LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. ■BX)7t^ ii^ap Snp^rig]^ Ifa Shelf_..Xi. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. •^^ - THE CATHOLIC FAITH OR Doctrines of the Church of Rome Contrary to Scripture AND THE Teaching of the Primitive Church BY / JOHN HARVEY TREAT, Esq. AUTHOR OF NOTES ON THE RUBRICS, ETC. WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY Rev. J. A. BOLLES, D. D. Published by THE BISHOP WELLES BROTHERHOOD NASHOTAH, WIS. if Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1886, by G. H. Houghton Butler, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. INTRODUCTION In the somewhat remarkable review of "The Faith of Catholics" by the editor of the Literary Churchman, the following passage occurs : " This is a very thorough mode of treatment, and we venture to suggest that the best way to answer this book is to pro- duce a corresponding treatise of equal thoroughness on the other side." At once, on reading this, my mind reverted to a work by John Harvey Treat, Esq., the manuscript of which, so far as he had then gone, was submitted to my inspection more than twenty years since, and which when published will more than meet the demand of the reviewer. According to my best recollection, the plan of Mr. Treat then was to arrange side by side the Catholic Faith and the Roman Faith, with an inexhaustible catena of authorities upon every point, and so thoroughly collated as to defy the cavils of doubt and criticism. The MS., of course then unfinished, was in my possession for several weeks, and I took special pains to call the attention of the clergy to it, and also some of the learned laymen of Boston ; nor shall I ever forget the enthusiastic praise with which the late Richard H. Dana, Esq., returned it to me ; for he hesitated not to say that "If the plan could be fully carried out, it would be the best contribution which the American Church could possibly lay upon the Altar of Religion and learning." More- over, to those of us who knew the singular and more than heroic devotion of Mr. Treat to the study of the Fathers and of Ecclesiastical History at the fountain head, there was a prevailing conviction that God had raised him up for that special work which no other man could do ; as no other man but a Cruden could have compiled the Concordance. From that time to the present I have been looking for his book, and have received the occasional pamphlets from his own press, worked by his own hands, and the " Notes on the Rubrics," as only the advance sheets and harbingers of the great work yet to come. Immediately upon reading the review of Capel, to which I have referred, I wrote to Mr. Treat, calling his attention to the extract that I have made, and asking for in- formation in regard to his work, the MS. of which I had seen so many years ago. To this letter he responded as follows : " I saw by the papers some time since that Capel was soon to put forth an edition of Berrington and Kirk's ' Faith of Catholics.' I have had for many years the first edition in one volume. The book is a very excellent one in many respects, as the chapters on the Authority and Unity of the Church, where a Churchman would find just what he believes. But at the same time, the book is a very misleading one. The authors were moderate Roman Catholics, and state the minimum of belief in that Church. For instance, to prove Transubstantiation they cite Fathers who teach the Real Presence ; to prove Invocation of Saints, passages which teach that the Saints are to be honored : to prove Purgatory, they cite Prayers for the Dead, ths Intermediate State, and those Fathers who taught that according to ist Corinthiane there would be a Purgatory of fire at the day of judgment, though not giving the passages which state that the Blessed Virgin herself, the Apostles, and all men would 11 INTRODUCTION. have to pass through that fire. If you have seen that book, you are already aware of those things. I wonder that the reviewer did not see through them. * * * j have a complete Catena of the Fathers on all these points : as . Invocation of Saints, Immaculate Conception, Assumption and Worship of the Blessed Virgin Mary ; on Purgatory, the Intermediate State, Prayers for the Dead, the Purging fire at the Day of Judgment, and how it differs from the doctrine of Purgatory, the late origin of the doctrine of Purgatory, etc. I would like much to publish these books, but am unable to do so myself. They might be published in parts, like those I sent you some years ago. Any one who will publish them may have the MS. and welcome." ;My object in making this quotation and in the foregoing history, is simply to show my connection with the work and how I became so deeply interested in its publication. That the original plan may be fully carried out, and the faithful and devoted layman of the Church, who is the author, be in some degree rewarded for his life-long labor and study in that department of learning, is my most earnest prayer ; nor have I any doubt that The Catholic Faith will eventually become as much a standard work as any that can be named for the use of theological students and for the clergy. TAMES A. BOLLES. PUBLISHER'S NOTICE. This volume, with the exception of the last article, is the result and outcome of years of hard and conscientious literary labor on the part of the author, John Harvey Treat, Esq. The research necessary for the accurate compilation of a work of this nature, must be apparent even to the casual reader. To the theological student and the clerg}', the book will commend itself as throwing much light on the controversy between the Anglican and Roman branches of the Catholic Church. The manuscript for this work was originally prepared for the author's own use, and not with a view to publication. At the solicitation of friends, Mr. Treat consented to its publication by the Bishop Welles Brotherhood, of Nashotah, Wis., who undertook to have it printed in a series of pamphlets. After the issue of the first pamphlet, it was decided to adopt the book form, as being more permanent and suitable to a work of this character. The Brotherhood then requested me to superintend its publication, which I have done with the assistance and co-operation of the author. The last article, on Papal Infallibility, I prepared at Mr. Treat's request, and for the same I am alone responsible. The aim and purpose of The Catholic Faith is to show that the modern Roman dogmas are at variance with the teachings of Scripture, of the Fathers, and the writings of the more Catholic-minded members of the Church of Rome. In a work of this nature, even with the most careful proof-reading, it has been impossible to prevent typographical errors. It is believed, however, that all errors of this kind have been noted in the Corrigenda. We bespeak for The Catholic Faith a cordial reception at the hands of the clergy, and a merited recognition and commendation from the Church press. G. H. Houghton Butler. PREFACE Some twenty-five years since, while an undergraduate at Harvard, I made a large collection of extracts from the Fathers and ecclesiastical writers, illustrating the faith and practice of the Primitive Church. Having arranged these selections in the manner in which they are now published, they were laid aside. Not many years ago a few of the smallest tracts were printed for private distribution. When it began to be an- nounced through the papers that Monsignor Capel was about to issue a new edition of -Berrington and Kirk's " Faith of