V / '^ *> '->-** &Z&L AN AMICABLE DISCUSSION CHURCH OF ENGLAND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL DEDICATED TO THE CLERGY OF EVERY PROTESTANT COMMUNION, AND REDUCED INTO THE FOUM OF LETTERS, BY THE RIGHT REV. J. F. M. TREVERN', D. D., 1 Bishop of Strasbourg (late of Aire.) Tunc demum vos Spiritum Sanctum habere cognoscite, quando mentem vestram, per sinoeram charitatem, unitati consenseritis haerere. St. Aug. t. V. Serm. XXL de Pantec. BALTIMORE: PUBLISHED BY LUCAS BROTHERS, 170 BALTIMORE STREEET. n s. V* <#> REPUBLISHED WITH THE APPROBATION OF THE ARCHBISHOP OF BALTIMORE. Baltimoue, November 10th. 1856. • • *lf^ TABLE OF CONTENTS. LETTER I A sJiort account of thefrst establishment of the Chunk if En first geniuses of the Reformation. I would gladly be intoi m d w i th W hat ^con- science they can at the present day refuse to surrender themselves to the appeal Of thf most lea rned men of their own party, and continue any longer obstmately to uphold divisions among the people, that are fatal to all happiness here and h ?c^njure Protestants to read frequently the Votum W«£ ^ ^°fe*^ Suslema Theolo.,icum of Leibnitz, Published in Latin and French at Pan*, 18U. DEDICATORY EPISTLE. XX1U dispositions. Let us endeavor to render general and to bring about an entire reconciliation. To us, as ministers of God, whether Catholics or not Catholics, to whatever country, commu- nion or government we may belong, to us is the lofty enterprise especially delegated. A crew of impious and infuriated monsters [shall we yield to the wicked in zeal?] have conspired in our days against Christ and his alters : Let us re-unite to consolidate and extend their dominion. Let us consign to oblivion our an- cient feuds, and with them the injuries and insults given and received : Let us cast all these miseries at the foot of the cross and join with one voice in recalling the Christian world to unity, ever bearing in mind the rigorous and indispensable precept of our divine Saviour on this subject, as also his prayer, hitherto so imperfectly understood by too many Christians : ' That they also may be one ; in order that the world may believe that thou hast sent me.' St. John, xvii. 21. 23. TREVERN, Former Vicar General of Langres, now Bishop of Aire, (lately translated to the See of Strasbourg) AN AMICABLE DISCUSSION. LETTER I A Short Account of the first Establishment of the Church of England. Sir — I am very sensible of the confidence you are pleased to testify in my regard, by communicating to me the doubts that have arisen in your mind respecting your Church, together with your eager desire to discover the true Church, and by requesting my assistance in this important enquiry. I shall reply to you with whatever zeal is at my command : on that score, you shall have all that you can desire, though you will discover, no doubt, much to be desired in point of information and talent. My solicitude and my exertions are at the command of any one, who may do me the honor to call for them ; my state of life renders this a duty, and the grateful recollection of numberless favors bestowed upon me in former times by many of your countrymen, converts it into a pleasure, in your particular regard. In this undertaking, I fear no trouble, beyond that which it may occa- sion yourself. Controversial discussions are ill suited to the taste of the times, and all their interest is lost in consequence of the indifferency that prevails under the plausible name of liberality. As you have been unaccustomed to Such subjects, and may naturally be alarmed at entering upon them, I would willingly spare you a laborious discussion, and indeed am of opinion that a simple narrative of the manner in which your Church has been established, will of itself suffice to convinco 2 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND you that you can no longer remain in it with safety. An historian 1 whose acknowledged celebrity is unfortunately sur- passed by his unfaithfulness, has asserted that the history of the English Reformation was its apology. Had he asserted the opposite to this, he would, in my opinion, have been much nearer the truth. Of this you will be enabled to judge by the following brief narrative, in which I shall not contradict him in facts, but shall merely have recourse to authorities, which he himself would have admitted. Eighteen years had elapsed since the marriage, which Henry VIII. had contracted, according to the dispensation granted in 1509, by Julius II. with the widow of Arthur, his elder brother, Catharine of Arragon, daughter of Ferdinand, King of Spain. By her he had many children, of whom the Princess Mary was alone surviving. In 1521, appeared at the court of Catharine the famous Anne Boleyn. She was in her twenty-first year, and was just returned from France, where she had spent seven years in the presence of two successive Queens, and the Dutchess of Alencon, sister of Francis the First. Youth, beauty and the graces set off her person, and inspired the Monarch with that fatal passion, which a few years later drove Catharine from the throne, put Anne in her place, for a time, then sent her to the scaffold, and involved England in a schism, that continues to this day. As soon as it was known at Rome that Cranmer, the successor of "Warham to the see of Canterbury, had taken upon himself to annul the marriage of Catharine in order to facilitate that of the King with Anne Boleyn, the consistory, on the 24th of March, 1533, gave a decision, by which they confirmed the validity of Henry's first marriage with Catharine, commanded the Prince to live with her, and, in case of refusal, pronounced against hiin a sentence of *escommunication. On hearing this, the enraged Monarch determined on breaking with the see of Rome and withdrawing himself and his dominions from the jurisdiction of St. Peter, whose authority and rights he himself had so stoutly 1 Bumot. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 6 defended against Luther. Already were the people prepared to expect a change ; sundry menaces had been sent to the sovereign Pontiff, and many blows had been struck at his jurisdiction. In fine, the Parliament meeting again in November, 1534, seizes hold of the jurisdiction of the Church and invests the crown with it, by an act, that decorates the King with the pompous title of the temporal and spiritual head of the Chm-ch of England. The King is eager to have his new jurisdiction acknowledged in the kingdom : he has a form of oath drawn up to which the bishops and clergy are obliged to subscribe ; whoever refuses, or pretends to raise his voice in favor of the spiritual supremacy of the Pope, is punished with death. Cromwell, Henry's vicar- gcneral, delegated by him to exercise his supremacy, runs over the different diocesses, suspends during his diocesan visits the jurisdiction of those bishops, who carry their cowardly com- pliance so far as to receive letters-patent, by which they acknow- ledge the Prince as the source and origin of all jurisdiction, themselves only exercising a precarious jurisdiction, subject to the good pleasure of the Sovereign. 1 The remainder of this reign was marked by the frequent exercise of spiritual jurisdic- tion, by the suppression of abbeys and monasteries, by various arbitrary dismemberments of diocesses, by erections of new sees, whose incumbents were consecrated and confirmed by letters- patent from the King. While, however, the supreme ruler was maintaining the schism with the utmost severity, he repelled heresy with equal rigor, and at the same time that he was pun- ishing Catholics, who still dared to declare themselves for the chair of Peter, he condemned to the flames the disciples of Luther and Calvin, who were busy enough to dogmatize in his states. But it was not difficult to foresee, that the schism would one day open the door to heresy ; and that, unity being once destroyed, innovations held in esteem upon the continent, would finally appear and gain ground in England. Scarcely bad Henry closed his eyes, when the Duke of Somer- 1 We mud excepl Pi her, Bishop of Rochester, who courageously maintained hifl faith, and lost his head cm the scaffold. 4 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND pet took upon him the guardianship of his nephew, Edward VI. and the administration of the kingdom, at the head of the council of regency, under the name of Protector. He was a Zuiuglian in heart, and had for his confidant, Archbishop Cranmer, who, no longer having reason to dissemble, soon threw off the mask, rnd openly entered into the views of the Regent. The Arch- bishop hoped to get his marriage into credit, which hitherto he hud been obliged to keep concealed. The Protector looked for the spoils of the Church — many others wished to share them with him — nothing but the reformation could serve them all to their satisfaction : it was therefore determined upon. The Duke of Somerset commences by proclaiming his nephew supreme head in spirituals and temporals : he then obliges the Bishops to receive commissions revocable at the will of the King, names commissaries to perform the visitation of the diocesses, and in the meantime suspends the exercise of all episcopal authority: he announces by an edict that a collection of articles of faith is preparing in the council; that it will appear before long, and that they are to hold themselves in readiness to receive it with submission : and in the meantime he forbids any ecclesiastic to preach in any assembly whatsoever. Already had Peter Martyr and Ochin his companion been called to labor in the work of reformation. Both of these were Italian religious, who like the greater part of the reformers, had quitted the monastic state to embrace that of marriage. The announced work at length ap- peared. It took away from public worship its ancient forms, and from ceremonies their majesty. Confession, works of satis- faction, purgatory, prayers for the dead, the invocation of saints, the honor paid to images, relics, and the cross were abolished : the ritual, the liturgy, the mass with its sacrifice, the real pre- sence with transub&tantiation, all are swept away, and England is astonished to behold itself on a sudden become Calvinistic. But by this time heaven appeared to be wearied with so many sacrileges. It removed from the world this youthful sovereign, whose weakness was so shamefully abused. 1 Mary, his eldest ' 1553. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 5 sister, brought to the throne the Catholic sentiments, with which her mother, the virtuous Catharine, had constantly inspired her — aided by the ministers with whom she was surrounded, and above all by the wise counsels of Cardinal Pole, her kinsman, she succeeded in bringing back her people to the obedience of the Holy See. The parliament had itself solicited the reconcilia- tion, which was pronounced by Cardinal Pole, nuncio of Julius III. The affairs of the Church were adjusted between the legate and parliament with as much prudence as moderation. 1 On their return to unity, they resumed the dogmas and liturgy, which had always been received in this great island from its conversion to Christianity to the young Edward. England, although trou- bled with the innovations and the outrages of the last reign, appeared generally to applaud itself for its return to Catholicity — and probably would have done so, much more, had not Glod, whose judgments are inscrutable, refused posterity to Mary, and deprived her, after a short reign, of her crown and her life. She was replaced 2 by her natural sister, Elizabeth, who was indebted for the crown to the last will of Henry rather than to her birth, for she was born in the lifetime of Catharine, his Queen and lawful wife ; and even the marriage of Anne her mother had been declared null, a little before her tragic end, by a solemn sentence of Archbishop Cranmer. It is said, that Elisabeth, convinced of the illegitimacy of her rank, ascended the throne with trembling step, and that being fearful of exciting dangerous commotions, she hesitated about the re-establishment of the Reformation, towards which, however, she had a secret inclination. Her ministers determined her to it, by repre- senting to her that there would be no security for her in union with the Church of Rome, which in its public documents had condemned her birth. " She was well aware," says Heylin, 3 " that her condition of legitimate daughter and the primacy of the Pope could not subsist together." The rupture was then deliberately resolved upon : all that remained, was to prepare the public mind for it. The ministers took upon themselves to 1 Iu.jI. *1558. 3 History of the Reformation. 1* 6 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND dispose the people for the projected changes, and conducted themselves in the business with consummate address. The Par- liament was convoked as early as the following December. In the House of Lords a law was proposed, which abolished that of. Mary, gave to Elizabeth the title of supreme governess in all things spiritual and temporal, with all the rights exercised by Edward and Henry, authorized her to execute her ecclesiastical jurisdiction by commissaries, and, to maintain her supremacy, obliged the bishops and their clergy to take an oath, the formu- lary of which was subjoined to the law. The first reading of this bill caused consternation and dismay among the bishops, who then were sitting in the upper house. In vain did the Arch- bishop of York and the Bishop of Chester, in the name of all the others, oppose their eloquence to the project of the law. It was carried, and but little attention was paid to their objections. It met with more opposition in the Commons. But ultimately the court party prevailed. Thus the ecclesiastical authority was taken away from the Holy See and the clergy of England, the entire spiritual jurisdiction attached to the crown, and schism erected into a law of the kingdom. Elizabeth, after the prorogation of her parliament, enters upon her new functions and proceeds gradually to work. She sum- mons all the Bishops into her presence, impatiently listens to all their representations, then dismisses them, saying, "that from henceforth she shall regard as the enemy of God and the Crown, whoever shall dare to support the pretensions of the Bishop of Bome." After this she sends forth into the diocesses her com- missaries, who upon the refusal of the Bishops to take the ap- pointed oath, declare them to be deprived of their office. They are all, with the exception of the Bishop of Landaff, driven from their sees. They are afterwards replaced by priests attached to government and to the new principles. Parker being nominated to the see of Canterbury, was consecrated and confirmed, ac- cording to letters-patent from the Queen, by some bishops of Edward VI. but who, being canonically deposed since the reign of Mary, had remained without jurisdiction. Parker, in his AND TUB REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 7 turn, consecrated the first, who were nominated after him : in this manner, all the sees were filled in 1562, and then it was, that the new prelates agreed together upon a declaration of faith, which they drew up in thirty-nine articles and which received afterwards, the sanction of the parliament and the Queen. A new order of things now appears in England. Schism, for the second time, is about to be solemnly proclaimed. The nation is to be separated from the rest of Christianity, and is from henceforth to form a separate and independent Church, isolated from the whole world, like the territory in which it is enclosed. But by what right ? By what authority ? Such is the will of her, who aspires to become supreme governess in the Church. By this time, the convocation of the clergy, having taken alarm at the projects of the court, had done its utmost to prevent them, had declared in five articles the apostolic belief upon the dogmas that were said to be the most threatened ; the two uni- versities had loudly joined their voices with the chamber of the inferior clergy upon the four first articles ; the bishops had en- tirely adopted them, and of their own authority, as well as in compliance with the wishes of the priests, had transmitted them to Lord Bacon, the keeper of the seals :' but the declaration of the clergy stops none of these preconcerted measures ; the decla- ration of the spiritual guides, of the bishop, the judges of doc- trines, is put aside and despised ; and by whom ? by_her, whom they pretend to give to the successors of the apostles as supreme governess. From the cabinet these projects are carried into the parliament: on the first reading, the whole bench of bishops rise in opposition. In vain do they object before the peers ; in vain do they instruct their flocks, out of the house, that the oath of supremacy wounds faith and the sacred principles of the government of the Church : they arc not heard; they are stript of their jurisdiction, and driven from their churches: and by whom ? by the supreme govern New subjects are named to fill their places. But how shall 1 Fuller's HiBtory, tin the Synod of 1559. 8 ON THE CHURCU OF ENGLAND this nomination be confirmed, since the right to do it belongs exclusively to the Pope ? By whom shall be changed and over- thrown that order of things, which for centuries had been estab- lished for the communication of power in the Church ? by the supreme governess. She pretends to throw the discipline back to the times when the metropolitans were consecrated and confirmed by the bishops of the province : but this ancient discipline, being abolished by the Church, could be re-established only by it: but, according to the ancient discipline, the patriarch ordained and confirmed his metropolitans himself in person, or by the bishops of the province, his delegates; for so it had been regulated by the council of Nice, can. 4, and by other councils afterwards, as Dr. Field and Bishop Bramhall, to cite no others, confess : but on default of the patriarch of the west, neither the vice-president of Canterbury during the vacancy of the see, nor Bonner, bishop of London, nor Heath, metropolitan of the north, could be in- duced to lend their ministry to so manifest a violation of rule in the affair of Parker ; but these four consecrators, in open revolt against the Church, were without episcopal authority. Hodskins having never been more than a suffragan, suppressed and never re-established, and the other suffragans created by Henry VIII. , Scory, Barlow, Coverdalc, having been canonically deposed under the preceding reign, for cases of marriage; the two latter in contravention to their monastic vows. But supposing them to be possessed of diocesan jurisdiction, still they could not of themselves extend it to a metropolitan and primatical see : but no matter, these irregularities, these defects, these nullities, are superseded in a moment: and by whom, pray? still by the same female and by her letters-patent: by her, who from henceforth, with the diadem on her head and the pastoral crook in her hand, Speaks and commands obedience through her new spiritual lords, as their supreme governess. 1 But whence did she derive this absolute power to undertake 1 Femineo et a senilis inaudito fastu se papissam et caput Ecclesiae fecit. 'Mtart. Ohemnitim in Epist. ad elect. Lrandcbui-g. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 9 such unheard of attempts and to produce so total a revolution ? From her House of Lords and Commons ? Well then ! let her parliament produce to the world the charter it has received from Jesus Christ : let it prove to us that Christ confided the govern- ment of his Church to the powers of the earth. But for our parts, we know, that he has confined it solely to the apostles and their successors. Thus, this parliament, although absolute and all-powerful in what relates to this world, was evidently without right and without power in the concerns of the Church ; it there- fore could transmit no spiritual jurisdiction to Elizabeth — Eliza- beth could not therefore take it away from those who occupied their sees before she mounted her throne, she could not, there- fore, transfer any from them to her intruded bishops, nor could they to their successors. Without right to destroy, repair, or rebuild, her attempts are null from the first. Her innovations all rest upon a false foundation, and the whole structure of the Reformation sinks of itself, and is buried in the hollowness of its own system. 1 1 "An act was passed, by a lay parliament, requiring of the prelates to take the oath, under pain of being expelled from their sees. At the expiration of the time appointed for taking the oath, the fathers who refused it, found themselves driven from their palaces and deprived of their revenues and of all the honors and privileges of their episcopal dignity. So far we make no complaint Let the secular power take back, if it please, the favors it has bestowed upon the Church : we are content. It will injure the temporalities of the bishops; but will leave uninjured the consciences of the subjects. For Jesus Christ has imposed no obligation on the subjects of defending against the magistrates the civil rights and immunities of the bishops, but most assuredly does he require of us to defend the rights that he has himself conferred upon his Church for its preservation, in spite of secular power, even during persecution; rights that no human power ever gave or can ever take away. Yet our adversaries have carried their violence so far as to wrest them from it. Our most reverend fathers are driven from their flocks and from the care of souls; altars are raised against altars; bishops of an opposite party take the places of our own bishops: their churches are occupied, and they are BtiU living; their sees are succeeded to, before they are vacant, before the predecessors had l.l't them or had been deprived of their spiritual jurisdiction bj a sentence of bishops, to whom alone belongs the right of passing it, and even before they had been displaced bv any authority whose decision would be ratified in Heaven, for (ear, it would seem, lesl God mighl acknowledge, U legitimate bishops, those, whom the violence of human power had driven from 10 ON TIIE CHURCH OP ENGLAND There is no need of further discussion — the cause has been tried : the case is determined. The radical and essential defect of competency strikes with absolute nullity whatever was done by Elizabeth at that time. You may, if it so please you, call her work a parliamentary or Royal Church, ever bearing in mind, that it is a human and not a divine establishment. 1 He, therefore, who would belong to the Church of Christ, cannot remain in a Church of the above description. He must go back to the preceding reign, and enter into Catholic unity, in which from the establishment of Christianity in Great Britain to the twentieth year of Henry VIII., your ancestors, more fortunate than their descendants, had constantly the happiness of living and dying. their sees. From these considerations, we concluded, that our ties of dependence, uniting us to our bishops, remained as close and binding as ever, that we still were bound, in conscience, to pay them the same deference and submission as before, and that we could not, without crime, transfer them to intruders, who had thus destroyed Catholic unity, and virtually renounced Christ himself and all his graces." Uodwcll was very just in his ideas of the independence of the episcopal juris- diction. In the principles, which he maintained in 1689, and which he would have had quite other reasons for defending, a century earlier, you read the con- demnation of the proceedings of 1559, drawn out, unconsciously as it were, by one of the first divines of the University of Oxford. — H. Dodwell, de Nupero Schismate Anglicano. See. 3, page 4, 5, London, 1704. 1 Humanam conantur Ecclesiam facere. — S. Cypr. Epist. LII. ad Ant. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 11 LETTER II. On Unity. Sir — I yield to your solicitation, and since you require it, I will discuss, successively, the different articles upon which we differ ; and in the first place, with your permission, I shall com- mence by casting together with you, a general glance upon the spectacle that religion presents in your country. Long did I witness it with sorrow ; a thousand times did I groan in spirit, whilst residing amongst you ; and now, in my state of separation from you, I am still equally afflicted with dismay and pity, so often as I consider, what you were, and what you are. From the establishment of Christianity in your country, to the period, when, for the first time, mention was made of a reforma- tion, your happy ancestors had known but one faith, one altar, and one religion. Bound from without to all the churches of the world, they were within themselves strictly united together : they resorted to the same temples, and assembled around the same altars. Under the direction of the same pastors, they heard the same doctrine and participated in the same sacraments. They all were brethren, all members of the same body of Jesus Christ. The name of a dissenter was not so much as known amongst them. The sweetness of harmony, and the peace of uniformity reigned in families, in cities, in districts, in the whole empire. At the voice of the reformation every thing changed its appearance. What do we behold from the time of Elizabeth ? Shu hud flattered herself, in the pride of her wisdom, and from the grand conceptions of her ministers, that by separating her subjects from the Catholic world, she should mould them into her reformation, and invariably bend them to her law, and that her spiritual supremacy would beoome as extensive as her temporal dominion. Aud behold ! in spite of all her efforts, she could not draw to^er belief the inhabitants of a single county, no. not of a single town or village. Her reformation has ever pro- 12 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND duced new succeeding sects, and affords no glimpse of hope that it will ever reach the term of its lamentable fecundity. From it have already sprung the presbyterians, the independents, the puritans, the socinians, the quakers, the anabaptists, the moravian brethren, the new-jerusalemites, the latitudinarians, the swarms of metkodists, &c. Whilst the civil law admirably maintains its dominion over all your people without distinction, preserves peace and order throughout society, the evangelical law is aban- doned to systems, to opinions, nay, even to the fanatacism of any individual who chooses to erect himself into an expounder and preacher of the gospel, and who possesses talent enough to gain a hearing and procure an audience. Everywhere, altar is raised against altar ; everywhere, by the side of the established Church are to be found rival churches, dissenting chapels, temples strangers to one another, domestic meetings, where, at the same hours, worship is celebrated with different forms and ceremonies, the gospel explained in different ways, and doctrine expounded in different and contrary senses. In fine, since the thorough change produced by Elizabeth, religion, in your country, presents a confused medley of every sect and every form of worship ; a perfect chaos of doctrines, in which each one plunges and tosses, dogmatizing and declaiming as fancy or feeling directs. Men no longer know whom to listen to, what to believe, or what to do. All that we have to do, is to ask ourselves, whether our divine legislator came to give his Church different forms and appear- ances, to be subject to variation according to the caprice, or tast of men : to give to his doctrine and dogmas various and opposite significations : or rather, whether he has not assigned to his Church a fixed constitution, and to his words an appropriate meaning. Whether he has not imprinted on the system of his revelation, whether taken collectively or in detail, that character of simplicity and unity, which is so remarkable in all the works of God, and which constitutes their excellence and beauty, omnis pyHchritudinis forma unitas. We are now arrived at a question so decisively important, that I feel myself bound to spend some time in developing the proofs, that, in my opinion, demonstrate AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 13 the necessity of acknowledging and preserving unity in govern- ment and faith. I shall in the first place, consult reason ; for it will teach us that the dogma of unity is so conformable with, and so analagous to the spirit of revelation, as to appear insepara- bly connected with its establishment. I shall then open the scriptures, and they will shew us the precept delivered by Jesus Christ to his apostles, in the clearest, the most forcible, and the most peremptory terms : and, in conclusion, I shall interrogate the illustrious ages of the Church, ages so justly revered by protestants for purity of doctrine, and they will inform us that unity is the life and soul of Christianity, as schism is poison and death to it. I. Reason of itself can sufficiently conceive that unity must attach to the plan and spirit of our revelation. In fact, what was the condition of the world with respect to it at the coming of our Saviour? You need not be informed. If you except the people who preserved the deposit of the sacred truths, all the others, being delivered up to the corruption of their hearts and the darkness of their understanding, had lost sight of their Creator. Incapable of comprehending how one single being could preside over all, they had filled the world with imaginary gods, produced the most fantastical forms of worship, at one time offering their incense and their prayers to the planets that roll over our heads, at another prostituting them to the produc- tions that spring under our feet, to the vilest animals and the most shameful passions : and in this multitude of temples that covered the earth, the God who created them had not one single altar, unless the one, which Athens had erected to the unknown GW. Such was the deplorable condition of human nature, when there appeared in Judea an extraordinary personage, distinguished from nther men by a character peculiar to himself, incomparable and divine : announcing to the Jews, that the time fixed for the abrogation of their ceremonial law was arrived, and to the nations, thai they were all called to the knowledge of the true God. From the time that he came down from heaven to intru- 2 14 ON THE CIIURCn OF ENGLAND duce among mankind a system of doctrine, reason could no longer admit that he could be indifferent to the various ways, in -which this his system would be understood, or that the most opposite interpretations could be ecpially agreeable to him. It could not admit that it should enter into the spirit and economy of his mission, to replace the multiplied idolatrous societies and superstitious worships, by a variety of separate sects, of incohe- rent and opposite communions ; it could not admit that it was his will there should prevail in his Church, almost as general a confusion of ideas, as prevailed under the empire of blinded reason, and that there should be no better understanding amongst us in the bosom of the true religion, than there was in paganism. Where there exists an opposition of dogmas and a contrariety of opinions, there necessarily is error : and it would be absurd to suppose God indiscriminately favorable to falsehood and truth . Reason, on the contrary, tells us, that the God of all truth, in communicating himself to man, could reveal but one doctrine, and establish but one spiritual government, it being a fact that a difference in government produces more or less a difference in doctrine. Reason tells us, he must have been desirous that his dogmas and precepts, whatever they were, should be adopted just as he had taught them ; that nothing should be added to, or taken from them ; that men should never presume to give them a sig- nification different from that, which he himself had assigned them. It tells us in fine, that he came to display to the world the light of his revelation, to substitute a uniformity of belief in place of a variety of superstitions, to unite from north to south, from east to west, in one single association, under the yoke of the same doctrine and the same spiritual government, so many nations widely differing from each other in interests, customs, climates, prejudices and language : a design too grand for any mortal legislator whatsoever, but which well became him, who was entitled to the homage of the universe. 1 1 "Hear, O ye innumerable nations, all ye men endowed with reason, whether Greeks or Barbarians 1 I call to me all the human race, of which I am the Crea- AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 15 One of your own divines 1 has spoken -well on this subject : '■ Nor is the importance of unity," says he, " much less in these latter days of Christianity, for as much as all divisions in all times destroy that beauty and loveliness, which would otherwise attract all men's admiration and aifection It is not the sub- limity of Christian doctrine, nor the gloriousness of the hopes it propounds, that will so recommend it to the opinion and esteem of beholders, as when it shall be said : Ecce ut Christiani amant. when they shall observe the love, concord, and unanimity amongst the professors of it. And the want of this hardens the hearts of Jews, and Turks, and Pagans more against it, than all the reasons and proofs we can give for it, will soften them, and instead of opening their ears and hearts to entertain it, open their mouths in contempt and blasphemy against it." On the contrary, the proofs of Christianity would easily enter into the heart by the most moving and irresistible of all proofs, the perfect union of Christians among themselves. Where, in fact, are we to look for the cause of this unanimity? How are we to account for this union of mind and heart among the innumerable faithful, strangers to one another in language, customs, climate, and gov- ernment? No human institution could ever have effected so great a prodigy ; Jews, Turks, idolaters, all would have felt its force ; all would have acknowledged and adored a supernatural and divine operation. We may then reasonably conclude, that if men's passions had not revolted against the yoke of authority ; if restless spirits had not been borne away with the mania of dogmatizing, and subtilizing upon mysteries ; if ambitious hypo- tor, by the will oftlie Father. Come to me, and be subjected and united to God alone and to hi- only Word." Tim.-; does Clement of Alexandria represent Jesus Christ, as speaking.in his admonition to the gentiles. And, in another plaee, !h i same lather Bays again : "At his circumcision he received tin' name ofiJeaue, which signifies salvation of tin people \nd truly he then became the salvation of {he people; not of one but of many : yea of all nation.-, and of the whole earth." Ilu mil. in ooo. Domini, inter diveraas. 1 Dr. Goodman in Ids work entitled, •• A Serious and Compassionate Enquiry into tli" Causes of the present Neglecl and ContempJ of the Protestant Religion and the Church of England." Pages 106, Kit Part 2nd, Chap. 2nd, 3d Edition, .London, 1675. 16 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND crites and proud sectarians had not divided brethren, torn the Church and miserably dragged entire nations after them into schism and error, the plan of our divine legislator would have been gloriously accomplished, infidelity would have disappeared, all nations would have been brought over to the Christian reli- gion : from every part of the globe the same prayers would be offered up to our only and adorable mediator, the world would be at the foot of the cross, and heaven-born unity would reign un- disturbed throughout the world. II. Reason has sufficiently proved that it is not merely expe- dient, but necessary, that the economy of Christian revelation be inseparable from the most absolute unity. We will, there- fore, proceed a step further, and pass on to facts. Is it true that Jesus Christ was really desirous that unity should prevail in his Church and in his doctrine ? Are we certain that he ac- tually taught it as an essential dogma of his law ? Let us open the archives that contain it, and first call to mind a principle on which protestants and Catholics are agreed : The principle is, that every one ought to believe and admit what is clearly expressed in the Holy Scripture. Now, therefore, let us see whether the dogma of the unity of the Church, both in its gov- ernment and its faith, is found to be taught with that degree of clearness, which requires our assent, which commands and bears away our submission and our belief. He, who would understand the plan that our divine legislator proposed to himself in coming down upon earth, should collect with care whatever the evangelists tell us concerning it in the different circumstances of his life. These different passages collected together and compared with each other, will prove to demonstration the correctness of the views, that unassisted reason has already taken of the subject. Our Saviour himself shall now open his thoughts, and reveal to us that the end of his preaching and of his death, were, 1st, to call to himself all the nations of the earth; 2dly, to unite them all together in one body, in the same doctrine and sentiments. 1st, St. Matthew relates that, being struck with the humility AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 17 of the centurion and with the faith that animated his petition, our Lord turned towards those who were following him, and said to them : " Amen, I say to you, I have not found so great faith in Israel : and I say to you, that many shall come from the east and the west, and shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven." l On Mt. Olivet, after having foretold the destruction of Jerusalem, and before he announced that of the world, he said to his disciples: "And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in the whole world, for a tes- timony to all nations and then shall the consummation come." 2 We will, moreover, adduce the words uttered by him in the house of Simon during his repast with Lazarus, after he had raised him from the grave. Mary came with great piety to pour precious ointment on his feet : and Judas having censured this affectionate tribute of respect and tenderness as an act of prodi- gality, Jesus vouchsafes to justify it and adds : " Amen, I say to you, wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, that also which she hath done, shall be told for a memory of her." 3 Who does not discover in these as well as in the foregoing words, the intention of the legislator that his law should be announced to the world and that all the nations of the earth should be called unto it? So far, he had satisfied himself with insinuating it on certain occasions ; it was reserved for a latter period to point it out more expressly. After his resurrection it was that he opened himself bo his apostles upon the subject, when he declared to them the greatness and the extent of the ministry lie laid upon them. " doing, " said he to them, " teach all nations.... teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you." * And a! his lit appearance, when on the point of returning to heaven, he again commands his apostles to execute his intentions: he addresses them with these words, the last that have ever been h sard from his divine mouth: "You shall receive the power of the Holy Ghost coming upon you, and you shall be witnesses into me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and Samaria: and even 'Matt. viiL 11. *mv. 14. 8 xrvi. 13. -'xxviii. It). 18 ON TilE CHURCH OF ENGLAND to the uttermost parts of the earth." ' Here then, are all nations, all people, both those who then inhabited this globe, and those who were to inhabit it to the end of time, marked out for the apostolic ministry, and from thenceforth invited and called to Jesus Christ. 2dly, But what then would he do ? Listen, while he informs you: " Other sheep I have that are not of this fold." This he said after having spoken of those, who already were following him, and evidently referring to those who had not, up to that time, heard his voice, that is to say, to all the nations of the world, to whom he ordered it should afterwards be carried : " Other sheep I have, that are not of this fold," (the Gentiles, strangers at that time to the fold, into which the Jews alone had hitherto entered) " them also I must bring, and they shall bear my voice, and there shall be one fold and one shepherd." 2 We here see the unity of the Church, distinctly represented under the figure of one only fold, which contains one only flock, con- fided to the care of one only shepherd or pastor. But who is this single pastor? Jesus Christ was the pastor on earth, and no doubt he continues to be eminently so in heaven, but, in order that, after his ascension, the entire flock might always preserve a pastor at its head, it was necessary that Jesus Christ should substitute a visible shepherd to the end of time, and in fact, we learn again from St. John, that at the moment of his ascending to his Father, in the presence of his disciples, Jesus Christ con- fided to Peter and his successors the administration and govern- ment of all who were his, and with a view to make this great prerogative better understood by all and incontestably recognized in the prince of the apostles, he was pleased to confer it upon him by a commission given thrice in succession: "Feed my lambs, feed my lambs, feed my sheep." 3 You see there is no exception : it is the whole flock, all the sheep who were one day to hear his voice and be united in one and the same fold ; the whole of the faithful, therefore, are confided to the guardianship of one pastor, to the care of Peter, and after him to his successors. Previously to this, Jesus Christ had announced the same pre- ' Acts, i. 8. 2 John, x. 16. 3 John, xxi. 15. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 19 eminence to the same apostle under another figure, and always by shewing that he had but one Church in view, as he was desi- rous that all his sheep should be collected into one fold : and this above all it behooves us to remark : " Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." 1 I beg you to observe these words : he speaks but of one only Church, therefore he did not wish to establish several; there cannot therefore have been several founded by him, but only one for the world, and upon one and the same stone, one only foundation. Ah ! how should he ever endure division and parties in his Church, who has left us the axiom that, ' ' every kingdom divided against itself shall be made desolate ; and every city or house divided against itself shall not stand." 2 We see, moreover, his system of unity traced out most clearly by St. John. 3 At the report of the resurrection of Lazarus, the chief priests and the pharisees take alarm and assemble in coun- cil. " What shall we do," say they, " for this man doth many miracles ? If we let him alone so, all will believe in him and the Romans will come and take away our place and nation." Bat one of them, named Caiphas, the high-priest of that year, said to them : " You know nothing, neither do you consider that it is expedient for you that one man should die for the people and fli.it the whole nation perish not." Take notice of the reflection, which the beloved disciple of our Master subjoins. "And this he spoke not of himself; but being the high-priest of that year, he prophesied that Jesus should die for the nation ; and not only for the nation, but to gather together in one the children of Cod that were dispersed." Such then was the plan of our Saviour and the object of his death: by paying his blood as the ransom i'<>r all men, he died to gather together into one flock, to unite in one body all the children of Cod, spread over the face of the globe, both those who then were living or who afterwards would live upon the great continents, and those who 1 Matt. xvi. 18. n the birth and , Inlitj ." Dr. /■■■ ttt Consul, on the Prophi cios. 24 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND may be, more culpable than our blinded ancestors, if we perse- vere in their schism, and obstinately persist with full deliberation in impugning by our separation, the order and arrangement of our Saviour, and concealing that splendid proof of the divinity of his mission which he was desirous should be discovered by the world, after his death, in the union of his followers. Let us go back to the time when Jesus Christ invoked upon us the blessing of his Father ; let us represent to ourselves the apostles, pressing round their Master, their hearts still burning ^ith the first participation of his body, which they had just re- ceived at the institution of the Eucharist, yet in consternation at the announcement of the treachery which one or the other of them was soon to be guilty of, but afterwards consoled by expres- sions of kindness, and the familiar conversation, which he was pleased to prolong after Judas had abruptly left the assembly ; let us represent to ourselves, I say, the apostles, with their eyes fixed upon their Master, when all at once, raising to heaven his hands, and his celestial countenance, which then was lit up more than ever, with the fire of prayer, and a ray of the divinity, he solemnly pronounced that sublime invocation, some passages of which I have quoted above. How must their attention and their hearts have been suspended in silence, in rapture, and ecstatic delight ! How deep must have been the impression made upon their souls by these words proceeding from his divine mouth : " Holy Father, keep them in thy name, whom thou hast given me, that they may be one, as we also are one And not for them only do I pray, but for them also, who through their word shall believe in me ; that they may all be one, as thou, Father in me and I in thee ; that they also may be one in us, that the world may believe that thou hast sent me." Such words could never be effaced from their recollection ; never could the apostles have lost sight of the pathetic and enrapturing scene where they had heard them. A thousand times must they have repeated them in the course of their ministry to the rising Churches ; a thousand times must they have prepared the faithful against divisions and schisms, and have recommended them to hold inva- AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 25 riably the same language and the same faith, and to remain inseparably united iu oue body and one flock. It would be im- possible to doubt of this, should they even have left us no written document on the subject. But it was the will of providence, that, upon this fundamental article of unity, we should be sup- plied with a guarantee of the common doctrine of all the apostles : we find it in the Epistle that St. Jude addressed to all the Chris- tians then in the world. "My dearly beloved," says he, "be mindful of the words which have been spoken before by the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ ; who told you that in the last time there should come mockers, walking according to their own desires in ungodliness : these are they, who separate themselves, Bcnsual men, having not the spirit." l We are then assured by the testimony of an apostle, that all the others, wherever they went, every where insisted upon the necessity of forming but one body, and have carefully cautioned the faithful against false doctors, who might desire to separate and form a distinct sect. This passage is very remarkable : it is the only one of the New Testament, which attributes to all the apostles any point of doc- trine whatsoever as universally preached by them. As it con- tains the dogma that serves for the defence and the rampart of f.ll others, the Holy Spirit no doubt intended to signify to us that all the apostles had taken particular pains to inculcate it, in order that we might feel the obligation of keeping ourselves more interested in its preservation. Without fatiguing you any more with my argumentation, I will hastily and without much premeditation throw before you the various passages that the New Testament presents us on this Bubject. " And in fine, be you all of one mind being lovers of the brotherhood."* "Take heed to yourselves," said St. Paul to the reunited clergy of Miletus and Ephcsus, "and to the whole flock wherein the Holy Ghost hath placed you bishops, to rule the Church of (Jod which ho hath purchased with his blood. I know that after my departure ravenous wolves will enter in among you, not sparing the flock. And of your own 1 St. Jade, i. 17, is, 10. »i Peter, iii. 8. 26 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND selves shall arise men speaking perverse things to draw away disciples after them." ' You see that the congregations of Chris- tians spread in different places, compose but one church, which Jesus Christ purchased with his blood. You shall now see the same doctrine in the epistle to the Romans, in which St. Paul inculcates first the unity of the body, and then that of doctrine. "So we being many are one body in Christ. 2 .... Being of one mind, one towards another. 