Africee quam Numidie Episcopi numero septuaginta et unus, hoc idem denuo sententia nostra firmavimus, sta- tuentes unum baptisma esse quod sit in Ecclesia Catholica constitutum, ac per hoc non rebaptizari, sed baptizari a nobis. Quicunque ergo ab adultera et profana aqua veni- unt, abluendi sunt et sanctificandi salutaris aque veritate. ..Apud nos autem non nova aut repentina res est, ut Mm 2 532 APPENDIX. baptizandos censeamus eos qui ab hereticis ad Ecclesiam veniunt, &c. Cyprianus Jubiano, Ep. UXXILI. Opera, Ρ. 198. Augustine labours to remove the unfavourable impres- sion, that the authority of so eminent a person as Cyprian, a martyr of the Church, is against his own doctrine; some- times by insinuating a doubt as to the genuineness of his epistles ; sometimes admitting the fact of Cyprian’s dis- sent, and artfully palliating it as a pardonable error in so great a saint. NOTE: 1. ps 33h. “Τὸ (the word Species) is a term wherewith the lawyers “are well acquainted, and signifieth all that the ancient ‘¢ Latin writers include in the notion of fruges, wine, oil, ** corn, pulse, &c. And the glossary at the end of the ‘** Theodosian Code, published by Gothofred, extends its “* signification to all necessaries of life, tributes, public ‘* stores of provisions, and not only for the belly, but the * back also; with clothes, and household stuff, jewels, as ἐς also materials for building, timber and iron, passing by «ς that name in both the Theodosian and Justinian Codes, “ἴῃ the writers of the Imperial History, Vegetius, Cas- “ὁ siodorus, &c. In the Theodosian Code there are many “ς laws concerning the public Species ὃ, requiring them to “be brought in kind, and not a composition for them in “‘ money, particularly that the Species of Wine" be paid ‘in kind. There are laws to compel all farmers to furnish ** their proportions of all Species, to oblige men and ships “ὁ ἈΠ waggons for the carriage of them to Rome and “ὁ other places, laws also directing the mixing the sweet “and fresh with the Species decayed and corrupted by “Jong lying in public granaries and cellars. Cassiodorus ‘* in his Epistles, issues out orders for the providing of the & Tributa in ipsis Speciebus inferri. Non sunt pretia specierum, sed ipse que postulantur Species inferende. Codea Theodos. lib. XI. tit. 2. leg. 4. h Speciem Vini. Jéid. Leg. II. NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 533 << Species of bacon, wheat, cheese, wine, and iron'. And “¢ the law-notion of the term, I conceive, took its rise from ‘the great variety of necessaries of several sorts and “ὁ kinds that are requisite for the subsistence of armies or “€ great cities, or else from the variety of such provisions “¢ paid in the nature of rents or tribute.” “Now as the word Sacrament is generally acknow- «ς ledged to be a term borrowed from the Roman military “* laws, so probably was the word Species ; and as corn ‘“ and wine, and other stores for the public use, either of “the prince, the city, or army, go by that name, espe- “ cially what came in by way of pension or tribute, so it «ς is not unlikely that the oblations of the faithful, brought “to the altar as a tribute to God for the use of his holy «ὁ table, consisting of bread and wine, the two main sup- «ς ports of life, might in allusion thereunto be called Spe- “< cies by Ecclesiastic writers.” Fatramn on the Body and Blood of the Lord, Appendix by the Editor, p. 433—435. London, 1688. NOTE J. p. 333. Leotheric, Archbishop of Sens, was a disciple at Rheims, of the celebrated Gerbert, whose name stands almost alone in the annals of philosophy in the Xth century, and whose merits, under the patronage of the Emperor Otho III. af- terwards exalted him to the papal throne. Leotheric died in 1032. His doubts, de veritate corporis et sanguinis Domini, appear to have attracted notice about 1004. See Du Boullay, Hist. dead. Paris. tom. 1. pp. 354, 402. He submitted however to correction, and we hear nothing more of any agitation of the subject from him. Berenger appears to have been supported by numerous partisans. Lanfranc complains of his popularity as ob- i Speciem laridi, lib. Il. Ep. XII. Tritici speciem, lib. III]. Ep. ΧΙ), Vini, tritici, panici speciem, lib. XII. Ep. XXVI. Vini, olei, vel tritici species, lib. XII. Ep. XXIII. Casei et vini Palmatiani species, lib. XII. Ep. XII. De ferro, lib. II]. Ep. XXV. Convenit itaque hance speciem dili- genti indagatione rimari. ΐ Mm 3, 534 APPENDIX. tained by improper means. Hoc garriunt, he says, disci- puli atque sequaces tui, subversores quidem aliorum, et ipsi auro et argento, ceteraque pecunia tua, a