Catholics," a venerable Priest of the Church, Dr. Bolles, of Cleveland, Ohio, formerly Rector of the Church of the Advent, Boston, Mass., who had known of my undertaking almost from the first, and had always manifested a deep interest in it, wrote me, urging the immediate publication of the collection. Not having time to attend to the matter myself, I offered, gratuitously, such of my MS. as it was thought desirable to print to the proprietors of the Nashotah Scholiast (now the Church Scholiast), who have undertaken to publish them, the profits to be devoted to the school at Nashotah, which has done so much for the Church. The plan adopted has been to give the Roman Catholic side of the argument in the words of approved writers of that Church, and the extracts from the Fathers and ecclesiastical writers in the original languages, with a literal translation, without note or comment, save in a very few instances. The book is intended to serve as an armory, or text-book, from which weapons can be taken as needed. And now, a few words in regard to Berrington and Kirk's "Faith of Catholics." In 1812 the Rev. Joseph Berrington and the Rev. John Kirk published a book entitled "The Faith of Cathohcs." In 1830, after the death of the Rev. Mr. Berrington, the Rev. Mr. Kirk issued a second and enlarged edition of the work. In 1846 the Rev. James Waterworth published a third edition, greatly enlarged, in three volumes instead of one. He claims to have read all the works of the Fathers — having devoted four years to his task — and made a new translation, besides omitting sundry spurious passages found in the previous editions. The plan of the work, however, was not altered. And now we have a fourth edition, put forth by Monsignor Capel. This book appears to be a very fair one indeed, and so it is in many respects. Messrs. Berrington and Kirk were very liberal Roman Catholics, and give the minimum of what is held by the Roman Church in theory rather, instead of what is held as a IV PREFACE. matter of practice. The propositions on the Authority, the Unity, the Visibility, the Infallibility, the Indefectibility and the Apostolicity of the Church, and some others, are in full accord with the views of all loyal Churchmen. They are not at all doctrines peculiar to Rome, but are also the teaching of the Anglican Church. There are other propositions which are very misleading, and g^ve an entirely wrong impression. For instance, to prove Transubstantiation passages are cited from Holy Scripture and the Fathers which merely teach the Real Presence — having no connection whatever with Transubstantiation — which is the doctrine of the Anglican Church as well as of the Catholic Church in all ages. In proof of Purgatory are cited Prayers for the Dead, taken from the ancient Liturgies, where prayer is ofifered for all the Saints and the Blessed Virgin herself — which latter passage is mostly suppressed — and the doctrine of a purgatorial fire at the Day of Judgment, held by some of the Fathers, and through which all, even the Apostles and tjie Virgin herself, must pass ; none of which things teach the Roman doctrine of Purgatory at all. In proof of the Invocation of Saints and Angels this proposition is laid down, that the Saints in Heaven pray for us, which, be that as it may, is a very different thing from our praying to them. Some spurious passages are cited, but the language of genuiue passages from writers of the fourth century, when, as all who are acquainted with those times know, reverence for the Saints had in very many cases degenerated into a mild form of invocation, is far re- moved from the shocking expressions used in the " Glories of Mary," gathered by a canonized Saint, Liguori, and other approved books of devotion. Nothing is said of the Immaculate Conception and the Infallibility of the Pope, as they were not doctrines of the Roman Church in 1812, when this book was first published. In reviews of the book which I have seen, the misleading character of " The Faith of Catholics " is entirely overlooked. One writer tells us that it is plain that the Fathers were not Protestants, whatever else they were, which is very true ; neither were they Roman Catholics. J. H. T. CORRiaENBA. Page 9. For al read all. 29. " canceling read canceling. 29. ' Belethus read Beleth. 31. " oppose read opposed. 34. " especlialy read especially. 43. " voluptiousness read voluptuousness. 48. " Gelasius read Gelasius I. 48. " gave it read gave it to. lOi. Insert Hosea 12:4 before Century IV. 102. " The Church of Rome after Chapter II. 102. For he read He. 102. Insert The Catholic Church after extract from Becanus. 113. " " " " Chapter III. 122. " " " " Chapter IV. 164. For Athansius read Athanasius. 176. " antetype read antitype. 195. " Rupertus read Rupert. 196. " distinguish read distinguished. 205. " compell read compel. 205. " Chapter VIII. 7'ead Chapter IX. 215. Insert The Catholic Church after Chapter X. 243. For Magistor read Magister. 261. " Ench. read Euch. 282. Insert Century IV. after Matt. 12 : 32. 319. For fullness read fulness. 344. " divested read divested. 359. " blessen read blessed. 366. " Senensis read of Sienna. 391. " Chiefeft read chief est. 392. " TliXvoXi read IJavXoi. 397. Inse7-t Century V. before Gaudentius. 420. For Petus read Petrus. 424. " ftom 7'ead from. 426. Insert Century IV. before St. Jerome. 430. For ftaXiXidi read jia6iki8i. 459. " Translated read Translation. 480. " perogative read prerogative. 508. " concord read concord. 528. " publibly read publicly. 536. " belive read believe. 538. " Commentory read Commentary. THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN. THE CHURCH OF ROME. By the term "Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin," the Church of Rome means, not that our Saviour was conceived and born without sin, as many Protestants think, but that the Virgin herself was conceived and born without original sin, so that never for an instant was she subject to the influence of sin. It was, therefore, impossible for her ever to commit any actual sin, or to err even, in the slightest manner. Century XVI. . COUNCIL OF TRENT. Declarat tamen haec ipsa sancta Syn- Yet this holy Synod declares that it odus, non esse suae intentionis, compre- is not its intention to comprehend in this hendere in hoc decreto, ubi de peccato decree, where original sin is treated of, originali agitur, beatam et immaculatam the blessed and immaculate Virgin Mary, Virginem Mariam, Dei genitricem, etc. — Mother of God, etc. Sess. 5, Decret. de pec. orig., n. 5, p. 20. Century XIX. PIUS IX., BISHOP OF ROME. Declaramus, pronunciamus et defini- We declare, pronounce and define, that mus, doctrinam, quae tenet, beatissimam the doctrine which holds that the blessed Virginem Mariam in primo instanti suae Virgin Mary at the first instant of her con- conceptionis fuisse singulari omnipotentis ception,. by a singular privilege and grace Dei gratia et privilegio, intuitu meritorum of God Almighty, in virtue of the merits of Christi Jesu Salvatoris humani generis, ab Jesus Christ, the Saviour of mankind, was omni originalis culpae labe praeservatam preserved free from all stain of original immunem, esse a Deo revelatam, atque sin, has been revealed by God, and there- idcirco ab omnibus fidelibus firmiter con- fore should firmly and constantly be be- stanterque credendam. — Bulla, Dec. 8, Heved by all the faithful. — Translated in 1854, p. 28, Acta Pii Papae IX., Paris, Offic. Doc, p. 95. ed. 1884. 