3 Now the God of patience and of comfort grant to you to be of one mind one towards another, according to Jesus Christ ; that with one mind and one mouth you may glorify God and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. 4 Now I beseech you, brethren, to mark them, who make dissen- sions and offences contrary to the doctrine, which you have learned and to avoid them. 5 Now I beseech you, brethren, by the name of our Lord, Jesus Christ, that you all speak the same thing and that there be no schisms amongst you ; but that you be perfect in the same mind, and in the same judgment. For it hath been signified unto me that there are contentions among you Is Christ divided ?" 6 Alas ! how often would he have had in after times to repeat this question. And why has it not always been better understood? " God is not the God of dissension, but of peace, as also I teach in all the churches of the saints." 7 And as all the apostles taught with St. Paul, because their doctrine was everywhere the same, and because upon this article St. Jude expressly tells us so. We must not omit the 12th chapter of the same Epistle, which should be quoted almost entire. "In one spirit were we all baptized into one body, whether Jews or Gen- tiles, whether bond or free ; and in one spirit we have all been made to drink. For the body also is not one member but many : Now you are the body of Christ, and members of member. 8 For the rest, my brethren, rejoice, be perfect, take exhortation, be of one mind, have peace ; and the God of peace and of love shall be with you. 9 Now the works of the flesh are manifest, "vhich are fornication, uncleanness, ... enmities, contentions, ... • Acts, xx. 28, 29, 30. 2 Rom. xii. 5. 3 Ibid. 16. nc God and Father of all." 3 Here is unity evi- dently presented in every shape and point of view, in govern- 1 OaL iv. 19, 20, 21. *Gal. ii. 20. "»Ephes. iv. 1. 28 ON THE CIirRCII OF ENGLAND ment as well as in faith, in the body of the Church as well as in the profession of doctrine. The governments of the earth may vary according to the will of nations and the vicissitudes of life ; but the government of the Church founded by Jesus Christ, and purchased by his blood, must needs be one, as are its hopes, its Mptism, its Lord, and its God. "Only let your conversation be worthy of the Gospel of Christ ; that whether I come and see you, or being absent may hear of you, that you stand fast in one spirit, with one mind, laboring together for the faith of the gos- pel :'" And not fighting against one another, and tearing one another to pieces, as the sectaries have at all times exhorted their followers, and unfortunately have too well succeeded. " Fulfil ye my joy, that you be of one mind having the same charity, being of one accord, agreeing in sentiment. Let nothing be done through contention, neither by vain glory 2 Neverthe- less whereunto we are come, that we be of the same mind, let us also continue in the same rule. 3 And let the peace of Christ rejoice in your hearts, wherein also you are called in one body.* But avoid foolish questions....... and contentions, and strivings about the law. A man that is a heretic after the first and second admonition avoid, knowing that he that is such a one is subverted and sinneth, being condemned by his own judgment.* Be not led away with various and strange doctrines." 6 Thus did the indefatigable apostle of nations preach to the world. He still lives, breathes, and speaks in his epistles ; his preaching, beginning with the Church, will pass on with it to the end of time. He never ceased, nor does he yet cease to recall to unity that crowd of societies gone astray for so many ages, to whom, nevertheless, is due the glory of having preserved Christianity in Africa, and carried it to the extremities of Asia, I mean the Nestorians and Eutychians ; he still calls upon the numerous people of the Greek Church, so nearly resembling our own ; and our brethren, the Lutherans, Calvinists, and English, separated in more modern times; he exhorts them, he conjures them all •Philip, i. 27. 2 lbid. ii. 2. ^ib. iii. 16. Died in 430. Ptutbm ■Book 1. against tin Donatiate. 36 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND may shed his blood, but he can never obtain a crown. Out of the Church, and after bursting the bands of charity and unity, you have nothing to expect but eternal punishment, even should you deliver up your body to the flames for the name of Christ.'" 1 Now, Sir, in perusing the reflections that I have laid open before you on the plan of God's revelation, and on the text of Scripture, perhaps you may have imagined that I have carried things to exaggeration. Have I said too much ? You have just heard some of the fathers, who after the apostles, till the fifth age, have thrown most light upon the world. How did they cherish union ! How alarmed were they at any thing that might tend to wound it ! What zeal in applying an immediate remedy ! "What a horror of schism ! They have assigned it its place at the head of all crimes, looking upon it as the most fatal of all prevarications. They understood better than we the spirit of Christianity, and discovered more clearly the noble views of our divine Legislator. Oh ! if these views had been as seriously considered and as thoroughly felt by all Christians, if the neces- sary attention and obedience had always been paid to the pre- cepts of Scripture and to the doctrine of the fathers, the sectarian would never have dreamed of making a party and of dividing the Church, or, if he had undertaken it, he would have found himself forsaken by the people. Wo to us, whom the vile in- terest of the earth have so often turned from the interests of heaven ! Wo to us who are assailed by ignorance and blinded by passion ! But when ignorance, and passion and interest have ceased to blind us, and when truth shews itself to us in full splendor, a thousand times wo to us, if we persist in the separa- tion, after having acknowledged its revolting and anti-christian principle, and the frightful consequences that ensue from it. It would have been easy for me to lengthen these quotations, by adding what has been written upon this subject, during the first five ages by Tertullian, Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Fcrmilian of Cesarea, Theophilus of Antioch, Lactantius, Euse- bius, Ambrose, &c, and after so many illustrious testimonies, 1 Ep. to Donatus. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 37 the decisions of the bishops united in a body in the particular councils of Elvira, in 305; of Aries, in 314; of Gaugres, to- wards 360; of Saragossa, 318; of Carthage, 398; of Turin, 399 ; of Toledo, 400 ; of Constantinople, 381 ; of Ephesus, 431 ; of Chalcedon, 451. I prefer calling your attention to authori- ties, which, for being more modern, will not on that account, perhaps, appear less strong in your eyes, and no doubt will as- tonish you the more. The confession of Augsburgh (Art. 7) : ' We teach that this one holy Church will exist always. For true unity of the Church, it suffices to agree in the doctrine of the gospel and the adminis- tration of the sacraments, as St. Paul said, one faith, one bap- tism, one God, the Father of all.' The Catechism of Geneva (Sunday XVI), teaches that, 'No one can obtain the pardon of his sins, unless he be first incorpo- rated in the people of God, and persevere in the communion of the body of Christ : — Thus therefore there would be nothing but damnation and death for him who is out of the Church Yes, without doubt, all those who separate from the communion of the faithful, to form a separate sect, must never expect salvation as long as they remain in that state of separation.' The Helvetian Confession (Art. 12), speaking of the assem- blies held by the faithful in all times since the apostles, adds : ' All those who despise them and separate from them despise the true religion, and should be urged by the pastors and godly magistrates not to persist obstinately in their separation.' The Galliean Confession (Art. 16) : ' We believe that no one is permitted to withdraw from the assemblies of worship, but that all ought to maintain the unity of the Church ; and that vhoevev strays from it, resists the order of God.' The 18th Article of the English convocation, 1562, teaches tin' same dootrine almost in the same terms. The Scotch confession (Art. 27) ; ' We firmly believe that tin; Church is one We utterly detest the blasphemies of those who pretend that all men, by following equity and justice, what- 38 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND ever religion they otherwise profess, shall be saved. For with- out Christ, there is neither life nor Salvation.' The Belgic confession : ' We believe and confess one only Catholic Church Whoever forsakes this true Church, manifestly revolts against the ordinances of God.' The Saxon confession (Art. 12) ; ' It is a great consolation for us to know that there are no inheritors of eternal life except in the assembly of the elect, according to that, whom he has predestinated, them has he called.' The Bohemian confession (Art 8) ; ' We have been taught that all ought to keep the unity of the Church ; that no one should introduce sects or excite sedition, but that every one should prove himself a true member of the Church in the bond of peace and in unanimity of sentiment.' How strange and deplorable was the blindness of these men, not to have known how to apply these principles to the time that preceded the preach- ing of Luther ! What was so true, when they drew up their confessions of faith, was equally so, no doubt, at that time. Even Calvin teaches ; ' that to forsake the Church is to deny Jesus Christ : that we must be greatly upon our guard against so criminal a separation ; that a more atrocious crime can- not be imagined, than that of violating, by a perfidious sacrilege, the covenant which the only Son of God has deigned to contract with us.' ' Unhappy man ! What a sentence has escaped his mouth. He will for ever be his own condemnation. In 1080, Henchman, bishop of London, wishing to shew the dissenters the necessity of ending their schism, thought he should more effectually accomplish his object, if the Calvinistic minis- ters from without would join their voices with his : he wrote to M. Claude and to M. de l'Angle, ministers of Charenton, and to M. le Mayne, professor of divinity at Leydon : they all three entered into his views and gave him their opinion in writing. De l'Angle sets forth; ' that all those, who, from hatred to the episcopacy, forsake the established Church were guilty of a very great crime; for schism (said he), is the most terrible calamity ' Inst, book IV. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 39 that can befall the Church.' ' Claude exhorts the English dis- senters to consider, ' whether their system is not in direct contra- diction to the spirit of Christianity, which is a spirit of union, of social and fraternal intercourse, and never a spirit of division. My Lord (continues he), I have not the least scruple in having recourse to violent remedies against the procedure of those who form a separate party, avoid the assemblies of the faithful, and withdraw themselves from your authority. Such conduct evidently amounts to a positive schism, a crime detesta- ble in itself and abominable before God and man ; those who incur its guilt, either by being its first promoters, or the suppor- ters of it in others, must expect to render a terrible account at the great day of judgment.' And yet, neither Claude, nor de 1' Angle, nor Henchman, had any notion of applying to them- selves and their predecessors that well-founded threat, they so emphatically held out against the Calvinists of England ! I have under my eye many more passages in which Melanc- thon, Peter Martyr, Gerhard, du Plessis, &c, and before them John IIuss, teach the same doctrine. I turn them aside, to bring before you some of the most distinguished divines of your own Church. James I. the second supreme governor in spirituals, and his theologian, Casaubon. in their reply to the Cardinal du l'erron, acknowledge in plain terms, 'that there is no hope for salvation for those, who are separated from the Catholic Church or from its communion.' ' Touching the sin of dividing the Church,' says Dr. Goodman, 2 that it is of the deepest dye and greatest guilt, I suppose we shall easily agree ; for indeed no body can well doubt of that, who considers what care cur Sa- viour took to prevent it, what pains he took with his apostles that they might be thoroughly instructed and not to differ in the delivery of his mind to the world, and with what extraordinary Btdor he prayed for them upon this very account. John 17, 11. > Collier's Ecd. Hist. vaL 1 1, p. B99 and 000. Folio, edition. 2 A Serious and Compassionate Enquiry into the Causes of the present Neglect and Contempt of the Protestant Religion :my Mtuoibourg. 48 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND baptized in it, he thought he could not leave it without great scandal." Oh! but unity and schism ! did they never enter your mind, my Lord? Elizabeth Christina, Queen of Charles VI., and mother of the immortal Maria Theresa, was desirous before she accepted the imperial crown, of securing the most important of all affairs, her salvation. She consulted upon the subject the most able protectant divines, and they declared to her, by an authentic and pub- lic document, that the Catholic religion also conducted to salvation. On occasion of the projected marriage (afterwards ratified), of the Princess of Wolfenbuttel with Charles III., King of Spain, the faculty of theology at nelmstadt were consulted upon the following question. Can a Protestant Prin- cess, destined to marry a Catholic Prince, embrace the Catholic religion, with safe conscience ? The professors unanimously gave an affirmative opinion in a long and argumentative reply, which they all signed, the 28th of April, 1707. Vou may read it at the end of a small work entitled : " The Duke of Brunswick's fifty reasons for leaving the Lutheran communion to enter into the Catholic Church."* To these decisions, I could join the testimonies of your own instructors, such as Barrow, Hooker, Cowel, Bunny, Some, Morton, Montague, Iieylin, Potter, Laud, Stillingfleet, &c. Of these I shall only cite one, who is of great -weigl it. " I declare, and am bound candidly to declare (says Thorndyke) I know not of any article necessary to salvation, that is prohibited by the Church of Rome ; nor of any incompatible with salvation, that is propounded by her."t What shall we say of so many individuals who, being born and brought up in protestant communions, accustomed to hear of nothing but the errors, supersti- tions, and idolatry of the Church of Rome, induced afterwards by circumstances to examine more closely its doctrine, its principles, and its worship; have ac- knowledged their purity and conformity with the primitive faith and practice) have thrown aside their hatred of it together with the prejudices that had only been recommended to their belief by misrepresentations and calumnious imputa- tions, and have concluded by ranking themselves among the number of her chil- dren, and by defending and vindicating her from the errors and crimes, whi h they themselves had so long been accustomed to lay to her charge. Such, among others, in my country, were the celebrated Cardinal Duperron, the grave and sensible Dcsraahis, the eloquent PelissOn, the learned Morin, priest of the Oi a- toire, and Papin, long a zealous minister of Calvinism, and who, after preaching his errors in France, England, and Germany, came to renounce and abjure them in the hands of the great bishop of Meaux ; and in your country, Challoner, Gother, the two Hays, and the anonymous author of an excellent work which docs no less honor to his heart than to his head.t All these distinguished men, * Sold by Keating, Duke street, Grosvenor square, London, 1814. t Thorndyke in Epilog, p. 146. %An Essay towards a Proposal for Catholic Communion. This is an excellent work, that cannot be sufficiently recommended to the English, who wish to become acquainted with the true Church. It was reprinted in London some few years back at the expense of the late M. Sheldon Constable, of Burton. And to cite more recent examples, I will here call to your recollection two striking conversions, that of M. Nathaniel Thayer, who after being a minister of the sect of puritans at Boston, was converted at Rome, in 1783, and has himself published the AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 49 to whom many more might have been added, have left behind them admirable works, equally useful to those who seek the truth, and to those who are carried on by their zeal to defend it. I can personally assure you, sir, that, having often had occasion, during my long residence in your country, to converse upon the difference of our religions with English bishops and divines, and even with well instructed laics; 1 have always found them of the same opinion and almost employing the same words. They would say to me that " their religion and mine were equally good ; that the greatest part of the differences turned upon ceremonies and points of discipline, and some also upon opinions superadded (would they say), to the ancient belief by our Church, and which theirs had thought proper to retrench ; they consider- ed the Churches of France and England as two sisters, in whom were discovera- ble a family likeness and the leading features of resemblance." Would to God, sir, that this resemblance might become perfect, as it formerly was, and as it ought never to have ceased to be I After the facts and testimonies you have just read, I dare flatter myself, sir, that you, by this time, no longer doubt of the injustice of the imputations cast upon the Church of Rome. They have originated in that sourness, malignity, and hatred, which the spirit of party always produces, and from people unfortu- nately finding it their interest to extend and support the defection. Destitute of reality and proofs, they recoil upon their inventors, and never will they justify the rupture. "It was evil done of them who first urged such a separation."* Calvin therefore was wrong in his conceit, when he wrote to Melanchton in 1552: " We have been compelled to separate from the whole world. "f motives that led him back to Catholic unity ; that of Miss Elizabeth Pitt, a relation of the immortal minister, whose talents and eloquence have so long been the ad- miration and the astonishment of England ; she pronounced her vows at the convent of the visitation at Abbeville, the 26th of November, 1787. I present you with the conclusion of the letter which, she wrote upon her conversion to the cure de Saint Jacques, of the same town, the 20th of June, 1788 : " As for the protestante, who may obtain information of it, I do not consider myself calculated to instruct them, much less to convert them : but I conjure them, as my brethren, whose salvation is most dear to me, to follow one piece of advice ; which is, not to reject, without the most serious examination, the doubts, which must be originated in their minds, if they think deliberately upon it, by the novelty of their belief and its variations since the reformation, compared with the antiquity and unity of the Catholic doctrine ; for the true faith is one ; and must necessarily be traced to the apostles and to Jesus Christ. May it please God to enlighten them, as he has deigned to enlighten me, in order to draw me from the errors in which my birth and education had unfortunately engaged me." Germany presents, in our days, a multitude of enlightened protcs- tants, who have embraced Catholicism, such as the learned M. Schlcgel and his wife, daughter of the celebrated Mendelsohn : M. le compto de Stolberg, not less illustrious for his profound learning than for his noble birth : M. Werner, who from a poet becomes an humble priest, attracts all Vienna to his eloquent discourses, as he had before drawn Berlin to his dramatic representations : the learned Lutheran minister Baron de Stark, a Catholic in private life and still more in his last works ; the celebrated jurist M. de Haller, &c, &c. •Bunny's Treatise tending to pacification, p. 109. t " Disccssionem facere a mundo oto coacti sumus." 5 50 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND To prove, however, that all these accusations were inadmissable, it would have been quite sufficient, without the detail, to have made the single observation with which this note, already too long, shall be concluded. Who are they that have dared to accuse the Church of innovation in dogma, error in doctrine, superstition in practice, and idolatry in worship ? Who are they? The question ,S AUhehetd of all appears Luther, an Augustinian friar ; next Carlostadtius an archdeacon; Melanchton, a professor of the Greek language; all three at W ir- temburg; their party is quickly joined by (Ecolampadius, a monk of the order St. Laurence, near Augsburgh ; by Munster, a grey friar ; by Bucer, a domimcan ; and bv the famous Muncer, who from a disciple, became the infuriated leader of the anabaptists. So much for the first Lutherans. In Switzerland, Zuingbus, the cure of Glaris ; at Geneva, in Switzerland, and in France, Calvin, the young cure of Pontl'Eveque, near Noyon; Theodore Beza, the Latin poet and prior at Loniemeau; Peter Martyr, a Florentinian, who left the regular chapter ot St. Augustine, ran from Italy with Ochin, general of the Capuchins, to dogmatize in Switzerland, then at Strasburgh, then in England, and last of all once more in Switzerland, where he died. So much for the Calvimsts.* ■.-.:, In Scotland, Knox, a monk, a priest, and afterwards the furious disciple of Calvin, whose principles he conveys to his native country, where he puts every thin- into a flame ;t the Earl Murray, the natural, but unnaturally cruel brother of Mary Stuart, who passed from the convent of St. Andrew to the regency of the kino-dom: Buchanan, the ungrateful calumniator of Mary Stuart ;% so much for the presbyterians. In fine, for the reformers of your country, I find a house of lords, with the exception of many lords and of all the bishops; a small ma- jority of the house of commons, together with the Queen and her council. Now what do we discover in the persons 1 have just named ? I touch not here upon selfish motives of ambition, interest, and lust, nor upon the morals and the con- duct of these fiery fabricators of the reformation, which present an appearance any thin- but apostolic. I pass by the scandalous marriages of the priests, and of religious men with religious women, which, when recurring among us in the midst of our impious revolution, have excited contempt and ridicule. || But I ask what was the character of the personages in the ecclesiastical hierarchy I We're they such as Jesus Christ had in view when he said : " Go, teach all nations. I am with you to the end of the world?" Was it to them that he said: "He that heareth you, heareth me; and he that despiseth you, despiseth me?' Was it to them that he promised the Holy Spirit, to come and instruct them in all truth ? But as these lofty and magnificent promises were made to the apostles and their successors, as the apostles, and after them the bishops only, have, at all times, according to the promises and ordinances of Jesus Christ, governed • See Appendix II. t " The ruffian of the reformation," said Dr. Samuel Johnson. 1 It is said that he retracted on his death bed all that he had said injurious to tea character of Mary. II The bantering of Erasmus upon these sacrilegious connections is well known : « (Ecolampadius has just married a tolerably pretty girl ; seemingly this is the way he intends to mortify his flesh. They are mistaken in saying that Lutheranism is a tragical affair; for my part, I am persuaded that nothing is more comic, for the winding up of the piece is always a marriage, as in the comedies. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 51 his Church, decided controversies, and declared as judges what was revealed and what not ; it was an easy and simple thing to stop the mouths of the innovators, by unanimously replying to them on all sides : " Who are you, that you must meddle with doctrinal points, must decide that such a doctrine is an error, such a point of discipline a corruption, such a practice idolatrous, and that you must needs produce a schism in the Church ? As for you, you are but mere laics ; and you others are only ecclesiastics of an inferior order. To decide on these subjects belongs not either to the one or other of you ; the power comes from a higher source. Tell your complaints, lay open your doubts, and welcome ; put forth to the word your reasonings upon the matters that offend and scandalize you. So- licit and urge, if you please, your superiors in the spiritual order, your judges, the bishops, to examine into them. But respectfully await their decision, and receive it with submission : for such is the ordinance of God, and obedience is your duty, and the part you have to act in religion." Instead of this Christian and canonical proceeding, we find them disregarding the authority of all the bishops in the world, arrogating to themselves superemi- nence, overturning the arrangements of the divine Legislator, introducing anarchy in its place, preaching up and commanding a separation, and tearing in pieces the body of Jesus Christ. And this is what they have called a reformation. Let them give it what name they please, it is as clear as the sun, that a reformation of such a kind will eternally bear on the face of it the character of revolt, and in the indelible stain of schism will disclose the mark of reprobation. 52 ON THE GilURCH OF ENGLAND APPENDIX II. An Historical Account of the Opinions that the First Reformers have given for one another, and of the effects of their preaching. LUTHER. He himself bears testimony that, "while a Catholic, he passed his life in aus- terities, in watchings, in fasts and praying, in poverty, chastity, and obedience."* When once reformed, that is to say, another man, he says that: "as it does not depend upon him not to be a man, so neither does it depend upon him to be without a woman ; and that he can no longer forego the indulgence of the vilest natural propensities."! 1. "I burn with a thousand flames in my unsubdued flesh ; I feel myself car- ried on with a rage towards women that approaches to madness. I, who ought to be fervent in spirit, am only fervent in impurity.":}: 2. " To the best of my judgment, there is neither emperor, king, nor devil, to whom I would yield ; no, I would not yield even to the whole world." || 3. " He was so well aware of his immorality, as we are informed by his favorite disciple, that he wished they would remove him from the office of preaching."§ 4. " His timid companion acknowledges that he had received blows from him, ah ipso colophon accepi."T[ 5. "I tremble (wrote he to the same friend,) when I think of the passions of Luther; they yield not in violence to the passions of Hercules."** 6. "This man (said one of his cotemporary reformers), is absolutely mad. He never ceases to combat truth against all justice, even against the cry of his own conscience."!! 7. " He is puffed up with pride and arrogance, and seduced by Satan."!! 8. " Yes, the devil has made himself master of Luther, to such a degree, as to make one believe he wishes to gain entire possession of him."|||| " 1 wonder more, Luther (wrote Henry VIII. to him), that thou art not, in good earnest, ashamed, and that thou darest to lift up thy eyes either before God or man, seeing that thou hast been so light and so inconstant as to allow thyself to be transported by the instigation of the devil to thy foolish concupis- • Tom. v. In cap. I. ad Galat. v. 14. t Ibid. S&rm. rir Matrim. fol. 119. % Luth. Ta- ble-talk. || Idem. Rcsp. ad Maleg. Reg. Aug. § Sleid. Book II. 1520. 1T Mel. Letters *o Theodore. "Ibid, tt Hospiuiau. ftlEcolampadius. |||| Zuinglius. AND TIIE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 53 cences. Thou, a brother of the order of St. Augustine, hast been the first to abuse a consecrated nun ; which sin would have been, in times past, so rigorously punished, that she would have been buried alive and thou wouldst have been scourged to death. But so far art thou from correcting thy fault, that moreover, shameful to say, thou hast taken her publicly to wife, having contracted with her an incestuous marriage and abused the poor and miserable to the great scandal of the world, the reproach and opprobium of thy country, the contempt of holy matrimony, and the great dishonor and injury of the vows made to God. Finally, what is still more detestable, instead of being cast down and overwhelmed with grief and confusion, as thou oughtest to be, at thy incestuous marriage, O miserable wretch, thou makest a boast of it, and instead of asking forgiveness for thy unfortunate crime, thou dost incite all debauched religious, by thy letters and thy writings, to do the same."* " God, to punish that pride of Luther, which is discoverable in all his works (says one of the first saciamentarians), withdrew his spirit from him, abandon- ing him to the spirit of error and of lying, which will always possess those who have followed his opinions, until they leave them."f * Luther treats us as an execrable and condemned sect, but let him take care lest he condemn himself as an arch-heretic, from the sole fact, that he will not and cannot associate himself with those who confess Christ. But how strangely does this fellow let himself be carried away by his devils ! How disgusting is his language and how full are his words of the devil of hell! He says that the devil dwells now and for ever in the bodies of the Zuinglians ; that blasphemies exhale from their insatanized, supersatanized, and persatanized breasts; that their tongues are nothing but lying tongues, moved at the will of Satan, infused, per- fused, and transfused with his infernal poison? Did ever any one hear such lan- guage come out of an enraged demon ?t " He wrote all his works by the impulse and the dictation of the devil, with whom he had dealing, and who in the struggle seemed to have thrown him by victorious arguments." || "It is not an uncommon thing (said Zuinglius), to find Luther contradicting himself from one page to another ;§ and to see him in the midst of his fol- lowers, you would believe him to be possessed by a phalanx of devils. "IT Erasmus the most learned man of his age, he who has been called the pride of 1 1 ol hind, the love and delight of Great Britain, and of almost every other nation,** wrote to Luther himself: "All good people lament and groan over the fatal schism with which thou shakest the world by thy arrogant, unbridled, and sedi- tious spirit, "ft " Luther (says Erasmus again), begins to be no longer pleasing to his disci- ples, so much so that they treat him as a heretic, and affirm, that being void of the spirit of the Gospel, he is delivered over to the deliriums of a wordly spirit. "ft " In very truth, Luther is extremely corrupt (said Calvin) ; || || would to God he * In Horim. p. 299. t Conrad Iteis. Upon the Lord's Supper, B. 2. J The church of Zurich, against the Confessions of Luther, p. 61. || Ibid. §T. II. lirpons. ad con- flat I.utheri,fol. 44. IT Ibid, fob 381. "Preface to the London Edition, year 1642. 1 1 F.j.istlo to Luther, 1626. XX Epistle to Cardinal Sado let, 1628. |||| Cited by Conrad Schlusscmborg. 5* 54 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND had taken pains to put more restraint upon that intemperance which rages in every part of him ! would to God he had been attentive to discover his vices."* "Calvin says again, that, "Luther had done nothing to any purpose that people ought not to let themselves be duped by following his steps and being half-papist; that it is much better to build a church entirely afresh "f Some- times, it is true, Calvin praised Luther so far as to call him " the restorer of Christianity.''^ He protested however against their honoring him with the name of Elias. His disciples afterwards made the same protestation. "Those (said they), who put Luther in the rank of the prophets, and constitute his writings the rule of the Church, have deserved exceedingly ill of the Church of Christ, and expose themselves and their Churches to the ridicule and cutting reproaches of their adversaries." || "Thy school (replied Calvin to Wesphal the Lutheran), is nothing but a stinking pig-stye ; dost thou hear me, thou dog? dost thou hear me, thou madman? dost thou hear me, thou huge beast?" Carlostadius, while retired at Orlamund, had so far ingratiated himself with the inhabitants, that they must needs stone Luther, who had run over to rate him for his false opinions respecting the Eucharist. Luther tells us this in his letter to the inhabitants of Strasburgh : " These Christians attacked me with a shower of stones. This was their blessing; Maya thousand devils take theel mayst thou break thy neck before thou returnest home again. "§ CARLOSTADIUS. You shall have his portrait as drawn by the temperate Melanchton. " He was (says he), a brutal fellow, without wit or learning, or any light of common sense ; who, far from having any mark of the spirit of God, never either knew or practised any of the duties of civilized life. The evident marks of impiety appeared in him. All his doctrine was either judaical or seditious. He con- demned all laws made by Pagans. He would have men to judge according to the law of Moses, because he knew not the nature of Christian liberty. He em- braced the fanatical doctrine of the Anabaptist immediately that Nicholas Storck began to spread it abroad One portion of Germany can bear testimony that I say nothing in this but what is true." He was the first priest of the reform who married, and in the new fangled mass that was made up for his marriage, his fanatical partisans went so far as to pro- nounce this man blessed, who bore evident marks of impiety. The collect of the massir was thus worded : " Deus qui post logam et impiam sacerdotum tuorum coecitatem Beattnn Andraam Carlostadium ca gratia donare dignatus es, ut pri- mus, nulia habita ratione papistici juris, uxorem ducere ansus fuerit; da, qusesu- mus, ut omnes sacerdotes, recepta, sana mente, ejus vestigia sequentes, ejectis concubinis aut eisdem ductis, ad legitimi consortium thori convertantur : per Dom. nost. etc." The Lutherans informs us, that " it cannot be denied that Carlostadius was strangled by the devil, considering the number of witnesses who relate it, the *Theol. Cal. L. II. fol. 126. tSee Florium. J Ibid. p. 887. \\In admon, de lib. Concord. v i. §Tom. II. fol. 447. Sen. Germ. II Quoted in Florim. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 55 number of others who have committed it to writing, and even the letters of the pastors at Bale.* He left behind him a son, Hans Carlostadius, who, renouncing the errors of his father, entered the communion of the Catholic Church." ZUINGLIUS. I do not refuse (wrote Melanchton) ,f to enter upon a conference (at Marburgh ) with CEcolampadius ; for, to speak to Zuinglius is time lost.— It is not, however, a light undertaking, because then- opinion is agreeable to many, who are desirous of touching the mysteries of God with their hand, and yet permit themselves to be conducted by their curiosity." Luther replying to the Landgrave, said ; " Of what use is this conference, if both parties bring to it an opinion already formed and come with the determination of yielding in nothing. I know for certain that they are in error. These are the stratagems of the devil ; and this is the way that every thing goes worse and worse." " I cannot (says Zuinglius of himself) conceal the tire that burns me and diives me on to incontinence, since it is true that its effects have already drawn upon me but too many infamous reproaches among the Churches. "% The printer at Zurich, said Lavatherus, made a present to Luther of the trans- lation of Zuinglius: but he sent it back with abusive language. "I will not read (said he) the works of these people, because they are out of the Church, and are not only damned themselves, but draw many miserable creatures after them. As long as I live 1 shall make war upon them by my prayers and my writings." || Carlostadius's opinion upon the Eucharist seemed to Luther to be foolish ; that of Zuinglius fallacious and wicked, giving nothing but wind and smoke to Christians, instead of the true body of Jesus Christ, who spoke of neither sign nor figure. § "The Zuinglians write that we look upon them as brethren; this is a fiction bo foolish and impertinent (proclaimed the Lutherans in full synod) that we cannot be sufficiently astonished at their impudence. We do not even grant to them a place in the Church, far from recognizing as brethren, a set of people, whom we see agitated by the spirit of lying, and uttering blasphemies against the Son of Man."1T lirentius, whom Bishop Jewel called the grave and learned old man, declares that •• the dogmas of the Zuinglians are diabolical, foil of impiety, of corruptions and calumnies ; that the error of Zuinglius upon the Eucharist drew along with it many others still more sacrilegious;"** he predicted that the Zuinglians would noon shew the heresy of the Nestorians springing up again in the Church of God ; "soon (says he), will the different articles of our religion disappear one after another, and to them will succeed the superstitions of the Pagans, the Talmudists, and lh" Mahometans. "ft * Hist, de C(tn. August, fol. 41. t Quoted in Florim. Jin Parerws ad Helvct, t. I, (1. 113. || Schlnssemb. lib. II. Theol. Calvin, quoted in Florim, p. 96. §In Florim. p. 109, » Epitome Colloq. Maul. Brums 1564, p. 83. "Brcutius in Iitcugn, Prophet, et Apost. in fine, ttln Bvllingeri Corontde, an. 1544. 56 ON THE C1IURCII OF ENGLAND Luther openly declared that " Zuinglius was an offspring of hell, an associate of Arius, a man, who did not deserve to be prayed for " " Zuinglius, (said Luther) is dead and damned, having desired like a thief and a rebel, to compel others, to follow his error."* "Many protestants (testifies the Apologist of Zuinglius), have not scrupled to pronounce that he died in his sins, and thus to send him to hell."t "Blessed is the man who hath not walked in the counsel of the Sacramenta- rians, nor stood in the way of the Zuinglians, nor sat in the chair of the Zurich- ians. You understand what I mean."t CALVIN. Calvin v being obliged to leave France to disengage himself from law affairs, went to Germany and there sought out the greater part of those who were busy in disturbing the consciences and agitating the minds of men. At Basle he was presented by Bucer to Erasmus, who resorted to the private conferences without being induced to embrace the opinions of these innovators. Erasmus, after hav- ing conversed with him upon some of the points of religion, exceedingly aston- ished at what he had discovered in his dispositions, turned towards Bucer and shewing young Calvin to him, said: "I see a great plague rising in the Church against the Church ; video magnam pestem oriri in Ecclesia contra Ecclesiam." "Calvin, I am aware, is violent and wayward : so much the better; he is the very man to advance our cause." || Thus spoke a German who had taught him at Bourges, and who, together with Greek and Hebrew, had crammed him with the new doctrines of Germany. " Calvin, (said Bucer, ) is a true mad dog. The man is wicked, and he judges of people according as he loves or hates them." Baudoin, expressing his disapprobation of the opinions of Bucer and Melanch- ton, said that he admired their modesty, but that ho could not endure Calvin, because he had found him too thirsty for vengeance and blood ; propter nimiam vindictae et sanguinis sitim Baudoin, induced by Cassandre, had renounced the doctrine of Calvin. He was tin? most learned and renowned lawyer of his time; he was born in the year 1520, and died in 1573. See his Funeral Oration on Papyrius Masson. Paris 1638. See Bibl. Mazarine. The intolerant and sanguinary spirit of this too celebrated man appears in one of his letters to his friend, the Marquis du Poet; "Do not find fault with our ridding the country of these fanatics, who exhort the people by their discourses to bear up against us, who blacken our conduct, and wish to make our faith be considered as an idle fancy. Such Monsters ought to be suffocated, as happened at the execution of Michael Servetus, the Spaniard." The original of this letter has been preserved in the archives of the Marquis du Montelimart. We are assured that M. de Voltaire received in 1772 an authentic copy of it, according to his request, and that, after he had read it, he wrote on the margin some lines against Calvin. * Tom. II. fol. 36, cited in Florim. t Gualter in Apclog- Tom. I. oper. Zuingl. iul. 1 B> % Luth. Epist. ad Jacob presbyt. || Wolniar. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 57 " What man was ever more imperious and positive and more divinely infallible than Calvin, against whom the smallest opposition that men dared to make was always a work of Satan, and a crime deserving of fire."* Calvin's erroneous opinions upon the Trinity excited against him the zeal of one, who in other respects held his sacramentarian opinion ; " What demon has urged thee, Calvin! to declaim with the Arians against the Son of God? It is that antichrist of the north that thou hast the imprudence to adore, that grammarian Melanchton."t " Beware, Christian readers, above all, ye ministers of the word, beware of the books of Calvin. They contain an impious doctrine, the blasphemies of Arianism, as if the spirit of Michael Servetus had escaped from the executioner, and according to the system of Plato had transmigrated whole and entire into Calvin.":}: The same author gave as the title to his writ- ings : " Upon the Trinity, and upon Jesus Christ our Redeemer, against Henry Bollinger, Peter Martyr, John Calvin, and the other ministers of Zurich and Geneva, disturbers of the Church of God." By teaching that God was the author of sin Calvin raised against him all par- ties of the reform. The Lutherans of Germany united to refute so horrible a blasphemy; "This opinion (said they), ought every where to be held in horror and execration; it is a stoical madness, fatal to morals, monstrous and blas- phemous." || "This Calvinistic error is horribly injurious to God, and of all errors the most mischievous to mankind. According to this Calvinistic theologian, God would be the most unjust tyrant. — It would no longer be the devil, but God himself who would be the Father of lies."§ The same author, who was superintendent and general inspector of the Lutheran Churches in Germany, in the three volumes he published against the Calvinistic theology, IT never makes mention of the Calvinists without giving them the epi- thets of uiilii.lit vera, impious, blasphemous, impostors, heretics, incredulous, people itruck with the spirit of blindness, barefaced and shameless men, turbulent ministers, busy agents of Satan, &c. Reshusius, after exposing the doctrine of the Calvinists, indignantly declares, that "they not only transform God into a devil, the very idea of which is horri- ble: but that they annihilate the merits of Jesus Christ to such a degree that they deserve to be banished forever to the bottom of hell."** The Calvinists themselves objected against this doctrine of their leader. Bul- linger proves its erroneousness from Scripture, the Fathers, and the whole Church. " We dp therefore (said he) prove clearly from Scripture this dogma taught every where since the Apostles' time, that God is not the author of evil, the cause of Bin, but our corrupt inclinations or concupiscence, and the devil, who moves, excites and inflames it. "ft And Ciiatillon, whom Calvin had for a long time taken into his house and fed at his table, was one of the first to take up tho |i m against his benefactor and master, although he did it with all the deference due to this double title. "He is a false God (said he) Chat is so slow to mercy, * J. J. Bousseau, Lettru de la mont. t Stancharus de Mediot. in Calv. inxtit. No. 4. t Id. ibid. No. 3. \\ Corpus doctrina Christiana. \ Conrad. Schlussemb. Ccdvin. Tha>> log. fol. 46. II Krancfort. I0W. •' Lib. de I'rasmt. Corp. Chritt. I olio, in fine. ttDe- cad. 111. Serm X. 58 ON THE CTURCH OF ENGLAND so quick to wrath, who has created the greater part of men to destroy them, and has not only predestinated them to damnation, but even to the cause of their damnation. This God, then, must have determined from all eternity, and he now actually wishes and causes that we be necessitated to sin ; so that thefts, adulte- ries and murders are never committed but at his impulse ; for he suggests to men perverse and shameful affections ; he hardens them, not merely by simple permis- sion, but actually and efficaciously ; so that the wicked man accomplishes the work of God and not his own, and it is no longer Satan, but Calvin's God, who is really the father of lies."* Calvin in his turn forgets not to reproach Chatillon with his ingratitude, and adds: "Never did any man carry pride, perfidy and inhumanity to a higher pitch. He who does not know thee to be an impostor, a buti'oon, an impudent cynic and one ever ready to rail at piety, is not fit to judge of anything." To- wards the end of his reply, he dismisses him with the following Genevan bene- diction : " May the God Satan quit thee : amen. Geneva, 1558." About 1558, appeared in London, a work written, or at least approved, by the English Bishops, against the Calvinistic sect of Puritans. Calvin and Beza are there described! as intolerant and proud men, who by open rebellion against their prince, had founded their gospel, and pretended to rule the Churches with a more odious tyranny, than that, with which they had so often reproached the sovereign pontiffs. They protest in the presence of the Almighty God, that, " amongst all the texts of Scripture quoted by Calvin or his disciples, in favor of the Church of Geneva against the Church of England, there is not a single one, that is not turned to a sense unknown to the Church and to all the Fathers, since the time of the apostles ; so that were Augustin, Ambrose, Jerom, Chrysos- tom, &c. to return again to life and to see in what manner the Scripture had been cited by these Genevese doctors, they would be astonished that the world should ever have met with a man, so audacious and extravagant as to dare, with- out the least color of truth, to ill treat in such a way, the word of God, himself, his readers and the whole world." And after declaring that from this Genevese source an impoisoned, seditious and Catalinarian doctrine had been spread over England, they add: "Happy, a thousand times happy our island, if neither English nor Scot had ever put foot in Geneva, if they had never become acquainted with a single individual of these Genevese doctors !" The partizans of Calvin have attempted, and for his credit, I wish they had succeeded in their attempt, to rescue his memory from the crime and disgrace of having the mark of infamy branded on his shoulder. "What must pass as an indisputable proof of the crimes imputed to Calvin, is that, after the accusation had been prepared against him, the Church of Geneva, not only did not shew the contrary, but did not even contradict the information, which Berthelier, commis- sioned bv the persons of the same town, gave at Noyon. This information was Dgned by the most respectable inhabitants of Noyon, and was drawn op with all th * accustomed forms of the law. And in the same information we see that this hcresiarch, having been convicted of an abominable sin, which was always pun- * Oastelliou in lib. de Pradcslin. ad Calvin, t A Survey of the pretended holy discipline, page 44, by Bishop Bancroft. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 59 ishcd by fire, the punishment that he had deserved was at the intercession of his bishop, mitigated into that of the fleur-de-lis Add to this, that Bolesque, hav- ing given the same information, BerthelTer, who was still living in the time of Bolesque, did not contradict it, as, undoubtedly, he would have done, had he been able to do so, without going against the conviction of his conscience, and opposing the public belief. Thus the silence both of the whole town interested in the affair and also of his secretary, is, on this occasion, an infallible proof of the disorders imputed to Calvin."* They were at that time so uncontested, that a Catholic writer, speaking of the scandalous life of Calvin, advances as a fact , well known in England, that, " the leader of the Calvinists had been branded with the fleur-de-lis and had fled from his native town; and that his antagonist Wittaker, acknowledging the fact, merely replied by the following shameful com- parison : Calvin has been stigmatized, so has St. Paul, so have others also."f I find also that the grave and learned Doctor Stapleton,J who had every opportu- nity of gaining information on this subject, having spent his life in the neighbor- hood of Noyon, speaks of this adventure of Calvin's in the terms of one who was certain of the fact. " Inspiciuntur etiam adhuc hodie civitatis Noviodunensis in Picardia scrinia et rerum gestarum monumenta : in illis adhuc hodie legitur Joannem hunc Calvinum sodoinice - convictum, ex Episcopi et magistrates indul- gentia, solo stigmate in tergo notatum, urbe excessisse ; nee ejus familiae hones- tissimi viri, adhuc superstites, impetrare hactenus potuerunt, ut hujus facti memoria, quse toti familije notam aliquam inurit, e civicis illis monumentis ac scriniis eraderetur."