te subversi, errantes, et alios in errorem mittentes. Lanfranc. De Corp. et Sang. Dom. c. 20. Oper. p. 247. NOTE K. p. 335. Respondeo dicendum, quod sacramenta (sicut dictum est) adhibentur ad hominum sanctificationem ; sicut que- dam signa. ‘Tripliciter ergo considerari possunt: et quo- libet modo congruit eis quod verba rebus sensibilibus ad- jungantur. Primo enim possunt considerari ex parte cause sanctificantis, que est verbum incarnatum: cui sacramen- tum quodammodo conformatur, in hoc quod rei sensibili verbum adhibetur, sicut, in mysterio Incarnationis, carni sensibili est verbum Dei unitum, &c. dquinas, Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. Lx. art. 5. Sed contra est, quod Ambrosius dicit in libro de sacra- mentis. Si tanta est vis in sermone Domini Jesu, ut in- ciperent esse que non erant, quanto magis operatorius est, ut sint que erant, et in aliud commutentur? Et sic quod erat panis ante consecrationem, jam corpus Christi est post consecrationem: quia sermo Christi in aliud creaturam mutat. Respondeo dicendum, quod quidam dixerunt nullam vir- tutem creatam esse, nec in predictis verbis ad transub- stantiationem faciendam; nec etiam in aliis sacramento- rum formis, vel etiam in ipsis sacramentis, ad inducendos sacramentorum effectus. Quod (sicut supra habitum est) et dictis sanctorum repugnat, et derogat dignitati sacra- mentorum nove legis. Unde cum hoc sacramentum sit pre ceteris dignius, sicut supra dictum est, consequens est, quod in verbis formalibus hujus sacramenti sit quedam virtus creata, ad conversionem hujus sacramenti facien- dam; instrumentalis tamen, sicut et in aliis sacramentis, sicut supra dictum est. Cum enim hec verba ex persona Christi proferantur ex ejus mandato, consequuntur virtu- NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 535 tem instrumentalem a Christo; sicut et cztera ejus facta vel dicta habent instrumentaliter salutiferam virtutem, ut supra dictum est. IJhid. qu. LXXViII. art. 4. Et ideo aliter dicendum est, quod sicut preedictum est, hec locutio habet virtutem factivam conversionis panis in corpus Christi: et ideo comparatur ad alias locutiones, que habent solum vim significativam, et non factivam, sicut comparatur conceptio intellectus practici, que est factiva rei, conceptioni intellectus nostri speculativi, que est accepta a rebus: nam voces sunt signa intellectuum, secundum Philosophum. Et ideo sicut conceptio in- tellectus practici non presupponit rem conceptam, sed facit eam; ita veritas hujus locutionis non presupponit rem significatam, sed facit eam; sic enim se habet ver- bum Dei ad res factas per verbum. bid. art. 5. We may see from this last passage particularly the con- nexion of Transubstantiation with the scholastic theory of the Trinity. The Word of God is the Divine conception expressed, and by its utterance, carrying creative efficacy: so also the words of consecration are the divine conception going forth actively, and bringing down Christ with trans- forming power to the creatures of bread and wine. It followed from this doctrine, that all who participate of the consecrated elements, whatever may be their dispo- sition of mind, participate of Christ. Aquinas accordingly is forced to admit, that even if the consecrated host should be eaten by mice or dogs, the substance of Christ still does not cease to be under the species, so long as the species remain‘. To obviate this inconvenience, a distinction was drawn between receiving the body of Christ in essence, or merely sacramentally, and receiving it spiritually, or with salutary efficacy. Thus Lanfranc says: Est quidem etiam peccatoribus, et indigne sumentibus, vera Christi caro, ve- rusque sanguis, sed essentia, non salubri efficientia!. The same doctrine is expressed under the technical k Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. LXXX. art. 3. 1 De Corp. et Sang. Dom. c. 20. Oper. p. 248. Mm 4 536 APPENDIX. terms opus operatum and opus operantis: the former be- ing the spiritual power or grace attached to the visible sign; the latter, the part which, either the minister, or the recipient acts, and on which the application of the grace, the opus operatum, depends. The materialism involved in the speculation should not pass unnoticed. ‘The effect οἵ. the sacrament takes place, unless the recipient opposes an obstacle [obicem] ; in which case the sacred instrument, from the want of a proper matter to act on, is obstructed in its operation. NOTE K. p. 339. Aquinas labours hard to reconcile these miraculous ap- pearances with the doctrine of Transubstantiation. He has a question on the point; ‘“‘ Whether