2 THE CATHOLIC FAITH. J. D. BRYANT. There has existed in the Church, from its commencement, a dogma, which, fondly and lovingly cherished in the Catholic heart, foreshadowed in Sacred Scripture, spoken of by Apostles, Evangelists, Saints and Martyrs, has from various causes remained until now without that solemn definition which renders it essential to faith. That dogma is the Im- maculate Conception of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God. — The Immac. Concep., Pref., p. xi. But [by the Immaculate Conception] it is meant that, at the very moment of her conception, when the soul of the Blessed Virgin was infused into her body, special preventing grace, participating, as it were, in the act of her creation, was present and exempted her from the slightest stain of original sin ; so that it could not be said that sin had dominion over her for the least interval of time. — lb., p. 37. The Acts of the Martyrdom of St. Andrew are cited on page 77 : Et quoniam de immaculata terra fac- And, moreover, as the first man was tus fuerat homo primus, — necessarium created from immaculate earth, it was fuit, ut de immaculata Virgine nasceretur necessar}' that from an Immaculate Virgin perfectus homo, Filius Dei, etc. — Act. et should be born a perfect man, namely, the Mart. S. Andreae, col. 1226, B., Greek Son of God. — P. 77. col. 1225, B., Pat. Gr. T. 2. " The authority of the Apostle Andrew, Roman Catholics think, is sufficient to establish the Immaculate Conception. But if they are so eager and willing to receive the words of the Apostle to establish one doctrine, they ought as readily and cheerfully to receive his authority when it establishes another. In these same Acts the Apostle holds the doctrine of the Greek Church on the Procession of the Holy Spirit. This doctrine the Church of Rome pronounces a most dangerous error, and for centuries has labored in vain to convince the Greeks that they do not hold the Catholic doctrine on this point. Pax vobis et omnibus qui credunt in Peace be unto you and to all who unum Deum, Perfectam Trinitatam, — believe in one God the Perfect Trinity. — verum Spiritum Sanctum procedentem ex the true Holy Spirit proceeding from the Patre et in Filio permanentem. — Id., col. Father and continuing in the Son. 1218, A., Greek col. 1217, A., lb. Cardinal Bellarmine says that he knew a great man who called these Acts into question, and that they were vigorously disputed by grave and learned men before they were received. The ancients knew no such Acts. There were Acts of St. Andrew which were numbered among the Apocrypha by Gelasius, Bishop of Rome, but they were not these modern THK CA'moi.R- FAiril. 3 Acts. These later Acts were never cited by any one before the yth or 8th century. Petrus Damianiis, Lanfranc, and S. fjernard in Serm. in Vigil. Sancti Andreae, cite them, (ireat stress is laid on the fact that these Acts exist in Greek as well as in Latin ; just as if spurious pieces did not exist among the (Greeks as well as among the Latins. THE NE W MONTH OE MAR Y. '' Mary's extraordinary privilege consisted, not only in being pre- served from all actual sin and imperfection, — so that she never offended (iod by any sin, however light, and was ever docile to the inspirations of grace, — but also, in being pure and free from the guilt of original sin, even in her very conception." — Page 42. scripturp:. Cien. 3:15. I will put enmities between Cien. 3:15. And I will put enmity be- thee and the woman, and thy seed and her tween thee and the woman, and between seed : she shall crush thy head, and thou thy seed and her seed ; it shall bruise thy shalt lie in wait for her heel. . head, and thou shalt bruise his heel. EXAMINATION OF CiEN. 3 : 15. The reading of the Vulgate is "ipsa conteret, " — she shall crush The pronoun her in the original Hebrew refers to the Seed of the woman Many ancient Codices of the Vulgate, as well as many of the Latin Fa thers, read " ipse. " The Septuagint, of the version of Sixtus V., an. 1587 reads " aJro'. " The Greek Fathers read " avro^ " generally. Where the Vulgate reads "ipsa" (she) the Fathers often referred it to "Ecclesia, the Church, and not to Mary. Century II. JUSTIN MARTYR. Kal did ravrr/^ ytyevvr/rai ov- And by her He was born, concern- ro?, TTspi ov rdi ro6avTa dra ovh d7tarf/fievro<^, Hard Tj'fv TOV HavXov cpoai'jjv, /\.a- yadhaiy Avvoi 6ov Trjpr}6ai xacpa- /l?/j^, oj5 i6xvp6? nai aitiTyjdaioTapo^ TToXajiiaiv nai cpvXdTTaiy. — In Gen. 3:15, col. 20S, A., Pat. Gr. T. 87. The discourse is changed from one gender to another. For as He said all this to the woman, He now says : He shall observe thy head. It was proper, indeed, that it should be said of the weaker : I will place enmity, etc. ; that there might be no place for deceit. But, concerning the man, seeing that he had not been deceived, according to the testi- mony of Paul, it was proper to be said : He shall observe thy head ; seeing that he is stronger and better fitted for fighting and defence. Century IX. WALAFRIDUS STRABO, MONK OF FULDA. ' Ipsa conterit caput tuum, et tu con- teres calcaneum ejus,' quia et nostri gres- sus praependiuntur a colubro, et Dominus conteret Satan sub pedibus ejus. — Gloss. Ord. in Gen. 3, col. 95, AB., Pat. Lat. T. 113. ' She shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise her heel.' Because also our steps are hindered by the serpent, the Lord even shall bruise Satan under His feet. THE CATHOLIC FAITH. Century X, REMIGIUS, A MONK OF AUXERRE. Ipsa conteret caput tuum. Id est, Kcclesia 'conteret caput tuum.' — In Gen. 3: 15, col. 66, C. Pat. Lat. T. 131. She shall bruise thy head. That is. the Church ' shall bruise thv head." Century XI. BRUNO ASTENSIS, BISHOP OF SEGNl. Conterit autem ecclesia ipsius caput, etc. — Ipse vero invalidiatur calcaneo ejus, quia nisi recte incedat, et in boni operis itinere firmiter gradiatur, mox earn inva- dit, et quasi titubantem supplantare et dejicere nititur. — Expos, in CJen. 3, col. 170, Pat. Lat. T. 164. But the Church bruises his head, etc. — Vet he shall prevail against her (the Church's) heel, because unless she walk rightly,, and step firmly in the way of good works, he soon invades her, and strives to overthrow and cast her down as faltering. Century XVI. THOMAS DE VIO CAJETAXUS, CARDINAL OF S. SIXTUS. Ipsa conteret caput tuum, et tu insid- iaberis calcaneo ejus. Juxta Hebraeum habetur : Ipsum conteret tibi caput, et tu conteres ei calcaneum. Non de muliere, sed de semine ejus dicitur, quod conteret caput Diaboli. — In Gen. 3 •. 15, p. 29, T. i. She shall crush thy head, and thou shalt lie in wait for his heel. According to the Hebrew we have : It shall crush thy head, and thou shalt crush his heel. Not of the woman, but of her seed, it is said that, It shall crush the head of the Devil. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. In the article on the Worship of the Blessed A^irgin may be found many citations from the Fathers charging her with faults and disbelief in common with the rest of mankind. - The present article will treat exclusively on the subject of original sin as connected with the Immac- ulate Conception. The Fathers unanimously declare that Christ our Saviour alone was conceived and lived entirely free from the stain of sin. None of them, when speaking of sin in general terms, saying that it has passed upon all men inasmuch as all have sinned, ever except the Virgin, and some of them include her by name among those who are born in sin and had need of a Saviour ; as she herself declares in St. Luke, I :47: My spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour. The Feast of her Nativity, or of her Immaculate Conception, was certainly un- known in the fourth centurv, as St. Augustine declares that in his time rHK CATllOLIC FAITH. 