|| Moreover, the Lutherans of Germany equally speak of it as of a fact: "De Calvini variis flagitiis et sodomiticis libidinibus, ob quas stig- ma Joannis Calvini dorso impressum fuit a magistiatu, sub quo vixit."§ " And as for the affected silence of Bcza, it is replied, that the disciple having acquired notoriety by the same crimes and the same heresy as his master, he merits not the confidence of any one on this point." It is very possible and most easy to dissemble like Beza and others after him ; but, surely, it is hardly possible to fabricate at pleasure the account, that an eye- witness and that cotemporarics have given us of the death of this man, an account which must excite compassion and terror in all who hear it. An eye-witness, who was then his disciple, gives the following information :1T " Calvinus in des- perations finiena vitam obiit turpiasimo et fa>dissimo morbo, quern Deus rebellibus el maledictis comminatus est, prius excruciatus et consumptus. Quod ego veris- sime attestari audeo, qui funcstum et tragicum illius exitum his meis oculis proo- Bens aapexi.** The Lutherans of Germany testify, "Deuui etiam in hoc sceculo judicium suum in Calvinum patefecisse, quern in virga furoris visitavit, atque bortflrfliter punivit, ante mortis infelicifl horam. Deus enim manu sua potenti adco hunc hereticum percussit, ut, desperata. salute, doemonitras invocatis, jorans, execrans, et blasphcrnans misserrime, animam malignant, exhalarit; vermibus * Card. Richelieu, Traite. p. convert, liv. II. pp. 319, 320. t Campian in the 3d rea- son, year 158S- \ Born in 15*0. He was nearly 30 yean of age when i 'alvin died, in 1564. II Promptuar Catholic, pars. 32, p. 133. (Conrad. Schlnssemb, Calvin Theolog. lib. II. II. fol. */2. IT Joan Harem. Apud Pel. Cutzamium. •* Sec. Diet, de Feller art. Calvin. 60 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND circa pudenda in apostheisate seu ulcere fcetentissimo crescentibus, ita ut nullus assistentium foetoreui ampliua ferre posset."* On this subject 1 find an account too curious to be omitted here. " The Dean told me that an old Canon, a familiar friend of Calvin's, had formerly related to him the manner, in which John Calvin died, and that he had learned it from a man called Petit Jean, who was Calvin's valet and who attended on him to his last expiring breath. This man after his master's death, left Geneva, and went to reside again at Noyon. He related to this Canon that Calvin on his death bed made much lamentation, and that oftentimes he heard him cry out aloud and bitterly bewail his condition, and that one day he called him and said ; Go to my study, and bring from such a part, ' The Oltice of our Lady according to the use at Noyon.' He went and brought it; and Calvin continued a long time praying to God from this office : he mentioned that the people of Geneva were unwilling to let many persons visit him in his illness, and said that he labored under many complaints, such as imposthumes, the rash, the piles, the stone, the gravel, the gout, consumption, shortness of breath, and spitting of blood ; and that he was struck by God, as those of whom the Prophet speaks Tetigit eos in posteriora, opprobrium tempitemum dedit et*."f This recital agrees with that of Boise, who also cites the testimony of those who attended upon Calvin in his last illness. For after having spoken of the complaints mentioned by Bt-za, and of the lousy disease, about which Beza says nothing, he adds : " Those who attended upon him to his last breath have testified it. Let Beza, or whoever pleases deny it : it is however clearly proved, that he cui-sed the hour in which he had ever studied and written : while from his ulcers and his whole body proceeded an abominable stench, which rendered him a nuisance to himself and to his domestics, who add moreover, that this was the reason why he would have no one go and see him." (Life of Calvin, Lyons, 1577, transl. from the Latin.) •Conrad. Schlussemb, in Thcolog. Calvin, lib. II. fol. 72. Franco/, an 1592. \ Remargues sur lame de J. Calvin, taken from the records of the chapter at Noyon, the personal examination that took place in 1614 ; by James Desmay, doctor of Sor- bonne, vie. gen. of Rouen. This little work, dedicated to Lord Kay, earl of Ancas- ter, 1621, is to be found in the Bibliotheque du Roi. It is the part of candor to signify that I have not seen a word about the famous fleur-d«-lis in the work of M. Desmay, although he carefully made his enquiries in these places. I should be glad if that silence carried sufficient weight with it to destroy the very positive and public assertions of authors who wrote more than forty or fifty years before him. It appears that M. Desmay only examined the records of the Chapter and not those of the town. Moreover, it was then eighty years after the sentence had been passed upon Calvin, and we are assured that his friends had succeeded in removing it from the records of the town. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 61 THEODORE BEZA. Let us now pass on to Calvin's celebrated biographer. The Lutherans shall teach us in what esteem and value we are to hold him : " Who will not be aston- ished (says Heshusius) at the incredible impudence of this monster, whose filthy and scandalous life is known throughout France, by his more than cynical epi- grams. And yet you would say, to hear him speak, that he is some holy person- age, another Job, or an anchoret of the desert, nay greater than St. Paul or St. John ; so much does he every where proclaim his exile, his labors, his purity and the admirable sanctity of his life."* If we wish to refer the matter to one holding an elevated situation among the Lutherans: "Beza (says he to us) draws to the life, in his writings, the image of those ignorant and gross persons, who for want of reason and argument have recourse to abuse, or of those heretics, whose last resource is insult and abuse.... and thus, like an incarnate demon, this obscene wretch, this perfect compound of artifice and impiety vomits forth his satirical blasphemies. "f The same Lutheran testifies that " after having spent twenty-three years of his life in read- ing more than 220 Calvinistic productions, he had not met with one, in which abuse and blasphemy were so accumulated as in the writings of this wild beast. And if any one doubt of it, adds he, let him run over his famous Dialogues against Dr. Heshusius. No one would ever imagine they were written by a man, but by Beelzebub himself in person ; I should be horror struck to repeat the obscene blasphemies, which this impure atheist puts forth on the gravest subjects with a disgusting mixture of impiety and buffoonery: undoubtedly, he had dipped his pen in some infernal ink." "Beza who was a Frenchman, (says Florimond, ) :): and the great buttress of Calvin's opinions attacked Luther's version as impious, novel and unheard of." " Truly, (retorted the Lutherans,) it well becomes a French merry-andrew, who understands not a word of our language, to teach the Germans to speak German." MELANCHTON. Let us confine ourselves to the judgment passed upon him by those of his com- munion. The Lutherans declared in lull synod; "that he had so often changed lii.—- opinions upon the supremacy of the Pope, upon justification by faith alone, upon the Lord's supper ami free-will, thai ;ill (his his wavering inconstancy had staggered the weak in these fundamental questions and prevented a great number ft mbracing Che confession of Augsburgh; that by changing and recfaanging his writings he had given ton much reason in the Epi copaliaiu to sot otl'his variations, and to the faithful to know no longer what docti ine to consider as tine." || They add; "that this famous work upon the theological common planes would much i <■ appropriately be called a Treatise upon Theological witticisms." •Traduct. de Florim. p. IOIH. t Schlussemburg, in Thcolog. (Jaluin. lib. II. passim. tp. 90. || Colloq. Altaib. fob 503, 503, year 1508. C 62 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND Schlusscmburg goes so far as to declare ; " that being struck from above by a spirit of Dliudnesa ami dizziness, Melanehton afterwards did nothing but fall from one error into another, till at last he himself knew not what to believe."* Be says moreover, that; " .Melanchton had, evidently impugned the divine truth, to his own shame and the perpetual disgrace of his name."f (ECOLAMPADIUS. The Lutheran's wrote in the Apology for their Lord's supper, that (Ecolampa- dius, a fautor of the sacramentarian opinion, speaking one day to the Landgrave, said : " I would rather have my hand cut otf than that it should ever write any thing against Luther's opinion respecting the Lord's supper. "J W hen this w-as told to Luther, by one who had heard it, the hatred of the Patriarch of the reform seemed immediately softened down. On learning the death of CEcolampadius, he exclaimed; "Ah! miserable and unfortunate CEco- lampadius, thou was the prophet of thy own misery, when thou didst appeal to God to exercise his vengeance on thee, if thou taughtest a false doctrine. May God forgive thee ; if thou art in such a state that he can forgive thee." Whilst the inhabitants of Bale were placing the following epitaph on his tomb in the Cathedral: "John CEcolampadius, Theologian, first preacher of evan- gelical doctrine in this town and true bishop of the temple ;" Luther was posi- tive and sure, and afterwards wrote on his side, that " the devil, whom CEcolam- padius employed, strangled him during the night in his bed. This is the excellent master (continues he) who taught him that there are contradictions in Scripture. See to what Satan brings learned men."|| OCHIN. This religious man, superior of the Capuchins, leaving Italy and his order, where he had acquired a great reputation for the austerity of his life and his distinguished talent in preaching, repaired to Peter Martyr in Switzerland, where, after striking acquaintance with the Sacramentarians, he went a step farther and preached up Arianism. "Be is become (wrote Beza to Diducius) a wicked lecher, a fautor of the Arians, a mocker of Christ and his Church. "§ 'Tis true that Ochin had, on his part, been equally severe upon the religionists of Geneva and Zurich ; for in his dialogue against the sect of terrestrial Gods, he thus expressed himself in their regard "These people are desirous that we should hold as an article of faith whatever comes from their brain. Be who does not choose to follow them is a heretic. What they dream of in the night (an allusion to Zuinglius) is committed to writing, is printed and held as an oracle. Do not think that they will ever change. So far are they from being disposed to obey the Church, that on the contrary the Church must obey them. Is not this being popes ? Is it not being gods upon earth ? It it not tyrannizing over the consciences of men ?" ThMl. Calvin, lib. II. p. 9J . t Ibid. p. »2. t See Florim. p. 175. || T)e Miss. priv. §Florim. i>9G. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 63 Such were the principal authors of the religious and political excitements that desolated the Church and the world in the 16th century. They were perfectly acquainted with each other; they had seen one another, had conferred together in different conferences ; the}' labored with emulation, if not with unanimity, at the work, which they called reform. It is impossible at the present day to form respecting their doctrine, their characters and persons, more correct notions than those, which they themselves entertained respecting them and which they have transmitted to us. It would therefore be unreasonable in us not to refer to the reciprocal testimonies they have borne to one another. Neither is it less true, that if we go by their own judgments, we cannot but consider them as odious beings and unworthy ministers, whether they have mutually done justice to each other or have calumniated each other. In a word, the only point upon which they agree is to blacken and condemn one another, and it is but too certain that this point, in which they were all agreed, is also the only one upon which they were all right. You then who have just heard them revealing to the world their own turpitudes, will you continue any longer to take them as your guides, your masters, your fathers in faith ? Hitherto you have only been taught to look upon them as ex- traordinary beings, endowed with sanctity, virtue, and all the gifts of heaven ; and with this persuasion, you felt proud to call yourselves their disciples and children. You now see your mistake ; you see what they were ; they have told it you themselves. Believe them upon this point, and it is enough to make you abandon them on all others, and to abjure, since you can do it, a descent that must from henceforth be so disgraceful and ignominious in your eyes. What could religion expect from such men? What profit could the world receive from their preaching? What actually were the effects produced? Here also they shall be our instructors. " The world grows worse and becomes more wicked every day. Men are now more given to revenge, more avaricious, more devoid of mercy, less modest and more incorrigible ; in fine more wicked than in the papacy."* " One thing, no less astonishing than scandalous, is to see that, since the pure doctrine of the gospel has been brought again to light, the world daily goes from bad to worse. "f " The noblemen and the peasants are come to such a pitch, that they boast and proclaim, without scruple, that they have only to let themselves be preached at, that they would prefer being entirely disenthralled from the word of God; and that they would not give a farthing fir all our sermons together. And how are w to lay this to them as a crime, when they make no account of the world to come? They live as they believe: they are and continue to be swine: they live like swine and they die like real swine.":}: Calvin, after declaiming against atheism, which was prevailing above all in the palaces of princes, and in the eonrte of justice* wild the first ranks of his ciiiniMuiiion. "There remains still (adds he) a wound more deplorable. The pastors, yes, the pastors themselves who mount the pulpit are at the present tine the most shameful examples of Waywardness and other vices. Hence their • Luther in Postilla sup. I. dom- advrnt. f Id- in Scrm. Conviv. German, fol. 55 * t Id. on the 1st Ep. to the Corinthians, xv. 64 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND sermons obtain neither more credit nor authority than the fictitious tales uttered on the stage by the strolling player. And these persons are yet bold enough to complain that we despise tbeni and point at them tor scorn. As for me I ain more inclined to be astonished at the patience of the people : I am astonished that the women and children do not cover them with mud and tilth."* '• Those whom I had known to be pure, full of candor and simplicity (says one whom no one suspects) these have I seen afterwards, when gone over to the sect (of the Evangelicals) begin to speak of girls, flock to games of hazard, throw aside prayer, give themselves up entirely to their interests, become the most impatient, vindictive, and frivolous; changed in fact from men to vipers. 1 know well what I say."t " I see many Lutherans, but few Evangelicals. Look a little at these people, and consider whether luxury, avarice, and lewdness do not prevail still more amongst them than amongst those whom fhey detest. Shew me any one, who by means of his gospel is become better. I will shew you very many that have become worse. Perhaps it has been my bad fortune; but I have seen none but who are become worse by their gospel. "t " Luther was wont to say that after the revelation of his gospel, virtue had become extinct, justice oppressed, temperance bound with cords, virtue torn in pieces by the dogs, faith had become wavering, and devotion lost."|| It was at that time a saying in Germany, expressive of their going to spend a jovial day in debauch: " Hodie lutheranke vivemus : We will spend to-day like Luther ans."§ '•And if the Sovereigns do not evangelize and interpose their authority to appease all these disputes, no doubt the Churches of Christ will soon be infested with heresies, which will ultimately bring on their ruin By these multiplied paradoxes the foundations of our religion are shaken, heresies crowd into the Churches of Christ, and the way is thrown open to atheism. "IT " Did any age ever witness persons of each sex and of every age give up them- selves, as ours do, to intemperance and the fire of their passions? (said one of the first witnesses of the reform). Men now receive as a divine oracle that saying of Luther's that it is no more possible for a person to restrain his desires than his saliva, nor more easy for man and woman to dispense with one another than for them to go without eating and drinking. Impossible, do you hear it sung on all sides, and in all tones, impossible not to sacrifice to Venus, when the time of life arrives."** "Do we not see at the present day (cries out another witness) youth even giving into debauch, and if they are withdrawn from it, loudly demanding to be married. The young women also, whether already fallen, or only as yet lasci- vious, are perpetually throwing in your face that impudent sentence of Luther's, that continence is impossible, seeing that Venus is not less necessary than eating ; according to the new fashion, children marry and from them no doubt are to spring the valiant champions who are to drive the Turk beyond the Caucasus."ft * Liv. sur ?rs scandales. p. 128. tErasm. Ejist. to the brethren of Lower Germany. J Id. Ep. a an 1528. !| Aurifaber, fol. 628, v. Florim. p. 235. § Fened. Morgenstern, Traite de I Eglise, p. 221. IT Sturm, Ratio ineunda c nrord. p. 2. an. 1579. •• Sylv. Czccanovius de corrupt, morib. tt Wigandus, de bonis et malis German. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 65 " We are come to such a pitch of barbarity that many are persuaded that if they fasted one single day, they would find themselves dead the night following."* " It is certain that God wishes and requires of his servants a grave and Chris- tian discipline; but it passes with us as a new papacy and a new monkery. f We have lately learned (say the religionists of our times), that we are saved by iaith alone in Jesus Christ, without any other help than his merits and the grace of God." "And, that the world may know they are not papists and that they have no confidence in good works, they perform none. Instead of fasting, they eat and drink day and night, they change prayers into swearing ; and this is what they call the re-established Gospel, or the reformation of the Gospel, said Smidelin." •• We are not to be astonished that in Poland, Transylvania, Hungary and other countries, man}' pass over to Arianism and some to Mahomet; the doctrine of Calvin leads to these impieties." $ "Certainly, to speak the truth, there is much more conscienciousness and up- rightness among the greatest part of papists than among many protestants. And if we examine past ages, we shall find more sanctity, devotion, zeal, although blind, more charity and fidelity to one another, than is seen at present among us." || "Let them (the Protestants) I say, look with the eye of charity upon them (the Catholics) as well as severity, and they shall finde some excellent orders of government, some singular hclpes for increase of godlinesse and devotion, for the conquering of sinne, for the profiting of virtue ; contrariewise, in themselves, look- ing with a lesse indulgent eye than they doe, they shall finde, there is no such absolute perfection in their doctrine and reformation. "§ This is enough, without adding to these testimonies, those of Capito, Bucer, and Melanchton, who may find place in the following letter, and without tran- scribing here upon England what is told us by Strype, Camden, Dugdale, and even by Henry VIII in a declaration to his parliament. U Such then were the first fruits of the reformation! and such we learn them to have been from its authors themselves, from its promoters and its first witnesses.** • Melancht. on the sixth chapter of St. Matthew, t Jacob Andraus, on St. Luke, ch. xxi. 1583. fid. Preface contre l'Apol. de Danoeus. || Stubb's motive to good works, p. 43, an. 1596. 5 A Relation of the state of Religion and with what Hopes and Policies it hath been framed and is maintained in the several states of the Western parts of the world. Sec. 48. By Sir Edwin Sandes, Printed London, 1605. U See Letters of Atticus, p. 64, 65. 3rd edition, London 1811. ** I hog the reader to make also the following remarks : It is a fact that, before the reformation, infidels wore scarcely known in the world : it is a fact that they are come forth in swarms from its bosom. It was from the writings of Herbert, Hobbes, fllouin, Shaftesbury, Bolingbroke, and Boyle, that Voltaire and his party drew the objections and errors, which they have brought so generally into fashion in the world. According to Diderot and d'Alembert, the first step that the untractable Catholic takes is to adopt the protes- tnnt principle of private judgment. He establishes himself judga of his religion, loaves it and joins the reform. Dissatisfied with the incoherent doctrines he then discovers, he passes on to the Socinians, whose inconsequences Boon drive him into Deism ; still pursued by unexpected difficulties, he throws himself into universal 0* 66 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND Their confessions, their lamentations, wrung from them by the extent and noto- riety of the scandal, will eternally proclaim to the world, that with the reform w ere propagated vices and disorders ; that in the countries where it was adopted, and in proportion as it gained ground, devotions was seen to be weakened, piety extinguished, morals deteriorated laith gradually lost in the multitude, and even among the ministers themselves; so much so that to this day, in the cradle and centre of Calvinism, at Geneva, where they abound, you will scarcely find four or five, (1 know it for certain), who will consent to preach the divinity of our Saviour and teach it in their catechetical instructions. And yet there have been persons bold enough to hold out the progress of such a reform as a proof of the divine protection : as if we could acknowledge as its apostles such men as they have reciprocally described themselves to be : as if it could take parts in disor- ders, smile upon the propagation of vice, and favor the decaying of faith and Christianity. doubt, where still experiencing uneasiness, he at last resolves to take the last step and proceeds to terminate the long chain of his errors in Atheism. Let us not for- get that the first link of this fatal chain is attached to the fundamental maxim of private judgment. It is therefore historically correct, that the same principle that created protestanism three centuries ago, has never cea>ed since that time to spin it out into a thousand different sects, and has concluded by covering Europe with that multitude of free thinkers, who place it on the verge of ruin. When sects beget infidelity and by infidelity revolutions, it is plain that the po- litical safety of the states will only be secured by a return to religious unity. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 67 LETTER III. On the Infallibility of the Church. We have just seen that unity in faith and government is an absolutely essential dogma, taught by Jesus Christ, by the apos- tles and their successors from age to age, recognized and set forth in all the Churches and in all the communions of the Christian world. When we are all of us, without exception, once agreed upon admitting the principle, we must of necessity be agreed upon admitting its immediate and necessary consequence, which is, that Jesus Christ has supplied us with some means of pre- serving and maintaining this unity. For, to oblige us all, under pain of damnation, to have but one baptism and one faith, to form of ourselves but one only body, one only Church, and to leave us without the means or the possibility of arriving at this, would be inconsistent with his providence and justice. Now we all know and we loudly profess that his providence and justice have never been wanting and never will be wanting to man. We are therefore all convinced that Jesus Christ has not left us without the means of being able to fulfil his great commandment. We have only therefore to examine what are the means appointed by him, in order that, following his direction and his wish, we may all with one consent have recourse to them, that we may adopt them with sincerity and attach ourselves exclusively to them. If each one of us were directed by an immediate revelation, a particular inspiration, there is no doubt that we never should depart from unity. But that this is not the means that provi- dence grants us no person, how enthusiastic or fanatic soever. can reasonably doubt. Every 'me sufficiently feels within him- self that he is nut supplied with this miraculous assistance. lint perhaps Jesus Christ may have left his doctrine to our private interpretation; perhaps it was his wish, that for the ex- planation of his dogmas ami the understanding of his law we should have no other guide but ourselves, no other judge to at- ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND tend to but our private opinion. If he had come to establish upon earth a variation in the belief, and a plurality in the gov- ernment of his Church, well and good : for we have already seen, and soon shall still more plainly see, that the liberty of interpreting just according to our fancy and of preferring and following our own conceits, is the infallible means of introducing disputes, quarrels, and discords, and of multiplying sects ad in- finitum : it is diametrically opposed to unity, and is therefore pro- scribed. We are under the necessity of looking out for another means, and we shall never find it except in a supreme authority, that speaks with a tone of authority, which presses equally upon all, which has the right to declare what is revealed and what is not, what we must believe, what we must reject: and which con- sequently, itself being secured from error, shall protect us from it, by subjecting us to her decisions. This is the powerful, the efficacious, the only means we can conceive capable of holding us together, circumstanced as we are. Without it, it is impos- sible we should ever be united ; with it, impossible we should not always be so : it has therefore been established ; we cannot doubt of it. It necessarily follows from the principle of unity as an effect belongs to its cause, and a consequence flows from its prin- ciples. Were there no scripture in the world, were there no mon- ument of primitive tradition, we should not on that account be less certain of the institution of this eminent and infallible au- thority, when once the necessity of being but one in belief and in communion is demonstrated to us. But, thank God, we have the Holy Scripture, we have the un- broken tradition of all centuries, since the preaching of the gos- pel, from age to age, down to our days; both attesting in the most authentic manner the positive institution of this authority. I l Jesus Christ, after his resurrection, appeared again at different times during forty days in the midst of his apostles and disciples, to console them and give them his last instructions, speaking to them of the kingdom of God, which without doubt The Holy Scripture. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 69 means his church, and of its progress and its obstacles, of its combats and its triumphs, of the forma essentially necessary in its hierarchy and government, and of its unavoidable connections with the powers of the world. It was in his last appearance to them, that he announced to his apostles the termination of his mission and the commencement of theirs, when he solemnly ad- dressed them in these important words : ' All power is given me in heaven and on earth. Going therefore teach ye all nations teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have command- ed you : and behold I am with you all days, even to the consum- mation of the world.' 1 What an authority to go and instruct! Never was such given to man before. It comes to them from the Almighty himself, and subjects the whole human race to them. What security, what confidence is there not given to their teaching by this only word, I am with you! Go, fear no- thing : let men and devils rise up against you, their efforts, their illusions shall not prevail : I hold them under my hand : all power is given to me in heaven and on earth, and, by virtue of this power, from this moment I stand by your side, and shall unceas- ingly remain w r ith you, without the least interruption, even of a single day, to the end of time. A potentate may assemble his ministers, and say to them, Go, bear my orders to all my empire, inform my people of them : he has a right to do so, he can do it : But is there one who could say, Inform all nations of them ? Such a command could only come from him to whom the whole human race was subjected. And again, should this potentate have conquered the universe, would he presume to add: lam with you even to the consummation of the world ; he who is feeble and mortal as ourselves, he whose power expires with his life, and is buried in the same tomb with him ? This promise becomes Jesus Christ alone, and truly shews us what he is. He made it like a master; he keeps it like a god. ]3y this promise he se- cures his Church against all error in its doctrine, and ensures the perpetuity of its existence, and its indefectibility to the end "Matt XXV III. 18. 70 ON TIIE CHURCH OF ENGLAND of time. Already has this promise preserved his Church against earth and hell for nearly two thousand years ; and this without doubt is sufficient to convince us, that it will support it even to the consummation of the world, come when it may. He had formerly said to the chief of. his apostles, when he took from him the name he had till then borne, to give him one that was symbolical and mysterious : ' Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it" and to his apostles in general ; ' And I will ask the Father, and he shall give you another Paraclete the Spirit of truth 2 When he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will teach you all truth.' 3 These passages are so clear, that at the first glance they must immediately discover to us the stability of the edifice he proposed to raise (an edifice not to be overturn- ed by all the powers of hell,) and the inadmissable purity of doc- trine in his church, with which the spirit of all truth is to reside for ever. I am not surprised that, intending the Apostles to represent him one day, and reserving for them a tutelary and continual assistance from on high, he should in the course of his preaching, have said to them, and also to the sixty-two disciples : ' He that heareth you, heareth me; and he that despiseth you, despiseth me.' 4 A simple expression this, but yet vigorous enough to put forth at one single stroke and in the highest degree, on the one side, the authority to teach, and, on the other, the duty to obey. After this striking and peremptory word : ' He who desjriseth you, despiseth me,' how are we to account for the blindness and im- piety of those Christians who afterwards had the face to despise this their doctrine ? we learn moreover from St. Matthew, 5 that our Saviour sometimes sent off the apostles to announce in the towns and cities of Judea, that the kingdom of heaven was at hand : ' And whosoever shall not receive you, nor hear your words ; going forth out of that house or city, shake off the dust from your feet.' And what shall be the punishment of those, who • Matt. XVI. 18. "John XIV. 16. » Ibid. XVI. 13. - drim, they deliver themselves with the same firmness, the same tone of confi- dence, of superiority, and supreme dominion. Assembled in council they hesitate not to pronounce in their own name, and in the name of God : "It hath ap- peared good to the Holy Ghost and to us." Thus do they write at the head of their decree. From Judea they spread themselves over the world : some pro- ceed straight to the centre of the empire and settle there; others to its principal towns; others penetrate to its utmost extremities, some even beyond, and reach as far as India. Every where do they announce the kingdom of God, every where do they es- tablish the government that Jesus Christ had traced out for them, and which in their turn they again trace out for their disciples, with an injunction to transmit it to their successors. The divine master had said to them : — " Teach all nations to observe whatsoever I have commanded you:" and St. Paul says to the inhabi- tants of Miletus and Ephesus: "I take you to witness this day I have not spared to declare to you all the counsel of God." * He had told them that he should be with them to the end of ages, which ne- cessarily supposes an unbroken chain of successors: and in all places where the word fructifies they establish bishops. "Take heed to the whole flock wherein the Holy Ghost hath placed you bishops, to rule the Church of God." J They confer upon them the powers with which th >y themselves are invested, with an injunction to transmit them in their turn: " I left thee in Crete that thou shouldst ordain bishops in every city, as I also, appointed thee a bishop must be without crime." % Jesus Christ had said to them : " As my Father hath sent me so do I send yon." and they carry themselves as his ministers : Let a man so account of us as of the ministers of Christ ;"|| and again, "For Christ therefore we are ambassadors God as it were, exhorting by us." § Undoubtedly the ambassadors of such a •Acts xx. 26. t Ibid. 28. 1 Titus, i. 5. || 1 Cor. iv. 1. §2 Cor. v. 20. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL; 73 It seems to rae impossible for any one, who is not obstinately- blind, not to recognise in the Testament of our Saviour on the one hand, the establishment of a spiritual authority, always guided by the spirit of truth in every thing pertaining to revela- tion, and consequently incapable of leading us astray in the doc- trine attributed to it ; and on the other hand, the duty of submis- sion and obedience to the instructions belonging to this authority. We are certain (for it would be blasphemy to doubt that a God- man would fulfil his promise) we are certain that this infallible doctrine, whatever changes take place in the affairs of the world, will never depart from his Church. As to obedience and sub- mission they never will cease to be a duty. But the observation of this, as well as all other duties, depends upon the free will and master forcibly felt the dignity of their character and knew how to assume the language belonging to it. " These things speak, and exhort and rebuke with all authority. Let no man despise thee." * And because authority falls away where obedience ceases, the apostles had been admonished, that they were, in case of refusal and opposition, to shake the dust from oft" their feet, and that the refractory would be treated more severely than Sodom and Gouiorrha. The apostles also warned the faithful of the sub- mission they owed to their bishops: — "Remember your prelates, who have spoken the word of God to you; whose faith follow." f And you, Sir, remem- ber here your supreme governess expelling the bishops, who were preaching the word of God, rejecting, instead of following their faith. 'Obey your prelates anJ be subject to them." % Gall to your mind, moreover your ancestors of 155S, and all those, who elsewhere called themselves reformers and reformed. Jesus Christ had said to his apostles: "He that heareth you, heareth me; and he that despiseth you, despiseth me." And the apostles, sanctioning by the same motive the deference they required of the first faithful to the instructions of their bishops: "Ho that despiseth (said they) these things, despiseth not man, but God, who also hath given his Holy Spirit in us." || What a contrast between the submission and respect commanded by the scripture towards bishops, and the insubordination and contempt of the reformers towards one another. We will not here repeat the painful narrative of it — both you and I have too often heard it. But let us at least learn from scripture, what conduct they ought to havo adopted. They should have had recourse to the successors of Peter, to the suc- cessors of the apostles, and to them they should have addressed the same lan- guago that Cornelius, his family and his friends formerly addressed to Peter. " Now therefore, all we are present in thy Bight, to hear all things whatsoever are commanded thee by the Lord." § This is what the respect enjoined by the scripture commanded them to do ; you know what they did do. • Titus, ii. 15. f Heb. xiii. 7. {Ibid. 17. ||Thes.iv.8. §Actax.33. 74 ON TIIE CHURCH OF ENGLAND liberty of man. What is certain and as clear as the light of the aim, is that all those who fulfil this duty of obedience to the in- structions of the spiritual authority, can never be divided, when once this authority has spoken. What is certain and as clear as the sun, is that by their submission to its word it must necessa- rily follow, that they remain united together in the same Church and the same faith. The authority given by Jesus Christ to his apostles and their successors is therefore the means that he has established, and that we were looking for, to conduct to him, to cement in one body and in one and the same belief, the people of all nations, of all countries, and of all ages. And in fact, that such actually was the intention of our divine Legislator, we learn positively and in distinct terms from the apostle St. Paul. The passage I am going to quote from his epistle to the Ephesians, deserves your particular attention. ' And he gave some apostles, and some prophets, and other some evangelists, and other some pastors and doctors, for the perfec- tion of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ that henceforth we be no more chil- dren tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the wickedness of men, by cunning craftiness by which they lie in wait to deceive.' ' St. Paul, you see, here re- veals to us the interior thoughts of Jesus Christ, his wish, his positive intention in giving us his apostles, and after them the bishops, often designated by St. Paul under the name of pastors, doctors, and priests. For what reason did he establish their ministry? To assemble his saints from all parts of the world, and by their union to raise the edifice of his Church and his mystical body. And how long was the ministry of the pastors to be continued? Until all people drawn by their teaching be- come members of this great body, and meet successively in the union of faith to the end of the world. Thus the flocking to the same Church, adherence to the same body, agreement to the same faith are the effect, the aim, and object of the ministry es- tablished by Jesus Christ. " Ch. ir. 11. 12. 13. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 75 The conclusion of the passage confirms what has been said in a still more forcible manner. For, following two metaphors of St. Paul, Jesus Christ has given us the ministry of the pastors , in order that, being strengthened by their instructions, we may not float about in uncertainty, like children who, when left to themselves, go as chance leads them to the right or to the left without knowing where to direct their steps ; and that ' we may not be tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine.' The doctrine of our conductors is for us, therefore, a solid and weighty anchor. Let us hold fast to this anchor, and let the winds, and tempests, and the waves work their pleasure. We shall undoubtedly, be always agitated, but never shall we be drawn away. The immovable anchor will firmly keep us within sight of port, and uniformly directed among ourselves towards one and the same centre. As for those, who being deceived by the artifices and seductions of some individuals shall withdraw from, this powerful support to follow them, you will see them be- come the sport of the winds, having no longer any guide but their own fancy, always uncertain on a rough ocean, wandering from error to error, and, in the confusion of opinions, not know- ing what course to steer, some disappear at last under the waves, and others rush distractedly into a labyrinth of endless errors. This is the history of the Church and of all the sects that have separated from it ; and St. Paul's doctrine is found to be correct by the experience of eighteen hundred years. 2. ' But if in the small number of writings that we have upon the preaching of our Saviour and of his apostles, we find such manifest proofs of infallibility, how much more striking and more multiplied proofs must they have had, who had the happiness to hear Jesus Christ, and, after him, his disciples, explain them- selves upon this important article! We knew that the sacred writers have given but a very succinct account of what was said and dune by our Saviour and by themselves. St. John 8 goes BO far as to declare that if they desired to give the full detail, tke world would scarcely contain the books that must be written. 1 Tradition of the first ages. " Gospel. Last verse. 76 ON TIIS CHURCH OF ENGLAND These words that we road upon the promises made to the Churches should therefore be regarded as some straggling evidences. They arc sufficient indeed to command our belief; but they must have been more repeated and more developed by the living voice of Jesus Christ. In fact, by imposing upon some the obligation "f teaching, and on others that of hearing, he must necessarily have guaranteed all against the danger of deceiving, or of being deceived. By enjoining them above all things to preserve unity among themselves from one end of the world to the other, Jesus Christ must strongly have insisted upon the only means which would keep them together, and in their turn the apostles must have repeated it over and over again in every place to which they carried the word of the gospel. They must have explained to the bishops, as they establish them, that the right and obliga- tion of instructing would in all ages attach to the episcopal body of the Church : that decisions made by it should become for the people a rule of faith, manifest and at the same time unshakea- ble, by the power of the Holy Spirit. It is even to be supposed that the apostles would have carried their solicitude so far as to explain the manner in which they might one day have a mutual understanding and act in concert with one another, according to the circumstances in which it should please heaven to place the Churches, in the exercise of their authority and the promul- gation of their doctrine. These considerations convince me, that, of its own nature, the dogma of infallibility must have been, a dogma the most clearly known from the first times of the Church. Nevertheless I make no difficulty in confessing that we do not discover so many traces of it in the three first ages as in those that follow. They are not, however, devoid of them, and some of them you shall be made acquainted with. If they are not to be found so frequently, beside that there remain but few monuments of these distant times, I shall moreover give you two particular reasons for it. Whatever certainty there ■ should exist, at that time, that from the concurrence of the bishops there would result an infallible opinion, there was no necessity of having recourse to it to condemn heresies so evi- AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 77 dently contrary to faith, as were those of the first ages, that we know not which to be most astonished at, the audacity or the extravagance of their authors. It was a most simple and easy thing for every teacher to refuse such opinions on the ground of their manifest opposition to the doctrine just established by the apostles. The whole of the first age was filled with their dis- ciples ; the second possessed many of them, and those who were not had been for the most part instructed by the immediate suc- cessors of these disciples. Thus the world was still echoing with the voice and doctrine of the apostles : the remembrance of them was fresh and present to the minds of the faithful. Their seats, to use the expression of Tertullian, still spoke : it was sufficient in those times to say to the innovators ; ' ' The apostles taught not so ; they wrote not so : your doctrine is not theirs ; this is the first time we have heard such ; it is false, it is impious." The second reason is the impossibility there existed during the fire of persecutions, for the bishops to assemble and to pronounce decisions in common, and to give at that time to the world splen- did proofs of their authority. In those days of researches and of blood, there were no other means of meeting novelties but by private condemnations, in which, nevertheless, the bishops discover to us unequivocal traces of their opinion of their in- fallibility. Every one who then thought proper to dogmatise, to gain credit for his foolish ideas, was marked by the diocesan bishop, who admonished him of his error, charitably reproved liim, refuted, threatened, and at last condemned him. The affair then passed from one to another, and according to the facility of cirrimistances to the neighboring bishops, to those of the province, to those of the apostolic Churches, and with more eagerness and deference still to him, who presided upon the eminent chair of the prince of the apostles. For the greater part of the time it was from this principal see that the condemnation came, which from the centre of unity reached in every sense to the farthest extremities. The bishops adhered to it by a consent either expressed or tacit, and their separate approbations formed in their great rc-union, the irre- 78 ON THE CIIURCH OF ENGLAND fragable decision of the dispersed Church : the dogma was set- tled, and the refractory innovator from that time marked out to all the faithful, as he would be in our days after a similar sen- tence, under the disgraceful name of heretic. Thus in the sec- ond age were Saturuinus, Basilides, Valentinus, Carpocrates, Cerdo and Marcion, condemned and stigmatized as corruptors of the faith. 1 In less stormy periods, and when the Church had a respite under milder and more humane Emperors, the bishops assembled together, as far as circumstances permitted, and pronounced au- thoritatively upon whatever belonged to faith. We learn this from the following very remarkable passage of Tertullian : ' ' Ac- 1 It would be an historical error to imagine that the Churches were then iso- lated, without communication together, and unknown to one another, whereas from their very origin they tended to nothing but to be united together, being mutually known and of support to one another. Call to mind the circumstances of Fortunatus going to Rome to implore the authority of the Pope in the dis- turbance that had commenced at Corinth ; of Clement, who sends him back with four deputies to labor in re-establishing order and peace ; of Polycarp going in person, at his advanced time of life, to confer with the pope Anicetus upon mat- ters of discipline; of Ignatius writing seven epistles to different Churches during the long rout, which conducted him to martyrdom, and begging of them to send trusty priests to his Church at Antioch to console it on his absence, and soon, on lis death. The following is the address of a letter written on occasion of the martyrdom of Polycarp, as found in Eusebius. " The Church of Cod which is at Smyrna salutes all persons of the holy Catholic Church spread throughout the world." In the year 1G6. Eusebius has moreover preserved for us the letter of the Churches of Vienna and Lyons to the Chinches of Asia and Phrygia on the martyrdom of Pothinus, Attalus, of Sabina and their companions, in 177. Even from the time of the apostles, a correspondence was opened among all the Churches and was frequent. St. Paul praises the Romans, " because their faith was spoken of in the whole world, * and because their obedience was published in every place." % He begs them to salute his fellow-laborers, Prisca and Acquila, who had for his life laid down their own necks, to whom not only he gave thanks, but also all the Churches of the Gentiles. X From Asia Minor, St John, according to ancient tradition, addressed his first epistle to the Parthians, who were so remote from him and out of the Roman Empire. St. Peter wrote to the Christians of Pontus, Gallatia, Cappadocia, of Asia, Bythinia, and in fine, to all the faithful of the dispersion. St. James and St. Jude addressed their epistles to all the dispersed tribes, to all those who preserved themselves in God and in Jesus Christ. * Ch. i. 8. t Ch. xvi. 10. 1 Ibid. 4., AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 79 cording to a prescribed ordinance, from all the Churches, there are in certain places of Greece councils assembled, in which the most important affairs are discussed publicly in common; and tins representation of the whole Christian name obtains amongst us the greatest veneration." 