when in this sa- ** crament there appears miraculously flesh, or a child, the ** body of Christ be truly there.”” The appearance, he says, may sometimes be explained by the change taking place in the eye of the individual who beholds it, whilst by others or by the same person at another time, only the species of bread is seen. And yet there is no deception, he adds ; because the effect is divinely produced, in order to the re- presentation of the truth: quoting Augustine to the pur- port that, “‘when a fiction refers to some signification, it is “ὁ not a falsehood, but a figure of the truth.” But he ad- mits that there are instances also of the miraculous change being external, in the sacrament itself: and rejecting the speculation which explained it as an appearance of Christ under the proper species, on account of other difficulties involved in such an account of the phenomenon, he con- cludes that the change takes place in some of the acci- dents; in the colour, for instance, or figure, of the con- secrated bread, whilst the dimensions continue the same. Neither is there deception, he contends, in this case; be- cause the miraculous apparition is for the purpose of shew- ing, that the body and blood of Christ are truly under the sacrament™. ™ Summa Theol. Tertia Pars, qu. LXXVi. art.8. NOTES TO LECTURE VII. 537 NOTE L. p. 341. The philosophy of Descartes naturally drew the atten- tion of theologians to the scholastic theory of Transub- stantiation, from his division of substance into the two great classes of thinking and extended substances. It was evident that the supposed sole existence of the accidents of bread and. wine after consecration, could no longer be maintained, if such a philosophy were admitted. If the dimensions of the sacred elements still remained, as the scholastics taught ; then, according to Descartes, the substance of bread and wine would be there. Descartes accordingly being attacked on this ground, was driven into explanations, at any rate, no less subtile than those of the Schools, to defend the orthodoxy of his philosophy. He urged, that the superficies of the bread and wine presented to the senses, were not the proper substances of them; but that their substances were, the superficial boundaries between the several internal particles of which they were composed, and other bodies occupying their interstices. The change therefore might take place in these internal boundaries, and consequently a different substance be produced ; whilst the external visible superficies remain- ed the same. Various other refinements were devised by his followers, to maintain their consistency with the council of Trent. A mass of angry controversy was ex- cited on the subject. The character of the whole dispute illustrates the vital importance of the scholastic philosophy to the peculiar doctrines of the Church of Rome. See Brucker. Hist. Crit. Philos. tom. IV. p. 584. NOTE M. p. 343. Every one knows what volumes of casuistry the doc- trines of Penance, Auricular Confession, Absolution, have given occasion to. We have only to look into the forms of self-examination contained in some modern devo- tional works by writers of the Church of Rome, to see the 538 APPENDIX. perplexities thrown into the way of the conscientious and sensitive mind, by this minute philosophy of divine things. What difficulties indeed must have been produced in con- nexion with the sacramental doctrine of Intention, by such a case as that mentioned in the Life of Esprit Fléchier, the French bishop; of a vicar of Paris, who confessed on his death-bed, that he had for many years administered the sacramental rites under a positive secret will of being in sport ? LECTURE VIII. NOTE A. p. 352. I REFER to the following passages, to shew the difficulty which the distinction between what is necessary and what is not necessary to be believed, in order to salvation, has occasioned. “The Scriptures and the Creed are not two different “9 rules of faith, but one and the same rule, dilated in the “Scripture and contracted in the Creed; the end of the “* Creed being to contain all fundamental points of faith, ** or a summary of all things necessary to salvation, to be “believed necessitate medii; but in what particular writ- “ings all these fundamental points are contained, is no «* particular fundamental article itself, nor contained in the “ἐ Creed, nor could be contained in it ; since it is apparent *“ out of the Scripture itself, that the Creed was made and “ς deposited with the Church as a rule of Faith, before the “canon of the New Testament was fully perfected.” Schism