7 the Church celebrated the Natal days of none but our Lord and St. John Baptist, though she commemorated the Passions of the Saints. In the ancient Liturgies prayers are offered for her as well as for all the holy Patriarchs, Apostles, Saints and Martyrs ; and the ancients believed that at the Day of Judgment she, as well as the rest of mankind, would have to pass through that purging fire which is to try every man's work. (See article on Purgatory, ch. v.) The first time we hear of this new dogma is in the twelfth century, when at its very birth it was condemned by St. Bernard as at variance with reason and Catholic tradition. St. Bernard scouts the idea now entertained by the Church of Rome, that "special preventing grace" at the very instant of her conception, before she could strictly be said to exist, exempted her from the .stain of original sin ; for, he says, she could not have been a subject of grace before she had existence. St. 'Lhomas Aquinas declared it derogatory to the dignity of Christ, in that He is the Saviour of all men, to assert that the Blessed Virgin was not conceived in sin. St. Bonaventura, who, like St. Bernard, was most zealous in his devotion to the Virgin, attributing to her all power, as may be seen in his Psalter and other works cited in another article, says that she was conceived in original sin and that he has never heard any one state to the contrary. This new dogma was condemned on all hands, and so the matter would probably have rested had not Duns Scotus, in the fourteenth century, taken up and vigorously defended the Immaculate Conception. St. Antoninus, who was most devoted to the Virgin, in the fifteenth century, opposed the new dogma. Even up to the fourteenth century, as we learn from Alvarus Pelagius, the Roman Church, though tolerat- ing, did not herself celebrate the Feast of the Conception. Scarcely eighty years ago Bishop Milner, a favorite author with Roman Catholics, declared that the Church did not make the Immaculate Conception an Article of Faith, for the reason that neither Scripture nor tradition delivered anything clearly on this point. Yet, in 1854, Pius IX. declared it an Article of Faith, " fondly cherished in the Catholic heart from the beginning," according to Dr. Bryant, which every good Roman Catholic is obliged to believe under penalty of eternal damnation. What a flood of light must have burst in upon the Roman Church dur- ing the last half century I The various opinions on this subject, in different ages, may be classed under four heads : I. That of the ancient Church, which held that Christ alone was conceived, born, and lived, without any sin, and charged the Virgin with unbelief in her Son and with doubting, when she saw Him in agony on 8 THE CATHOLIC FAITH. the Cross, whether He were the Son of God — a mortal sin now in the Church of Rome. II. That of a later period— about the eleventh or twelfth century — that though the Virgin was conceived and born in sin, yet that she wa^ sanctified when "the power of the Highest overshadowed her," so that afterwards she never comniitted actual sin. HI. That of the Schoolmen generally, that she was indeed con- ceived in original sin, but sanctified at some period, which they did not determine, previous to her birth. IV. That of the Church of Rome of the present day, that she, like our Saviour, was conceived, born, and lived, without the contamination of sin, either original or actual. King James' J 'crsion . bCRIrTuRE Job 14 : 4. Tl~ vci/j tdrai xaha- fju< (XTto fJVTtuvj ovSi £1?, tdv xai f-iia't i)}.itpa~: yaw ecu 6 (jlo' avrov F.Tti tt)^ YV''- — Ed. Septuag. For who will be clean from defile- ment? Not one ; even though his life has been but a day upon earth. Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean ? Not one. — Heb. in King- James' Version. Ps. 51:5. Behold, I was shapen in iniquity : and in sin did my mother con- ceive me. Eccles. 7 : 20. For there is not a just man upon earth, that doeth good, and sinneth not. Luke I : 46, 47. And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord. And ray spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour. Rora. 3 : 23. For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of Ciod. lb. ^ : 12, 18. Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin ; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinne4 : Therefore, as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemn- ation ; even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life. Do nay I ^ersion . Job 14:4. Quis enim erit mundus absque sorde ? Nee unus quidem, etiam si unius diei fuerit vita ejus super terram. — Vet. Vers. Italic. For who will be clean from defile- ment ? Not one ; even though his life has been but a day upon earth. Who can make him clean that is con- ceived of unclean seed ? is it not thou who only art ? — Vulg. Ps. 50 : 7. For behold, I was con- ceived in iniquities ; and in sins did my mother conceive me. Eccles. 7 : 21. For there is no just man upon earth, that doeth good, and sin- neth not. Luke I : 46, 47. And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord. And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour. Rom. 3 : 23. For all have sinned ; and do need the glory of God. lb. 5 : 12, 18. Wherefore, as by one' man sin entered into this world, and by sin death : and so death passed upon all men in whom all have sinned. Therefore, as by the offence of one, unto all men to condemnation : so also by the justice of one, unto all men to justifi- cation of life. THE CATHOLIC FAITH. 1 Cor. 15 : 22. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. 2 Cor. 5 : 14, 15. For the love of Christ constraineth us ; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead : And that He died for ail, etc. Eph. 2:3. Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the i^esh and of the mind ; and were by nature the children of wrath, even as others. 1 Cor. 15 : 22. And as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all shall be made alive. 2 Cor. 5 : 14, 15. For the charity of Christ presseth us : judging this, that if one died for all, then all were dead. And Christ died for all : etc. Eph. 2:3. In which also we all con- versed in time past, in the desires of our flesh, fulfilling the will of the flesh and of our thoughts, and were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest. We nowhere read in the Scriptures that the Virgin Mary was sanctified before her birth ; yet Jeremiah and John the Baptist were. jer. I : 5. Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee ; and before thou earnest forth out of the womb 1 sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations. Luke 1:15. For he shall be great in the sight of the Lord, and shall drink neither wine nor strong drink : and he shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb. Jer. 1:5. Before I formed thee in the bowels of thy mother, I knew thee : and before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and made thee a prophet unto the nations. Luke 1:15. For he shall be great before the Lord ; and shall drink no wine nor strong drink ; and he shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb. Century II. JUSTIN MARTYR. Kai ydfj nav yivo'i dyBpaoTtcov EvpsfjTjdsrai vito xardpav dr. Kara tor v6/uov MoovdiGDi eTtiKardparo'^ ydp elpTjTai Ttdi ui ovk e/ujuevsi tv roii yEypafj-i^iEvoii er rep fJi/3Xicp rov v6/Liov rovTtoirjdaiavrd. Kai ovdei'i dKpif3c^ Tulit esse tuus. Virgo singularis. Inter omnes mitis, Nos culpis solutos Mites fac at castos. — Pars yEstiva. Die 15 Aug. in Assumpt. B. M. V., p. 659. Maria, mater gratiae, Dulcis parens clementiae, Tu nos ab hoste protege, Et mortis hora suscipe. — Offic. parv. B. Mariae, Pars ^st., p. clxxi. Loosen the chains of the guilty. Give Hght to the blind. Drive away our evils. Ask for us all good thing's. . Show that thou art a Mother, Let Him Who was born for us. And condescend to be thine. Receive through thee our prayers. O excellent Virgin ! Meek among all, Make us free from faults, Meek and chaste. Mary, Mother of grace, Sweet parent of clemency, Do thou protect us from the enemy, And receive us in the hour of death. DEVOTIONAL WORKS OF THE CHURCH OF ROME. "The Glories of Mary," by St. Alphonso Maria de Liguorio, Bishop of St. Agatha dei Goti. St. Bonaventura declares that those who are devoted to publishing the Glories of Mary, are secure of Paradise. — Page 17, Introduction. If Jesus is king of the whole world, Mary is also queen of the whole world : therefore, says St. Bernardine of Sienna, all creatures who serve God ought also to serve Mary ; for all angels and men, and all things that are in heaven and on earth being subject to the dominion of God, are also subject to the dominion of the glorious Virgin. Hence THE CATHOLIC FAITn. 6/ (iuerric, abbot, thus addresses the divine mother: "Continue, Mary, continue in security to rei^n ; dispose, according to thy will, of every- thing belonging to thy Son, for thou being mother and spouse of the king of the world, the kingdom and power over all creatures is due to thee as queen." — Chap, i, sect, i, p. 26. This the blessed Virgin herself revealed to St. Bridget : — Therefore he shall be miserable, and forever miserable in another life, who in this, being able, does not have recourse to me, who am so compassionate to all, and so earnestly desire to aid sinners. — Chap, i, sect, i, p. 34, 35. The venerable Alphonso Rodriguez, of the Society of Jesus, was once standing before an image of Mary ; and there burning with love for the most blessed Virgin, broke forth into these words ; My most amiable mother, 1 know that thou lovest me, but thou dost not love me so much as 1 love thee. Then Mary, as if wounded in her love, spoke to him from that image and said : What dost thou say — what dost thou say, oh Alphonso? Oh how much greater is the love I bear thee than the love thou bearest me I Know that the distance from heaven to earth is not so great as from my love to thine. — Chap, i, sect. 3, p. 63. The devout Lanspergius puts these words into the mouth of our Lord: 1 have commended sinners to Mary as her children. — Chap. i. sect. 4, p. 74. Behold, oh mother of my God, Mary, my only hope, etc. — Chap. 2, sect. I, p. 88. St. Francis Borgia, with reason, feared for the perseverance of those in whom he did not find a special devotion to the blessed Virgin. When once he asked some novices to what saint they had the most devotion, and found that some of them were not especially devoted to Mary, he warned the master to watch more carefully these unfortunate persons ; and it happened that they all lost their vocation and quitted religion. — Chap. 2, sect. 2, p. 93. St. Antoninus encourages us, saying : If Mary is for us, who is against us? — Chap. 2, sect. 3, p. 104. He who does not implore the aid of Mary is lost ; but who has ever been lost that had recourse to her? — Chap. 3, sect. 2, p. 136. And to increase our confidence, St. An.selm adds, that when we have recourse to this divine mother, we may not only be sure of her protec- 68 THE CATHOLIC FAITH. tion, but that sometimes we shall be sooner heard and saved by invok- ing her holy name than' that of Jesus our Saviour. — To thee it belongs, as St. B'onaventura also says, to save whom thou wilt.-^Chap. 4, sect, i, p. 149, 154.^ Very glorious, oh Mary, and wonderful, exclaims St. Bonaventura, is thy great name. Those who are mindful to utter it at the hour of death, have nothing to fear from hell, for the devils at once abandon the soul when they hear the name of Mary. — Chap. 4,- sect. 2, p. 163. St. Bernardine of Sienna does not hesitate to say that all obey the commands of Mary, even God Himself ; signifying by these words, that God listens to her prayers as though they were commarids. — Chap. 6, sect. T, p. 202. ^ Yes, Mary is omnipotent, adds Richard of St. Laurence, since the queen,' by every law, must enjoy the same privileges as the King. For as the power of the Son and mother are the same, the mother by the omnipotent Son is made omnipotent. As St. Antoninus says : God has placed the whole Church, not only under the patronage, but also under the dominion of Mary. — ^^Chap. 6, sect, i, p. 203. St. Bonaventura, too : He who neglects the service of Mary shall die in sin. And in another place : He who has not recourse to thee, oh Ma.ry, will not reach paradise. And in Psalm xcix the saint goes so far as to say that those from whom Mary turns away her face, not only will not be saved, but can have no hope of salvation. — Chap. 8, sect, i, p. 256. EXAMINATION OF A FEW OF THE CITATIONS FROM THE EARLY FATHERS CONTAINED IN THIS BOOK. St. Augustine rightly calls her the only hope of sinners (Serm. 18 de Sanctis), since by her means alone we hope for the remission of all our sins. And St. John Chrysostom repeats the same thing, namely, that sinners receive pardon only through the intercession of Mary. — Chap. 2, sect, i, p. 83, 84. Suspecting immediately that this could not be a genuine citation from St. Augustine, I turned to Serm. 18 de Sanctis, but now Serm. 194 de Annunc. Dominica. The Benedictine editors at the outset stamp this Sermon as spurious : THE CATHOLIC FAITH. 69 Opus quippe est imperiti alicujus con- It is certainly the work of some igno- sarcinatoris, qui hue concessit plures ad rant patcher-together-of-pieces, who has verbum sententias superiorum sermonum brought together here many sentences, 119, 120, 121, necnon sermonis 208. — Col. word for word, from the previous sermons 2104, Pat. Lat. T.. 39. 119, 120, 121, and also sermon 208. Then in col. 2107 are the words cited above: . Accipe quod offerimus, redona quod Receive what we offer ; bestow what rogamus : excusa quod timemus. (Quia we ask ; excuse what we fear. (For thou tu es spes unica peccatorum, per te spera- art the only hope of sinners ; through thee mus veniam dehctorum ; et in te, beatis- we hope for pardon of sins ; and in thee, sima, nostrorum est expectatio praemi- Most blessed One, is the expectation of orum.) — Col. 2107. our rewards.) On the words inclosed in parenthesis, the same editors remark : Verba hie parenthesi inclusa desunt The words here included in a paren- in manuscriptis, et in Serm. 208, de As- thesis, are w^anting in the manuscripts, sumptione. — Col. 2107. and in Serm. 208, de Assumptione. No intimation is given as to where the citation from St. Chrysostom may be found ; doubtless for the reason that it cannot be found at all in the works of that Saint. No, Catholic in the fourth century, and, indeed, for many centuries after that age, would have dared to utter such blasphemy. And before this, St, Ignatius, the Martyr [an. no], said the same thing, asserting that a sinner cannot be saved except by means of the holy Virgin, who, on the other hand, saves by her merciful intercession many that would be condemned by divine justice. Some persons doubt whether this passage is from St. Ignatius ; at least Father Crasset says that St. John Chrysostom has adopted it as his own. — Chap. 8, sect, i, P- 256, 257. Neither in the genuine Epistles of St. Ignatius, nor in the spurious ones attributed to him, can any such sentiments be found. Other pre- tended citations, of the same worthless character, from the early Fathers, are to be found in this volume, and, indeed, in most all Roman Catholic devotional works, which, it is needless to say, if they ever existed at all outside of those who wickedly forged them to serve their purpose, can only be found in acknowledged spurious productions attributed to writers who flourished in the early age of the Church. JO THE CATHOLIC FAITH. THE CAIHOLIC SCHOO[.