1 Eusebius, speaking of the first ages, observes, "that, at the birth of heresy, all the bishops of the world rose up to extinguish the fire." 2 The ambitious Mon- tanus aspires to pass for the paraclete promised by Jesus Christ. 3 He seduces, by the austerity of his manners and of his precepts, and by the imposing style of his prophecies. The bishops of Asia assemble frequently at Hierapolis, 4 and, after much precau- tion and a long examination, pronounce the prophecies of Mon- tanus to be false and profane, as also those of Priscilla and Maxi- milla, who had left their husbands to join the extravagances of the impostor ; they condemn their doctrine and their errors, and cut them off from the communion of the Church. In 255, when peace was restored to the Christians under the Emperor Gallus, many of those who had fallen in the late perse- cutions demanded the peace, and the communion of the Church, and were received into it, after having undergone the rigors of the public penance. Novatian, a priest of a stern and harsh character, is indignant at the condescension that is shewn to these weak and cowardly creatures, maintains that absolution cannot be granted to those, who have fallen into idolatry, and separates from Pope Cornelius, whose see he even desires to usurp : a synod of sixty bishops condemns him at Rome, and expels him from the Church. Paul of Samosata, bishop of Antioch in 262, to draw to the Christian religion Queen Zenobia, attempts to reduce the myste- ries to intelligible ideas, and attacks the mystery of the Trinity, by denying the divinity of our Saviour. The bishops of the province take alarm, flock a second time to Antioch, condemn the 1 Treatise on fasting, ch. XIII. It is to the councils here made mention of by T rtullian, that the learned IJcvcridge, with as much sagacity as correctness, attributes the most ancient apostolic canons. See bis opinion on the apostolical canons, No. 8, in Cotelier, t. 1. p. 430. 2 Eccle iast. Hi tory, book II. ch. XXV. i In the year L31 ondec Marcos Amelias. ' In 181 under Comwodus. 80 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND errors of Paul, depose him from his see, and with one voice ex- communicate him. Paul, under the protection of Zenobia, obstinately persists in not quitting bis see, until such time as Aurelian, becoming master of Antioch, ordains that the episcopal residence shall belong to him, to whom the bishops of Rome address their letters; judging, adds Theodoret, that he, who submits not to the sentence of those of his religion, ought to have nothing more to do in common with them. These examples, to which others might easily be added, prove that from the first ages the bishops pronounced decidedly upon what pertained to faith, declared what was revealed and what was not, cut off from the Church those who refused to obey them, and exiled them among heretics and infidels, by pronouncing anathema upon them. And it was not because these men had taught erroneous doctrines, but because they did not submit to the authority of their ecclesiastical superiors, because they per- sisted in their opinions after they had been condemned and raised themselves as contumacious rebels against the decision of the bishops. ' The proud and the contumacious are struck unto death, by the spiritual sword (said St. Cyprian), when they were cut off from the Church.' 1 Now to inflict spiritual death on proud spirits, and to devote the contumacious to eternal damna- tion, it was necessary that the bishops should know all their rights, that they should be convinced they could not be mistaken in their decisions ; it was necessary that they should be assured that Jesus Christ was with them, that the spirit of truth never would abandon them, and that, according to the order of their master, whoever did not hear them, deserved to be treated as a heathen and a publican. Far from suspecting these venerable bishops, of not knowing their authority, one would be much rather tempted to accuse them of having exaggerated it, and ex- tended it beyond its bounds, by attributing to their scanty synods an infallibility which had only been given to the entire body of bishops. But it must be observed that the opinions it con- 1 ?' Spiritual) ^ladio superbi et contuaiaces nDcantur, dum de ecclesia ejiciuL-^ lur." Ep. LXH. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 81 demned in these first synods, had already been condemned by the apostles; that, perhaps also, this small number of assembled bish- ops knew to a certainty the doctrine of their absent brethren, and that at all events, the acceptation of these would take place in due time, and conclude by adding to the weight of the synodi- cal sentences the last seal of infallibility. ' 1 Eusebius * teaches us that the council of Antioch, after having condemned 1'aul of Samosata, addressed a synodical letter to Dionysius, bishop of Rome: to .Maxituus, bishop of Alexandria; to all the bishops, all the priests and all the deacons of the world, and to the whole Catholic Church under heaven. "The faithful who were in Asia (says Eusebius again) assembled many times and in many parts of Asia, and, having examined the doctrine of Montanus, they condemned it; on which account these heretics were driven from the Church and deprived of Catholic communion." "One might be surprised" observes the learned Thomassin, f'that Eusebius, after saying that the Montanists were con- demned by all the Catholic Churches, is satisfied with proving this by the coun- cils that were held in Asia But the Churches of Asia were living in commu- nion and in perfect understanding with the other Catholic Churches of the world; they had been informed that these revolters were equally displeasing to the other Churches as to themselves. The silence of the other Churches confirmed the ex- amination and decision of the Churches of Asia." "Pope Cornelius wrote a letter to Fabius, bishop of Antioch, in which he in- formed him what resolutions had been agreed to, by the council and by all the bishops of Italy and Africa, besides those of many other provinces. They had also published the letters of St. Cyprian and of the other bishops of Africa who were assembled." % St. Alexander, after having assembled a council at Alexandria, in which Arius and his first adherents were condemned with unanimous voice, wrote to all the bishops a synodal letter, of which Theodoret has preserved us a copy. He lays open the proceedings and the doctrine of his council. Among other things he says, " We all profess one only Catholic and apostolic Church, always invincible, although all the world conspire to make war upon it, and victorious over all the impious attempts of the heretics, placing her confidence on the word of the Fa- ther of the family, Take courage, I have conquered the world." And now see how he concludes. "Condemn them with us after the example of your brethren, who have written to me and subscribed to the note which I sent you together with their letters. There are some from all Egypt, from Thcbais, from Lybia, I'entapolis, Syria, Pamphylia, Asia, Cappadocia, and the neighboring provinces. I am expecting to receive similar letters from you; Cor after man] other iiH'di- chiee, 1 am led to think that the agreement of the bishops could complete the cure of those whom they have led astray." || II.- seat these decrees to all the Churches, and from their unity they acquired • Book vn. t Traiie dogma, et hint, rim moyetu doni on tfesi tervi -pour maintenii I'unitc dans tous lis temps. Ch. II. Art. 7. \ Ku: ebius Book VI. on Novalian. || Athan. I. Vise against Arius. 82 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND The facts I have just adduced speak for themselves. The bishops have displayed their authority in all its possible extent ; the faithful have recognised it by complying with the sentences passed upon the heretics, with whom they ceased from that time to hold any communication. Thus the usage and the practice of the primitive Church sufficiently prove that the dogma of in- fallibility was recognised in it. "We see, moreover, in the few writings that are come down to us from these times, that the fa- thers considered this dogma as a truth generally established. Let us return to the beautiful epistles of St. Ignatius, of which I spoke in my preceding letter. ' While among you, I loudly called upon you and said: Be united to the bishop. 1 Avoid divisions as the source of evils : all of you follow the bishops, as Jesus Christ follows his Father.' 2 You see the episcopal authority marked out as the means of preserving unity — ' I bid you farewell in Jesus Christ, Be submissive to the bishops and the priests, according to the command of God. * I exhort you to do every thing in divine concord, the bishop presiding in the place of God." 4 It is still to the episcopal chair that he attaches the bond of unity. ' You must concur with the aid of the bishops, as you do ; for your worthy priests are in harmony with them, like the chords of a lyre, and your union forms a wonderful harmony Take care, therefore. not to resist the bishop, that you may be subject to God; for all those whom the Father of the family sends for the gov- ernment of his house, you ought to receive as you would him that sends them,' 5 We will not press the words of St. Ignatius so far as to conclude that he attached infallibility individually to each bishop. Those of whom he speaks were personally known to him. He knew that their doctrine was pure and conformable their final strength. This ia the remark of Bossuet upon the dicisim just ad- duced in the synod of Alexandria against Arius. Hint, of the Variation*. Book VIL Art. 69. ' i To the Philadelphia™. 2 To the Christians of Smyrna. 3 To the Christiana of Tralles. 4 To the Christians of Magnesia. & To the Ephesians. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 83 with the universal doctrine ; that union reigned between them and the priests, between them and all those whom the Father of the family had sent for the government of his house. Now this unity would have ceased, immediately that a bishop taught any dogma contrary to the received doctrine of the Church, as we Lave seen in the case of Paul of Samosata, condemned and de- posed by his brethren. Thus, then, when we come to analyze the matter, we find, that it was upon the conformity with the general doctrine of the bishops, that St. Ignatius founded, on the one hand, the particular authority of each bishop, and, on the other, the entire submission he required to be paid to them by the people ; and, by a more remote consequence, it appears necessary, according to his principles, that the doctrine of the great majority of the bishops must have been infallible, other- wise the faithful, by conforming themselves to the bishops ac- cording to the command of God, might have been drawn into error, without any means of being preserved from it. In a word, if we understand the doctrine of this great man, he teaches us that the unity of the Church depends upon the submission of the faithful to their particular bishops, and on the agreement of the bishops among themselves, that is to say, that the supreme au- thority given to the body of the bishops is the safeguard of unity. "We find the same doctrine taught one hundred and forty years afterwards by the illustrious doctor and martyr of Carthage. ' The Catholic Church is one,' wrote St. Cyprian, ' and the bish- ops joined together are the bonds of this union.' ' These few words comprise the whole subject of this and the preceding let- ter: they give you in abridgment the entire theory of the unity and the infallibility of the Church. ' Fifty years before St. Cyprian, Irenams, 3 a disciple of St. ' Ep. XXXIII. '"There is but one episcopacy spread on all sides in many bishops united together." Cyprian, in his h'/>. in AiiIikHhiiiik, bishop of Africa, Bod again, in his book On Unity; "The Catholic Church is united in all its parti and consolidated by the cement (glutino) of the bishops adhering to one another. We, who are bishops and who preside in the Church, we ought par- ticularly and more closely to embrace and defend this unity. s Born in 120, martyred under Marcus Aurelius in 203. 84 ON THE CHURCH OP ENGLAND John through Polycarp and Papias, and, after the martyrdom of St. Pothinas, second bishop of Lyons, wrote his great work Upon Heresies. Hear what he says in Book IV. ch. XLIII : ' For this reason we must obey those who preside in the Church, who hold their succession from the apostle, as we have shewn, and who, with the succession of the episcopacy, have received the certain grace of truth, according to the good pleasure of the Father.' Where the certain grace of truth is found, there, as- suredly, no error is to be apprehended: and there, of course, must be found infallibility. And again in the XLV. chapter of the same book, speaking of the successors of the apostles, he adds : ' It is they, who preserve the faith that we hold of God alone, who made all things ; they who expound to us the scrip- tures, without danger of errors.' Let us then boldly follow their exposition of scripture, confident as we are with St. Irenaeus, that we can never go astray, while we follow their steps, nor fall into error, while we adopt their interpretations. Tertullian, 1 so celebrated for his writings, and above all for his excellent book on the Prescriptions against the heretics, ad- dresses them in the following ironical strain. " Well ! then, for your satisfaction, we will suppose that all the Churches have fallen in error ! not one of them has been looked upon by the Holy Spirit ; not one directed in truth by the Spirit which Christ had sent, and which he had asked of his Father to be for his people the teacher of truth ! This agent of God, this vicar of Christ has then we will suppose neglected his ministry, by per- mitting the Churches to think and believe otherwise, than he had himself announced to them by the mouth of his apostles." Ter- tullian observed in this passage that, according to the heretics, it would follow that all the Churches had fallen into error, because they all were agreed upon the articles, which the heretics reject- ed. He sets off the absurdity of such a supposition, by introdu- cing the perpetual assistance of the Holy Spirit, promised to the Church by Jesus Christ. It was his belief therefore that the Church was always guided in the truth by the Holy Spirit, and I Hied in 210. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 85 under its influence always secure from error : and this his belief was founded upon the same reason and the same promises that have induced the belief of it in all Christian ages before and after. If I have prolonged the discussion of the three first ages, it is because they are in general less known, because it was necessary to shew that the promises of Jesus Christ, being then more re- cent, must on that account have been more lively in the remem- brance of men; because the bishops who illustrated the rising Church were well acquainted with the rights and obligations of their ministry, and because, to discover with more splendor the dogma of infallibility, with which their minds were profoundly impressed, nothing more was wanting in those times than the appearance of favorable circumstances. These circumstances did at last appear when Providence called Constantine ' to the throne, and seated religion on it with him. Soon were the bishops of the whole world beheld assembling at Nice, 2 where the doctrine of Arias was solemnly condemned and banished. The doctrine of Macedonius was afterwards treated in the same manner at the general council of Constantinople, 3 that of Nes- torius at Ephesus : 4 that of Eutychites at Chalcedon. 5 It would be superfluous to mention all the oecumenical councils that dis- tjaguished the following ages up to the council of Trent. Let but an attentive observation be made of the circumstances, and motives which caused the convocation of these councils, the man- ner of proceeding adopted by the fathers in them and the recep- tion their decrees met with in the world, and it will be perceived that iii all ages there prevailed a general persuasion that the ejueopal authority was the means instituted by Jesus Christ to preserve unity among all his disciples, and that the opinions adopted by the majority of the bishops are for all an infallible rule of faith. It would be tedious to pursue in detail this ex- amination of the councils: let us confine ourselves to that of Nice. Arias, being condemned by a synod at Alexandria, makes 1 In 306. Proclaimed afterwards at Rome, by the Senate, first Augustus, SrfS. ■In 326. Mnllftl. 'In 431. ■• In i.M. 86 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND his complaint to several bishops in other parts, explains to them liis principles, declares, his submission, implores their light ami assistance, succeeds in making himself some friends, some pro- tectors and a great number of proselytes : his cause soon becomes alarming on account of the seditions, tumults, and murders which it occasions. Constantine endeavors to apply a remedy to it, but fails in his attempt. In the mean time, the flame is still on the increase, and the Emperor, together with the bishops whom he consults, sees no other means of extinguishing it, besides the authority of a general council. He convokes it at Nice. Upon the news of this, the minds of men become calm, parties relent, each one flatters himself that he shall soon see his cause triumph, and remains at peace in the expectation of the definitive decision to be pronounced at Nice. Hither assemble from Europe, Africa and Asia, patriarchs, metropolitans and bishops, to the number of 318, and in their attendance a great number of doctors, and at the head of all, the celebrated Osius of Cordova, as proxy for Sylvester, the head of the Church. Arius is cited to appear — many of his partisans were there already. He comes in person to give an account of his opinions. You see, so far the universal opinion well proved. Every thing bows before the authority that is going to pronounce sentence. Arius and his party pay hom- age to it, and submit beforehand. The august and venerable senate opens its sessions, Constantine appears in all his imperial pomp. I pray you, remark this passage, in the answer he gives to an harangue that had just been addressed to him in the name of all the fathers. ' The rage of division spreading through the minds and penetrating the hearts of men, excites them one against the other, troubles peace, ruins faith by rendering it uncertain, fills the country with disorder and tumults, and after all this, exposes religion to the contempt, the ridicule, and the blasphemy of our adversaries (the pagans), who take occasion from thence to tear it in pieces. To remedy so great an evil, I have thought nothing to be so powerful as the whole Church acting with authority in this holy assembly that represents it." 1 1 Eusebius, Sozoiv.on, Tliecxioret, Nicephorus. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 87 The first business, the council entered upon, was that of Arius. 1 It sets about it with that maturity and wisdom that was to be expected from so great and learned an assembly, in which also were sitting a great number of confessors of the faith, mutilated in the persecution of Licinius and covered with scars, which Con- stantine kissed with respect. Arius and his doctrine were unanimously condemned, the consubstantiality of the Word re- e ignised and fixed to the immortal symbol, which is still to this day repeated by all Christians. The fathers of Nice, at the end of their labors, addressed a synodal letter to all the Churches under heaven, to notify their decisions and to offer them to the acceptation of all the Bishops in the world. In it they say ; ' that with one voice it had been resolved to anathemize Arius and his impious doctrine.' They had already presented the decree of his condemnation to the Emperor, 2 who had received it with the highest veneration as if it had been drawn up by heaven itself and had been sent to him on the part of God; he added, that whoever would not submit should be banished as a rebel to a divine decision. This menace reduced to obedience Arius and the fautors of his doctrine, who till then had refused to subscribe to the decision of the council. Constantine after- wards dispatched two letters, one encyclical, addressed to the Churches in general, the other to the Church of Alexandria, where the heresy had first appeared. In the first are found these words: ' Whatever is done in the councils of the bishops ought to be considered as the will of God.' And in the second, after enumerating the tumults, discords, and schisms that the heresy had produced, he adds: 'It was in order to put an end to all these that, by the will of God, I assembled so great a number of bishops at Nice.' And at the conclusion: What three hundred bishops have ordained is nothing else than the sentence of the only Sun of God: the Holy Spirit has declared the will of God 1'V means of these great men, whom he inspired. Therefore let do one doubt, let no one delay; but all of you return in good 'Bee the HivtoirecU I'Arianieme, Liv. 1. Maimbourg. s Ru(inus, Gelasius. 88 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND earnest into the way of truth.' 1 Before he dismissed them, he re-assembled the bishops in his palace, where he delivered to them an excellent discourse to recommend to them the peace of the Church, which they would preserve by preserving inviolably, amongst themselves, a perfect union of mind and heart, in unity of doctrine and sentiment, conformably with what the Holy Spirit had just established by their means in the council. 2 Eusebius, of Cesarea, 3 who a long time opposed the word consubstantial, afterwards wrote the life of Constantine, in which he praises his indefatigable zeal to secure the superiority of that salutary faith, which the Holy Spirit himself had truly promulgated by the holy fathers assembled at Nice. After the condemnation of Arius, they examined the question of the paschal solemnity ; all the fathers agreed to observe it on the same day, and the orientals promised to conform to the prac- tice of all the other Churches, that is to say, of Italy, of Africa of Lybia, of Egypt, of Spain, G-aul, Britain, Greece, Asia, and Pontus. ' The council of Nice,' says Athanasius, in his apology, has been doubly useful, because the people of Syria, Lybia, Mesopotamia, had not been accustomed to celebrate the pasch on the proper day, and because the Arian heresy had arisen against the Church. The Catholic world assembled in council. The day of the pasch was regulated for all, and Arianism was con- demned. It is true that for the day of the pasch they used these terms, it hath seemed good to us, after the example of the apos- tles, in order that all the world may obey — but to regulate faith they said : the Catholic Church believes : and immediately they add the entire confession, to shew that it was not a new doctrine, but that of the apostles, and that what they had put down in writing was not their own invention but derived from the apostles.' But if afterwards Arius and some of his adherents retracted 1 Thus it was that the decision of the council was proposed as a divine oracle, utter which there was nothing more to be examined; for we are not to doubt that these letters of the Emperor were dictated by the bishops, or at least drawn up according; to their instructions. This is the reflection made by the judicious Floury, after introducing the letters of the Emperor. His. Eccles. t. p. 159. edit, in 4to. i Hist, de Arianisme. s Euseb. Sozom. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 89 their word and the obedience they had sworn, the passions, inci- dent to men explain this perjury but too well; we should doubtless lament it, and deplore the fatal consecpiences it produced upon tiie unfortunate reigns of Constantius and Valeris. But it is enough for our present purpose to know that Arius and his parti- sans had recognised this authority before it explained itself; and that they themselves had afterwards submitted to its decision, and that they did not venture to revolt against it for a considera- ble time after their condemnation. "With regard to the other bishops in various parts, who had not been able to assist at the council, they almost all applauded its decrees : the most enlight- ened doctors took up the defence of them, as soon as they were called in question, and generally all nations conformed to them. The Nicene Creed, already adopted by the universal Church, was for the second time universally proclaimed at the council at Constantinople, and there received the additions made necessary by the heresy of Macedonius against the Holy Ghost. From the sixth age, it was publicly recited in the Greek Churches, according to the ordinance of Timotheus, patriarch of Constanti- nople ; sung in the Churches of Spain, according to the form of the Oriental Churches, by the decree of the council of Toledo: 1 in Gaul and Germany towards the end of the eighth century; towards the year 1014, in all Italy, by the constitution of Bene- cRci VIII. ; in fine it has been kept by the reformation; and in our days it is still held in honor among almost all protestant communions. And to say a word upon the individual opinion of the most celebrated doctors of the Church, the learned Euscbius of Ce- sarca, who, in the council, held out a long time against the term consubstantial, was nol on that account prevented from writing afterwards, * thai the Holy Spirit himself had truly promulgated the faith, by the instrumentality of the fathers of Nice. He had already reckoned among the evils inflicted by Licinius on the Church, the prohibition to assemble councils. ' For,' adds the historian, ' important controversies Can never be terminated with- ' in the life el Con tantine. 90 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND out a synod." We know with what strength, spirit and eloquence Athanasius supported during a struggle of 50 years, against the Seuiiarians, the decisions of the council of Nice. Threatened with exile when in his see, and with death in his exile, he evinced the same courage, and had not less credit at the extremities of Gaul, at Treves, than in Egypt, and at Alexandria. From all the places, to which he was constrained to take refuge, he com- hated with unshaken firmness that heresy armed as it was with the power of two Emperors, and many times in synod carried off in triumph the formula of Nice ; as the rule of the orthodox faith. 2 He calls it the word of God, the divine and sacred oracle of the Holy Spirit. ' What can be wanting to the council of Nice that we can desire further ? The Indians are not ignorant of it, and all the Christians of barbarous countries revere it. The word of God, who has spoken by this oecumenical council, will remain for ever.' See now how he commences the profession of faith, which the Emperor Jovian had demanded of him in 363, after the agitated and unfortunate reigns of Constantius and Julian. ' Know then, Emperor, that the faith, which the fathers of Nice have acknowledged, is the faith that has been preached from the beginning ; know that it is followed by all the Churches of the world, whether in Spain or in England, in Gaul, in all Italy, in Dalmatia, Dacia, Mysia, Macedonia, and all Greece, in Pamphylia, Lycia, Isauria, Egypt, Lybia, Pontus aud Cappadocia. To these we must add all our neighboring Churches, as well as those of the east, except a small number, who are in the party of the Arians. We know all those whom we have just named and others still more distant : we even have letters from them.' 'Cyril of Alexandria expresses himself of the fathers of Nice with the same veneration. ' Truly, with them was Jesus Christ, who said, when two or three are gathered to- gether, there am I in the midst of them, for how should we be permitted to doubt that Jesus Christ himself invisibly presided over this great and holy assembly.' St. Hilary, St. Basil, and St. Jerome hold the same language. St. Ambrose, 3 whose scnti- •Ecclca. Ilis. B. T. c. LI. Ep. to the Bishops of Africa. 3 Ep. xxxv, Lib. v. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 91 ments ought to be discoverable in every Christian heart, hesitated not to declare : ' I embrace the decrees of Nice, from which neither death nor the sword shall separate me.' Saint Augustine calls it ' the council of the world, whose decrees are equal to the divine commandments.' Speaking of the error of Saint Cyprian Upon rebaptization, he says, that ' tbis holy martyr would have adhered to the decision of the Church, if the truth had been cleared up and declared in his time by a general council,' 1 as it afterwards was at Aries and Nice. From these principles, which are also ours, this great man concluded in another passage, as we also conclude with him, ' that disputes may be tolerated be- fore the matter is decided by the authority of the Church, but that to dispute after such decision, is to root up the foundation of the Church itself.' 2 Pope Leo declares that, ' ' they could never be reckoned among Catholics, who would not follow the definitions of the venerable synod of Nice, or the regulations of the great council of Chalce- doB." 3 "I declare, wrote Gregory the Great, that I receive and venerate the four first general councils, as the four books of the holy gospel." 4 Socrates, who wrote his ecclesiastical history a century after the council, says, that "the fathers of Nice, al- though for the greater part simple and unlearned, could not fall into error, because they were enlightened by the light of the Holy Spirit." 5 It would certainly be very easy, were it not long and tedious to produce here many other passages which the writings of the Cithers of the Church furnished upon this subject. You will perhaps be more pleased to learn that the authority of the fathers of Nice has found defenders even amongst the reformers. The most learned and the most moderate protcstant theologians have i lade no difficulty in submitting to the decisions of the four first ral councils; and upon that of Nice hear how, amongst oth is. Bull, bishop of St. David's one of the most skilful divines ©f your English Church, expresses himself. "In this council 'I!. II. lv. on Bapt, 'Serm. .\iv. r Call inistic author, in his book on the re-union of Christianity, had Written, '• thai others who seemed to have had in view this general reconciliation, lii' I n"t. sufficiently distinguished whai is fundamental from what is not so." '1 he equally Calviniatic author of tin- Remarks upon this work, makes an obser- vation upon this passage, which also is worthy of notice ; What (says he) is this man thinking ot ".' Does he imagine that it is so easy a thing to agree upon \\h;it is fundamental and what is not so? Has it not hitherto been an iTuur- tiOiitUabU difficulty." % • Amalil. Polenburg in prtrst uiror. rp. tSoe Vrejugu legitime! de M. Nicole, p. 898. ; Nicole Pregugi ■ legitimes centre let Calviniitei, p. 358. 98 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND life without ever knowing what to hold of all they have read ; and the multitude of the ignorant and simple, because they can- not read, shall be condemned never to know Jesus Christ ! But it is not so : and this misfortune is much more to be feared for the learned than for those little ones, whom the world despises, and whom Jesus Christ has preferred for the uprightness and simplicity of their soul : he loved them too much not to put him- self within their reach and be known by them. ' I confess to thee, O Father,' did he exclaim in an effusion of tenderness for them, ' because thou hast hid these things from the wise and the prudent, and hast revealed them to little ones.' 1 Suppose a legislator, a founder of an empire or republic, with- out troubling himself about creating magistrates and tribunals, were to deliver a code of his laws into the hands of his people and say to them ; ' Take, read and interpret my laws yourselves : they are clear and intelligible. Above all, let there be no more law suits, but let fraternal love, concord, and unity dwell among you all ;' would not this be an admirably contrived republic ! And what would follow from this admirable and novel regulation? In the first place, three parts out of four, not knowing how to read and having no time to lose, if they are to get a living, would throw the code aside, and care nothing about its contents. The others would read in it whatever their interest might make them desirous of finding. And then commenting upon the text at pleasure, no one would be wrong; each one without contra- diction would have the law on his side. Thus, cavils and dis- putes without end or measure, implacable hatreds, irritated hearts, would prevail through the four epiarters of the empire. The making such an hypothesis, is a folly that stares us in the face. Away with it to some other world if you like ; it certainly belongs not to ours. Accordingly never was there a legislator who did not institute magistrates with supreme authority ; never a founder of an empire who did not feel how essential they were, to interpret the sense of the law, to apply it to all particular cases, to maintain the security of property, and persons, that is, 1 St. Matth. xi. 25. Luke, x. 21. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 99 to decide as a supreme tribunal upon objects as frivolous and transient as are their proprietors, upon interests of dust and dirt; and yet there are men who would have Jesus Christ, he who knows the heart and its folds, man and his silly passions, his restless curiosity, his rage for singularity, for pre-eminence, for making himself a name among creatures and followers ; he who knows the ignorance and the incapacity of the multitude, and who notwithstanding has chosen to mis them together under the same law, and of all the people in the world to make but one nation of brethren ; there are those, I say, who would have Jesus Christ to have been devoid of ordinary foresight in the Church of which he is King, in his plan of universal concord, on which the souls redeemed by his blood, and their happiness for time and eternity was at stake. 1 The reformation began by telling men ; ' Take reason for the guide and the judge of your belief,' and thus at once men were dubbed Logicians and theologians. Discord soon appeared among them, scattered divisions in their debates, and produced, with unceasing and inexhaustible fecundity, rival and jealous sects, who could agree in nothing but in doing their utmost to demolish One another, always attacking the youngest with increased fury, without perceiving that in their blind rivalship, the edifice must :i - lit decay and crumble, and bury them all under its ruins. Before the reformation, and as long as the voice of the spiritual guides were followed, all was firm and compact: one and the same creed was common to all: one and the same doctrine was preached and heard through the vast empire of catholicity. Let good Dense decide between these two conditions of mankind. Let us judge of the principles by their effects. The principle of Catholics is found by experience, to be the b f .nd of peace and harmony: that of protestantism, the source of trouble and dis- eord ; the former unites mankind and would make of the world one family of brethren; the lattei separates them, and would continue eternally to parcel out mankind into hostile parties. 1 "Godliness i- profitable to all things, having promise of the life that now to, and of that which ia to coinu." St.. Paul, 1. E/j to Tim. iv. 8. 100 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND The principle of authority, so analogous to our nature, is there- fore also the only one in conformity with the will of the divine legislator, since he incontestably proposed to unite his adorers of all nations and all ages. You then, who have hitherto been so much taken with this liberty of discussing matters of faith, frankly acknowledge with us, that this liberty is demonstrated to be anti-christian, since instead of assembling together, it in- fallibly disperses. Again, the reformation said at its commencement : ' Man is subject to error, and infallibility is the property of Glod alone.' So far we are agreed : and when we grant this prerogative to bishops united together, we are far from considering it inherent in their nature, which resembles our own : we derive it from heaven and from its promise. We take it as a favor, a pure gift, which Jesus Christ has condescended to bestow upon them for our advantage, in order that we may no longer be abandoned and fluctuating children, but may be conducted by a steady and paternal hand. As for you, who reject both the promises and gifts of your Saviour, you, whoever you be, reformers or re- formed, Lutherans or Calvinists, Anglicans or Presbyterians, Methodists, Anabaptists or Socinians, you who acknowledge that the society of which you are members aspires not to this privilege from on high, you who acknowledge that it may err and draw you into error, how can you without inquietude continue and terminate in such a Church your mortal pilgrimage ? How is it you are not afraid of all going fatally astray ? How can you walk on with a safe conscience, when by your confession, your steps are not secure ? Your whole society might go astray, you Bay : it is not then the church to which Christ has said the gates of hell shall never prevail against her. 1 Your society might go astray ; it is not then the Church to which Christ gave the ad- mirable and consoling assurance, ' Behold I am with you all days, even to the consummation of the world.' 2 It might go astray; it is not then the Church to which is addressed the magnificent promise of its divine founder : ' I will ask the Father, »Matth. xvi. 18. *D*id. xxviii. 20. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 101 and he shall give you another paraclete, that he may abide with you for ever : who will teach you all truth. 1 It might go astray ; it is not then the Church of the living God, 2 the pillar, and ground of the truth P It might go astray ! What then is become of those apostles, pastors, and teachers, who, by divine institu- tion, shall always direct the Church, shall fix it in faith, that it may not be carried away by every wind of doctrine ? Acknow- ledge, Sir, that your ancestors are here visibly shewn, by their own principle, to be cut off from the body of Jesus Christ. Thoy have renounced the promises and rejected the gifts he made to his followers ; they are no longer his : they have ceased to belong to him : and thus you are declared, by your own mouths, to bo strangers to his Church, from the time that you have estranged yourselves from the privileges with which he has been pleased to invest it. But attend to another consequence from the same principle, which will astonish you, and which, I confess, surprised me much, as soon as I discovered it. You remember all we have said in this and the preceding letters upon the authority of teach- ing in the governors, on the duty of submission in the governed, and on the enormity of heresy and schism. Now, Sir, with the glorious principle of the reform, all authority disappears in su- periors, all obedience in the faithful: there is no longer such a thing as heresy or schism ; or, if you please, heresy and schism, which the scripture and all antiquity describe as the blackest of all crimes, are found from henceforth in the rank of lawful ac- tions, quite harmless and innocent. In fact, when once you re- eognise no other rule of faith but the scripture, when once you grant to each one the right of interpreting it according to his own lights, it is most evident that I only use my right when I adopt that interpretation which appears to me the most reasona- ble. What ! you think it extravagant! Be it so, to your heart's (■'intent; you think so, and I do not oppose you: permit me also, together with yourself, t<» exercise my rights. Yes, but you run straight in the face of the doctrine generally received ! 1 St. John, xiv. 10. xiv. 13. *Ep. to Tim. 3. 16. * .... 102 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND Very well ! What have I to do with the opinion of another ? Speak not to me of authority ; I am emancipated from it. Ex- ample is not my rule ; reason is my only guide : and so long as I have no new lights upon such and such a question, I must hold to the opinion I have chosen. But, you will say again, this very choice and this perseverance in the choice, precisely con- stitute heresy. Indeed ! then I will be a heretic ; you will be one when you please ; and all others in the same manner : there will no longer be any but heretics in the world, because all having equally the right to choose, each one will preserve the opinion that appears to him preferable. And more than this, if amongst all the Christian societies that exist, I find none of my opinion, I shall, in virtue of the same right, form a society apart ; let those join in who please : if nobody fancies it, I shall remain alone, and my Church will be entire wherever I am myself. ' Perhaps, in your eyes, I may appear to invent absurd hy- pothesis, for the purpose of laying unjust accusations against the reform. Not at all, Sir ; and if you take the trouble to go back to its birth, or to consult the works of the most celebrated lati- tudinarians, 2 you will see that I only act the part of an his- torian. The first reformers and their emissaries, dispatched from all parts to propagate their doctrine ; had flattered them- selves that by filling the world with furious declamations against 1 1 remember to have read, somewhere, that a Mr. Johnson, an Englishman, had in his house, at Amsterdam, a Church composed of four individuals, and that it was soon divided and reduced to two, because the said Johnson excom- municated his father and brother, who on their part also excommunicated him. • Among others, Strimesius, Belgius, and other professors, both of the Uni- versity of Francfort on the Oder, and of the Academy of Dusburg in the Duchy of Cleves : Jurieu and his partisans in Holland ; Cartwright, Chillingworth, and Burnet, in England. Papin, who was a long time attached to their principles, ultimately became frightened at their consequences; he saw that they must ab- solutely open the Church to the Socinians, and even extend salvation out of Jesus Christ. He stopped at the brink of the abyss; and there, measuring all its terrific depth, and afterwards fixing his eyes upon the divine and infallible authority of the Church, he acknowledged it, humbled himself before it, and ca;ne to surrender himself up to Bossuct. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 103 the pretended tyranny of the pope and the bishops, they would insensibly substitute themselves in their place, and would draw to themselves all the consideration and authority they would succeed in withdrawing from them. The illusion did not last long, and there was no necessity for waiting much to be con- vinced in what their noble experiments terminated. All those who hud given into their ideas had set themselves to comment upon the scriptures, to search them, to compare passages, to reason upon the old and new testament : for they had been at great pains in preparing versions of them in different languages, each being seasoned to the taste of the translator, and according to the opinion that he wished to bring into repute. 1 The rage for controversy had then gained all states and con- ditions ; the courtier and the magistrate, those engaged in the profession of arms, and those immersed in business; females even, particularly those, who prided themselves on their wit and learning, all must meddle with theology. The monk, tired of his cell, threw aside his habit, gained his liberty, and proceeded, like a good protcstant, with edifying zeal to dictate to the suc- cessors of the apostles : the village schoolmaster did not think himself less clever than the new ministers. In vain did these latter remonstrate against such presumption : very soon they listened no more to them : no one understood how to obey : all claimed their rights, their independence, and that liberty of the 1 Luther made a version of the scripture into the vulgar language.* Zuinglius after having examined it, publicly announced that it corrupted the word of God. The Lutherans said the same of the version of Zuinglius. (Ecolampadius and the theologians of Bile, made another version: but, according to the fatuous Beza, it was impious in many parts i the divines of Bile said the same of Beza's version. In fact, adds Dumoulin, another learned minister, ho changes in it the text of scripture ; and .-peaking of Calvin's translation, he says, that Calvin does violence to the letter of the gospel, which he has changed, making also additions ill' bis own. The ministers of Genera believed themselves obliged to make an exact rersion, but James I. King of England, declared in the conference at Hampton Court, that cif all tin; versions it was the most wicked and the most unfaithful. * The learned Emser, doctor of Leipsick, discovered in it more than a thousand 104 on the church of England children of God, that had been so much extolled to them from the beginning. Thus the arms with which the ministers had overturned the legitimate authority of their superiors, were turned against themselves. They had advanced from liberty to licentuousness and anarchy, each one pulling his own way, shaping the Church to his fancy, inventing and forging doctrines according to his inclination. ' The authority of the ministers is entirely abolished; all is lost, all is going to ruin. There is no Church among us, not even a single one, in which there is dis- cipline ; the people tell us boldly; You wish to act the part of tyrants in a Church that is free ; you wish to establish a new papacy.' ' God gives me to know what it is to be a pastor, and the wrong we have done to the Church by the precipitate judg- ment and inconsiderate vehemence that has induced us to reject the pope. For the people accustomed, and as it were trained to licentiousness, have entirely thrown off the rein ; they cry out to us : I know the gospel well enough ; what need have I of your assistance to find Jesus Christ? Go, and preach to those who are willing to hear you.' 2 Bucer, Capito's colleague at Strasburg, made the same confession, in 1549, and added, that in embracing the reformation they had sought for nothing so much, ' as the pleasure of living in it according to their inclination.' 3 Myco, the successor of (Ecolampadius in the ministry at Bale, indulges in the same complaints: ' The hues attribute every thing to themselves, and the magistrate has created himself into a pope.' 4 And the peaceable and unfortunate Melanchton, who spent half his life in lamenting the part in which he had been engaged, and died without having sufficient courage to abandon it ; ' The Elbe, (wrote he in confidence to a friend,) 5 the Elbe with all its waves could not funrish tears enough to weep over the miseries of the distracted reformation.' ' You see the violence of the multitude and its blind desires,' wrote he again to his friend Camerarius. So much excess, so many crimes, which were daily committed iu the reform, at last opened the eyes of the leaders upon the 1 Capito, Buccr's colleague at Strasburgh, writing to his friend Farrell. fcfifi Ep. Culv. p. 5. ' Ibid. p. 509, 510. * Ibid. p. 52. * Lib. II. ep. 202. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 105 principles which they had at first put forward, and made them understand that they must change both their method and their language. Blinded creatures ! not to have known sooner, that to destroy, there is nothing more required than that enthusiasm and intoxication to which the multitude is so prone ; whereas when they wish to rebuild, they know not in what manner to bring back to order and subordination the minds that have been once infatuated with their religious independence ! However that may be, the reformers employed for this purpose all the resources of their mind, the credit they enjoyed with princes, and the little control they still retained over the people. See with what ardor poor Melanchton set himself about it : ' Would to God, would to God, said he, that I might be able, not indeed to conform the domination of the bishops, but to re-establish their administration ! for I see what kind of a Church we are going to have, if we overturn the ecclesiastical government. I see that tyranny will be more insupportable than ever "What will be the condition of the Church (continues he) if we change all the ancient customs and there be no longer any fixed prelates and conductors ?" ' ' Our brethren blame me because I give jurisdiction to the bishops. The people accustomed to liberty after having once shaken off the yoke, are unwilling to receive it any more, and it is the towns of the empire that hate this dominion the most. They do not trouble themselves about doctrine and religion, but only about power and liberty.' 