Guurded, Bramhall’s Works, p. 402. “And although the distinction be commonly received, “ὁ of necessity of the means, and of the command, as im- *¢ porting a different kind of necessity ; yet in the sense I “ here take necessity in, the members of that division do ** to me seem coincident : for I cannot see any reason to NOTES TO LECTURE VIII. 539 “ἐ believe that God should make the belief of any thing “ necessary, by an absolute command, but what hath an “immediate tendency by way of means, for the attain- “ment of this end, (eternal welfare and happiness of “ mankind :) for otherwise, that which is called the neces- “ sity of precept falls under the former degree of neces- ‘‘ sity, viz. that which is to be believed on the general ac- * count of Divine Revelation. ... . Whatever therefore “is necessary to a spiritual life, is necessary absolutely to “ salvation, and no more; but what, and how much that “is, must be gathered by every one as to himself from ** Scripture, but it is impossible to be defined by others as “to all persons. But in all, Faith towards God and in “ our Lord Jesus Christ, and repentance from dead works, ‘** are absolutely and indispensably necessary to salvation, “6 which imply in them both an universal readiness of “ἐ mind to believe and obey God in all things. ... . But “9 this controversy never need break Christian Societies in “‘ that sense, but the great difficulty lies in the other part “of it, which is most commonly strangely confounded «“ς with the former, viz. What things are necessary to be “ owned, in order to Church Societies or Ecclesiastical “ Communion? . . . . Only I add here, when I speak of «ς the necessary conditions of ecclesiastical communion, I “¢ speak of such things which must be owned as necessary ‘articles of Faith, not of any other agreements for the «ς Church’s peace. I deny not, therefore, but that in case “‘ of great divisions in the Christian world, and any na- « tional Church’s reforming itself, that Church may de- ‘¢ clare its sense of those abuses in articles of religion, and “ require of men a subscription to them: but then we are “ to consider, that there is a great deal of difference between “¢ the owning some propositions in order to peace, and the “‘ believing of them as necessary articles of faith. And this “ is clearly the state of the difference between the Church «ς of Rome and the Church of England... . . So the late “ learned Lord Primate of Ireland often expresseth the © 540 APPENDIX. “‘ sense of the Church of England as to her XXXIX Ar- * ticles... . By which we see, what a vast difference there *‘is between those things which are required by the «ς Church of England in order to peace, and those which “are imposed by the Church of Rome as part of that * Faith, extra quam non est salus, without belief of which “there is no salvation.” Stillingfleet, vol. 1V. Rational Account, &c. 1709. p. 51—54. NOTE B. p. 363. An excellent illustration of the delusive force of abstract terms may be seen in Burke’s Letters on a Regicide Peace. “ That hostile power, to the period of the fourth week in “¢ that month, has been ever called and considered as an “usurpation. In that week, for the first time, it changed “ its name of an usurped power, and took the simple name «ς of France. ... This shifting of persons could not be done «ς without the hocus-pocus of abstraction. . . . Blessings *‘ on his soul that first invented sleep, said Sancho Pancha “the wise! All those blessings, and ten thousand times “more, on him who found out abstraction, personification, “and impersonals. In certain cases, they are the first of ‘all soporifics. ‘Terribly alarmed we should be, if things «ς were proposed to us in the concrete, &c. . . . But plain “ truth would here be shocking and absurd; therefore ** comes in abstraction and personification. ‘ Make your ** ἐ peace with France.’ That word France sounds quite ‘“¢ as well as any other; and it conveys no idea but that of “ὁ a very pleasant country, and very hospitable inhabitants. “« Nothing absurd and shocking in amity and good corre- ἐς spondence with France, &c.” Burke’s Works, vol. 1X. p- 10. Many an ingenious theological theory has been raised in like manner on the mere sense of an abstract term ; for instance, the doctrine of Imputation, which could have no existence but for the analytical power of language. NOTES TO LECTURE VIII. 54] NOTE C. p. 869. Multa enim latebant in scripturis, et cum precisi essent heretici, queestionibus agitaverunt ecclesiam Dei. Aperta sunt que latebant, et intellecta est voluntas Dei. . . . Ergo multi qui optime poterant scripturas dignoscere