-BOOK. By her we may receive all the assistance which is necessary for us. She is most pow^erful with God, to obtain from Him all that she shall ask of Him. She is all goodness in regard of us, by applying to (lod for us. Being Mother of God, He cannot refuse her request: being our Mother, she cannot deny us her intercession when we have recourse to her. Our miseries move her, our necessities urge her ; the prayers w^e offer her for our salvation bring to us all that we desire : and St. Bernard is not afraid to say, " That never any person invoked that Mother of Mercy in his necessities, who has not been sensible of the effects of her assistance. — Part. 3, ch. 12, n. i, p. 158. If you perform this, you will have a true devotion to the Blessed Virgin ; you will be of the number of her real children, and she will be your Mother, under whose protection you shall never perish. — Part. 3, ch. 12, p. 161. FAMILY PRAYER-BOOK. Despise not, O Mother of Jesus ! the petition of your humble client, but hear and grant my prayer. — Page 151. THE NEW MONTH OF MARY. THE PRAVER OE Sr. BERNARD. Remernber, O most compassionate Virgin Mary ! that, from all ages, it is unheard of, that any one was forsaken, who, placing himself under thy maternal protection, implored thy assistance, and begged the favor of thy prayers. Animated with the confidence which this inspires, I fly to thee, O Virgin of virgins, and mother of my God ! and in the bitterness of my sorrow, I throw myself at thy feet. O mother of the eternal Word ! despise not my humble supplication, but listen graciously, and mercifully grant the request, which from my heart I make to thee. Amen. A FORM OE CONSECRATION TO THE MOTHER OF (iOl), USED KV sr. AEONVSIUS GONZAt;A. holy Mary '. my Mother and Advocate, to thy care, and particular protection, and into the bosom of thy mercy, to-day, and every day, and at the hour of my death, I commend my soul and body ; all my hope and consolation, all my difficulties and afflictions, my life, and the end THE CATHOLIC FAITH. /I of my life, I commend to thee : that through thy most powerful inter- cession, and through thy merits, all my works and actions may be directed according to thy will, and that of thy divine Son. Amen. — Page xi., -xii. Practice. • ASPIRATION. May thy name, O Mother of (iod, be the last sound that escapes my lips. St. Germanus. Page 19. PRAYER. O most holy Mother of our Redeemer, what a deep gratitude do Christians owe thee for thy instrumentality in our redemption ! In giving us Jesus Christ, thou hast given us a Redeemer who is flesh of thy flesh — over whom, as Mother thou hadst dominion — but whom thou didst willingly deliver up for our salvation. Yes, holy Mother, if we owe all to Jesus Christ, who has redeemed us, to thee we owe Jesus Himself ; as it was thy obedience to God's will that caused the designs of His ineffable mercy to be accomplished. O thrice happy Virgin, thou dost dispose thy favors with liberality and love. 1 recommend my.self to thee ; and as thou hast the dispensation of the inexhaustible treasures of God's grace, by thy influence with Jesus, impart therp to me, with a liberality corresponding to my great necessities. — Page 74, 75- PRAYER. Obtain for me, O Glorious Virgin, a sincere conversion, strength and resolution in the hour of trial, and the grace of final perseverance. Jesus can refuse thee nothing ; whereas my iniquities render my prayers unworthy of being regarded by him. — Page 95, 96. EXAMPLE. Immediately before death, he [Leander Vandrisse] seemed to enjoy a foreta.ste of the joys of heaven. "What a happiness I What a happiness I " he would exclaim. " What have I ever done to deserve it. 1 owe it all to the holy Virgin." In these sentiments he expired on the 2Tst of March, 1833. — Page 115. PRAYER. — Unless thou wilt assist me, 1 shall be lost. — Page 122. 72 THE CATHOLIC FAITH. EXAMPLE. He [St. Philip of Neri] lay dangerously sick, and his physicians had little hopes of his recovery. He was heard to cry out on a sudden, '• O most holy Mother I O most amiable Mother ! O most beautiful Mother ! O most blessed Mother ! " The physicians and some clergy- men ran to him, and found him elevated somewhat from the bed in which he lay, and heard him say, "O my dearest Queen, I am not worthy, — I do not deserve that thou shouldst come to visit and to heal me. What shall I do for thee, if thou healest me, for I have never done any- thing good." — They found him, in fact, perfectly restored ; and, on the following morning, he rose, as usual, and applied himself to his accus- tomed occupations, without suffering any inconvenience. — Page 148, 149. EXAMPLE. Whoever has had the grevious misfortune to offend God, cannot do better than fly to Mary, in a spirit of penance, to obtain, through her, reconciliation with God. — Page 185. When in Rome, I saw the following inscription, which is placed over the door of the Church of Santa Maria Liberatice, at the foot of the Roman Forum : SANCTA • MARIA St. Mary LIBERA • NOS ' Deliver Us A • POENIS • INFERNI. From the Pains of Hell. The following prayer directly addressed to the Virgin Mary, is hung up at an altar in the Church of St. Francesco a Ripa, at Rome : Preghiera ed orazione da farsi avanti A Prayer and oration to be offered ITmagine della Madonna santissima della before the Image of the most Holy Ma- Salute venerata nella Chiesa di S. Fran- donna of Salvation, venerated in the cesco a Ripa. Church of St. Francesco a Ripa. O vera Sorgente di vita, O Fonte per- O true Source of life, O perennial enne di ogni nostra Salute, gran Regina de Fountain of all our Salvation, Great Queen Cieli, Maria Santissima, che per le vostre of Heaven, Most Holy Mar}', who by your incomparabih virtu, etc. — Page 3. incomparable virtue, etc. « SCRIPTURE. Oouay Vejsion. King James' Version. Luke I : 28, 30, 48. And the Angel Luke i : 28, 30, 48. And the Angel being come in, said unto her: Hail, full came in unto her, and said. Hail, thou of grace, the Lord is with thee : Blessed that art highly favored, the Lord is with art thou among women. thee : blessed art thou among women. ; , THE CATHOLIC I'AITH. J 2> And the Angel said to her : Fear not, And the Angel said unto her, Fear Mary, for thou hast found grace with . not, Mary : for thou hast found favour God. with Ciod. Because he hath regarded the humil- For he hath regarded the low estate ity of his hand-maid : for behold from of his handmaiden : for, behold from henceforth all .generations shall call- me henceforth all generations shall call me blessed. ' ' ' blessed. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH.. Any one who even carelessly reads the works of the Fathers, will be at once struck with the vast difference between the early writers of the Church and those of later ages, especially from the tenth century down to the present time. While the works of the. later writers abound with expressions of love and devotion to the Virgin, and the Songs of Solomon are applied to her, among the ancients she is only spoken of with great respect as the Mother of our Lord. The decision of the Council of Ephesus in 431, where the title of Seotoho^ was confirmed to her, led the people to pay more honor to her, but she was not yet worshiped. Neither do we anywhere among the ancients hear of any of the numerous societies which have since been instituted to her honor in the Church of Rome. The heretical sect of the Collyridians, con- demned by St. Epiphanius (who also calls excessive admiration for the Blessed Virgin a nonsensical heresy), were the first to pay divine honors to her. They worshiped her under the name of " Queen of Heaven," as the Church of Rome does to-day. The heretic and usurper, Petrus Cnapheus, in the fifth century, first instituted that her name should be invoked in the public prayers of his Church. The early Fathers did not hesitate to ascribe faults to the Virgin, and tell us that on several occasions she was rebuked by our Saviour. The "heretic" Calvin finds fault with Saints Chrysostom and Ambrose for charging her with vanity. Besides, the Fathers say in express w^ords that Mary is not to be adored, but that our worship is to be ascribed only to the Holy Trinity. Even in the ninth century we find that the Virgin was not generally adored, but only venerated and her intercession with God humbly besought. Just compare the sentiments of the writers cited above, with the words of the Fathers, and note the difference in language. See also the Article on Saint Worship, where the vast difference between the ancient Church and the modern Roman Church is more apparent. HOLY SCRIPTURE. The Life of the Blessed Virgin, as recorded in the Holy Scriptures, may be found in Matt, i : 18-25, 2 : 11-21, 12 : 46, 50, 13 : 55 ; Mark 3-31-35? 6:3; Luke 1:26-56, 2:4-51, 8:19-21, 11:27, 28; John 74 THE CATHOLIC FAITH. 2 : I-I2, 19 : 25, 27 ; Acts i : 14. No mention whatever is made of her in the various Epistles of the Apostles, nor in the Revelation of St. fohn. King James' Version. Matt. 12 : 46-50. While he yet talked to the people, behold, His Mother and His brethren stood without, desiring to speak with Him. Then one said unto Him, Behold, Thy mother, and Thy brethren stand without, desiring to speak with Thee. But He answered and said unto him that told Him, Who is My mother and uho are My brethren? And He stretched forth His hand toward His disciples, and said, Behold, My mother and My brethren ! For whosoever shall do the will of My Feather Which is in heaven, the same is Mv brother, and sister, and mother. Do nay I ^ersion . Matt. 12 : 46-50. As He was speak- ing to the multitudes, behold His mother and His brethren stood without, seeking to speak to Him. And one said unto Flim : Behold, Thy mother and Thy brethren stand without, seeking Thee. But He answering him that told Him. said : Who is My mother, and who are My brethren ? And stretching forth His hand to- wards His disciples, He said : Behold My mother and My brethren. For whosoever shall do the will of My Father, That is in heaven, he is My brother, and sister and mother. Mark 3:31-35, Luke 8:19—21, give the same account. Luke 11:27, 28. And it came to pass, as He spake these things, a certain woman of the company lifted up her voice, and said unto Him, Blessed is the womb that bare Thee, and the paps which Thou hast sucked. But He said. Yea, rather, blessed are they that bear the word of God, and keep it. John 2:3, 4. And when they wanted wine, the mother of Jesus saith unto Him, They have no wine. Jesus saith unto her. Woman, what have I to do with thee {ji t^xoi nai doj, yvvai)'i Mine hour is not yet come. Luke 11:27, 28. And it came to pass : as He spoke these things, a certain woman from the crowd lifting up her voice said to Him : Blessed is the womb that bore Thee, and the paps that gave Thee suck. But Be said : Yea rather, blessed are they who hear the word of God and keep it. John 2:3, 4. And the wine failing, the mother of Jesus saith to Him : They have no wine. And Jesus saith to her : Woman, what is it to Me and thee (Quid mihi et tibi est, mulier)? My hour is not yet come. The Rhemish translators make nonsense of this passage here, in order to conceal the rebuke, for such the ancients considered it to be. which Christ conveyed to His Mother. Yet out of the fourteen places in which this phrase occurs in the Bible — eight times in the Old Testa- ment and six in the New — with the exception of this passage, J ohn 2 : 4, they translate as we do ; as, for instance, Luke 8:28: What have I to do with thee (Quid mihi et tibi est), Jesus, Son of the most high God ? THE CATHOLIC FAITH /O Martini, Archbishop of Florence, has: Che ho io da fare con te, O donna? (page 194.) Archbishop Kenrick, in the Four (ios|)els, trans- lated from the T>atin \'ulg'ate (page 461), has: Woman,, whiit hast thou to do with Me? and has been blamed for his translation, as appears from the Preface to his translation of the Acts of the Apostles (p. xii., New York, 1 851), wherein he states that his version has shocked the feel- ings of some, and proceeds to justify his translation. Dr. Lingard, in his New Version of the Four Gospels (page 337), has rendered the passage the same as Dr. Kenrick. Century II. JUSTIN MARTYR. 'Ey jtiev ydfj rep ydi^icp 5id to- Tl tjioi xcxi 6ui, yvvai; r/7 f.n]rfn Xey- fiv ^ tniitXyfc^Ev ■ i/vIkcx 8e Oeddadfjcxi avruv r) jur'/refj r/OeXr/da, jiiT/refja xai ddeXcpuv'^ rovi rd 06A.r/jua zov Qsuv Ttuiovvra^ cov6jiia6e. Kai TtdXir , ure 6/.(a>cafjillero r) /Jadrddda avrov HoiXia, Kcxi ol jiiadroi ovi ebyXada, Tovi noiovvrai to BeXr}i.icx tov Beov avTo? £/iuxKdfji'Cev ditEp ditavTcx Iqy vfjpei TTJ^ i-irfTpd'i Ttap'' avTov vof-ii- 'C,ovTcxi XeyedOai, dioTi r?;? mjTpo'i avTov ovof-iadhELdj]^ ncxi /.icxxcxpid- haidr]^^ xcxTd dvTidicxdToXrjv avrrj'^, vn^ avTov e^axapi'dOr/dcxv fTepm. — Quaest. et. Resp. ad Orthodox. (Op. Spurium), qu. 136, col. 1388, Pat. Gr. T. 6. IRENAEUS, BISHOP OF LYONS. For this reason, when Marv made For at tlie marriage, by saying to His mother : What have I to do with thee, woman? He rebuked her; and when His mother wished, to see Him, He called those doing the will of God His mother, and His brethren. And again, when the womb which bore Him was called blessed, and the paps which He had sucked, He called those blessed who did the will of Ciod. All these things are supposed to have been spoken by Him to the con- tumely of His mother, because when His mother was named and called blessed, in opposition to her, others were called blessed bv Him. Propter hoe properante Maria ad admirabile vini signum, et ante tempus volente participare compendii poculo, Dominus repellens ejus intempestivam festinationem, dixit : Quid mihi et tibi est, mulier? nondum venit hora mea. — Contr. Had-., L. 3, c. 16, n. 7, col. 926, Pat. Gr. T. 7. TERTULLLAN. PRIEST OF CARTHAGE haste at the wonderful miracle of the wine, and wished to partake of the cup of briefness before the proper time, the Lord repelling her for her unreasonable haste, said : What have I to do with thee, woman ? Mine hour is not vet come. ,„< Tarn proximas enim personas foris stare extraneis intus defixis ad sermones ejus, amplius et avocare eum a sollemni opere quaerentes merito indignatus est, non tarn negavit quam abdicavit. Atque adeo cum praemisset : quae mihi mater et qui mihi fratres? subjungens : nisi qui He justly felt indignant, that, while strangers v\'ere intent upon His discourse within, persons so nearly related should stand without, and moreover seeking to call Him away from His solemn work ; He did not so much deny them as re- nounce them. And therefore when He 76 THE CATHOLIC FAITH. audiunt verba mea et faciunt ea, transtulit sanguinis nomina in alios, quos magis proximos pro fide judicaret. — Adv. Marc, L. 4, c. 19, p. igi, Pars 3. Fratres domini non crediderant in ilium, sicut et in evangelio ante Marcio- nem edito continetur. Mater aeque non demonstratur adhaesisse illi, cum Marthae et Mariae aliaei in commercio ejus frequen- tentur. Hoc denique in loco apparet in- credulitas eorum ; cum is doceret viam vitae, cum dei regnum praedicaret, cum languoribus et vitiis mendendis operare- tur, extraneis defixis in ilium, tam proximi abierant. Denique superveniunt et foris subsistunt, nee introeunt, non computan- tes scilicet, quid intus ageretur, nee sus- tinent saltem, quasi necessarius aliquid afiferrent eo, quod ille turn maxime agebat, sed amplius interpellant et a tanto opere revocatum volunt. — De carne Christi, c. 7, p. 71, 72, Pars 4. said, first : Who is My mother and who are My brethren ? subjoining : But they w^ho hear My words and do them. He transferred the name of blood relations to others whom He judged were rather re- lated to Him by faith. The brothers of the Lord had not believed in Him, as it is also contained in the Gospel published before Marcion. His mother in like manner is not shown to have adhered to Him, though other Marys and Marthas were frequently in His company. Their incredulity, finally, is apparent in this place. Whilst He was teaching the way of life, whilst He was preaching the kingdom of God> whilst He was engaged in curing sickness and evils, whilst strangers were attentive upon Him, these who were so nearly related were away. At last they arrive and stand with- out, nor do they enter, not thinking, for- sooth, of w^hat was going on within ; nor do they wait at least, just as if they were bringing something more urgent than that upon which He was then chiefly engaged, but, moreover, they interrupt Him, and wish to recall Him from so great a work. Century III. ORIGEN, PRIEST OF ALEXANDRIA. ' Omnes vos scandalizabimini in nocte hac' Ergo scandalizati sunt universi, in tantum ut Petrus quoque apostolorum princeps tertio denegarit. Quid? puta- mus quod, scandalizatis apostolis, mater Domini a scandalo fuit immunis ? Si scandalum in Domini passione non passa est, non est mortuus Jesus pro peccatis ejus. Si autem omnes peccaverunt, et egent gloria Dei, justificati gratia ejus et redempti, utique et Maria illo tempore scandalizata est. Et haec est quod nunc Simeon prophetat, dicens : ' Et tuam ip- sius animam,' quae scis absque viro pepe- risse te Virginem, quae audisti a Gabriele: ' Spiritus Sanctus venit super te, et virtus altissimi obumbrabit tibi, pertransibit ' in- ' All of you shall be scandalized in this night.' All, therefore, were scandal- ized, insomuch so that Peter also, the prince of the Apostles, denied Him thrice. What ! Do we think that while the Apostles were scandalized, the mother of our Lord was free from scandal? If she did not suffer scandal at the Passion of our Lord, Jesus did not die for her sins. But if all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God, being justified by His grace, and redeemed, surely Mary also was scandalized at that time. And this is what Simeon now prophesies, saying : 'And thine own soul,' thou who knowest that thou didst a virgin bring forth without a husband, who didst hear from THE CATHOLIC FAITH. ^^ Hdeiitatis 'gladius,' et ambiguitatis mu- Cabriel : 'The Holy Spirit shall come crone ferieris, et cogitationes tuae te in upon thee, and the power of the most diversa lacerabunt, cum videris ilium, High shall overshadow thee.' shall the quem Filium Dei audieras, et sciebas ' sword ' of unbelief ' pierce through,' and absque semine viri esse generatum, cruci- thou shalt be struck with the sharp point figi et mori, et suppliciis humanis esse of doubt, and thy thoughts shall wound subjectum, et ad postremum lacrymabiliter thee in diverse ways, when thou shalt see conquerentem atque dicentem : ' Pater, si Him Whom thou hadst heard was the possibile est, pertranseat calix iste mea.' Son of God, and knew was begotten with- — In Luc. Hom. 17, col. 1845, B C, Pat. out the seed of man, crucified and dead dr. T. 13. and subjected to human punishments, and at last complaining in tears and saying : Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me. Century IV. ATHANASIUS, BISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA. 'EiteTtXrjTTE ry ixrfvpiy Xsycor, He rebuked His mother, saying : My OV7CQ0 r'fHEi 7) Gopa fiov. — Contr. Arian. hour has not yet come. Orat. 3, n. 41, p. 591, T. i. There is a passage cited from this Father in most Roman Catholic Catechisms and devotional works. The Doctrinal Catechism, chap. 3, on the Veneration of the Ever-blessed Mother of Jesus, page 291, thus cites it : " They should have ever on their lips the sweet address of the Archangel Messenger, thus paraphrased by the holy Athanasius fourteen hundred years ago : Be mindful of us, O Blessed Virgin ! Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with thee ! Thee the angelical and terrestrial hier- archies proclaim blessed. Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, O Mistress, lady, intercede for us. Queen and Mother of God, pray for us." These words are to be found in detached sentences in Serm. de Annuntiatione Sanctiss. Deiparae, p. 393-401, T. 2 ; particularly in sec- tions 14 and 15 at the end of the sermon. The Benedictine editors long since pronounced this piece spurious ; Spurium esse hunc sermonem nemo There is no learned man now who jam eruditus non judicat, cum sole clarior does not judge this sermon spurious, since sese prodat styli hujusee ab Athanasii dis- the discrepancy between the style of this crepantia. — P. 390, T. 2. and that of Athanasius betrays itself clearer than the sun. Baronius likewise pronounces it spurious : .■\thanasii opus non esse. — Ep. Apol. It is no work of Athanasius, adv. object. Thomae Stapleton, § 3, p. 691, Op. Athanas., T. 2. THE CATHOLIC FAITH. BASIL, BISHOP 'Ent.id)} toii'Vi^ rtdoa ipvxv Tuxfjci ruv Haipov rov itdBovi oiovsi diax- pl6ai rivi vittftaXXero, xard T7)r rov Kvfji'ov qjoovi/r, eiTtovTo^., on TldvTE'i dh:cxySaA.76fJfj686f)£ tv t/iioi, 7rpoq)7/re.vFi 6 ^vjneojv ucxi Ttepi avryi zi]^ McXfjia?, on 7tapf.6Tco6a TQj drcxvpGj, Mai fjXenovda rd y iv6- liEva, Kcxi aKovovda rc^v qjoovc^v, /lEvd TTfv Tov FcxfipirfX /.laprvpiav, /.lerd T7)v aTCopprjTOV yrwdiv r?/? fjEia'i dvXXjjipEGJ?, jLierd rr/r jitfydX?/v roor Bcxv/idraoy tnideicir , yevyde- rai, cpr/6i, rii ucxi TtEpi rip' 6i}y 'i\)vxy]y (?a'A,o?. "Edci ydp roi^ Kvpiov vTtEp navroi yEv6a6hai Bcxvdrov, Hcxi iXadrypiov ysvouEvov rov xo6- f.iov, Ttdrrcx- diKcxioodai ev rep avrov a'i/iian, xal 6ov ovv avrr/<^, ziji dvGoOEv dEdiday^iEvr/i rd Ttspi rov xvpiov, (XTpETcxi TipiOl TEXov6iV £/? 6vOf.lCX TTJr Mop?/', dijbEv hx 7Cpocf.HX.6EGDb xri^ hv- yarpo^ ^lEq/ide., rr/? tcote 'Jtpo6Ev- Ex^jELdrj'^ roj OeoJ Eiord. When the Angel Gabriel had descended to her in the form of a man, saying : Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with thee, alarmed and terrified, she was unable to reply, for she had never been saluted by man. — Thou also canst be a mother of our Lord, THE CATHOLIC FAITH, 8l AMPHILOCHIUS, BISHOP OF ICONIUM. "Opa 7t(^