2 Some time after this, it appears that the ministers and the principal person's of the party struck in with his opinion: for instead of saying, our brethren blame me, he says now : ' Our brethren are agreed that the ecclesiastical mode of government by which bishops are recognised as the superiors of many Churches, and the bishop of Rome superior overall the bishops, is permitted. It has also been permitted to kings to give reve- nues to the Churches : so there is no dispute about the superiority of the pope and the authority of the bishops; and the pope as 1 Book III. cp. 101. s Book I. ep. 17, addressed to Luther. 106 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND well as the bishops may easily preserve this authority. For the Church stands in need of conductors to maintain order, to have an eye over those who are called to the ecclesiastical ministry and over the doctrine taught by the priests, and to exercise ec- clesiastical judgments : so that, if there were no bishops, we must needs make them. The monarchy of the pope would also tend very much to preserve agreement in doctrine among many nations. Thus we should easily agree upon the superiority of the pope, if we were agreed upon all the rest, and kings might themselves easily check the encroachments of the pope upon the temporalities of their kingdom.' 1 What reflections do this pas- sage, and many others which I could produce, occasion on the irresistible force of experience and truth, which oblige men to recognise the principles which they themselves had overturned. 3Ielanchton is not the only one who entertained these opinions in these times. You will have remarked this declaration ; ' Our brethren are agreed.' In the confession of Augsburgh, they had already proclaimed tolerably loudly the authority of the Church, of the Catholic Church, and even the doctrine of the Church of Eome. I have given you the passages above. As for the Calvinists, without retracing here the multitude of pro- fessions of faith, and of synods, the object of which evidently was to instruct and to hold people's minds in subjection, by the voice of authority, I shall notice some sentences of the synod of Delpht, because they have more closely imitated the language of the Catholic Church, and almost adopted the same doctrine. The remonstrants had advanced that the synod with which they were threatened would not be infallible like the apostles. It was not easy for the Calvinists openly to deny this ; the synod of Delpht, however, answered them in these words : ' Jesus Christ who promised to his apostles the Spirit of truth, whose lights should conduct them in all truth, also promised to his Church to be with her to the end of ages and where two or three arc assembled together in his name there to be in the midst of them ;' from which they conclude, a little later, ' that when pas- Resp. ad. Bel. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 107 tors from several countries should be assembled, to decide ac- cording to the word of God, what must be taught in the Churches, we must, with a firm confidence, be persuaded that Jesus Christ would be with them according to his promise.' Now the declara- tion of this provincial synod (and this should be observed) was afterwards read and approved at the national synod of Dordrecht, called by all the party the almost oecumenical synod, because, in fact, in it were found deputies from England, Scotland, the Palatinate, Hesse, Switzerland, Geneva, Bremen, Emden, in a word, from the whole body of the reformation, not joined to the Lutherans, with the exception of the French, whom reasons of state kept away, but who approved of it afterwards. We see here the whole of Calvanism brought back in its turn to the principle of authority, as was Lutheranism before it, in the con- fession of Augsburgh. The particular teachers who have since appeared, and who have shewn more learning and moderation, in both parties, have adopted the same principles and held nearly the same language. I do not even entirely except M. Jurieu, whom I could cite to you, were it not of more consequence to make you acquainted with a more grave and more solidly instructed personage M. Molanus, the Abbe de Lokkum, the friend and fellow-laborer of Leibnitz, in the project of conciliation carried on for some time, between them and Bossuet, but which unfortunately failed. M. Molanus assigns as the third rule of faith the interpretation of the scripture adopted by common consent or authorized by the practice of the ancient and modern Church, — or which should be approved by a general council held legitimately and freely. All Christians are agreed Csays he) upon the following points: 1st, such or such councils arc nut always necessary of themselves, but only on account of certain circumstances, as when the troubles of tin- Church cannot otherwise be appeased.' 2dly. 'It is agreed that the interpretation of scripture given by the council should be preferred, at least exteriorly, to that of any individ- ual : on this account the confess!) f Augsburgh declares that a general council is the ultimate means employed by antiquity 108 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND to procure the peace of the Church, and ought to be resorted to. The synod of Dordrecht, all the councils held by the two parties, and even that of the apostles, confirm the same thing. In fine, we find still another decided confirmation in the acts of the synod of Charenton, where it is said, that if it were permitted to all and to each one to adhere to private interpretations, there would be as many religions as parishes, ordly. Again, it is agreed, that the oecumenical councils have very often erred, 1 and that when we attribute to them the assistance of the Holy Spirit, or that infallibility to which all Christians owe an inward submission, we have never pretended that such infallibility belongs to them, precisely because they are councils, but because of the subsecpicnt consent of the greatest part of the Church, to which the assist- ance of the Holy Spirit is promised.' And in the new explana- tion of his method he says : ' If the Church had decided in a council undoubtedly general, such as are, by the consent of all parties, the first of Nice, the three of Constantinople, that of Chalcedon and that of Ephesus, the contrary to that which the protestants decide, there is no doubt that this decision should carry the day.' 2 You have here then, according to the learned Abbe and according to M. Leibnitz, for they both labored to- gether, the authority of the Church brought into honor and re- pute : and according to them and the acts of Charenton, it is not lawful for any one to adopt his private interpretations, because otherwise there would be as many religions as parishes : the oecumenical council should supersede all others ; infallibility is attached to the greatest part of the Church, because the assist- ance of the Holy Spirit has been promised it. Do we require more ? Or did we ask more in the time of Luther and Calvin ? Who would not feel himself vehemently moved with compassion at the sight of the fatal schism, that has been effected by means of crying down an authority, to which the reformers were one day to have recourse again ? the blindness and folly of man ! 1 1 know not who can allow that the general councils have erred : certainly M. Molanua cannot do it, for he teaches the opposite in this very passage. 'Ibid. 322. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 109 Oh ! the misery of your guilty reformers and their numerous descendants ! But I am detaining you too long in a strange country : I has- ten to conduct you again to your fellow-countrymen. From the time that England, which perhaps may claim the glory of supe- rior knowledge in its temporal interests, and of excelling in the art of governing, had taken the fatal resolution to legalize schism and to form itself into a religious constitution, it felt the neces- sity of investing its new Church with all the strength and power of the nation. One of the first concerns of the parliament was to carry a law for the establishing of uniformity of worship. The supreme governess acted upon the same plan. No sooner had she substituted her bishops for those of the ancient Church, but she gave them to understand that they must assemble and draw up a formula of faith, that might serve as a basis of the com- mon creed of her subjects. They actually assembled in 1562, and drew up the thirty-nine articles, which afterwards received the approbation of parliament. But what influence could the gov- erness of the parliament have over the mind, after they had taught the people to despise the holy authority that Jesus Christ had given to his Church ? And, above all, what did the new spiritual lords mean by their twentieth article? With what face did they there claim for themselves the right of judging contro- versies, deciding upon matters of faith, of enforcing obedience to their decisions by all their spiritual censures, they, who but late had prided themselves on their abjuring the authority of the universal Church, and had just made so shameful a display of insubordination against their legitimate superiors? How come they, now a-days, to entertain so high an idea of the episcopal dignity and authority, much misplaced undoubtedly in their per- sons, and yet essentially most Christian ? There are then cer- tain powerful truths with which men find themselves pene- trated and as it were impregnated in spite of themselves; to which they are constrained to pay homage, when their interests hold their peace. For then they lay down their principles in theory, as if they no longer remembered having combated them 110 ON THE CIIURCH OF ENGLAND the day before in their actions. To conclude, all that they gain is to give a more scandalous display to the contradiction with which they were reproached between their actual doctrine and their public conduct. Who are you? Said they to them : whence come you ? Yesterday we knew nothing of you ? Whose place do you occupy? It is the place of your masters in the faith, of your superiors, to whom the right of holding their sees still be- longs, unless sheer violence makes them lose it. You have de- spised authority in them, and would you have it recognised in you? They at least held it from the universal Church, with which they were in communion : they formed a part of the apos- tolic chain of succession ; but have not you by breaking his com- munion, broken also the chain? Have you not gone out of the regular line ? Intruders into these ancient sees, your authority comes from yourselves. 1 You have no existence, no power, except from your royal governess ; you are her creatures as she is the creature of parliament ; your authority comes from her ; her's from it. Join together, as long as you please, in framing rules of policy, among you and yours. So far, so good. But do not pretend to subjugate our opinions : they are free, you know " ' lit fieri solet in aedificio collapso, ut qui illud restaurare cupit, in veteri fundamento non fedificet, quia convulsum est et minus tirmum, et plenum ruderum, sed novum aliquod fundamentum ponit : ita in restauratione ecclesiae factum est. Voluit enim Deus non in veteri fundamento, hoc est, in aucceaaione epiacoporum, sed novo quodam et extraordinario niodo illam instaurationem fieri." "Nostri episcopi et ministri non sunt a papisticis episcopis ordinati."* It is a principle that he who withdraws himself from the authority of the Church, loses by that act all the jurisdiction he had received from it : and there no longer remains any jurisdiction for him to communicate. Thus the bishops who were not papistical, of whom Whitaker speaks, supposing even they had enjoyed the right of conferring it before their defection, would not have been able to transmit any after. Cardinal Pole was then the last archbishop of Can- terbury in the apostolic succession, and Parker the first in the parliamentary and royal establishment. And should the consecration of Parker have been valid (and this even, accord- ing to Le Courayer, is at least doubtful, to speak of it in the most favorable manner possible) it is certain that the jurisdiction of the Church could never have been communicated to him. * Dr. Whitaker, lector reg. Cantabr. Controv. II. q. V. c. vi. Died in 1595. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. Ill they are, you have taught us so, and without this, you would not be where you are.' The dispute has continued since and still exists between the partisans of the established Church, and the numerous sects, who wish for none. The first, agreeably with the institution of the divine Legislator, judge with reason that without authority there can be no unity in the Church : the others, agreeably with the principles of the reformation, and much more consistently, are of opinion, that if they must sub- mit to a spiritual authority, there was no necessity for beginning by emancipating themselves from it, and that, all things con- sidered, it would have been better to have kept to that, which derived its origin from God himself. It is certain that the doc- trine of the twentieth article is unwarrantable on the principle of the reformation, in England as well as upon the Continent. 1 There was no other means of establishing it than by returning to the Catholic principle. It would have been necessary that the first reformers, instructed by experience, should frankly have acknowledged their mistake, have loudly declared that they had gone astray, and that neither order, nor unity, nor salvation could be expected, unless under the protection of an infallible authority. A candid and spiritual acknowledgment like this would have been too heroic to have been expected from the very p rsons who had raised the standard of revolt. But you who come so long behind them; you, who without partaking in their aggres- sion, equally share in their errors, and the fatal consequences, of which they were the first witnesses, and which they so much de- plored towards the end of their career, what prevents you from surrendering yourself to the clearness of the proofs, the force of truth, and the the lesson read by experience 2 Never lose sight of the day when the reformation took its rise in your country and elsewhere, and say ; The Church and its authority were then as before, as they are to day, and as they will be for ever, solidly 1 See among others, Lord Somamri Tract*, vol. II. p. •!<;<>, where you will litnl an anonymtu work, the author of which expresses himself in a strong and viru- ] ni. manner, against the twentieth article, and against bishop Sparrow, the pub- lisher of the thirty-nine articles and the canons. 112 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND established upon the promises of Jesus Christ ; this foundation is not less firm and immoveable than that of the universe, for the finger of God supports them both alike, and promises to them the same duration. ' Yes, Sir, will you say to me, I see with you and our re- formers the evils that have come from their principles : in spite of myself I must acknowledge that men have abused to their ruin the rights that had at first been given to them ; I am struck also with what you have said to me on the infallibility of the Church : your proofs embarrass me ; I know not what reply to make : nevertheless, Sir, excuse my boldness ; I am an English- man ; I love and adore liberty. Your principles of authority destroy it. They are adapted for nothing but to make slaves, and a slave I can never become.' I was expecting to see you fly to this strong entrenchment and your last refuge, Sir ; I am aware of the sentiments of your countrymen and their ideas of liberty ; ideas which they carry even into the sanctuary. I remember that during my residence in London, even one of your bishops (Dr. Hoarsley, if my mem- ory serves me faithfully) published a work in which he pushed to excess this objection against the Catholic principles. I read the work at the time, and was scandalized, not to say indignant. How, said I to myself, how can a man endowed with reason and great talents persuade himself that he is made a slave of, be- cause it is proposed to him to submit his private and individual opinion to the uniform opinion of all the bishops of the earth ? Liberty then, according to him, would be for each individual to prefer his own self to the highest authority of the world. But is it not the height of pride and the last degree of extravagance ? ' Not to submit to such an authority, would be the height of pride and the blindest arrogance What more manifest proof can there be of our ingratitude to Grod, than to place our glory and exert our efforts in opposing an authority, which he created to be an aid and assistance to us V ' 1 St. Augustine to his friend Honoratus on the Utility of believing tlic Church. xvii. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 113 But, Sir, because upon the single fact of revealed dogmas you are required to follow the decisions of antiquity, of all the councils universally adopted, will you on that account consider yourself as degraded from your liberty and treated like a slave ? Were they slaves in Italy, in Germany, in France, Spain and England, where so many celebrated universities flourished, where so many great men have appeared in every state of life and every branch of science. To produce only one, but he the first of all, Bossuet, was he in your opinion a slave, he whose vast genius embraced so many sciences and treated them like a master, he whose iniuiitible and supreme excellence subdued all the enemies against whom he fought, made so many conquests to truth, and erected so many immortal trophies to religion ? But, you will say, as far as relates to dogmas at least, Bossuet was a slave, since he teaches so boldly that when the Church has spoken, we have only to believe and be silent. One moment, Sir, I pray. I may perhaps have something to say to you, which will produce a salutary confusion at your no- tion, and banish it for ever from your mind. Tell me, if you please, should Jesus Christ re-appear upon earth, or rather if you had had the happiness of seeing him and hearing his in- structions, would you have refused him obedience? Would you have considered yourself a slave because he commanded you to believe in his word ? You say nothing. Well then ! the au- thority to which you are at the present day to subject yourself, is still the authority of Christ. It is not the voice of man, that you obey by hearing the Church ; but that of Jesus Christ. He has spoken by his apostles ; as all Christianity agrees. He has spoken by his successors, and even as far as the fifth age, pro- t st.-mts are all agreed upon this. He continues to speak and will speak to the end of the word, by their means ; this is de- monstrated ; he himself has said it, promised it, and often re- peated his assurance of it : for this you have heard all the proofs. 1 1 " I will say more : I declare to you that, if I were born a Catholic I would retaain a good Catholic, knowing well that your Church puts a very salutary re- straint upon the wanderings of human reason, which finds ncith.T bottom nor 10* 114 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND Throw them aside your low ideas of servitude, and feel your- self much more ennobled under the yoke that your divine Re- deemer has with his own hand placed upon you, and upon the whole human race without exception. shore, when it attempts to sound the abyss of things : and I am so convinced of the utility of this restraint, that I have imposed upon myself a similar one, by prescribing to myself for the remainder of my life, some rules of faith, from which I do not allow myself to depart." (J. J. Rousseau, in his answer to M. Seguir de Saint -Brisson, dated Moitiers, July 22, 1764.) A very remarkable acknowledgement, forced by experience and reflection from a man, of all others, the most proud of his reason and liberty of thinking. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 115 LETTER IV. On tlie Authority of Tradition. At the same time that reformers were pretending an absolute deference and an exclusive submission to the Holy Scripture, they united all their hatred and all their attacks against the in- fallibility, of the Church. This disposition ought not to surprise y<»u, Sir; the reason of it you will easily discover. It is not without reason that they fear an impartial and inflexible judge, whose eye is always open and cannot be escaped, and whose sen- tence is unchangeable ; there is no imposing upon a supreme tribunal, the office of which is to maintain the law in its integ- rity, to call to it those who are gone astray, to explain it to those who misunderstand it, to rectify all their errors, by giving to the text its just and true signification ; a tribunal armed moreover with a sacred authority to condemn, and proscribe the refractory and contumacious. The only means of escaping from its con- demnation and anathamas, was to dispute its title of divine au- thority, and to annihilate, had it been possible, its jurisdiction. The authors of the reformation saw full well, that they had no Other plan to adopt: they adopted it, and employed all their ef- forts to bring it to bear : they flattered themselves they should succeed by substituting for the judgment of the Bishops, the authority of the word of God, so religiously revered by all the faithful, so imposing to Christian ears : and as they reserved to themselves the right of interpreting it, there remained nothing more to be feared in their appeal from the Church to the scrip- tine, that is to say, to an insensible and passive letter, which signifies whatever we please, and bears ever, the most opposite interpretation without objection or reply, because it is dumb: which suffers violence and is put to the torture, and utters no complaint, because it is dead. 1 They established, then, for their '"Speech is to writing what a man is to his portrait. The productions of writing present theuiselvos to our eyea as if living ; but if we interrogate them, 116 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND first maxim, that the judge of faith was not the Church, but the J ioly Scripture. lam going to examine this principle with you: and if the arguments I have to oppose to it are not much weak- ened by my pen, you will, I think, have to conclude that it was absolutely untenable in itself and in its consequences. For the second maxim, they taught that every thing essential in religion was in the scripture, and certainly, if the scripture was the sole rule of faith, the whole system of faith must be found there entire. The inference is logical but no less false in itself than the principle from which it is derived. And this we shall shortly prove. But previously it may be observed and collected from each of these principles, how little the first ages were then understood. The reformers were always boasting of the purity of those times, and with good reason : they were desirous, as they said, to re- produce this golden age of Christianity, and the renovated world was again to behold the restoration of the primitive Church which they always contrasted with the Church of Rome. They acted upon these three following suppositions : 1st, That anti- quity had possessed no other rule of life but the holy scripture : 2ndly, that it had never believed or practised any dogmas or precepts but what were found therein : 3rdly, that those which are not discovered therein had been added to the simplicity of faith and worship, in what they called the times of ignorance and corruption : whence they concluded that by retrenching these superfluous additions, which they also pronounced to be super- thcy hold a dignified silence. It is the same with scripture, which knows neither what it should conceal from one man, nor what it should say to another. If it is attacked or insulted without cause, it cannot defend itself; for its father is never there to defend it ; so that he who imagines that he can establish by scripture alone, a clear and durable doctrine, is a great simpleton." (Plat, in Phcedr. Op. t. X. edit. Bipont. p. 382.) Glory to the truth ! (exclaims upon this the eloquent Comte de Maistre) "if the Word eternally living does not vivify the scripture, never will the scripture become the Word, that is to say, Life. Let others then, as long as they please, call upon the dumb word, we shall laugh in security at this false good, always waiting with a tender impatience for the moment in which its deluded votaries shall cast themselves into our arms, open to receive them now for nearly three hundred years." AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 117 stitious and idolatrous, and by following what they supposed to be the rule of antiquity, 1 they should infallibly tally with it, and thus bring back the Church to its primitive purity. Such was the visionary proposal made by them on their appearance in the world : in their sincerity and simplicity, if you please, but more probably, in their ignorance of the first ages. For you have al- ready seen, with regard to the first point, Sir, that antiquity has laid the rule of faith in the doctrine of the bishops, according to the ordinance of Jesus Christ and the instructions of the apos- tles : on the third, you shall see clearly in the course of this ex- amination that the articles, treated as posterior additions, belong to the primitive times : on the second, I am about to shew you that, far from thinking that the dogmas and precepts were ex- clusively contained in scripture, antiquity teaches us after the scripture itself, that many articles are derived to us from the apostles by a purely oral tradition. The clergy of Elizabeth, in unison with the innovators of the continent, and like them in opposition to the sacred books and antiquity, declared accordingly, that 'the holy scripture contain- 1 In 1528, at the dispute at Berne, at which were present Zuinglius, Pellican, Bucer, BuHinger, CEcolampadius, and Capto, the second of the six theses asserted : " The Church of Christ does not make ordinances and laws without the word of ( tod.''* And here they were only treating of those laws which regard salvation and bind conscience, according to the explanation given to the theses by Kolb, in the name of the reformed. — Bucer, replying to a Catholic, asserts 'that it had been already proved, that the true Church makes no regulation which is not 1 1 sarly established in scripture. 't In 1636, in the disputation at Lausanne, Virol said, 'that it was not sufficient to say : I have found it written (in the Fathers), but wc must keep to the scrip- ture: nii'1 ill it it w that make* the Church of the Lord'% 'The holy fathers, de- clared Jewel in the name of the Chttrcb of England have never combated heretics except by the arms of the scripture."}: 'And thus, he tells as (a little later), when we desired to restore the Church to its primitive purity and intergrity, we did not attempt to build upon any other foundation than the one laid by the apostles and Jesus Christ : after having attended to what he himself has said to us, alter having considered the example of the primitive Church, we proceeded, Ac* || • HUtoire it la rtforme de la Suisse, par Ruchat, professour do belles lettres a Lau- sanne, torn, ii. p. U5. edit. do. Geneve, 1727. t Ibid. torn. vi. p. 31, 35. t -Apolog, i. uo. 15. [bid-vi. no. 1G, 17. 118 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND eth all things necessary to salvation ; so that whatsoever is not read therein, or can not be proved thereby, is not to be required of any man that it should be believed as an article of faith, or be thought requisite or necessary to salvation. 1 ' But without going any further, shew us, my Lords, the validity of your bap- tism, by scripture alone. Jesus Christ there ordains that it shall be conferred, not by pouring water on the heads of the be- lievers, but by the believers plunging into water. The word €««-ti^£oj employed by the Evangelists, strictly conveys this sig- nification as the learned are agreed, and at the head of them, Casaubon, of all the Calvinists, the best versed in the Greek language. Now baptism by immersion has ceased for many ages, and you yourselves, as well as we have, only received it by infusion : it would therefore be all up with your baptism, unless you established the validity of it by tradition and the practice of the Church. And again, we see from scripture that Jesus Christ commanded his apostles and their successors to preach and baptize ; but we do not read any where that he com- municated this right to heretics, whom he treated as pagans. This being settled. I ask you, from whom have you received baptism? Is it not from the Church of Home? And what do you think of her ? Do you not consider her as heretical and even idolatrous? You cannot then, according to the terms of scripture, prove the validity of your baptism ; and to produce a proof for it, you are obliged to seek it, with Pope Stephen and the councils of Aries and Nice, in apostolical tradition. You recognize with us the precept of sanctifying the Sunday, and considering the care with which you inculcate it to your people and the wise regulations of governmeut that concur with your instructions to confirm it in their minds, 2 I cannot doubt that you regard this precept as necessary to salvation. Never- 1 Article 6. • For the honor of the English government and for the shame of Catholic coun- tries, I am bound to publish, that the Sunday is observed in England with an exterior regularity, which we unfortunately, are far from equalling. On this day, especially consecrated to God, the laws and customs allow no public assem- blies, out of the churches and temples ; no balls, no routs, no masquerades, no AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 119 theless, it must be allowed, scripture is absolutely silent upon this precept : we every where read Sabbath (Saturday): and no where Sunday. And here again, the third time, are you obliged, in an essential matter to support yourselves with us upon tradi- tion, which shews us, from time immemorial, the Sunday as sub- stituted for the Sabbath or Saturday, in order to celebrate on one and the same day the two great prodigies of the ancient and modern eras, the universe coming forth from nothing, and Jesus Christ from his tomb. In order to discard tradition, you tell us, my Lords, that the scripture contains everything that is necessary to salvation. A strange and fantastical doctrine! and such I cannot but call it, seeing that you are most positively indebted to tradition for the scriptures, that you receive them from its hands, and that with- out it, you would not know to what to betake yourselves to de- monstrate their authenticity : for we do not prove that a book is written by such an apostle or such an Evangelist, except that it has been received and read as such in the Churches. But sup- posing that to please you for a moment, we must admit your sixth article. I cheerfully consent to do so, and at the same time we will open these inspired writings. What do we read there? 'Now T praise you brethren that you keep my ordinances Uenela^h, no Yauxhall ; all theatrical amusements are forbidden. In London, where commerce is so prodigiously carried on, the public conveyances remain at rest, the course of letters is suspended, the post does not receive them, although it is permitted to them in the evening to make their way to their destination : throughout the whole kingdom, stage wagons employed in trade or commerce stop on the high roads. I know not whether an act passed upon a Sunday would not be annulled by its very date alone. Certain, however, it is, that the civil power is obliged to suspend its pursuits, and concede to the debtor the light of appearing freely on tin- day of tin- Lord. On this day, moreover, the parliament is '-| ( ,.- d, in spite of tin' urgency of afikirs, and 1 have often .-ecu it respectfully interrupt it-- sessions at the approach of crreat solemnities. It must be confess d that there U in these laws a tone of wisdom and gravity that makes an impression on tlw mind. English persons of distinction have often testified t« me their astonishment at not finding in Catholic countries the same respect for the Sunday. They have dielatv.l to Die Hi it the) had been BOHCh scandalized on the subject, and certainly they had I. nt too iiiik h reason to be so. 120 ON THE C1IURCH OF ENGLAND as I have delivered them to you. 1 Stand fast (mark this well I pray you) and hold the traditions which you have learned, whether by word or by our epistle.' 2 Now let us look again at your article. What would the apostles say to it? He desires that they hold equally fast what he had taught them, whether by writing or by word of mouth. And what is it you desire, my lords? Nothing but what is written. That is sufficient. I go on reading : '0 Timothy keep that which is committed to thy trust. 3 Hold the form of sound words, which thou hast heard of me in faith, and in the love which is in Christ Jesus. Keep the good tiling committed to thy trust by the Holy Ghost, who dwelleth in us. 4 And the things which thou hast heard of me by many witnesses, the same commend to faithful men, who shall be fit to teach others.' 5 Apparently you doubt not, my lords, that Timothy followed this direction, and that faithful and fit men being instructed by him, instructed others in their turn. Thus from hand to hand, from age to age, the deposit is come down to you. And all at once you refuse to accept it ; you re- fuse to transmit it, you interrupt, you break the traditional and apostolic chain ; and, under pretext of holding to scripture alone, you disregard its repeated and most evident injunctions. Hon- estly confess, my lords, you did not think, by throwing aside tradition, that you would become embarrassed in contradictions both with yourselves and with the Holy Scripture. We as well as you, receive it, we venerate it, as the most noble present that God has made to man ; do you also honor in the same manner with us his unwritten word, since it comes not the less from Him. Change your article: let us stand fast together, accord- ing to the precept of the apostle, and retain all that has been taught, whether by word of mouth, or by writing. I return to you, Sir, and I entreat you to weigh the observa- tions I have yet to make to you on this important matter. They are suggested to us by the example of the apostles and their suc- cessors, during the illustrious ages of the Church. 1st. We I Tim. vi. 20. * II Tim. i, 13, 14. 3 Ibid. xi. 2. * 1 Cor. xi. 5 II Thcs. xi. 14. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 121 often see that Jesus Christ commands his apostles to preach his gospel and carry it to all nations. 'Go (said he to them) teach all nations whatever I have commanded you.' We no where find that he said to them : Go ; icrite for all nations what I command you to believe and practice, and let them always have in their bands under their eyes the most exact detail of their faith drawn out by your pen We behold the apostles and the disciples, after having received the Holy Spirit, traversing the whole of Judea, announcing to their countrymen the kingdom of God : every thing is done by exhortations, by instructions and prayers. If they had intended to give to the world, and to leave after them a complete code of revealed laws, it would seem natural that they should have drawn out this code, before their separa- tion. Let us observe them therefore at the moment, when, dividing the world among them to accelerate its conquest, they are on the point of leaving Jerusalem and Judea, and of pro- ceeding, each his way, to their particular destination. They separate, and carry with them no writing, no body of doctrine drawn up by common agreement. They all, however, carry the same gospel, but in their minds and hearts; they traverse cities, provinces, kingdoms, and do not present themselves to the na- tions with the sacred books in their hands : they preach from their inspired mouths the evangelical doctrine, but never pro- duce it in writing. To see them and follow them, they seem not even to think of any means of instructing men by the eyes. They are totally occupied with preaching and not with writing : with engraving the word, not upon the lips, but on the souls of men. Many years had already passed, and no work had as yet ap- peared from their pen. 1 You will remark that out of twelve apostles, two only have left us a gospel, and even St. John at a very advanced age, at Ephesus, under the Emperor Nerva, in the year 96. If you examine the occasions which induced them to write, you will find that particular and local circumstances gave 1 We mu.-i exeept Hi'' gospel of St. Matthew : for we learn from St. Chrysos- tom* that eight yean after the ascension of our Saviour, at the time when he •On St. Matthew. 122 ON TIIE CHURCH OF ENGLAND birth to these writings, as well as to all those that compose the New Testament. We owe the gospel of St. Mark to the fervor and eagerness of the Christians at Rome. Eusebius tells us upon the testimony of Clement of Alexandria, 1 that ' the hearers of St- Peter besought Mark, his disciple, to put in writing the doc- trine of the Saviour. He did so ; and Peter, inspired from above, examined this work, approved it, confirmed it with his authority, and ordered that it should be read in the Churches.' St. Luke commences by informing us of the motive that induced him to write. Ignorant and rude men, hurried on by a blind and cul- pable zeal had attempted of their own heads to relate the words and actions of our Saviour : their writings were spreading among the Christians under the false titles of the gospels according to Peter, Thomas, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthias, the twelve apostles, &c. It was of consecpience that these miserable rhap- sodies, should be put down. St. Paul exhorted his disciples to publish an exact narrative, and Luke executed it under the eye of his master, in Achaia and Boeotia, according to St. Jerome, in the year 58, the second of Nero. As for St. John, it was to refute the heresies of Cerinthus and the Ebionites that taking his lofty flight beyond the bounds of time, he shews us Jesus Christ in the bosom of the divinity, the Son of God. God himself, and then re-descends with him upon earth, to relate to us his incar- nation, his life and ministry among men. The epistles, for the most part, are either answers to consulta- tions, or instructions to Churches especially mentioned, or even to individuals. Called forth by local circumstances, but always dictated by the Holy Spirit, they appear successively at different epochs, at distant periods of time : adapted to the circumstances of the place, of the persons and sometimes of the moment, they treat of particular and relative subjects, although at the same time they contain advice, lessons and precepts that are applicable to Christians in general. But this does not authorize us to an- was going to preach to the Gentiles, St. Matthew, at the solicitation of the Jews, sketched out, in their language, a History of Jesus Christ and his revelation. ' Hist. Eccles. Lib. II. xiv. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 123 nounce, or suppose in the sacred writer, much less in the college of the apostles, a settled resolution, a premeditated design of drawing out for us a complete body of doctrine. It is true that all these writings were received with a singular avidity by the faithful to whom they were addressed ; true also that they were communicated one after another with a holy eagerness, and that, from the day on which they were first known to the moment I am addressing you, they have been read in all religious assemblies, in all the Churches of the world, and that this will be done per- petually to the end of time. It is true, that in them the doctrine of the apostles was recognised, their word tasted, their preaching discovered, and that though absent they seemed still to be heard. It is true, that the first Christians must have admired the agree- ment and resemblance of what they read with what they had heard. Yet nevertheless they could not but remark that all that they had heard was not there ; they could not therefore, in receiving these works as the sacred deposit of the divine word, regard them as the sole and only deposit of this word. In fact, did the apostle ever signify that, for belief and practice we must confine ourselves to what they were waiting? Did they ever signify, that they had entrusted to writing all that they had preached by word of mouth, or even all that was necessary for salvation ? There is not an expression of the kind in the whole of the New Testament. It comes from your reformers, who have drawn it from their brain or borrowed it from the ancient heresies, but not from the Holy Scripture, whatever protestation they all may perpetually be making, that they teach nothing but what is there. Let them shew you then this principle, since they admit it and wish you to admit it: let them shew it to you in the sacred volume. But how could they do it, when the contrary principle is found therein contained in so many words. For you have seen St. Paul frequently referring to the instructions he had given by word of mouth ; you have heard him positively distinguishing between his verbal and epistolary instructions ami prescribing that both the one and the other must be equally observed. Up to the time of your forefathers in 1502, this order had been ob- 124 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND served in England as well as upon the Continent, until the day when the Reformation shewed its head. At this epoch, so fatal to your country and my own, the precept of St. Paul was sol- emnly transgressed for the first time, and for the first time it was said: In what pertains to salvation, there is nothing but what is written. But the first Christians who passed many years without the scriptures, who received them successively one after another, and waited for the Gospel of St. John till the year 96 : but those barbarous and yet most religious people who had not even then any Scripture when St. Irenaaus wrote of them towards the end of the second age, they would not have known either what they ought to believe, or what they ought to practice; they would have been without resource for salvation — they who la- bored for it to an extent and with an energy of faith to which we shall never attain ! The reformation must here maintain at least that the means which they then possessed of knowing the law, and which sufficed for them, became absolutely useless as soon as heaven chose to add a second, and that the word reduced to legible characters stripped the word that was not so, of the merit and value it had hitherto enjoyed in the Christian world. I have been proving to you, Sir, that this notion is no ways in accordance with the conduct and doctrine of the apostles ; you shall now see that it accords no better with the conduct and doc- trine of their successors, and that antiquity was never acquainted with any such opinion. 2ndly, I will suppose that the reformed Church has to pro- nounce upon a question of faith. How is it to set about appro- ving or condemning the doctrine submitted to its decisions ? It knows nothing but the Scripture ; all that relates to salvation is to be found there ; nothing can be required that is not read there in full, or that cannot be drawn from it by a sound and lawful inference. It would not and could not therefore have any thing but the Scriptures to consult. But this was not the way of proceeding that antiquity followed. It examined not only the Scriptures, but also what was believed and taught by the Church- es, above all by the apostolic Churches, and what the most AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 125 celebrated Fathers had signified in their works ; its examination was directed both to the holy Scripture and the doctrine of Tradition, to the written and unwritten word of G-od. We will, if you please, produce an example, the most illustrious to be found, and which will dispense with our accumulating here a multitude of facts. The great council of Nice had to pronounce upon Arius, who was pretending to justify his doctrine by Scrip- ture. "We learn from the historians of the time, in what manner it proceeded in its examination : 'The bishops opposed to the false subtilities of the Arians the great truths of Scripture, and the ancient belief of the Church, from the apostles till then. 1 ' After having a long time, maturely and fully considered this adorable subject, it appeared to all our bishops together, that the consubstantiality was to be defined as of faith, in the same man- ner as this faith had been transmitted by our fathers, after the apostles. 2 You see here a fundamental question solemnly decided according to both authorities, according to Scripture upon which Arius placed his reliance, and according to the tradition of the holy Fathers, conformably with which the decision was carried. The single fact of itself crumbles to ruins the principle of the Reformation, and shows how far it has wandered from the ancient way. But I will now adduce something else, quite of a different character but equally powerful for my purpose ; another question of importance, celebrated for its antagonists, who were, on the one side the head of the Church, on the other, the primate of Africa ; and which after having agitated and divided the Church for nearly a century, was definitively decided without any possible recurrence to Scripture, by tradition alone, in this same general council. I am alluding to the question of re-baptization. In vain would they search the Scripture for the manner in which heretics were to be received into the Church : whether they must be admitted with the baptism they had received out of the Church, or whether it must be again administered. You are aware, Sir, how intimately this question is connected with salvation, and 1 Maiiuburg after EusebiuB. '-' GelasiuB. 11* 126 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND how fatal would be tke mistake, if their baptism were null and it were not conferred again in the Church. As the Scripture did not speak to the point, every thing was decided by the prac- tice of the Churches. But at the time when the question arose, this practice was not as yet generally known ; the conversion, the return of heretics, not being at that time an every day oc- currence, nor even frequent in any country. St. Cyprian observing that in Africa they were received without a renewal of their baptism, and being ignorant also of the practice in remote countries, was induced by many plausible reasons to believe, that this custom was injurious to the true principles of the Church and its faith. He assembled his brethren at Carthage, and in concert with them he decided, that from that time forward they should change their method, and that baptism should be conferred anew upon all those who should relinquish their heresy. This decision made a noise : Stephen, the successor of Peter, pro- claimed the voice of tradition from his chief and supreme chair. St. Cyprian, supposing that this tradition was neither general nor ancient, did not submit. The dispute continued, and was only settled by the decision of the council of Nice, which admit- ted without a renewal of baptism all heretics, except the disciples of Paul of Samosata, who altered the form of it. ' We ourselves,' says St. Augustine, speaking of the quarrel between Cyprian and the Pope, ' we should not dare to affirm with St. Stephen the validity of such a baptism, had it not been confirmed by the most perfect agreement of the Catholic Church, to whose authori- ty St. Cyprian would have submitted, if in his time a general council had cleared up and decided the question.' The reformed religion must surrender itself to the evidence of this fact, and must acknowledge, with the great council of Nice, that scripture alone does not contain every essential, and that tradition can supply its silence ; since here in default of the sacred books, every thing is decided by the ancient and general belief, justly considered as the doctrine of the apostles. The reformed religion would never have thought of erecting AND TUE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 127 as a principle that the scripture alone decides every essential point, if it had recollected this decisive and unanswerable exam- ple, and if it had not lost sight of the ancient maxim, to which St. Agustine so often recurs : that we must consider as an insti- tution of the apostles whatever we find to be generally believed and observed in the Churches without being able to discover its origin and commencement. And if it had had before its eyes this doctrine of the first ages, set down by Vincent of Lerins, in these terms : ' we must be particularly careful to hold fast that doctrine, which has been believed in all places, at all times and by all. For as the word (catholic) itself plainly denotes, there is nothing truly and pro- perly catholic, but that which comprehends all in general. Now it will be so, if we follow universality, antiquity, and unanimous consent. We shall follow universality, if we believe that doctrine alone to be true, which the Church every where admits. We shall follow antiquity, if we depart not from the opinions which our ancestors and fathers openly maintained. We shall follow unanimous consent, if we adhere to the sentiments of all, or of almost all, our pastors and teachers.' 