et pertrac- tare, latebant in populo Dei, nec asserebant solutionem questionum difficilium, cum calumniator nullus instaret. Numquid enim perfecte de Trinitate tractatum est, ante- quam oblatrarent Ariani? Numquid perfecte de poenitentia tractatum est, antequam obsisterent Novatiani. Sic non perfecte de baptismate tractatum est, antequam contradi- cerent foras positi rebaptizatores: nec de ipsa unitate Christi enucleate dicta erant que dicta sunt, nisi postea- quam separatio illa urgere ccepit fratres infirmos; ut jam illi, qui noverant hec tractare atque dissolvere, ne perirent infirmi, sollicitati questionibus impiorum, sermonibus et disputationibus suis, obscura legis in publicum deducerent. Augustin. in Psalm. 54. NOTE D. p. 370. Even Vincent of Lerins, the very advocate of the un- changeableness of church-doctrines, is obliged to allow the gradual accumulation of dogmas. It is easy to say, as he does, that these successive decisions are only explanations of the same truths originally propounded. So they may be in theory, and such may be the historical origin of them. But what are they in fact? As successively en- forced by the authority of the Church, with the same stress, and on the same footing of divine truth, as the original points which they are intended to explain, they become in reality new truths of religion. His argument proceeds on a false analogy, presupposed between personal identity and generic unity or sameness. He supposes it possible, for doctrines to go on expanding and growing, whilst the same being continues to subsist in them, as the human being continues the same in the progress from infancy to matu- 542 APPENDIX. rity. Now there is no similarity between the two cases. The sameness of the human being at different periods of life, is strictly a numerical unity: the one being continues under successive modifications. But where is the evi- dence of the one truth subsisting a priori, and gradually adding to itself? The variation of doctrines is what is evident here; and the only unity that can be affirmed, is a logical one,—one of consonance or agreement. In one case we should say, a real unity consists with great variations ; in the other case, that great variations are not inconsistent with a general unity. But even were the analogy admitted, it would be against his purpose ; for surely it would not de- clare much in favour of the wnity of doctrine, to admit as great a change in it as we see in the successive states of human life. It may be seen from the following passage how he proposes the point. Sed forsitan dicit aliquis: Nullus ne ergo in ecclesia Christi profectus habebitur religionis? Habeatur plane et maximus. Nam quis est ille tam invidus hominibus, tam exosus Deo, qui istud prohibere conetur? Sed ita tamen ut vere profectus sit ille fidei, non permutatio. Siquidem ad profectum pertinet, ut in seipsam unaqueque res am- plificetur ; ad permutationem vero, ut aliquid ex alio in alind transvertatur. Crescat igitur oportet, et multum vehementerque proficiat, tam singulorum quam omnium, tam unius hominis, quam totius ecclesiz, ztatum ac secu- lorum, gradibus, intelligentia, scientia, sapientia; sed in suo duntaxat genere, in eodem scilicet dogmate, eodem sensu, eademque sententia. Imitetur animarum religio rationem corporum: qu licet annorum processu numeros suos evolvant et explicent, eadem tamen que erant per- manent. Multum interest inter pueritiz florem et senec- tutis maturitatem; sed iidem tamen ipsi fiunt senes, qui adolescentes ; ut quamvis unius ejusdemque hominis sta- tus habitusque mutetur, una tamen nihilominus eademque natura, una eademque persona sit, &c. Commonitorium, Ρ. 350. NOTES TO LECTURE VIII. 543 Evidently his notion is drawn from the ancient physical philosophy of Transmutation ; which, by the aid of Realism, he is applying to a logical subject, and arguing from it, a sameness under all the various developments which the form of doctrine may assume. NOTE E. p. 370. It is curious to observe here the manner in which free- dom was secured, by the very advocate of Church-autho- rity, for any new speculations on the doctrines already established. His own conclusions might extravagate ever so widely from the given dogma, the point of outset ; but they were not therefore to be reprobated as heretical, since the Church had not pronounced against the conclu- sion. The same principle is ingeniously stated by Eri- gena, in the form of a just theory of Authority. The pas- sage indeed is interesting in respect to the whole subject of these Lectures; as it throws light on the origin of Scho- lasticism, and