1 And if it would have taken advice from St. John Chrysostom, who commenting on the famous passage of St. Paul to the Thessalonians, expresses himself as follows ; ' Hence it is plain, that all things were not delivered in writing, but many otherwise ; and are equally worthy to be believed. Wherefore let us hold fast to the tradi- tions of the Church. It is tradition : let this suffice.' 2 And of St. Basil on the same passage : ' Among the points of belief and practice in the Church, some were delivered in writing, while others were received by apostolic tradition in mystery, that is in a bidden manner: but both have equal authority as far as piety is concerned ; nor are they opposed by any one who is but slight- ly versed in ecclesiastical rites. For if we attempt to reject, as matters of little moment, such points, as were not written, we ' Commonit i. n. ii. |». :;17. Edit. Paris, 1684. "IIoiu. iv. in 2 Thes ii. T. 9. p. . Paris, L636. 128 ON THE CIIU11CH OF ENGLAND shall, by our imprudence, offer a signal injury to the gospel." And again of St. Epiphanius, who proves the necessity of tra- dition. 'We must look to tradition, says he ; for all things can- not be learned from scriptures. For which reason the holy apostles left some things in writing, and other not.' 2 And if it had observed, what particularly merits observation from its singularity, our very question proposed in express terms by a celebrated writer of the second century and decided as fol- lows ; ' But you say, (writes Tertullian) even in speaking of tradition, some written authority is necessary. Let us then enquire whether no tradition should be admitted, unless it be written.' (This is precisely the objections laid claim to by the reformed religion : attend to its refutation.) ' I will allow, that it should not, if no examples of other practices can be adduced, which we maintain on the sole title of tradition, and the strength of custom, without the smallest written authority. To begin with baptism ; when on the point of entering the water, we pro- test, in the Church and under the hands of the bishops, that we renounce the devil, and his pomps and his angels : after this, we are immersed three separate times, replying something more than our Saviour presented in the gospel. Leaving the water we take a mixture of milk and honey ; and from this time, for the space of a week, we refrain from the daily bath. The sacrament of the Eucharist, instituted by the Lord, at the time of the repast and for all, we take in our assemblies before day, and only from the hand of him who presides. We offer for the dead ; we an- nually celebrate the birth of the martyrs (The day of their death is the day of their birth to immortality) ' Of these and other usages if you ask for the written anthority of the scriptures, none will be found. They spring from tradition, which practice has confirmed and obedience ratified.' 3 The day would not suffice to adopt the expression of St. i De Spir. Sancto. c. 27. T. iii. p. 54. Ed. Bened. Paris. 1721. 2Haer. 55. T. i. p. 471, Ed. Colonic. 1682. 3 De corona Militis, iii. iv. p. 2S2. Edit. Rothom- agi. 1662. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 129 Basil, 1 were I to attempt to describe to you all that the fathers have said on the subject of tradition. I am not surprised that they so frequently insist upon it ; they were but two or three de- grees from the origin of the Church : they had a near view of the means and regulations that had tended to aggrandize and extend it : they held in mind that the apostles, entirely occupied in the ministry of the word, had rarely taken up the pen, and only from accident and necessity ; that their preaching had been daily and abundant ; their writing accidental and short ; that supposing the ground of the doctrine to be in their writings, the develop- ment of.it could not be found there also ; that for the detail they must always have recourse to their verbal explanations ; that, even on their mysteries and dogmas, they had in their works (tesignly thrown a certain veil of obscurity to prevent the pro- fane from having access to them, whilst in the midst of the faithful and their friends, they expressed themselves openly and 1 The day would not be sufficient, were I to attempt to relate to you all tho mysteries transmitted to the Church without wilting.* To omit others, from what writing have we this profession of faith in God, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost (the apostles creed)?' He had said before: ' Which of the saints have left us in writing the words of invocation in the consecration of the eucharistic bre vl and chalico? For we do not confine ourselves to those which the gospel and the apostle mention : we make additions before and after, as being of great importance to the mystery, and which are co?ne down to us by an unwritten tra- dition.'! And again, the following remarkable words occur in the same passage : ' The apostles and the fathers, who have from the beginning, prescribed certain rites to the Church, knew how to preserve for mysteries their becoming dignity, by the secresy and -ilence in which it kept them enveloped. For what is thrown open to the ear and the gaze of the people, is no longer absolutely mysterious. For this reason have many things been transmitted to us without writing, lest th- vulgar becoming too much familiarized with our dogmas, should pass from familiarity to contempt, The dogma is one thing, and preaching another. Dog- mas require to be kept Bilent— preaching to be public. There is, moreover, an- other kind of silence, that of obscurity, in which the scripture purposely conceals 'itself to render the dogmas more difficult to be comprehended.' And now, Sir, draw your conclusion, what this learned bishop of Cesarean would have thought of pour reformation, that pretends to take every thing from scripture and nothing from tradition. • De Bplr.Sancto. c. 27, T. Hi- p. &4. Ed. Bened. Paris, 1721. t De Spir. Sancto. c. 27. T. 111. t St. Basil, archbishop of Cesarea, iu Cappadocia, died in 379. 139 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND without restraint; in fine, that they never committed to writing the words and prayers with which they accompanied the cele- bration of the mysteries. These sacred and often essential forms were deposited in the hearts and the memory, and transmitted from mouth to mouth more securely in secret. After the exam- ple of their masters, the apostolic fathers wrote little : they also had their time taken up in active employment, rather than in composing works ; and when they took up their pen it was scarcely ever for any other reason than to make known to strangers, what they had heard preached by the apostles. Day by day did they repeat it round about them to their audience, and occasionally communicated it at a distance by writing. In this manner, in the Churches where the apostles had preached, their doctrine was preserved by the succession of disciples to the apostles, of hearers of the disciples to these same disciples, and thus from one to another. As for those from without, it reached them by means of communications carried on from one Church to another ; a steady and active correspondence attested and propagated through the world the instructions derived from the apostles and Jesus Christ, by establishing, according to the vigorous expression of Tertullian ; cons««^u'?u7y of doctrine in all the Churches of the world. Did any doubt or new question ai-ise, recourse was immediately had to the apostolic Churches : they consulted by preference those Churches, in which ' presided still the chairs, whence the apostles had often delivered their public discourses, 1 (and which after them seem to have been left vacant from respect ;) in which ware recited their authentic epistles, that recalled as it were the stund of their voices and the features of their countenances.' 2 Observe that Tertullian joins here the chairs of the apostles with their epistles ; to indicate that the written word and the word delivered by preaching always went together. ' Are you in the neighborhood of Achaia? You have Corinth: are you at no great distance from Macedonia ? You have the Church of the Phillippians, and of the Thessalonians : but if you can reach as far as Asia, you have Ephesus f approach Italy, and you have 1 Tertull. on Prescript. *Ibid. 3 ' The Church of Ephesus, founded by Paul, AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 131 Rome," The dignity of which Tertullian forgets not to set off in the most noble and sensible manner according to the true principles of Christianity. ' See what Rome has learned, what it has taught, and the perfect harmony of its doctrine with that of the African Churches.' Thus you will understand, sir, they did not upon new questions involve themselves in disputes which end in nothing : they did not permit themselves to be carried away by their private fancy or their enthusiasm : they did not abandon themselves to learned and laborious disquisitions, they did not regulate themselves according to the ostentation and dis- play of a few teachers : all was decided by the doctrine and the tradition of the apostolical Churches. It was in this, according to the happy expression of Thomassin, that consisted their learned simplicity and their solid method of examining questions of faith. A particular circumstance contributed much to preserve in these illustrious ages : the purity of the apostolic traditions. God, in the views of his providence over his Church, permitted during dangers and persecutions, that some of these first and holy bishops should extend their career to a very advanced age : and as formerly, in the old world, the patriarchs, by means of their long years, more easily transmitted to posterity what they had learned from their fathers and grandfathers on the creation of the world, the dogmas of religion and the principal features of the antediluvian history, so in Christianity these venerable old men served to testify that the faith of their time was exactly the same as that which they had received from the apostles and the disciples of the apostles. Not to speak of St. John, who lived a century, and of his centenary disciple Polycarp, who suffered martyrdom in 166, we learn from Clement of Alexandria, ' that some of those who had immediately succeeded the apostles, and preserved the tradition of the true doctrine preached by governed by John. (He there terminated his days after linving resided there a long time with the motln-r whom .Jfr.-ms ("hfist hfijucatliivl to him from the height of the cross), until the reign of Trajan, Is without contradiction one of the best witu -is of apostolic tradition.' Irenesns, xxiii. ' Turtull. Ibid. 132 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND Saints Peter, James, John and Paul, had lived till the time in which he was writing his Stromata, to sow and cultivate the seed of true faith in the minds of men.' 1 This remark, it must be allowed, would have been as useless as misplaced, on the princi- ple of the reformation : for what need was there of the long life of these holy personages to preserve the apostolic traditions ; and cultivate in the mind the seed of true faith, if there had been nothing for them to believe or practice but what they read in the scriptures, or what could easily be deduced therefrom ? However, sir, do not imagine that by here making war with the first promoters of the reformation, I mean to extend the same reproaches to all those who have since been born in its bosom. Among the distinguished characters of which it has reason to boast, there are a great number who have thought themselves bound to abandon it in its overstretched maxims on the sufficiency of the scriptures : this must be said to their praise, it is an act of justice due to them, which I take pleasure in discharging. Scarcely were the first controversies opened, when many already perceived that, in the spirit of party, they had carried things too far. They began by entering into a composition upon the prin- ciple, being desirous indeed to admit tradition upon certain points, and to reject it upon others, for the honor of the reforma- tion. 2 These primary concessions opened the way for others Clement of Alexandria, died in 217. He wrote his Stromata towards the end of the second century. Alexander, bishop of Jerusalem in 212, succeeded Nar- cis-m, who died at the age of 116 years, being born, of course, in 96, when the aged Simeon was bishop of Jerusalem. Simeon, suffered martyrdom in 108, aged 120, born, therefore, 12 years before Jesus Christ. Narcissus, who died about the year 220, aged 124, and who was born, of course about the year 96, must have seen Simeon twelve years: Alexander, in 212 coadjutor of Narcissus, eight years : he suffered martyrdom in 255. -It is remarkable that the Confession of Augsburgh* and the apology declare, that they do not despise the agreement of the Catholic Church, and go so far as to appeal to the authority of the ancient Church. Zuingliusf grants that the apostles taught by word of mouth, and that the epistles they sent were rather to confirm the people in what they had learned, than to instruct them. Calvin and Beza were not slow in having recourse to tradition against the Arians, sprung from their school. Ochin had said:): 'The sacred words are of * Art. 21. t Tom. ii. fol. 43. J Dial. 2. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 133 more open and less limited, and some wise and enlightened minds, after calmly contemplating the precepts of the apostles, the spirit of the primitive Church, and the confidence they could not re- fuse to the piety, and fervor of the first ages, to the depositions and testimony of all those holy bishops and illustrious martyrs of Jesus Christ, have felt the irresistible force of the proofs and have openly adopted the ideas and the language of antiquity upon tradition. Of these I could cite many ; but shall confine myself to three or four whom I shall not choose among the least known or distinguished. Gortius shall speak the first. 1 ' From the confession of Rivet, what is said by the apostles, either by the express command of God, or with full deliberation, has not less authority than what has been written by them. Nothing is more true. Now, that the apostles have not written all they have uttered, St. Paul him- self testifies, by ordering that we submit to all that he had taught themselves very clear, even in things necessary for salvation; and if the Trinity does not clearly appear in them, no one is obliged to believe in it 1 do not find that the Holy Spirit is there called God or Lord. I had rather enter a cloister than acknowledge that.* But Calvin, leading them to the unwritten word, taught them from the second epistle to Timothy : By this is repelled the arrogance of any senseless creatures, who boast that they stand in no need of teachers, because the rqading of the scriptures is sufficient. He that shall make no account of the aid of the living voice, and shall content himself with the dumb scripture, shall feel how great an evil it \a to despise the means ordained by God and Jesus Christ for being introduced.'! What then! holy fathers,' exclaimed Beza % against Stator, Ochin, and others, 'you, who for so many years, not in word alone but in wri- tings which shall never perish, have, contrary to the authority of so many kings, princes, and heretics, with so much labor, even to the shedding of your blood, defended the great mystery of the Trinity, shall it be said that you are imprudent and ignorant '.' <> Athanaaius! thou who didst on account of this subject traverse almost the whole world, for what reason didst thou compose and construct that admirable creed with bo much brevity, you, and yet it is very true, that the man who perhaps had the must to do with the drawing up of 1 Lett ir thr 32nd in the 'A'"' ret <<■ Bb <■"'. torn. ii. Paris edition in 4to 1778 • QBuvres pcethume* u, after having cast an inquisitive and p.netrating; eye into 140 ON THE CIIURC1I OF ENGLAND From all that has been hitherto set forth in this letter, I think it clearly follows that revelation was at first taught entirely by the preaching of the apostles and disciples; that in the course of their ministry it was at different intervals and partially pub- the writings of the holy fathers, feels himself all at once seized with a religious horror, and shudders within himself? And what is it he has seen ? Catholicism, good God ! Catholicism in full perfection : He says it, he proves it; and instead of concluding that they had done wrong at the reformation, when they rose up against venerable dogmas and practices ; instead of preferring the fathers nearest to the apostles, and their most faithful and holy imitators, before his religious and turbulent ancestors of the sixteenth century: this mad and whimsical genius immediately changes his colors, throws aside all tradition and banishes the fa- thers far from him; he will have no more to do with them, because he cannot surrender himself up to the primitive Church without renouncing his dear and glorious reformation. It had entered his head, and nothing in the world could make him put it out again ; it had then forcibly entered his head, that the mass, its altars, its sacrifice, praying for the dead, and of course purgatory, the sign of the cross, the holy oils, the invocation of saints, and the honor paid to relics were supertsitious and idolatrous dogmas and usages. lie discovers them, however, from the time of the primitive ages : he frankly acknowledges it. Well then! these primitive and apostolic times shall no longer be considered by him but as idolatrous and super- stitious ages : and according to him nothing less shall be required than all the lights and all the virtues of a Luther and a Calvin, to efl'ect at length the discn- g.ig 'incut of Christianity from its ancient rust, and from the stains of its origin. Does not this savor of madness and blasphemy ! Who would not be alarmed at the excesses to which even the best instructed might be driven, when once left to themselves and their prejudices ? I beg you will give yourself the satisfaction for a moment of comparing Dr. Middleton with bishop Croft. This latter, far from admiring the great lights so much boasted of in modern times on subjects of Theology, is of opinion that the doctrine being more immediate at its source, it must be purer and more certain; the former, on the contrary, persuades himself, that scarcely had religion been promulgated when it became generally corrupted, to such a degree as to be un- aole to recover its original beauty until sixteen centuries after its divine founder. The one, seized with respect and love for the models of virtue and knowledge presented to him in such abundance by the primitive Church, falls at the feet of Venerable and holy antiquity : the other, sorely offended at some miraculous facts or at some opinions which he found up and down the writings of the fathers and which no one obliged him to adopt, is not ashamed to sully their reputation and want of talent; he protests nevertheless that he recognizes them as valid wit- n sses, and yet in point of fact persists in denying the authority of their testimony. The bishop piously declares that he shall 1 >nd them a respectful ear, and yet never does so: he remains deaf to their instructions, and in his vale of darkness he discovers not, iu their writings, cither the mass or sacrifice, or praying for the AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 141 listed in the inspired writings ; and that thus it has been trans- mitted to the world in two manners, by word and by writing, that is to say, by tradition and by scripture, the twofold original and sacred deposite of the Christian doctrine ; the one, first in point of time and long by itself, gathered together at first in the hearts and the memories of the faithful, then deposited by little and little, and in detached pieces in the writings of the fathers, and the acts of the councils ; the other, of latter and gradual dead, or veneration for relics and images, or the invocation of saints, &c. The doctor, to make amends, although more deeply confined in the same dark vale, has seen, heard, and understood every thing, but takes good care not to believe any thing, or to bow to authority upon these articles. Here certainly are two persons in whom learning abounds : and yet they agree none the better on that account. The truth is, that learning even misleads, if not engrafted upon fixed and invariable principles. Never will you find an exam- ple similar to this amongst us, whilst you will behold a thousand of the kind among your teachers. And ought not this at length to convince the prudent and moderate members of the reformed religion, that by leaving to each one the right of judging for himself, there will be as great a diversity in opinions as in tastes,* and that the wholesome restraint of authority is alone able to subdue the indocility, and the proud and capricious impetuosity of the human mind. Bate frcenum indomito animali et impotenti ualurce. But if we are to believe all these fathers, said Middleton, we are at once neces- sarily drawn into popery. Give to the doctrine of the father whatever name you please, call it popery, if it suit you. Is it not bettor, is it not safer to be a papist with the Austins, Jeromes, Ambroses, Hilarys, Chrysostoms, Basils, Cyrils, Athanasiu8e8, Cyprians, Justins, Tertullians, Ignatiuses, and Clements, with those ;•■ men, those unexceptionable witnesses, who have astounded the world by their virtues, ami by an heroic end, and who still edify us by their writings, than to continue in protestantism in the train of Luther, Calvin Zuinglius, Beza Knox, and Buchanan, <>r, if you please, of bishops Barlow, Scory, Ilodgskin, Kitchen, A:<\, who hare rendered their names famous, some by their audacity in violating the vow of their firal engagements, others by their servile flexibility to tl^- will of the existing powers, some by seditions, wars, and rivers of blood, all volt against their mother Church, and not one of whom, to my knowledge, has- yet been remarked for an humble and tender piety, for the mortification of hi- senses, the abnegation of himself, or the austerity of his manners or for an :al and spiritual life. In truth, is it lawful, or is it reasonable to balance l> itween the two! And have I not myself to blush here to see myself constrained to tarnish the memory of theae illustrious saints by so unworthy a comparison! • Doctor Middleton acknowledges this in express terms. ' It is every man's right to judge for himself, and difference of opinion is us natural to us as a difference of tasto.' page 38, 16. 142 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND appearance, but fixed legibly upon paper by the apostles or their disciples, a durable and divine monument, which will speak forever to the eyes, as well as to the minds and hearts of all the faithful : the former, requiring a longer and more laborious re- search, and being more difficult of discovery, because it is scat- tered and spread through a greater number of monuments, and is often found mixed up with many subjects, which though not absolutely foreign to revelation, are nevertheless not it: the lat- ter, full of an inspired and heavenly doctrine, but which is sometimes inaccessible in its sublimities, and like every written law, never being able, without an interpreter and judge to make itself understood and followed with uniformity. The Scripture more copious without comparison, more rich, more precious, more excellent, and nevertheless leaving some articles to be desired ; tradition destined above all to transmit to us these same articles, by supplying what is wanting in the sacred books. Whence it follows again, that if it were permitted or expedient to make choice between these two deposits, and to accept one without the other, the preference would undoubtedly be due to that of the scripture : but that according to sound reason and the doctrine of wise antiquity, according to the command of St. Paul, they are absolutely inseparable ; that, one presenting us with articles not to be found in the other, we must bring together and consult them both, to form a whole and know the complete system of revelation ; that, as for the rest, coming to us, as on two paral- lel lines, they can never impede or oppose one another in their progress, but that on the contrary they render each other a mutual assistance, and reciprocally throw light upon each other; in fine, that we owe equally to what either of them contain*, both our respect and our submission, because the same spirit which directed the pen of the apostles, directed also their tongue, and the words that came from their mouth are not less divine than those that they afterwards traced out with their hand. AJSTD THE REFORMATION IX GENERAL. 143 LETTER V. On the Doctrines Taught by the Church. On reading the preceding letter, I anticipate there may pro- bably have arisen a difficulty in your mind. How can we be certain, will you have said, that such or such a doctrine is truly of apostolic tradition, that such an article, sufficient traces of which I do not find in Scripture, has been actually taught by the apostles and faithfully transmitted from them to us? This point, I flatter myself, shall soon be cleared up for you, if you will h-ave the patience to examine what I have to lay before you, and if I succeed in expressing to you with perspicuity those ideas which I shall now attempt to develope. If each of us was obliged to distinguish among many articles, those which come from tradition, and those which do not, he would find himself, in a general way, condemned to a labor above his strength. In fact, that part of the preaching of the apostles which they did not commit to writing, was at first confided solely to the memory of the faithful, fixed in particular Churches by th" oral and successive instructions of the first bishops and af- terwards collected partially and as occasion fell out, in the wri- tings of the fathers, and in the acts of the synods and councils. Whence it follows, that to prove that such an article is truly of ' lie tradition, we must consult the belief of the particular Churches, examine carefully the acts of the councils and the voluminous writings of the fathers of the Greek and Latin Churches. Who does nol Bee thai this labor requires a space of time and extenl of erudition, thai renders it in general impracti- c.iM ■•'.' There are, indeed, to be found men of an extraordinary capacity and application, whose taste and inclination lead them to this kind of research ; with the aid of the rules of criticism, all (bunded upon good Ben e, they balance and weigh authorities, they distinguish between what the fathers taught, as individual teachers, and what they depose as testifiers to the belief and 114 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND practice of their time, and they attach with discrimination the different degrees of credibility that are due, whether to their doc- trine or their deposition. The world is well aware that such a labor is calculated but for a small number: and again, after all, how succsseful soever it may be, it scarcely ever leads to incon- testible conclusions. We therefore are in want of some other means that may enable us altogether with certainty to arrive at the apostolic and divine traditions. The question is,what is this means I Call to mind, Sir, what we have said upon the holy scripture : we have clearly discovered that, seeing the ignorance and inca- pacity of some, and the pride and infatuation of others, the authority of an interpreter, of an infallible judge, was absolutely necessary to make known, and cause to be uniformly adopted the dogmas contained in scripture. We must say as much, and with still better right, for tradition. The same judge, the same interpreter that unfolds to us the sense of the divine books, mani- fests to us also that of tradition. Now this judge, this interpre- ter, I must tell you here again, is the teaching body of the Church, the bishops united in the same opinion, at least in a great majority. It is to them that, in the person of the apostles, were made the magnificent promises : ' Go, teach, I am with you ; he that heareth you heareth me. The Spirit of truth shall teach you all truth, &c.' They alone then have the right to teach what is revealed, to declare what is in the written or un- written word : they alone also have always been in possession of the exercise of it. No other ecclesiastics have ever pretended to it, whatever have been their rank, their dignity, and learning. They may be consulted and heard ; it is even proper this should be done, and it always has been done ; for they form the council of the bishops, and their erudition acquired by long study throws light upon the discussions. But as they have not the plentitude of the priesthood, they are not members of the eminent body that has succeeded the college of the apostles, and with it re- ceived the promises. They are then without power and authority to pronounce : their duty is respectfully to await the decision, and when once it is passed, to submit to it. Before the decision, AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 145 they were at liberty and permitted to discuss the question on the opposite side, to support their opinion with the weight of their erudition, the strength and warmth of their eloquence : after superiors have pronounced, all disputations are forbidden, dis- cussion is closed : mixed from henceforth with the simple and little ones, the most learned doctors lay down their private opin- ions, humbly confess that they were in error, and receive the decision of the bishops as decrees emanating from heaven. Such is the regulation of Jesus Christ, who suffers not in his Church either pride, or bloated conceit, or obstinacy whether in the rich, the great or the learned ones of the world. Immediately he has spoken by his ministers, he wills that all heads, those even by means of which he has made himself; he wills, I say, that all heads should with equal humility and lowliness bow before his oracles. Let it then be established as a principle, that to the bishops exclusively belongs the right of declaring what has or has not been revealed, that is, what is comformable or contrary to scrip- ture and tradition, or simply to one of the two. This is pre- sraely the extent of their authority: never does it go farther. They can add nothing to revelation : they can take nothing from it : they arc its interpreters and judges, but not its masters. In teaching us what we have to believe, they point out to us what has always been believed : they merely render the belief more explicit and clear, there, where before it was more vague and indistinct. It is therefore always the ancient faith that thy propose to us, and never a new faith that they introduce : for revelation is not a new faith which we are permitted to revise and retract : it came forth in full perfection from Jesus Christ; and his disciples, inspired by him, have faithfully transmitted it whether by word of mouth or by writing, to their successors, enjoininir them ;it the same time to transmit it with the same fidelity to those who should succeed them. Thus the bishops, on succeeding to the apostolic ministry, find themselves specially commissioned to guard the Scriptures and tradition. They had already spent their clerical years and those 146 ox the cnuitcn of England of tbcir priesthood in becoming acquainted with them, studying them and meditating upon them. Being by their episcopacy become the guardians and interpreters of this double deposit of revelation, they have it more assiduously in their hands and un- der their eyes. Does any new doctrine arise that must soon re- quire on their part a dogmatical decision, they prepare themselves for it by redoubling their application, by consulting each deposit alternately, by comparing them together, by making deeper re- searches into them with all the care, which, humanly speaking, they are capable of: and, assuredly, when they shall come to the decision, He, icho is always with them, and who is to instruct them in all truth, will never permit them all to agree in giving an erroneous sense to the written word, or the word that is not written. Their common decision will necessarily and uniformly be conformed to them, whether they infer it from both at once, or only from one of them. You and I might not have perceived it in either one or the other of these sources, but eyes interiorly enlightened by a celestial ray discover with certainty that which escapes a merely human penetration. We can therefore no longer admit a doubt respecting any dogma, that the teaching body of the Church has pronounced to have been revealed by Jesus Christ, that is, to be contained in Scripture, or in tradition, or in both at the same time. Learned and ignoraut, the decision is for all : not that it is forbidden to those who feel so disposed, to seek for the truth of the dogma, either in Scripture or in the monuments of tradition : far from that, this study would merit praise and commendation, being previously directed and put in the way by the judgment of the Church, they will more easily trace in it her doctrines. But nothing obliges us in general to undertake this laborious and fatiguing examination ; our masters, our fathers in faith have done it for us. They have afterwards decided that such a dogma is in scripture, that such another comes from an apostolic tradition : they are of one accord in teaching it : we know it : it is a fact, it is known by the most simple : this is sufficient for all. All are equally bound to re- ceive with the most unshaken confidence a decision which in it- AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 147 self is the most impartial and the most imposing that can be found upon earth, and which moreover, heaven has engaged to raise to infallibility. 1 As this doctrine has been hitherto quite a stranger to you, and as it properly constitutes the distinctive characteristic be- tween the Catholic Church and all protestant societies, allow me to lay it open to you in a new light, in order to make you more sensible of it. In the first place, always keep in mind that, ac- cording to all our proofs, the promise of infallibility made in the apostles to their successors, does not regard any of these personally and in particular, because Jesus Christ does not remain for ever with any one, none of them being immortal; but that it is addressed to all their successors collectively and in a body. Likewise it follows that, if separately and individually they are susceptible of error, they cannot, by virtue of the promise, be so, when united together ; that whatever deference their personal opinions require from us, we nevertheless do not owe the sacrifice of our opinion or our interior submission except to their unani- mous decision ; that truth being always to be found in the gene- ral agreement, it is this agreement we are bound to know and follow, since by following it we cannot go astray, and by not following it, on the contrary, we do go astray, for then we go out of the way and the line that Jesus Christ has drawn for us, and we leave the guides whom he has expressly appointed to conduct us. Let us therefore be cautious how we ever close our ears to their voices, or ever depart from their uniform instruc- tions. In whatever circumstances their consent is manifested, when once it is known, when once it becomes manifest to us, it is sufficient : our duty is to submit, and our salvation to remain firmly attached to it. And here I beg you to observe that a dogmatical decision may be given in many ways, but that it only becomes decisive and peremptory in one way, that is, by the general consent, or the 1 •■ Nothing should lie more venerable upon earth than the decision of a truly oecumenical council." Leibnitz, letter to the Duchess of Brunswick. July 2nd, L6M. 148 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND acceptation of the episcopal body united to its head. I will ex- plain myself on the two parts of this proposition. The bishops, the successors of the apostles, like them the guardians of the faith, by the high dignity with which they are invested in the Church, possess exclusively the right of inter- preting scripture and tradition, and of pronouncing after the one or the other upon points of faith. 1 A pernicious doctrine threat- ens to trouble or infect a diocese : the bishop has the power and the right to assemble his clergy, and, after having maturely deliberated with them, to pronounce a doctrinal sentence, when he becomes of opinion that this is a suitable and efficient means of stifling the error in its infancy. Arius began to spread the venom of his doctrine in Alexandria, and had already gained partisans by the subtility of his reasoning. The holy patriarch ' wishing to reclaim him by sweetness rather than compel him by authority, selected some priests from the two parties, who defended their arguments on both sides in a regular disputation, while he, surrounded with the principal of his clergy, presided as judge in this conference, to decide the difference by a solemn decision He terminated the dispute by pronouncing sentence in favor of those who had supported the divinity and eternity of the Son of God, and forbad Arius to teach or to hold an opinion that destroyed the foundations of the Christian religion.' 2 With how much more reason does this same right pre-eminently belong to him, who presides over the entire episcopacy, and who, from the centre of unity where he holds bis see, extends his superin tendance and jurisdiction over all the Churches of the world ? Accordingly we find, even from the most remote periods, that the greater part of dogmatical decisions have originated from this principal see, from which beams tbe ray of government, ac- cording to an expression as correct as it is brilliant. 3 If you 1 " Episcopura oportet judicare, interpretari, consecrare." Pontif. Rom. in fol. p. 50. The bishop is the only ordinary and natural judge of whatever re- gards religion, and it is for him to decide upon questions of faith and morality, by interpreting the sacred scripture and by faithfully relating the tradition of the fathers. Fleury, Institute, an droit, eccl. t. I. xii. 2 Maimbourg, Hint, del' Avian, t. I. p. 17 and 1. 3 Sermon su l'runite. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 149 consider on the one hand the ever active vigilance exercised by the vicar of Jesus Christ over all the Churches ; on the other, those intimations which, in great causes, every bishop thinks himself bound to forward to him, you will easily conceive that nothing essential in religion could escape his knowledge, nothing of importance occur at the most distant extremities, without be- ing immediately echoed to the centre, and then, without giving time to the error to increase, without waiting for the bishops to assemble in council, the chief pastor goes before the evil, drags to light the rising heresy, solemnly condemns it, and against it, produces to the eyes of the world, the ever pure and indefectible tradition of the holy see. We learn also from the history of the Church that the bishops of a province or an empire, frequently united together in private councils, and that there, to ward off the blows aimed against faith, they have proscribed erroneous opinions, and taught the true doctrine of revelation in their dogmatical decrees. Here then are doctrinal decrees given in three different man- ners, or coming from three different tribunals. Each of these decisions has an authority proper to itself, and proportioned to the tribunal from which it emanates : yet none of them is deci- sive, although it may become so by acceptation. For if the iecrees of a private council, or of the sovereign pontiff, or even that of a private bishop is found to be received and generally approved of by the bishops dispersed throughout Catholicity, and by the pope at the head of all, they then become the decrees of the universal Church ; their being generally received attaches to tliem the seal of infallibility and ranks them thenceforward 11 ninng the articles of faith. There occur, in fine, less frequent but graver and more solemn occasions, on which the Church explains and proclaims its doctrine in the most imposing and most splendid manner. For example, a pernicious doctrine, after having infested the country where it Bprurig up, reaches the neighboring nations, is propagating through more distant countries, and threatens to extend its ra- vages still further ; a general plague requires a co-extensive 150 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND remedy : from all parts of the world, at the request or with the consent of the sovereigns, the bishops are convoked by the head of the Church : they anathematize the innovators and their opinions, both to fix in the faith those who have hitherto pro- fessed it, and to bring back those who have strayed from it : they proclaim to the world what Jesus Christ has revealed. I do not enter with you into the questions that are discussed among divines, on the conditions requisite to constitute these councils, called general in spite of the weak minority of the bishops who compose them compared with those who do not assist at them. What is incontestable and acknowledged is, that the acceptation of the published decrees gives to these councils the splendid proof of their being oecumenical, and thus puts out of doubt and in full evidence the infallibility of their doctrine. I could justify the principles I have just laid down, by the testimony of a multitude of writers : of these I shall cite but one, who was the light of his own age, and will be the light of ages to come. ' The last mark we can have that a council or assembly truly represents the Catholic Church, is when the whole body of the episcopacy, and the whole society that makes profession of receiving instruction from it, approves and receives it : this is the last seal to the authority of this council, and of the infallibility of its decrees.' 1 ' The council of Orange, of which mention is made iu the Reply, was nothing less than gen- eral. It contained chapters whom the pope had sent. There hardly were twelve or thirteen bishops in this council. But because it was received without opposition, its decisions are no more rejected than those of the council of Nice ; because every thing depends upon the consent, or general agreement of the dis- persed Church. Even the author of the Reply (Leibnitz or Molanus) admits this truth, that every thing depends on the certainty of the consent. The number is nothing, says he, when the agreement is notorious. There were but few bishops of the west in the council of Nice ; none in that of Constantinople ; in 1 Bossuet's reply to various letters of M. Leibnitz. Letter xxii. p 115. vol. xi. edit, in 4to. 17. *An. 381. »An. 1215, 1274, 1439. < An. 431. •'• An. 151. J I 158 ON THE CHDBCH OF BNOLAHD in the person of our Saviour. Original sin, denied in the fifth age, by Pelagius, we believe to be of faith from the doctrine of several councils of the same age, from the constitution of Pope Zozimus, universally received by all the bishops, with the ex- ception of eighteen, who were deposed for it; from the first and fourth canons of the general council of Ephesus, and since then from the decrees of the council of Trent. Guided by these high authorities, we believe as of faith, the necessity of baptism to efface in us that mysterious stain, and open heaven to the un- fortunate race of the guilty Adam. So far, Sir, you are agreed with us upon these different points of doctrine. Your reformers have respected them ; they have found them two strongly imprinted on their own conscience, too deeply rooted in the minds of the people, to think of ever strik- ing a blow at them. Nevertheless they have said enough to give to others more audacity, and soon after to instruct the So- cinians that they might boldly proceed still further and attack those fundamental truths of Christianity. The right of judging having been once granted to each one, there is no longer any thing sacred, any thing firm, any thing that can stand its groun k Thank heaven ! they have not advanced so far in your Church. They have continued to believe and teach the dogmas I have mentioned, and some others connected with them. Observe nevertheless upon what different principles they are believed in your communion and in ours. The principle of the Church of England is, to admit as revealed and as necessary for salvation, only the dogmas which are read in Scripture, or may be duly in- ferred from it. And here, Sir, speak to me, I beseech you, with candor ; have you learned these dogmas, which you believe to be essential, in Scripture ? Have you examined and thoroughly searched the sacred text? have you compared the passages to- gether? Not, assuredly, that I doubt, that witli the penetration and justness of mind that I know you to possess, you would not of yourself have discovered the truth of these dogmas in the pas- sages of Scripture, where they are established. But as for this AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 159 examination, this search, I know you have never entered upon it. The nature of the business, with which you have been oc- cupied, has given you neither time nor liberty, nor even the in- clination to throw yourself into theological researches. You believe simply from the instructions you have received from your parents, from your masters, who in the same manner had re- ceived them from theirs, and so on, up to the period of the Re- formation. Your belief and the belief of your countrymen in general, has not then, if thoroughly analyzed, any other support than the authority of your reformers, who never pretended that they were infallible, and have most strenuously maintained they were not so. See where you are, and how much your faith, your salvation are found to be left at hazard, upon mere human authority, and consecmently wavering, perishable and faulty. But the Catholic, full of the promise, convinced that Jesus Christ, who has spoken by his apostles, will always speak by their successors, certain that he cannot go astray in the steps of guides whom he is ordered to follow, feels himself firm in faith and in the way of salvation. He knows that both are built upon the Church, as on an immovable rock, against the foot of which the efforts of hell shall eternally be broken in pieces. Instructed by the same authority, the Catholic admits in the number of the articles of faith and of the revealed mysteries, that of the most august of sacraments, the Eucharist ; under of the kinds of bread and wine, the substance of which no longer exist, he adores Jesus Christ veiled, but yet present whole and entire. He knows, or may easily know, that at the period when for the first time this belief was attacked in the till age by Berengarius, a cry of indignation was raised on all sides against him: that the ancient faith was maintained by the teachers of Christianity, among others by Lancfranc, the learned archbishop of Canterbury, and unanimously defined by many councils, as it has been Bincc defined in the council of Trent. Here unfortunately the lists were entered between the Protestanl societies and the Catholic Church, and wo ate about to find ourselves at variance ; it having seemed good to your an- 160 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND cestors, after having agreed with us upon all other mysteries, to leave us and attack us upon this. Your convocation of 1562, had not the same reason for sparing it, which had made the former convocations respect it. From the reign of Edward the sixth, the opinions of Zuinglius had been held in esteem; they had made a melancholy progress in your country, and even your new bishops had not been able to preserve themselves from them : in their twenty-eighth article they condemn transubstantiatiou, reject at the same time the worship and adoration of Jesus Christ in his sacrament, as being contrary to the text of the Scriptures and the institution of the Eucharist. As to the real presence, which should be looked upon as the great article, the principal point of the mystery, they shewed themselves more reserved : they say not openly that it must be admitted or rejected : they adopt a form of expression that seems to accommodate itself to one or other of these opinions. It is plain that they were equally apprehensive of alarming those who yet held in great numbers to the real presence, and those who wished to get rid of it. M. Burnet with more than his usual candor and with his accustomed correctness of mind ad- mires this dexterous scrupulousness of the convocation. He takes pleasure in remarking that the article was couched in such a manner as to serve each one's purpose, and that all might more easily be attracted and might thus increase the rising Church. That an insidious and weak government should adopt this mode of proceeding is quite in character : this artful method may serve the views and interests of the moment, but is it agreeable with an eternal and divine religion ? Is it not unworthy of the episcopal character ? Faith knows no such temporizing measures, such vagueness and indecision : its course is upright ; its lan- guage simple, precise, and decided. It enters into no compacts with error, because it can have no alliance with it. In truth, these political expedients of your spiritual lords sufficiently dis- closed their secret thoughts, and a man must have been very simple indeed to let himself be deceived by such pitiful artifices : for, in fine, if all or the greater part had believed the real AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 161 presence, they would have thought it a point of duty and honor to have loudly professed it, and to have warned their flocks against the heresy, by condemning with a sacerdotal vigor the opinions of Zuiuglius. They did not then for the most part be- lieve it, their silence shews they did not. Why then did they w--t immediately proceed openly to condemn it ? What mean this embarrassment, these snares, these concerted concealments ? Sou discover here, Sir, the inevitable*, march of error. At all times it has shewn itself timid and hesitating at the commence- ment, and its first steps have always been faltering and un- certain. I should but Use my right, were I to refuse all futher discus- sion, and refer you, upon the Eucharist as upon all other articles of faith, to the decisions pronounced by the Church. I have established its authority : I have shewn that it received it from its divine Founder ; that when he was leaving the earth he be- queathed it to his apostles, and, in their persons, to those who should succeed them in the ministry : that he had never ceased to teach by their instrumentality and would continue to the end of the world to teach by that of their successors : that, in conse- quence, the doctrines of the Church will always be protected from error; that, by hearing the Church, we hear Jesus Christ; and by despising the Church we despise Jesus Christ. You have n the proofs of all this : they have appeared to you convincing. And if the impression they have made upon you is weakened, read them over again : subject them, if you please, to a new lination. But when once a person is convinced of their solidity, there is no longer room for hesitation. The decision is past, every thing is said: all that remains is to accept it and submit to it. This simple, and at the same time safe method abridges for every Catholio, whether learned or ignorant, the interminable difficulties that exist in protestanl societies. Bui the arguments you have often heard opposed to the be- lief of Catholics upon this mystery, those that you have read in the writings of your teachers bave made a deep impression upon you. They frequently return to your mind, and balance, as 162 ox the church of England you say, the force of the general inference drawn from an in- fallible authority. Well! then, Sir, I am willing to enter with you into the heart of this controverted point: I engage to jus- tify to you the decrees of the Church upon the Eucharist, and to shew you their conformity with the doctrine of Jesus Christ. I forsee its full extent : I have it at one glance with all its proofs before my eyes. Oh ! that I could but lay it before your eyes with the same rapidity ! bjit the dissertation must necessarily be long : you must submit to it : it is necessary for your peace of mind : the subject is all important. I should also be apprehen- sive that my silence might appear to you a tacit acknowledgment of the weakness of my cause : and I ought not to give your teachers this kind of advantage in your mind. Before we set about developing the proofs, it will be well to remove certain general difficulties, which might diminish their effect. These difficulties are produced, in some, by the false notions conjured up by a heated imagination ; in others by spe- cious reasons, which seem to demonstrate the physical impossi- bility of the real presence. The first are indignant at the very idea of the consequences which they imagine themselves obliged to admit. If Jesus Christ were really present in the Eucharist, he would then, say they, be abandoned to the mercy of the wicked : he would have put himself into the power of his crea- tures, by giving them the power of offering to his adorable body the most shameful indignities ; of casting him to animals, of dragging him in the mud, and treading him under foot. But, in the first place, these persons do not reflect that similar objec- tions might be made against the presence of God which they admit in the universe. They will reply no doubt, that God is not present in all places in substance, as we say the Eucharist is but only by his infinite knowledge and by the action of an unlimited power. Were the observation correct, the objections would not the less forcibly recur : for does it not seem unworthy of his supreme majesty that his pure and immortal eye should be open to every scene of horror and debauchery ? What rep- resentations, what work full of folly and turpitude, what dis- AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 163 gusting and infamous images find place in the divine conceptions, and become reflected upon the increated Word ? Far from us however be such illusions ! God sees all crimes, and his eye is not defiled: he knows them, and the purity of his essence re- mains uninjured. 