confirms what has been already pointed out respecting its fundamental character. D. Admodum urges me talia rationabiliter fieri ; sed auc- toritate sanctorum patrum aliquod munimen ad hoc robo- randa velim inseras. M. Non ignoras, ut opinor, majoris dignitatis esse, quod prius est natura, quam quod prius est tempore. D. Hoc pene omnibus notum est. M. Ratio- nem priorem esse natura, auctoritatem vero tempore, didi- cimus. Quamvis enim natura simul cum tempore creata sit; non tamen ab initio temporis atque nature coepit esse auctoritas. Ratio vero cum natura ac tempore ex rerum principio orta est. D. Et hoc ipsa ratio edocet. Aucto- ritas siquidem ex vera ratione processit, ratio vero nequa- quam ex auctoritate. Omnis autem auctoritas que vera ratione non approbatur, infirma videtur esse. Vera autem ratio, quum virtutibus suis rata atque immutabilis muni- tur, nullius auctoritatis adstipulatione roborari indiget. Nil enim aliud videtur mihi esse vera auctoritas, nisi ra- 1 Page 485—488. 544 APPENDIX. tionis virtute cooperta veritas, et a sacris patribus ad pos- teritatis utilitatem literis commendata. Sed forte tibi aliter videtur. M.Nullo modo. Ideoque prius ratione utendum est in his que nunc instant, ac deinde auctoritate. Joan. Scot. Erigen. De Div. Nat. 1. c.70, 71. p. 39. NOTE D. p. 376. Non peregrina loquor, neque ignorata scribo. Audivi ac vidi vitia preesentium, non laicorum, sed episcoporum. Nam absque episcopo Eleusio, et paucis cum eo, ex majori parte, Asiane decem provinciz, intra quas consisto, vere Deum nesciunt. Atque utinam penitus nescirent; cum procliviori enim venia ignorarent quam obtrectarent. H?- lar. De Synod. p. 498. Item, quando Arrianorum venenum, non jam portiun- culam quandam, sed pene orbem totum contaminaverat, adeo ut prope cunctis Latini sermonis episcopis, partim vi, partim fraude, deceptis, caligo queedam mentibus offun- deretur, quidnam potissimum in tanta rerum confusione sequendum foret, &c. Vincent. Lirinens. Commonit. p.319. ed. Baluz. NOTE E. p. 376. The extent of the popularity of Pelagianism at its rise, appears from what has been already observed in regard to this point”. Inthe XIVth century Bradwardine, surnamed the Profound Doctor, felt himself roused to vindicate “ the “ cause of God” by the Pelagianism of the times, com- plaining that the whole world was gone after Pelagius. NOTE F. p. 379. The Apostles’ Creed states nothing but facts. The transition is immense from this to the scholastic specula- tions involved in the Nicene and Athanasian Creeds. Both these last indeed are logical definitions of the high subject of which they treat, differing from each other only in point of comprehensiveness and exactness. A definition in spe- n P, 48s—488, NOTES TO LECTURE VIII. 545 culative theology would necessarily be imperfect, so long as disputation was actively proceeding on the matter de- fined. New ideas would be continually introduced into the discussion, and a term or a description that seemed before sufficiently exclusive of notions foreign to the subject, would require to be further fenced round with new limitations. Thus the term Consubstantial, which at one time was heterodox, when the tendency was to “‘ con- “ found the persons” of the Trinity, would become neces- sary, and consequently orthodox, when the tendency was the other way, “ to divide the substance.”’” It was a re- quisite limitation in the Nicene Creed, of the assertion previously made concerning Christ’s derivation from the Father; since that assertion taken in itself might include also the Gnostic and Arian notions. The addition of the term in this place, applied the restriction just where it was wanted, and brought the terms of the proposed definition more immediately on the point to be defined. Thus Hilary, in explaining the term, recommends the cau- tious mode of applying it; by not setting out, that is, with declaring one substance, but adding it, after having first stated the relations of the Father and the Son°®. The more we examine into the Trinitarian Contro- versies, the more will this form of definition evidence itself to our view in these two Creeds. We shall find the idea of the Divine Being gradually expanded in each; whilst at the same time a more restricted and exclusive set of cha- racteristics are successively brought before us; each of which has been ground won from the heretic by hard- fought debate. ‘The copious particularity of the Athana- sian Creed still more illustrates the logical nature of the formularies. There we have the terms of a definition strongly put in contrast with each other, so that each in succession may limit that which precedes. Does a pre-_ ceding term taken in itself include in its meaning any of the theories which the Church has rejected :—immediately a . De Synodis, Oper. p. 501. Nn 546 APPENDIX. term is subjoined, which corrects the statement by nar- rowing the extent of the former: as is evident in the in- stance ‘‘ neither made, nor created, nor begotten, but pro- “ς ceeding ?” Where the terms involve numerical state- ments, an air of contradiction is given to this series of limitations of which the Creed will be found to be made up. But this arises, as I have before stated, from the positive notions which we attach to the numbers, instead of regarding them as negative; and generally indeed from not taking them in their acquired controversial sense. The paradoxical mode, in which the several terms are strung together, was probably further designed by the composer of the Creed, to combine with the logical expo- sition a rhetorical effect,—to render the formulary more energetic and more easy to be remembered, or perhaps more adapted to the alternations of choral chaunting, and imitative of the repetitions of Hebrew poetry. The reason indeed of those clauses, in which the contradiction appears most explicit, is the same as that of the others. Definition is what the author is engaged in. Thus, having affirmed the essential attributes of omnipotence, immensity, and eternity of each of the Persons, he is careful afterwards to exclude the notion of distinctness, from that of distri- bution, which his first declaration had asserted. NOTE α. p. 386. It is enough to refer to the reception which the Carte- sian philosophy experienced at Rome, where a decree was passed immediately on its appearance, that no one of any degree or condition should presume either to print, or read, or keep in his possession, any of the works of Descartes ;— or to the clamour raised against the Copernican theory of the universe, and the various shifts to which mathema- ticlans were consequently driven, to evade the threats of the Vatican ;—or lastly, to the well-known persecutions of Galileo. See Brucker, Hist. Crit. Phil. tom. V. p. 284. 628. 637. NOTES TO LECTURE VIII. 547 NOTE H. p. 387. The manner in which the words of texts of Scripture were used in sermons, is illustrated in the following ac- count given by Foxe, in his life of Latimer. « Amongst these, there was an Augustine Friar, who * took occasion, upon certain sermons that Master Lati- ‘© mer made about Christmas 1529,.as well in the Church “of St. Edward, as also in St. Augustine’s, within the “ University in Cambridge, to inveigh against him; for “that Master Latimer in the said sermons (alluding to ἐς the common usage of the season) gave the people cer- “¢ tain cards out of the fifth, sixth, and seventh chapters of “ St. Matthew, whereupon they might not only then, but “always else occupy their time. ... ‘This was upon the «ς Sunday before the Christmas-day; on which day, coming “to the church, and causing the bell to be tolled to a “ς sermon, he entered into the pulpit, taking for his text “the words of the Gospel aforesaid read in the church “ that day, Zw quis es ὁ in delivering the which cards (as ‘‘ is aforesaid) he made the heart to be triumph; exhort- ςς ing and inviting all men thereby to serve the Lord with “ inward heart and true affection, and not with outward ἧς ceremonies: adding moreover to the praise of that tri- «ς umph, that though it were never so small, yet it would ‘‘ make by the best court card in the bunch, yea though “it were the king of clubs, &c., meaning thereby, how the “ Lord would be worshipped and served in simplicity of “the heart and verity, &c. It would ask a long discourse “ to declare, what a stir there was in Cambridge upon this «ς preaching of Master Latimer. ... First came out the “ prior of the Black Friars, called Bucknham, otherwise “surnamed Domine Labia; who, thinking to make a «ὁ great hand against Master Latimer, about the same “time of Christmas, when Master Latimer brought forth ‘his cards, to deface belike the doings of the other, 548 APPENDIX. “ brought out his Christmas dice, casting them to his ‘* audience cinque and quater: meaning by the cinque five ‘“‘ places in the New Testament, and the four Doctors by ‘< the quater : by which his cinque quater he would prove «ς that it was not expedient the Scriptures to be in English,” &e. Fowe’s Eccl. Hist. vol. 11. p. 1903. THE END. ἂν rs" Ae ib ἘΝ ιν ᾿ rae Ὶ t ν ᾿ ἡ “δ ν ὌΥ are — ΩΝ ΔῊΝ f ἘΣ ΤΩΝ Rear e). pO AO ne a ᾿ ᾿ ἃ ‘ liars ᾿ i νὰ ms Ἡ ἈΝ ἣΝ ‘ ‘ μ᾿ ᾿ & δλ. 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