1 Aud let us equally be on our guard how we believe that the profanations exercised upon a consecrated host can touch and affect the person of Jesus Christ. The only right he has granted his ministers over it, is to be able, at their will, to render it present upon the altar, and that in a manner which it is not given them to comprehend. The wicked may indeed, profane the veils under which he conceals himself, may prosti- tute them to unclean animals : may throw them into the mud or under their feet : for he abandons to their mad outrages the cover he places between himself and them, of itself contempti- ble and common, it is true, and yet most deserving our respect and our veneration from the presence of the sacred guest, whom it holds concealed from our eyes. Here their profanations stop : they reach not his adorable body, on which he gives them no hold : inaccessible to all their senses, he is also screened from all their attempts: and not less impalpable than invisible, in the midst of the most shameful outrages, his divine person remains ct riKilly impassible and inviolable. Others borrow their arguments from still more abstracted 1 Saint Peter Chrysologus, archbishop of Ravenna, * sneaking of the woman who came secretly behind our Saviour, and touched the hem of his garment, as if | . gain from aim by Btealth the cure of the flux of blood under which she had labored for twelve years, makes the following reflection: 'She knew that the Divinity could neither be tarnished by the touch, nor offended at the sight, nor i ijnred by the h taring, aor stained by the thoughts of man. For if the sun by i 1 - rays cornea in contact with dirl ami liltli without, being defiled, with how ipa li more reason can the Creator of the sun come in contact with any thing whatsoever, without contracting the leasl stain or defilement ?' f Origen had -ail before him : ' Celsua i-nagines that the divine nature is defiled ,,- iii it it i- mixed up with defilement whether in remaining in the womb of a w .nan until its body was formed there, or in assuming this same body. It is 1,:. ■ ii„.-.- who believe that the raj - of Hi" sun are sullied by passing over Bloughs or bad m,i. -IN, ami that tl, ■•;, do not preserve all their purity.' Again t OeUm Bedh IV. n. 326. * An. 331- t Sermon 30. 164 OX THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND metaphysical sources, and with an air of triumph display to us their pretended demonstrations of the impossibility of one body existing in many places at the same time. Their triumph with- out dispute, would be, certain, did the question turn upon a body existing in the Eucharist under the same forms and with the natural qualities and proportions of a human body : for cer- tainly it will never enter any one's mind to believe or propose to be believed that a body such as yours or miue can be simul- taneously in many places. But we are speaking of a body passed to a state entirely different from our own, become impal- pable, invisible, inaccessible to all our senses: we are speaking of a presence, the manner of which we pretend not to explain, winch we acknowledge to be above our understanding. In what manner would they shew the impossibility of such a presence being simultaneously multiplied, and of the existence of such a body in many places at once ? Would they maintain it to be more impossible than impalpability and invisibility ? If they allow that our Lord could derogate from the ordinary laws of matter, to such a degree as to conceal his body from all our senses, can he not still further derogate from them so as to ren- der it present in many places at once ? Have we a sufficient knowledge of the properties of matter to deny this ? Have we sufficiently penetrated into its essence ? For, to affirm the im- possibility of any thing whatsoever is to assert that the qualities that are attributed to it are repugnant to, or mutually exclude one another. This cannot be proved, if we do not know them : the first step then is to know them : and up to this time the primitive elements, the intimate qualities of matter, the modifi- cations of which it is susceptible under the hand of the Almighty, are mysteries to man. Whatever progress may have been made in the analysis of bodies, their formation and organization al- ways elude our inquiries ; in this respect as in every thing else, the secret of the Creator has not yet been discovered. I am sorry, I confess, for those transcendant geniuses, who, to justify their incredulity and overturn our belief, transport us with them into unknown regions, and would have us adopt as luminous de- AND THE REFORMATION IX GENERAL. 165 rnonstrations the arguments they produce for us out of sight in the void and the night of chaos. What is remarkable, is, that they make no difficulty in admitting other mysteries, not less incomprehensible than this. You believe with us, I would say to them, the Trinity and Incarnation, and have not these dogmas tiieir inaccessible heights ? Does not the Socinian imagine that he discovers in them impossibilities and absurdities ? You reply to him that his objections prove only the limits of the human mind and in no wise the impossibility of these dogmas : it is just so that I answer you respecting the Eucharist. Does not the birth of Jesus Christ appear repugnant to our ideas of things? that he should have taken a body and come into the world from the womb of a virgin, what is there in appearance more impos- sible than this, according to all that we observe of the laws of nature and the properties of the human body? that after his resurrection his disciples being assembled and keeping the doors shut for fear of the Jews, 1 he should have twice appeared in the midst of them, how are we to explain this prodigy and make it accord with the notions we have formed of matter ? 2 And after his ascension, that he should have appeared to St. Paul in the same manner as he shewed himself after his passion to St. Peter, to his disciples and to more than five hundred brethren together, 3 do you more easily conceive this ? For we have manifestly here the presence of Josus Christ in two places at once in heaven at the right hand of his Father, and on earth before St. Paul, to whom he shewed himself as he was before. To convince his apostles of his resurrection he had caused to be seen by their eyes, in his complete humanity, the same members, the same ' St. John, xx. in. • One of your teachers somewhere relates, that the disciples being assembled and closely shut u|>, Jesus Christ fling* the doors wick opon (thai is Ms expression if my memory Berves me faithfully, it certainly i- the sense of it), and advances to the middle of the room. Such is tli • way this rare genius turns and changes b he pleases, the narrative of the gospel to accommodate his fancy I This is again tb ■ game Dr. Jortm whom I have cited before. • Quod januis clausis Dominus ingressus est, biter alia ejus miiacula nunierabit, quicumque Sanaa mentis est.' Cyril. Alex, BOBCulo v. •I. Corinth xv. 6. 166 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND features that they had known him to possess before his death. 1 What will you say again of the dogma of the general resurrec- tion, the belief in which is common to us both? Can your imagination comprehend this mystery? Do you readily con- i ivc the state in which our bodies will then be changed? Are you able to conceive that they can without ceasing to be the same divest themselves of all their sensual and terrestrial qualities, and put on those that are spiritualized and angelical? for, there, there is neither eating nor drinking ; there they shall not marry or be married, says our Saviour, but shall be like angels. 2 And according to the sublime theology of St. Paul, the body ' is sown in corruption, it shall rise in incorruption : it is sown in dishonor, it shall rise in glory: it is sown in weakness, it shall rise in power: it is sown a natural body, it shall rise a spiritual body : if there be a natural body, there is also a spiritual body.' 3 After these incontestible truths, admitted and yet unintelligible, what means the difficulties you object to us ? To what purpose do you create imaginary impossibilities upon a state of things that far surpass our comprehension ? If God, as you doubt not, destines our sensual and gross bodies for a state of spirituality which we do not understand, why should not our Lord be able to put his body in another spiritual state still more incomprehen- sible ? You reason upon matter such as we see it, and upon bodies such as they strike our senses : but here we are treating of a matter that is imperceptible, of a body that eludes all our senses. You speak to us of an animal body, whereas you should speak of a spiritual body. But you will reply, what do you mean by a spiritual body': and how are we to join these two ideas together? Tn truth, Sir, I am sure that they are joined; for we are taught so by St. Paul : but how and in what manner, I know not, any more than you do. And here it is that all our 1 ' Nemo ascendit in coelum, nisi qui descendit de coelo, Filius hominis qui est in ccelo. Joan. iii. 1-3. ' No man hath ascended into heaven, but He that hath descended from heaven, th: son of man who is in heaven.' Challoner. These words of Jesus to Nicode- nius prove that Jesus Christ was at the same time on earth and in heaven. - Matt. xsii. 30. 3 I. Corinth, xv. 42. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 1G7 metaphysical reasonings upon the Eucharist come to a termina- tion, in our ignorance. I will add one general observation upon mysteries. Revela- tion speaks to us of a supernatural order, and talks to us of a fife to come and of the kingdom of God. This revelation comes i'roni heaven and invites us thither : it shews us the road and acquaints us with the means of arriving at it. Is it surprising that in all that it teaches about this unknown world there should be found some mysterious dogmas, whilst this world, in which we are born, this world, which has been created for us, every where offers us nothing but impenetrable objects, every where nothing but mysteries? "We see every thing that passes around us, and we understand nothing, absolutely nothing. Fix upon any object you please in this world, from the smallest grain to the majestic cedar, from the imperceptible insect that would be wearied with traversing over the head of a pin, to the most monstrous animal, from the atom to the globes that roll over our heads in a space of immeasurable extent, and with a rapidity of movement that the imagination even cannot follow in its flight : every thing is mystery to us : every thing, both the drop of water that is shed from the cloud, and the sprig of the herb, that we tread under our feet, and the grain of sand that is carried by the wind, every thing is inexplicable; both that which we per- and that with which we come more or less in contact or connection: everything confounds our enquiry, everything is mystery, and without doubt the greatest mystery to man is man himself. 1 Nevertheless we believe the existence of the objects, which surround us, and we have good reason for believing it, because the proofs of it are most certain. It is then upon proofs thai depends and ought to depend our belief in every thing, whether in the natural or supernatural order: it is to proof that we must all adhere. Whal is proved, whether in itself conceiv- able or not, what is proved ought to be believed, and cannot be "Mai i to me these inferior terrestrial things, and I will believe yon capable of penetrating also intOBnblime and divine things. t sv. Any 1G8 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND otherwise than believed. Whence it follows that our examina- tion ouglit to refer, not to the nature of the dogmas, which ex- ceed the limits of our minds, but to the proofs of their existence, which we are capable of seeing and judging about. It is there- fore a very foolish way of setting about it to say with your teach- ers : ' God cannot reveal that which is repugnant to reason ; now the doctrine of the Eucharist is repugnant to reason : therefore, &c.' For then they are forced to enter into the nature of things that we all hold to be incomprehensible, and of course to wander from unknown to unknown, and to reason in the dark. But the method that good sense points out, and that the consciousness of our weakness should suggest, is this : ' God cannot reveal what is repugnant to reason ; now, he has revealed or he has not re- vealed the dogmas of the Eucharist ; therefore, &c.' For here we can all understand one another ; here the examination and decision are brought to a level with our minds. It becomes a question of fact : Has God or has he not revealed the mystery of the Eucharist ? If it is not proved that God has revealed it, let us all with one accord throw aside the mystery : if on the contrary the proofs of it are certain, we are all of us absolutely bound to submit to it : you and your teachers must indispensably admit it, pay homage to it, and throw aside the vain objections of an impotent and conceited reason. Now I wish to enter upon an examination of this question of fact with you : I undertake to convince you that the mystery of the Eucharist has been re- vealed to us, such as we now receive it. "We have seen that revelation had been transmitted to us by word of mouth and by writing : that, to know it entirely, we must have recourse to the two-fold deposit of scripture and tradi- tion. I will proceed therefore to lay them before your eyes one after the other : and I hope, with the assistance of heaven, to produce in their favor proofs so decisive that you will be obligod to acknowledge, that this mystery, inconceivable as it is, has certainly been revealed to the world by Jesus Christ, and that the decrees of the Church upon the Eucharist are manifestly con- formable with both the deposits of revelation. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 169 The holy scripture, — The words of promise. Open, if you please, the 6tli chapter of the Gospel of St. John, which is too long to be here transcribed entire : and have the goodness merely to follow, with the book in your hand, the argument with which this chapter will supply you. The Evan- gelist relates in how miraculous a manner our Saviour fed in the desert the five thousand men who had folio. wed him : how he withdrew himself by flight from the transports of their admira- tion, and the honors they wished to pay him by proclaiming him King : how towards night he rejoined the vessel of the apostles in the middle of the sea of Tiberias, walking over the waters to them : how, in fine, he himself was rejoined the next day at Caphernamn, by the multitude he had fed the day before. The conversation between Jesus and the Jewish multitude, which cannot be sufficiently meditated upon, commences at, the 25th verse. After having blamed their eagerness for perishable food, and their indifference in seeking for meat that endureth to life everlasting, he tolls them that the means of obtaining it is to believe in him whom God has sent them : he reproaches them for their incredulity in his regard, in spite of the miracles he had performed in their presence. He adds that the manna of which he had spoken, and which their fathers had eaten in the desert, was not the heavenly bread : that the bread of God is that which cometh down from heaven : that he himself is the true heavenly bread, that he is come down from heaven : that he had been sent by his Father to save them. At these words the Jews no longer contain themselves. ' Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know? How then garth he, I came down from heaven'?' 1 But Jesus without re- vealing to them the secret of his human birth, still leads them to his celestial origin and to his divine mission, and insists more strongly than ever upon the obligation of believing in his words and his testimony. Amen, amen I Bay to you : he that believeth in me hath everlasting life.' 2 What is the meaning of this cx- ' Verse 42. »Verae4T. 170 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND orclium, and of this manner of opening himself by halves and by degrees ? How comes it, that he reminds them at repeated intervals of the necessity of the faith due to his character, his miracles and divinity ? What is the tendency of these prelimi- nary recommendations ? In what are they to end, or what is he thinking of proposing to them ? Something very extraordinary no doubt, and very difficult to be received ; otherwise he would have explained himself without making use of all these precautions. The plan he always adopted was distantly to announce the great mysteries he was to accomplish. Thus he taught the necessity of baptism for entering the kingdom of heaven, before he instituted it : thus also his disciples often heard him discourse upon his passion, death, and resurrection, and on the descent of the Holy Ghost; thus he announced in this very chapter 1 his ascension and return into heaven. By admonishing them before hand, he kept their minds in expectation : he humored also the weakness of man by sparing him the too lively impressions that unforeseen prodigies would have made upon his senses. Induced by these same motives he gives them intimation of a miracle which he was intending to work, and which would still more as- tonish human reason. He selected for its announcement the circumstance, which had the most analogy and connection with the Eucharist, that of the multiplication of the loaves, of which the very people whom he was addressing had just been witnesses. After having convinced them of all the claims he had to their entire confidence, he proceeds at last to declare the object he is about, and expresses it concisely in these words, ' I am the liv- ing bread which came down from heaven. If any man eat of this bread he shall live forever : and the bread that I will give is my flesh, for the life of the world.' 2 The secret hitherto con- cealed is now divulged : the great mystery is declared : it has been heard : it has been understood to signify a real presence ; but will this real presence be believed ? No : the Jews instead of trusting to Jesus Christ as to the manner in which he would give them Verse 62. 2 Verse 51. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 171 his flesh to eat, think only of that in which they eat common flesh : they moreover break out into murmurs, look at one another with marks of disapprobation and repugnance, and quickly ex- claim : ' How can this man give us his flesh to eat ?' They had therefore clearly understood him to speak of a real manducation. We will proceed no farther for the present. I have here two observations to make to you. When we propose to your teachers and those of their communion the august mystery of the Eucha- rist, do they not immediately begin to contest it? do they not shew towards our belief signs of disapprobation, contempt, and aversion ? do they not disdainfully reply to us in the manner of the Jews of this gospel ; ' How can he give us his flesh to eat?' In vain do we endeavor to represent to them that the bread of God is that which cometh down from heaven; that 'this bread that he has given us is his flesh, that flesh which he has given for the life of the world: and that what God demands of us, is to believe in him whom he has sent ;' and that according to the solemn declaration of our Saviour upon this same subject, ' he who believes in him has everlasting life.' In vain do we repre- sent to them again that how high or incomprehensible soever this real manducation may be, the promise has cpaite as certainly pro- ceeded from the mouth of Jesus Christ, and that if it is above reason to conceive it, it evidently is against reason to doubt of his word, where we cannot doubt that he has given it, and when we acknowledge his divinity. They cease not replying to us with the incredulous Jews ; ' How can he give us his flesh to eat?' Let us for a moment change the scene of action, and suppose that one of your missionaries, explaining to an infidel this point of Christian doctrine, should produce, without intending it, the Idea of a real manducation in the minds of his audience, and that t'n'V, being shocked at the proposition, cried out: ''What is it you mean to say ; or how shall your God lie able to give us his flesh to eat?' What would your missioner reply? Should he not say that they had mistaken the meaning of his words; that he 11 iver intended to propose to them the belief of a real manduca- tion: that the flesh of Jesus Christ is not true but figurative 172 ox Tin-: church of exolaxd meat : that his blood is not veal, but ideal drink ; that they have only to cat his flesh and drink his blood by faith : that the Eucha- ristic bread is the symbol of his body, the wine the symbol of his blood : that both one and the other are signs which his love has condescended to consecrate and leave us after him, to console us for his absence. In this way, or at least something like it, would your missionary explain himself in order to remove every idea of a real manducation. But does Jesus Christ set himself in this manner about removing the same idea, at which the Jews shewed themselves so shocked ? What reply does he make to the mad insult they offer him, by saying before his face ; ' How can this man give us his flesh to eat ?' Let us hear what he has in reply. ' Amen, amen, I say unto you (an affirmation which from the mouth of the Man-God is equivalent to an oath) ; except you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you shall not have life in you. He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, hath everlasting life : and I will raise him up in the last day. For my flesh is meat indeed and my blood is drink indeed: He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, abideth in me and I in him. As the living Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father : so also he that eateth me, the same also shall live by me. This is the bread that came down from heaven He that eateth of this bread shall live for ever.' Are you not struck with what you have just heard? Is there any thing wanting to these words to determine their meaning ? Confess that this lan- guage is very different from that which we have heard from the mouth of your missionary. Jesus Christ, far from removing the idea of a real manducation, confirms it anew in the minds of the Jews, shocked as they had already been at it : far from softeuing down the sense he had already given to his first words, he con- firms it by an oath, and continues to present it perpetually in still more energetic terms : far from saying, like your teacher, that his flesh is but figurative meat, his blood an ideal drink, he affirms that his flesh is meat indeed, his blood, drink indeed. In the discourses of the missionary, we hear of nothing but of AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 173 figure, of symbol, of spiritual raandueation, of a memorial and of absence : in tbat of Jesus Christ there is nothing of all this, not a word of symbolical or figurative language : in it every thing expresses, every thing confirms the reality of his flesh as meat, and of his blood as drink, the reality of the manducation : every thing declares and supposes his presence in the sacrament. He there communicates himself to him who eats it, as common meat is communicated to him who takes it and derives life from it : ' He that eateth me, abideth in me and I in him.' And again, he that shall eat him shall live by him as he lives by the Father : therefore he shall live by him in reality and in substance, as He lives by his Father. In fine, the truth of the manducation is compared to that of the mission he has received, and what is there more real and better attested than this heavenly mission ? Thus you find on the part of Jesus Christ, his presence, com- munion and intimacy, by the fact of his body and blood being really given as meat and drink : on the part man, the reality of the manducation, the certain pledge of life, of resurrection and salvation : and all these prodigies attested by the reiterated affir- mations and even by the oath of the Son of Cod. What more do you want to determine with certainty the meaning he attached to his words ? What is wanting in them to convince you, and force your belief? After having exposed, repeated and confirmed so many times the sense of his real presence, shall not Jesus Christ succeed at last in persuading you to believe it: and will y>u always say with these blind and obstinate Jews: 'How can tliis man give us his flesh to eat?' Still one more observation. According to the principle of yuur teachers, the Jews could only have been wrong in under- standing literally what he had said figuratively, and in taking for a real manducation, that which according to our Saviour's intention was only to take place by faith. But here by attempt- ing to give this turn to the fault of the Jews, your teachers themselves are mistaken. In fact, had it been so, Jesus Christ would have immediately perceived the error of the Jews, and would not have permitted them to remain in it. There only 15* 174 ox Tin: church of encland needed a word, to correct their mistake, to appease their mur- murs, to reconcile their hearts to his doctrine ; and yet this most simple explanation he refused to give them ! He who always corrected his disciples, whenever they mistook his meaning, 1 he who had just performed a miracle to feed this multitude of Jews, and had attached them to him by his favors, he who came down from heaven but to instruct and to save, 2 he sees them become irritated and embittered against him merely from a misunder- standing, which he can easily remove, and he refuses to do it! he leaves them in error! what do I say? He himself throws them into it ! for the strength of his expressions necessarily implied the reality. The Jews understood them so, neither ou^ht they to have taken them in an opposite sense. It belonged to our Saviour to remove from their minds the idea that he had given them of the reality, if he had not wished that they should believe it; yet he does no such thing. It was the reality then that he had in view, the reality that he meant, the reality that lie had promised, and that he wished them to believe beforehand on the word and assurance that he gave them of accomplishing it on a future occasion. The fault of the Jews did not so much consist in misunder- standing hi in as in refusing to believe him, and if they deserved to be condemned, it was not for want of understanding so much as for a want of faith. I will explain myself: they understood Jesus Christ to say that he would give in reality his flesh to eat and his blood to drink; and they had had good reason for un- derstanding him so : for, most assuredly it was what he had said. They judged that he could not give them his flesh to eat in the manner that the flesh of animals is eaten : and in this again they were right. What then was their fault? It was this: they were not aware of any other way of eating flesh than of tearing it with their teeth, either raw and bloody, or cooked and dressed: and because this is the only manner they arc acquainted with, they conclude that there can be no other manner, and will not believe that there can be some other way unknown to them. ■ St. Mark, xvi. 24. * St. Matt. xvi. 11, xv. 16. &c. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 175 They come to a decision according to their own ideas, and measure their faith by their limited conceptions : and not seeing the possibility of what Jesus announces to them they refuse to believe it. 1 But had they not often heard speak of him as of an extraordinary personage ? Had they not approached, known and followed him ? Had they not been witness of many miracles, and quite recently, of the multiplication of the loaves? His de- portment, his features, his august and majestic countenance, from which beamed a ray of his shrowded divinity, 2 his conver- sation full of a surprising wisdom, his most holy and pure life ; every thing should have inspired them with confidence ; every thing should have discovered to them in his person a superior character, a prophet who held natnre under his control. In addition to this, he had just revealed to them that he was come down from heaven, that he had been sent to them by God his lather : imposture could have no share in such a soul as his was shewn to be, nor could lies proceed from his mouth. The Jews therefore ought to have believed in his heavenly mission and his divinity ; they ought to have given credit to all his discourses, 1 What Jesus Christ had already said to the Jews, with what he afterwards added in speaking in their presence to his disciples, was sufficient to let them ■ 1 that they must not adhere to the idea of a carnal manducation. He bad already said, many times, that he was himself the living bread, the bread come down from heaven : that the bread that he would give them to eat was his fl sh, which he would give for the lite of the world: that whoever should eat of this bread should live for ever. By these repeated declarations ho gave them BUlBciently to understand, that they should eat his flesh under the form or ap- pearance of bread, that they should participate of the substance of his body and b ■ nourished by it and r the appearance and image of this ordinary aliment of iii:ui : and when soon after he said to his disciples that they should see him go up to where he was before, was it not for the purpose of teaching them that he Blionld not give hia flesh to be eaten in a visible manner, because they should see hi u visibly disappear and mount up into heaven in body and person with all the .- n'llil e and natural proportions of the human body? Was not this telling them that although he should give them hi flesh to eat, it would still remain, as before, riving and entire: that therefore he spoke not of ordinary flesh, which must be given bO support a mortal life, and to be torn in pieces and consumed when e;.i -II '.' * Certc f'ulgor ipse et majestas divinitatis occult, qua: etiam in human;! facie relucebat, ex primo ad se videutes trahere poterat aspectu. Hyeron. Hbmil. in Vatth. lib. 1. 176 ON THE CHURCH OF BNQLAJTO and thon have said to themselves: 'We cannot conceive, it is true, in what manner lie can make us eat his flesh and drink his blood : but since he has said it and assured us of it, it certainly must be possible : he certainly must have means, which we kuow nothing of, for the accomplishment of his promise. He is holy, he is good : he cannot sport with our credulity: he is sent by God, he comes from heaven: he therefore knows all things and can do all things whatsoever he pleases : and when once he as- sures us that he will give us his flesh to eat and his blood to drink, we are immediately persuaded of it; we are convinced by his holy word, and without being able to conceive it, we be- lieve it.' This is what they should have thought, should have said and firmly confessed. Their fault and condemnation lie in not having thought or acknowledged it; in having cast aside so many motives which required their entire confidence and reliance upon him ; in having preferred their own conceptions to his : in having presumed to consider him as capable of proposing to them what is impossible, that is, of wishing to deceive them, or of deceiving himself, and, in this insulting alternative, in obsti- nately refusing to believe him. These reflections on the unhappiness of the Jews create in my mind another reflection ; which makes me afraid for you and those of your communion. Like unto these Jews, you reject the reality of the manducation that Jesus Christ announces to them, and with them you say ; ' How can he give us his flesh to eat ? But in you this incredulity becomes much more unpar- donable. The Jews did not at that time know of the resurrec- tion and ascension of our Saviour, or of the descent of the Holy Ghost announced by him, and followed by so many prodigies that have renewed the face of the earth. These splendid and divine operations have in your regard placed the authority of Jesus Christ beyond any thing the Jews could at that time know of it. They had seen some of his miracles, an 1 had from them concluded that he was the prophet expected in t'lose times. For his divinity they had his assertion, and it was sufficient in such a parsonage. But, besides this assertion, y u have all the AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 177 proofs of it, and this is much more. You admit these proofs, you profess the divinity of Jesus Christ. Well, then ! Sir, either cease to profess it, or cease to refuse your belief in him : for to acknowledge him as God and not believe his word : to hear him clearly telling you that he will give you in reality his flesh to eat, as he has said, and as is demonstrated, and never- theless to maintain, to persist obstinately in maintaining that the tiling is impossible; this is an extravagance much more in- sulting, much more to be condemned, than the blind incredulity of the Jews. The Evangelist, 1 as if desirous of giving greater authenticity to his recital, remarks that this conversation took place in the village of Capharnaum, in full synagogue, where the multitude had assembled around Jesus. After the care he had taken to repeat and confirm so often, as we have heard, the reality of the manducation, it would seem that all his hearers should have ceased from their original opposition, and believed unanimously in his words. A melancholy and lamentable example of the weakness, the pride and blindness of the human mind ! Incre- dulity, far from yielding to repeated assertions, becomes irritated at them. It is no longer among the people only, that it appears ; ir reaches even his disciples: This saying is hard, and who can hear it?' 2 said many amongst them. Josus, who read their hearts, turns to them and says; 'I)oth this scandalize you? If fcheB you shall see the son of man ascend up where he was be- fore? 8 Let us weigh well these words: coming from such a per- SOD they can never be sufficiently thought upon. If you are shocked, if you are scandalized at what I say to you, that I shall give you my flesh to eat, now that it is upon earth and before your eyes, h<>w much more will you bo scandalized when you shall see it go up to heaven and disappear from your sight? If this manducation appears to you incredible now that you see my body, how much more so will it appear to you, when you shall see it no more? Hi- doctrine therefore ttras Bucb that after his resurrection it would present more difficulties to be understood •St. John vL 60. 'Veree CI. 'Verse 62, 63. •US ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND than before, and from this I conclude that his doctrine was not such as the reformed attribute to him. For it could not become more difficult for his disciples to comprehend a spiritual and figurative manducation after, than before his ascension : it would not have required any greater exertion to uuite themselves to their master as a Saviour and a God, when they should believe him to be at the right hand of his Father, than when they saw him in the midst of them. Indeed, so far must their faith have been from finding a greater difficulty in reaching him in heaven than upon earth, that it must on the contrary have found much less : for the ascension is one of the most splendid proofs of his divinity, and nothing was more calculated to excite the hearts and inflame the faith of the disciples, than the majestic and rav- ishing spectacle of this prodigy. It must, therefore, become more easy to them afterwards, to believe in Jesus Christ, to feed themselves with his remembrance by receiving the pledges of his love, to unite themselves to him in thought, and to embrace him by faith as their Redeemer and God. But in the Catholic dogma of the real manducation, the removal of his person, the absence of his visible and natural body must have been for his disciples a fresh difficulty in believing the mystery, and this is so true, that your theologians rest upon the fact of the ascension as an argument against the real presence, and unceasingly repeat to us that he is as far from our altars as is earth from heaven. They are blind and perceive not, that, contrary to their inten- tion, this reasoning turns precisely to the support of our doctrine, by giving it the very character which Jesus Christ here assigns to it, that of appearing more inconceivable after his ascension. In announcing to his disciples, he insinuated to them and gave them sufficiently to understand that in the manducation of his flesh there should be nothing for the senses, as they had imagined ; and that his presence in it would neither be palpable nor visible, since, according to his natural presence, they would see him dis- appear and rise up to heaven. He informed them, moreover, that they were not to judge of his body as of other human bodies, incapable of themselves of a similar flight : that his was to be AND TOE REFORMATION IX GENERAL. 179 of a divine nature ; his flesh being that of the Son of God, on which he could imprint an all powerful virtue, and which he could easily convert into a supernatural state. I beg you to re- nnirk also that he is not satisfied with saying to them that they should see him go up into heaven, but also moreover go up where lit was before. This he said to convince them of his divinity, wishing to ground upon this transcendant and sovereign motive, the faith which he required of them, and which they refused to his words *? Now the figurative sense which you give them is so easy, and so much within the reach of our own ideas, that, in that sense, neither would the disciples have ever refused their assent to it, nor would Jesus Christ have had any need to bring forward his divinity in order to extort their belief. Therefore, this sense absolutely cannot be the sense of his words ; the only one it is possible to give them is that of the reality. Your divines have imagined that the following verse brings to the spiritual and figurative sense the whole previous discourse of our Saviour. You shall decide upon it : 'It is the spirit that quickeneth, the flesh profiteth nothing. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life." We have already proved that the words which Jesus Christ had spoken were decisive for the reality ; these therefore cannot give them the figurative sense : for it would be absurd to suppose that our Saviour would teach at the same time, or by turns, in the same discourse and on the same subject, two senses, as opposite as are the reality and the figure. There is also a second and still more forcible proof. If Jesus Christ had concluded by asserting that whatever he had just said must be understood only in a figurative sense, it is evi- dent that both the Jews, who had exclaimed against the real munducation, and the disciples, who had found it too hard to be understood, would immediately have been reconciled to his doc- trine, and more tenderly attached than ever t<> their master. And yet they all left him, even after hl8 last words and walked qo more with him. 2 Their subsequenl departure proves, that the disciples discovered in these words no explanation in the ' Verse 01. 2 Verse GO. 180 ON THE CTIURCTT OF ENGLAND figurative sense, and that our Saviour gave them none of this kind, since his only intention in giving it would have been to disabuse them and retain them about his person. But if you ask of the signification of these words; 'the flesh profiteth nothing : it is the spirit that quickeneth ;' I give you that which best agrees with what precedes and follows in the dis- course of our Saviour. It is well known that in the scripture language the flesh signifies the corporeal senses, or the carnal and corrupted reason of man ; while the spirit denotes the grace of God, and the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Thus our Lord said to Peter : ' Flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee, but my Father who is in heaven.' 1 Thus St. Paul said to the Romans that Christians, 'walk not according to the flesh, but according to the spirit.' 2 He details to the Galatians the works of the Jlesh and those of the spirit.'' 3 In these and other passages, the spirit and the flesh are taken in the sense that I have ex- plained : they are also taken in the same sense in the verse under examination. Our Lord therefore said, that the flesh, that is the senses or corrupt reasons of man profiteth nothing towards the discovery or belief of what he had announced. It is still this reality of manducation on which he has so much insisted, of which he here declares that we cannot judge by the flesh or by a carnal reason which profiteth nothing, and that it could neither be discerned nor believed except by the quickening spirit, that is, by the grace and the light of God. Accordingly he immedi- ately adds: 'But there are some of you who believed not 4 » therefore did I say unto you, that no man can come unto me, unless it be given him by my Father ;' 5 which very much re- sembles what he said to Peter, who had just been confessing his divinity: ' Flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee, but my Fntljer who is in heaven.' The reason in fact is that faith is a gift of God, and that in order to be more influenced by the proofs on which the credibility of mysteries rest, than by the difficulties that the senses oppose to them, we stand in need of succor from ' Matth. xvi. 17. '-'viii. -1. ^ v. 20. -"St. John, vi. 65. 5 vi. 66. AND THE REFORMATION IX GENERAL. 181 above, of the lights and inspiration of the Holy Spirit. 1 Ac- cording to the exposition I have just given you, every thing is regular and connected, every thing is consistent in the discourse of our Saviour. Have you remarked these word : ' Therefore (i.e. because they do not believe) did I say unto you, that no man can come unto me, unless it be given by my Father? That is to say, that there was need of an assistance, a particular grace from heaven for believing the manducation that was announcing. It was not therefore the manducation, that is recognised in your communion, so natural, so conformable to our ideas that it presents not even the shadow of a mystery and recpiires not for its belief any effort of the mind, and still less any particular assistance of divine grace. The words which immediately precede, present also a reflec- tion which I must not permit to escape ; ' But there are some of you who believe not.' Whence comes this reproach of their in- credulity *? To what can it refer ? Ask your divines, if you please^ and you will see their embarrassment, or rather their in- ability to give any satisfactory reply to your question. At what then were these disciples offended? What was it they refused to believe ? It was not any strong expression which our Saviour liad made use of; for in that case he would have softened it down: and therefore the reproach of incredulity falls upon the things and not upon the expressions. Neither was it the man- ducatioo taken in the figurative sense, a thing too simple to admit of the possibility of a moment's hesitation; it was therefore the reality that they absolutely would not admit. But, in the prin- ciples ui' your divines, that would deserve no reproach. These disciples thought it *" be impossible; and do not your brethren think the«ame? and according to fchem did ool these disciples, by refusing their consent, reject what they ought to have he- 1 Spiritns est qui vivificat, caro non prodest qnidquam: qnod indicat ista Splfitaa Bancti auxilio Lntelligi oportere. Carnem enim hoc est rationem bu- manain in hiace divinta rebus nihil prodesse, hoc ■• I caligare el Inepttre. ( ! i&vt /.. .'li. ,-n„- Cut. 1. C. iv. eel. 167, 1G 182 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND lioved, by holding it to be impossible ? They could not there- fore merit any reproach ; and Jesus Christ (may he forgive us !) Jesus Christ reproached them without cause. ' After this many of his disciples went back and walked no more with him.' 1 Here ask again the most skilful of your ministers : ask them why these disciples abandon their master ? In vain will you expect a solid reply. They will always tell you, and they have nothing more to say, that these disciples had permitted themselves to be-staggered at expressions which seemed to them to favor the reality of the manducation, which in point of fact our Saviour had only proposed in figure. But he who saw into the interior, would immediately have seen their mistake, and to remove it he had only to say ; ' When I spoke to you of giving you my flesh to eat, I merely intended to give you the sign and figure of it, and to inform you that by taking them you would unite yourselves to my flesh by faith : and are not you already thus united, you who are my disciples ?' And they would have fallen at his feet and would never have left him. In fact it is ridiculous to explain this fatal separation by a mere misun- derstanding of terms. Men, indeed, are liable to this in their mutual communications, because they cannot read each others thoughts ; but it is absolutely inadmissible between these disci- ples and Jesus Christ, who clearly saw whatever was passing in their minds. Consider their departure from Christ : seek out a motive for it as long you please ; you will find it only in the incom- prehensibility of the mystery. In vain does Jesus Christ re- mind them of his heavenly mission, of his divinity, and the miracles which attested both: nothing could persuade them. Neither the admiration of his person, nor the works of a power that commands nature, nor the benefits they had received, nor those which they had reason to expect, could make them over- come their repugnance to this real manducation. They obsti- nately persist in judging of it by the flesh, by the corporeal senses, by a confined and corrupted reason : they deem it impos- sible, and will hear no more of it: they withdraw. Alas! too > Verse G7. AND THE REFORMATION IX GENERAL. 183 often, since then, has this unhappy separation been renewed in the world ! How many children of the Church have been lost through the like repugnance to believe the same mystery ! How many left her bosom at the time of the Reformation, and since that epoch, how many were not and still are not reconciled to it, on account of the same difficulty of embracing this incompre- hensible dogma. Thus the same effect that it produced at its first announcement in the word, it still continues to produce in our days : the aversion it occasioned in many disciples to Jesus Christ, it still occasions in Christians to his Church. At the time our Saviour saw himself abandoned by many of his disciples, he perceives his apostles, in suspense perhaps be- tween the authority of their master and the incomprehensibility of his doctrine, humbly maintaining a profound silence. But he. wishing to ensure their attachment and faith, said to the twelve : ' Will you also leave me ? And Simon Peter answered him : Lord, to whom shall we go ? thou hast the words of eter- nal life : we have believed and have known that thou art the Christ the Son of God." Had the apostles here given, as a motive of their continuance with him, that they had taken the words of Jesus Christ in the figurative sense, and understood that to cat his flesh and drink his blood meant to be intimately united to him by faith, then it would be fair to conclude that the disciples had taken those same words in too literal a sense. But si far are the apostles from expressing any such thing, that it is evident from their answer that they had inferred from them the reality of the manducation, as well as the disciples: but that havimg more confidence and being less disposed to judge by the //-.>// than by tin- spirit, and corresponding better with grace, they left entirely to our Saviour the manner in which he would accomplish his promise, although they could not conceive or im- agine any. They believed what they could not understand but it was what Jesus Christ had positively told them oyer and over again to believe : they believed because the words of truth and life eternal being in his mouth, he could not himself be deceived, 1 Vcrsea 08, 60, 70. 184 ON THE CHTRCD OF ENGLAND nor deceive them: they believed, because they knew him to be the Son of God, the Christ, having power to do beyond what human reason conld attain or conceive. These were their mo- tives. Assuredly the easy figurative sense would have required none of this exertion. There was, therefore, something incom- prehensible to them in the words of our Saviour : they discovered in them the ineffable mystery that we discover : and the motives upon which they grounded their belief are absolutely the same and the only ones on which the Catholic Church has always rested hers. Let us, if you please, cast a rapid glance over the arguments we have developed in the examination of this chapter 1. Jesus Christ begins by producing the great motives that are to convince his hearers of the obligations of believing in his words. Therefore he has something to propose to them which will be in itself very difficult to be believed. 2. Jesus Christ comes to the proposal of it, and says that he is the bread that quiekeneth, that the bread which he will give them to eat, is his flesh, which he will give for the life of the world. The Jews take the natural sense of those words, and reject it, because the manducation of his flesh appears to them impossible : therefore they understood his words of a true and real manducation. 3. The carnal manner in which they represented to themselves this manducation, evidently supposes the reality of it, and not less evidently excludes the figure. Then, it was the reality they understood. 4. If they had been mistaken in understanding the reality, our Saviour would have disabused them immediately. But far from disabusing them, by explaining himself in a figurative sense, he resumes what he first proposed, repeats it six times in succession, and always with expressions still stronger for the re- ality and even with an oath. Therefore he had the reality in view, and in it he required their belief. &. Many of the disciples take offence at the words they had just heard our Saviour pronounce in six successive verses, and AND TKE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 185 declare them to be too hard to be borne. Therefore these words conveyed the sense of the reality, incomprehensible to the human mind, and not the figurative sense so conformable to our ideas. 6. Instead of softening down the expressions which alienated the disciples, Jesus Christ declares that if they are scandalized now, they shall soon be scandalized still more when they shall see him going up to where he was before ; that is, that his doc- trine will then appear to them more incredible than before his ascension. Now the figurative manducation becomes still more easy to believe after his ascension, and the real manducation ap- pears more incredible in consecpience. Therefore it is not the former, but the latter which had been announced. 7. Jesus Christ who never reproached his disciples with not having understood the sense of his discourse, reproaches them here for not believing. Now the reproach for not believing can only fall on the reality. Therefore he had announced the reality in his discourse. 8. Jesus reproaches them with not believing in this reality. Therefore they did wrong, and you do still more so, in pronounc- ing it to be indefensible. The Jews and disciples judged soundly according to you, by deeming this manducation impossible. Therefore your judgment, like that of the Jews and the disciples, is in direct opposition to that of Jesus Christ, and you are all equally condemned together. 9. Jesus declares that no one can bolieve in him concerning this manducation, if he have not received grace from his Father. Now, to believe a figurative manducation there is no need of any grace, since there is no need of any exertion : therefore he speaks ii t of that kind of manducation. 10. The doctrine of our Saviour on the manducation is such that it hindered many of the Jews from believing in him, and induced many disciples to abandon him. Now the doctrine of the Catholic Church on this point is also such, that it prevents many Christians from joining its creed, and has induced many of its children to quit it : whereas the doctrine of the reformed, whatever be the strength of the expressions they make use of in 186 ON THE CHURCH OF BNGlflWD the Lord's Supper, has never engaged any one to quit tlicm, nor prevented any one from joining them. Therefore the doctrine of the reformed upen this inanducation has not the characters of the doctrine of our Saviour, whereas that of the Catholic Church has them all ; therefore the Catholic faith is the doctrine of our Saviour. 11. The disciples leave their master rather than believe; the apostles adhere to him, grounding their belief on his divinity and his sovereign power. Now the former would never have abandoned such a master for not believing so simple a thing as a figurative manducation, and the latter would have had no need, in order to believe it, to recall to mind his infinite power and his divinity. Therefore neither the one nor the other under- stood this manducation in a figurative sense : therefore that of the reality is the only sense, which can explain at once the op- posite conduct of these disciples and the apostles. In concluding this article, permit me, Sir, to address to you one final observation. I kuow not what impression will have been made upon you by this contrast between the apostles on one side, and the Jews and many disciples on the other. Change the times and the names, and you there read the history of the opposition that exists between those of your communion and us. I feel with regret every thing they will find odious in this com- parison : I entreat them to pardon me for it: it is even more painful for me to have to tell them hard truths, than for them to hear them : nothing would ever have induced me to do it, but the hope of being serviceable to them, even at the purchase of their displeasure. We must therefore here again open for a moment before j r ou and them the scene at Capharnaum, in order that you may see how strikingly it applies to the supporters of your reformation. They have renewed it, and they copy it daily with so much fidelity that you will see them performing the same characters and the same parts as the Jews and disciples ; you will see them borrow their language, imitate their actions, their conduct and carry on the resemblance even to the catastrophe. In fact, when we tell them that Jesus Christ is the living bread AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 187' that came damn from heaven: that ijie bread which he gives vs to eat is his own flesh, the same that he has given for the life of the world, they rise up against this proposition, which is precisely that which, in the mouth of Jesus Christ, produced the departure of the Jews. Like them they shew a thousand sigus of im- patience, of disdain, of contempt: they hold us as foolish aud absurd, they treat our doctrine as impossible and extravagant, and thus produce again under a thousand insulting forms the rude exclamation of the Jews : ' How can this man give us his flesh to eat?' In vain do we represent, unless we eat the flesh of the San <>f Man and drink his blood, ive shall not have life in us: that his flesh is meat indeed and his blood is drink indeed: that we learn it from him, who was sent by his Father, and who came down from heaven to instruct and save us: that his order is that we all believe in his word, &c: they still remain as immovable as ever in their past incredulity : they pass over to the disciples and repeat with them and with much more bitterness : This say- ing is hard, and who can hear it? We persevere in our endea- vors to soften their inflexibility : we suggest that this mystery is proposed to us by him who is gone up to where he was before : that it is unreasonable to believe in his divinity and not to be- lieve in his doctrine : these proud men listen no more to us : they tivut us either with contempt or pity, and the same reason that in Laced the disciples to leave Christ, induces them also to leave us. Let them boast now of the high antiquity of their principles : t !i--v iii:iv date them, if they please, from the Christian era: in- dooteetably they have a right to do so: on this point I recognise Hi -111 .is parti. -a ns ami assosiates of the Jews in this gospel, as >ra and heirs of the disciples, I mean of those ungrateful and unfortunate disciples, whom the Holy Spirit has marked out t-i ii- in scripture as the first apostates from Jesus Christ. Can a man be a Christian, and not blush at such a descent? Can he }>■■ a Christian and nut tremble at the idea of sharing in the opinions, obstinacy, desertion, and lol of these ancient renegades. For yiir part at least, Sir, reflect, I conjure you, on the dan- gar to which you are exposed by the prejudices of your education. 183 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND Have the courage to emancipate yourself from them : it certainly must cost you less to quit an opinion which is not of your own choice. Imagine yourself for a moment in the midst of the synagogue where this important affair was discussed, and that you witness all that passes. You distinguish our divine Saviour surrounded by his apostles and disciples : You attentively listen with them to the words that come from his mouth, and at that part of his discourse where he comes to the mystery, you hear the confused murmurs, and afterwards the declared opposition of the multitude. In vain does our Saviour exert himself to persuade them, by repeatedly affirming what he had just an- nounced ; the multitude remain deaf: and soon you remark the repugnance even of many of his disciples, you notice their words of contradiction, and then their entire desertion from him. On the other side you admire the firmness, the liveliness of the faith of the apostles, and what is more striking through the whole of this scene, the calm countenance and unalterable sweetness of the Man-God. All this passes before your eyes; I suppose you to be present at it. Now what are you yourself going to do? you must declare yourself. On what side will you range yourself? will you adhere with them to your divine master? or will you turn your back upon him with the crowd of the mur- murers ? You are indignant at my question : is there any room for hesitation ? You say to me : Well then ! Sir, take now the part that you would then decidedly have taken with the apostles. The dispute unfortunately still continues. It has been renewed for nearly three centuries with more violence than at its birth, and with still more deplorable consequences. It is no longer between the Jews and in the synagogue, but in the Church and among Christians : Jesus Christ is still in the midst of them : he continues to speak the same language to them. You have just heard him : surrender yourself therefore to him. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 189 LETTER VII. The Words of Institution. The strange and inconceivable proposition which our Saviour had just made in the synagogue, the disputes and contradiction it had generally excited among the crowd of his hearers, the re- peated declarations of Jesus, which instead of quieting their minds and bringing them again to him, provoked the murmurs even of many of his disciples : the formal opposition of the lat- ter, their defection, their desertion, the more successful appeal made to the twelve, their open and declared profession of faith, their persevering fidelity, all these circumstances should give importance and celebrity to the scene at Capharnaum. Those who had been present at it, must have long talked it over to- gether, and likewise have related it to those who were not there ; the fugitive disciples particularly, to justify their desertion and apparent ingratitude. It will then have made a noise in the world, as men were often discoursing upon the extraordinary personage who for more than two years had been astonishing Judea by the wisdom of his doctrines, by benefits and prodigies without number. But it is above all in the minds of the apos- tles and the faithful disciples that it must have left the most pro- found impressions. Amongst those who had left them, they had to regret the loss of friends and companions, with whom they had hitherto shared their assidious attention to their gracious master. Without doubt it cost them much at that time to see them no longer by their side: and this striking absence called incessantly to their recollection the cause of their unfortunate ration. This cause itself, bo very unexpected, so profoundly mysterious, musi have been bo them an inexhaustible source of reflection, of conversation, and confidential communications with one another. What then ! we are one day destined to receive truly and really his flesh to eat and his blood to drink ? Yes, we 190 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND are certain of it, because be bimself bas so strongly assured us of it. But wben? How? In what manner? &c. It is natural to think that they must have put to themselves a thousand times these and similar questions upon this astonishing mystery : neither can we refuse to believe that they mutually strengthened one another in the faith that they had already publicly professed, and that they encouraged one another to expel from their minds the various suggestions of the senses, that might present themselves. Let us put ourselves in their place. If at this distance of time, and with the mere reading of it, we are still so struck and con- founded at the promise which they heard, we may easily conceive that, if it had been directly and for the first time addressed to us, it would have supplied us with abundant matter for reflection until its accomplishment. It is also to be presumed, I had al- most said to be believed, that our Saviour who saw what passed in their heart, would in his goodness have condescended to recur frequently to this subject, and that to the instructions given in the synagogue, he would have added others to confirm them more in their faith, and to recompense the confidence they had so sig- nally displayed in his words. It would be unreasonable to ob- ject to me the silence of the evangelists on this subject : we know very well that they have not related the thousandth part of what our Saviour has said. Even by St. John's account, if he had attempted to write the whole, the world would not ,have contained the books he must have composed. At all events, it is most certain that the apostles implicitly trusted to their Master for the moment in which he would be pleased to fulfil his promise, and that they waited for the accomplishment of it with a con- fused mixture of sentiments of impatience, inquietude, love, and terror. A whole year passed away in this manner. But the time was nigh at hand, the ministry of Jesus Christ was draw- ing to a conclusion : and soon does he announce to his disciples bis near approaching death. The shorter time he has to spend among them the more does he testify to them his affection : he treats them no more as servants but as friends. No sooner does he see them assembled around the paschal table, than he declares to them AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 191 that he had ardently desired to celebrate this last paseh with them before he suffered :• and a little after, continuing to announce to them his death, he told them he should no more eat the pasch with them until it should be fulfilled in the kingdom of God ; then taking the chalice, he adds that he will no more drink of the fruit of the vine, until the kingdom of God should come. 2 At the con- clusion of this legal supper, Jesus rises from table, and to give to his disciples an example of humility and mutual charity, he abases himself so far as to wash their feet. He then invites them to the banquet and again sits down at table with them. What more then, has he to give to them ? It is not the nour- ishment of their body, that now engages his attention, but that of their soul. The moment was arrived for the accomplishment of his promise : it is just going to take place. Already had he laid upon the bread his venerable and creative hands, and lifting up his eyes to heaven, he begins to pray, whether we are to sup- pose, that the acts of thanksgiving here spoken of by the evan- gelists passed mentally between him and his Father, or where heard by the guests at table. After having invoked the all- powerful virtue of his Father, he makes it fall upon the bread, by blessing it: he breaks it, and solemnly says to his apostles : ' Take and eat, this is my body, which is given for you.' And in the same manner after blessing the chalice, ' Drink ye all of this (says he) this is my blood of the new testament which is shed for you.' What were then the sentiments of the apostles, and what ideas must the whole of this ceremony have awakened in their minds? Who can doubt that what they had heard at Capharnaum was here distinctly brought to their remembrance? Those words committed to writing so long afterwards by St. John, were therefore still echoing in their ears: 'The bread that I will give you to eal is my flesh, which 1 will give for the life of the world.' And at the moment our Saviour had said, this is my body which is delivered for you. they necessarily saw in these word- the accomplishment of the former. The connexion of the actual institution with the promise made by Jesus Christ was so 1 Lake. ecu. 15. i Luke, xxii. 10. 192 ON TJIE CHURCH OF ENGLAND manifest, they both accorded and corresponded so exactly in the things and in the terms, that they must evidently have seen that what had been announced to them and what they had been hitherto expecting, was then just accomplished. Hence there is no hesitation, no doubt on their part : no question is proposed : every thing passes in a profound recollection ; and the apostles receive from his hand and take with silent adoration, that fi< sit which is meat indeed, and that blood ichich is drink indeed. 1 The exposition you have just read is sketched from the com- pared narratives of the evangelists. St. John, who wrote the last of the four, has given us at length the words of the promise, which the three first had omitted, and has dispensed with the repetition of the fact of the institution, described by the others. It is very remarkable that the evangelists relating the same facts at too remote periods to have an understanding with one another, and on that account varying almost always in the circumstances and expressions, all three agree, and St. Paul after them, in re- lating these words of Jesus Christ: " This is my body, this is my blood." This uniformity, no where else observable, denotes a particular design of the holy Spirit who directed them, viz : that of teaching us still more plainly the essential words of the mystery. Considering them in themselves, it is impossible not to be struck at once with their simplicity and their strength. This 1 ' The connexion of the words we read in St. John with those of the institu- tion is visible. There to eat, and here to eat, there to drink, and here to drink : there fleih, and here fleih ; or, which amounts to the same, body. There blood, and here blood : there to eat and drink, the flesh and blood separately ; and here the same thing. If this does not shew distinctly that all this is but one and the same mystery, one and the same truth, there no longer exists such a thing as analogy or agreement: there is no connexion nor consistency in our faith, or m the words and actions of our Saviour. But if the eating and drinking of St. John is the eating and drinking of the institution, then in St. John it is an eating and drinking with the mouth, since it is visibly of such a nature in the institution. If the flesh and blood of which St. John speaks is not the flesh and blood in spirit and in figure, but the true flesh and the true blood, in their proper and natural substance, it is the same in the institution: and we can no more interpret this is my body, this is my blood, of a figurative body and figurative blood, than in St. John, unless you eat my fleih and drink my blood, of the figure of one or the other of them.' iiossuet, Meditations sur V Eramjilc, jour. 33. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 193 great prodigy is expressed by the plainest and simplest words to be found in human language ; men would never have discovered such an expression : accordingly it is not from them that proceeds this sublimity of expression, but from him by whom the greatest won- ders are as easily produced as spoken. These few words were understood in the sense of the real presence and of transubstan- tiation by the apostles, and after them by all the Christians till time of Berengarius and Wicklif, whose subtilities for a short time disturbed the Church. It was reserved for the sixteenth century to combat these dogmas more obstinately. And yet even the leader of the reformation could only prevail upon himself to do it by halves. He defended the real presence ; and only declared himself against the way in which it was universally un- derstood. He had at first desired, it is true, that some happy expedient might be suggested to him of getting rid of the re- ality, in order to do more essential injury to the cause of the papacy : a motive which was assuredly most worthy an apos- tleship like his, and which you might regard as a calumnious imputation on the part of the Catholics, had not Luther himself inserted it in one of his letters. 1 ' But God, says Bossuet in his usual style, fixes secret boundaries to the wildest minds, and does not always permit innovators to afflict his Church as much as they would wish. Luther remained invincibly struck with the strength and simplicity of these words, this is my body, this my blood.' Carlostadtius, archdeacon of Wittemberg, his disciple and partisan, proved a bolder man than his master. He was the first to leap the fence, and deny the real presence. To attack the sense of the reality, in which the words of our Saviour had been understood throughout the world, he bethought himself of explanation, but one so foolish and extravagant that it could 1 In hie letter to the inhabitants of Strasburg, he says that they would have greatly delighted him it' they had supplied him u iih si good reason lot- dens mg the real presence, because it would have fallen in better with his design of incon- veniencing (Ik; papacy : Sciens hoc masme modn posse me incommodare papa- tui.' * • Epirt. ad. Argent torn. vii. fol. 501, an I5S0. 17 104 ox the cnuRcn op England only have come from a disordered brain. He pretended then, that Jesus Christ when ho pronounced the word this, did not refer to what he held in his hand, but merely to his own body: and that thus the natural sense of his words was : ' This, that is, my body, is my body.' This unreasonable and ridiculous inter- pretation put his party too much to the blush not to be immedi- ately abandoned. They preferred giving the honor of the re- newal of the sacramentarian doctrine to Zuinglius, the rival and antagonist of Luther, to whom he was a long time a subject of bitter vexation, by obstinately disputing with him the glory of being the first reformer. 1 Already five years had elapsed since Carlostadtius had brought his discovery into the world, which paid no attention to it, when Zuinglius, who was held in great repute at Zurich, assembled in that city on the 11th of April, 1525, the famous synod, which adopted his reform. This synod was composed of two hundred citizens, all as able theologians no doubt as one could reasonably expect to be found among the Swiss burgesses in the sixteenth century. Here it was that in the presenee of these new fathers of the Church, there arose a regular disputation between Zuinglius and the lay chancellor of the town upon the meaning that was to be given to the words of the Eucharist. Having only to deal with a mere burgess, and possessing likewise more boldness and fluency of language than he, the cure of Notre-Dame-des Ermites demonstrated without difficulty, and to the perfect satisfaction of all these powerfully gifted men, that they ought to acknowledge a figurative sense in the words, this is my body, as in the others of the parable, the field is the world, the seed is the word. These were the only examples he produced, having nothing better at the time to 1 Zuinglius had published that, from the year 1516, before the name of Luther was known, he had preached the gospel in Switzerland. Piqued at this his pre- tension, Luther wrote to the inhabitants of Strasburg, that he confidently assumed to himself the glory of having been the first to preach Jesus Christ, but that Zuinglius wished to rob him of his glory. ' How are we to hold our peace (said he) while these people disturb our Churches, and attack our authority ? ' He declares, in conclusion, ' that there is no medium : and that he or they must be the ministers of satan.' AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 195 produce : for he had not then been favored with the apparition of the black or white personage, who came afterwards to him in a dream, to point out to him a still more analogous passage in the Bible. This council of the burgomaster and burgesses how- ever adopted unanimously his conclusions against the real pres- ence, and from that very day abolished, by a decree, the cele- bration of mass. S«ch is the origin of the sacramentarian opinion and of the whole reformation in general at Zurich, where two hundred ignorant laics pronounced sentence against the faith of all ages and the perpetual doctrine of the Church, as if they had been deciding upon some acres of ground, or a few scraps of meadow-land near the borders of the lake. The other towns that afterwards adopted the same principles, imitated the conduct of Zurich, and proceeded just as wisely and canonically in their decisions. Undoubtedly, Sir, you can have no difficulty in acknowledg- ing the absolute illegality and prodigious temerity, with which the sacramentarian opinion and the reformation were admitted at Zurich and from thence in the other cantons. You will tell me that you are but little concerned with what took place on this subject in the towns of Switzerland, G-ermany and France: that the Church of England alone has claims to your interest, and that upon the article of the Eucharist the canonical forms have not been laid aside, because the bishops and doctors held a convocation which pronounced, indirectly at least, against the real -presence, and most positively against transubstantiation. T :i- observation, I grant, is not devoid of reason; in fact, we p -niive in the convocation an appearance of canonical form. Thin is not the place to expose the too positive defects that nulli- fied all its aotfl and proceedings: I shall be satisfied with ob- serving, in my turn, that drawing its objections from the holy Boriptures as all the reformers did, and none of them having s •en or found any thing more than another, it will read its own r ■f'utation in that which I am now going to give to every thin"- that bears the name of reformation, whatever country it may inhabit, or under whatever denomination it may be distinguished. l'JG ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND "We will examine the difficulties brought against the real pres- ence, and afterwards I hose against transuhstantiation. It would be useless to treat separately of the adoration, an inevitable con- s jquence of the real pr isence : for to believe Jesus Christ present in his sacrament, an 1 not to pay to his divine person divine honors, would be an outrage, an impiety, and a kind of apostacy. Have we not learned from .St. Paul that men at the name alone of Jesus every knee shall bow, in heaven, on earth, and under the earth ?' 1 The convocation of 1562, in its twentv-eiidith article, under pretence that our Saviour did not ordain that lie should be adored in the Eucharist, suppresses and condemns indirectly the adoration we there pay to his divinity. This evidently enough unmasked its secret opinion against the real presence and gave the world to understand that it banished Jesus Christ from its sacrament. To prove this by authorities that it must admit, I will cite those who, like itself, have suppressed the adoration ; I mean the Calvinists. Beza arguing against Luther, who had given full liberty to adore or not to adore, express's hints If as follows : ' lllud vero prai caeteris demiror qui adora- tionem illaua liberam relinquas, qui tamen Christum reipsa corporaliter, ut in ceelis, cum pane adesse, dari et sumi fatearis. Id enim si ita esse crederem, illius profecto non modo tolerabilem et religiosam, sed etiam necessariam arbitrager adorationem.' * Another Calvinist refutes the Lutheran doctrine in like manner : 'Hanc ado- rationem pontiliciani si neges, posita corporali prsesentia Christi in pane, crimen impietatis et contumeliae Christi nee apud papistas, nee apud ullos sanos potes etl'ugere.' | The Calvinistic author of the Caution on the Boole of Concord : $ ' Si Christus in pane euchai istico prsesena esset corporaliter, necessario nos ad panem hunc converses oporteret ipsi reverentiam et adorationem Deo debitam exhibere. Al- ligata est autem adoratio ad hanc naturam humanam, assumptam a Filio Dei, ut ubicumque vel sensu uostro, vel verbo ipsius constat eum esse prajsentem, eo ciirio-i adorationem et honorem Christi, amnio et corpore necesse sit : sicut dictum est : AdSh nt < van tmnes AngtM Dei. || Estque fabula impia et in Christum con- tumeliosG quod aliqui (Lutherani) respondent Christum adesse huic paui, non ut in eoadoretui'.sedutineoeomedatur, nequejussiss :ibi seadorari, sadedi. Sntlicit cnim universale Dei mandatum de adorando Christo, ad asserendura ei summnm honorem. Si igitur constaret eum ibi praesentem essesuo corpore, tain non esset nobis expectandum special .■ mandatum, de reverent ia et honore divino ipsi in hoc pane exhfhendo, quam non expectabat, nee expectare debebat Thomas siognlare mandatum de adorando Christo, quern videbat ob oculos suos stantem in conclavi, • Ut ■ Carta Domini, p. 270. t Balasus in Examen recit. p. *20. % Cli. ii. p. 368. | Ileb. i. 6. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 19*7 The Real Presence. We have already remarked the address of your lords spiritual of 1562 in not only rejecting the real presence, which still had its partisans in this Convocation, and which was afterwards ad- mitted and defended by many doctors of your Church : perhaps I may have occasion farther on to make you acquainted with them. It is nevertheless true, that the Zuinglian and Calvinis- tic opinions, at last prevail with you to such a degree, that, upon discoursing on this subject in your country, I have often been astonished at persons, otherwise well instructed, when I advanced that the doctrine of the real presence had found most able de- fenders in the Church of England : I have even been obliged for my justification to produce writings and passages that I had at first cited from memory. Permit me now to ask you, what great discoveries your modern theologians have made in the holy scriptures, to induce them to reject a doctrine as ancient in your country as its conversion to Christianity : to reject the natural sense which is presented to every unprejudiced mind by the words repeated by the three evangelists and by St. Paul, this is my body, and according to the Syriac version of St. Mark, this is my very body: 1 to reject the only sense which agrees with the discourse of the promise, which most certainly speaks only of the scd eo agnito, statim sui memor officii, proeidens coram eo exclaniavit: Dominus metis el Deus mem. In regfa aut prineipis conspectuin nemo sanus prodit, quin ad ilium cenverso vultu reverentiam ipsi debitam cxhiboat. Quae igitur fuerit im- pietas, si Christus tam proprio nobis assistat corporaliter, ut per manus sacer- dotam in ora nostra cum pane se deferri patiatur, non toto animo et corpore ad panem ilium converso, divinos honores Christo prasstare? Nee obstat quod ibi non ccrnatur oeulis. Si cnim vn-bi ipsius tcstimonio constaret, cum adesso ibi suo corpore, hoc magis ad credendum et ibi adorandum ipsum nos obligaret, quam testimonium sensus nostri. Btbh Oheronithm himself, the disciple of Melanchton, found himself obliged to acknowledge that the corporal presence induced the necessity of adoration. • Nulliis i-t qui dnbitet an ('hri.-ti corpus in ccena sit adorandum, nisi qui cum S.M rami-ntariis aut negat aut dubitat in coma vere Christum esse prsesentem.'* 'Amongst the most judicious critics, some are of opinion that St. Mark him- self was the author of this Syriac rersioDj and thai he made it for the use of the converted Jews, to whom this language was then natural. Others, among whom is found Walton, the learned bishop of Chester, attribute it to some disciples of ♦Exainen cone. Trident, sess. 31. cap. V. 17* 198 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND reality, and to substitute in its place one of figure, of representa- tion and of absence, which contradicts the promised nianducation Of this flesh, which is truly meat, and which was to be given for the life of the world 2 But in place of discoveries, for no new discovery could be made in writings so well understood and so thoroughly examined before them, they formed their decision upon the same grounds, which the reformers had already pro- duced to give credit to their new interpretation. These examples and these grounds or reasons shall all be dis- cussed in their turns : and in order that you may judge more correctly of the former, we will here produce some principles admitted by all parties. According to the rules of language there are some things established by use, as signs : there are others on the contrary which are not, and which cannot become si^ns except by a new and primary establishment of them as such. When signs are established by use, we have a right to suppose that they are known as such by those to whom we speak, and if we discover any perplexity in their mind, it arises from their being unable to ascertain, not what they are in themselves but what they signify : then, by giving to these signs the names of the things signified, the perplexity ceases, and the meaning of the phrase is clearly understood by every one. Thus, when you shew me a collection of pictures, you say : Do you see this portrait '? It is the Prince Regent : or it is the Princess Boyal. When you direct my observation to geographical maps, you say to me ; This is England ; This is Scotland : I perfectly under- stand you, because I know that pictures and maps are established si"-ns : and my only difficulty was to know what they particularly represented. This is not the case with signs that are newly established for the first time. Not being accustomed to regard the apostles. According to the spirit of the original it should be translated : Thin i . my body, my own body, which is given for yon. Thk in my blood, my own blood.* Fur it is also for this reason that the Syriac, which is as ancient as the Greek, and which was done in the time of the apostles, reads. This is my own body ; and thai in the liturgy of the Greeks it is declared that what is given to us is the very (,,, ly of Jesus Christ and his very blood. Bossuet, Medit. sur VEvangtte, 22 jour. * Proleg. Bibl. Polyglot. AND TIIE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 199 the thing you have named to me as a sign, and having been taught to consider it merely according to its natural and essential properties, I cannot understand that which you wish to establish by it, unless you acquaint me with the particular use to which it is destined by you. If you would have me to understand you, you must explain yourself, or let me know that, contrary to the established usage, you have taken it into your head to make a sign of what has hitherto been no such thing. In fact, to return to the portraits and maps we were speaking of, put in my place some uninstructed savage, and in vain would you repeat to him : This is the Kegent; This is England : he will understand nothing about it, because, in regard to him, these maps and paintings are signs then for the first time established, which you must ex- plain to him before you make use of them. The principle naturally applies itself to the point in question. It is plain that before the institution of the Eucharist, it had never been the custom to consider bread as a sign of any thing whatsoever, that it had not been classed among those objects that are ordinarily considered as signs, but in the number of those which are regarded as peculiar and distinct things. Jesus Christ could not employ it to signify his body, unless he then, for the first time, established bread as a sign ; and in that case, to make himself understood, to speak according to the rules of language and good sense, he must have explained his intention to the apostles, who could not have the least suspicion of it; but this he in no wise did : or at least he must have previously intimated to them that he should on some future occasion make use of bread to give them a sign of his body ; and we do not find that he ever announced any such thing, but rather quite the contrary. It is certain, therefore, that he could not have intended to establish bread as the mere figure of his body, by these most positive terms, l/, is is my body, without a previous admonition or an actual ex- planation, because it would have been the first establishment of tnia Blgn, and we only then give to signs the names of the things signified, when they have already been regarded as signs, lie, who was true man, spoke according to the language of othei 200 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND men : He, who Was wisdom itself, could no otherwise express himself but in a wise and rational manner; He, who is truth it- self, could never express himself in a manner that was deceitful and calculated to lead into error his disciples, to whom he had said : ' The time comes when I will no longer speak to you in parables, but openly :' to whom he then wished to give bis last moat important instructions : to whom in fine he bequeathed a share in the testament which he instituted for them, on the eve of his separation from them by death. And if in the course of his ministry Jesus Christ, making use of common metaphors, said to his apostles, lam the door, lam a vine; the minds of men were sufficiently prepared for this, and could have found no difficulty but in discovering the imme- diate purpose, for which he had employed these figurative ex- pressions. It is surprising that any one should have pretended to discover in these expressions any resemblance with the words of the institution, and conclude from these two metaphors that this is my body might be explained by this is the sign of my body. For 1, It would be necessary at least to suppose that our Saviour, when he said I am a door, I am a vine, meant to say that he was the sign or the figure of a door or of a vine, which is perfectly absurd. When he calls himself a door or a vine, it is not that he is the sign or figure of them, but that he possesses qualities of which a door and a vine presented feeble but sensible images. There is then no parity between these examples : they are of two very different kinds. 2. Jesus Christ himself explains what he meant to convey under each of these figures. ' I am the door. By me if a man enter in, he shall be saved : and he shall go in, and go out, and shall find pastures.' 1 And in like manner : ' I am the true vine ; and my Father is the husbandman. Every branch in me that beareth not fruit, he will take away : and every one that beareth fruit, he will purge it, that it may bring forth more fruit. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, unless it abide in the vine, so neither can you, unless you abide in me. 2 1 St. John, x. 9. - St. John, xv. 1, '-', 3. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 201 3. But if men will draw comparisons from these and other such examples, they must do it in a different way : and, instead of saying, Jesus Christ is the door or the vine, God the Father is the vine-dresser, which presents reasonable and very intelligi- ble metaphors on account of the explanation that accompanies them, they must change the sentences as follows: This door or this line is Jesus Christ, this vine dresser is God the Father, Then they would have a grammatical resemblance with this is my body : but then also, taken in their isolated state and without previous preparations or explanations, as the words this is my body are taken, they would be so ridiculous and extravagant that no sensible person would ever advance such propositions. How often have the ministers brought forward the words of the parable related in St. Matthew, 1 the seed is the word of God, and the field is the world! And because it would admit of none but a figurative sense, they would infer that the words of this eucharistic institution must also be susceptible of it. And they see not the erroneous difference between them ! We must there- fore place it before their eyes. Who does not know that a para- ble is a sort of enigma, in which words are employed to convey a meaning different from that which they seem to present, and in which every person seeks for the meaning concealed under the expressions, because he is well aware that there must be one there, even before he has discovered it? The apostles having in vain endeavored to penetrate into it, besought our Saviour to inform tbem : ' Explain to us, said they, the parable of the cockle of the field.' Jesus seeing that all their anxiety was to know (ho signification of this parable, answered them very natu- rally : 'He that soweth the good seed, is the son of man, and the field is the world. And the good seed are the children of the kingdom, and the cockle are the children of the wicked one, and the enemy thai Bowed them is the devil. But tin; harvest is the <-nd of the world, and the reapers ire the angels.' Jesus answered according to the wishes of the apostles : They had asked bim merely to know tin- meaning concealed under the terms i Ch. xiii. 202 ON TUB CHURCH OF ENGLAND which they knew to be but signs, but the signification of which they could not discover. They perfectly understood it, as soon as Jesus Christ had joined to the signs the name of the things signified. But suppress the parable : imagine Jesus Christ in the open _ fields with his "disciples, and shewing them the reapers at their work. In this case, it is evident that he could not have said to them, these are angels, merely to signify that they represented angels. Upon this M. Nicole argues as follows : To say in the explanation of a parable that reapers are angels, is speaking rea- sonably : but to say out of a parable and when reapers are not considered as signs, but as men, that they are angels, in order to indicate that they represent angels, is a proposition most ab- surd and contrary to common sense. Now the proposition this is my body, taken in the calvinistic sense, is not like the propo- sition, these reapers are angels considered in a parable, but out of a parable. Then it is not like it, except when it must be considered absurd and contrary to common sense. There is quite as litte solidity and analogy in the example of the paschal lamb, become so celebrated by the manner in which Zuinglius affirms that it was revealed to him in a dream, after he had wasted full five years in vainly opposing the real presence. He could not say for certain, whether the spirit which had ac- quainted him with this example was black or white. Black in my opinion, and most decidedly so : for the absurdity of his revelation could proceed from nothing else than a spirit of dark- ness. I expect you will soon be of my opinion on this point. You will see that the example adduced by the nocturnal phantom neither requires nor forms any figure : and that, should we even make a concession of this, no inference could thence be drawn against the natural and simple sense of the words, this is my body. 1. The example is drawn from a chapter of Exodus, where, after having regulated the manner in which the paschal lamb was to be chosen and immolated, and in which the houses were to be sprinkled with its blood, the Lord adds : ' And thus you AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 203 shall eat it : you shall gird your reins, and you shall have shoes on your feet, holding staves in your hands, and you shall eat in baste : for it is the Phase (that is the passage) of the Lord. And I will pass through the land of Egypt that night and will kill every first born - ' 1 There is nothing said here to make the lamb the sign of the passover : every thing points to the time when the Lord was to pass. Be ready to go out of Egypt, and equipped for your journey : make haste to eat the paschal lamb, and lose no time, for the Lord is going to pass. Such is the sense that these words naturally present : for it is the Phase (thai is the Passage') of the Lord. What immediately follows confirms this : ' and I will pass through the land of Egypt that night,' adds the Lord. It was then the moment of his approach- ing and immediate passage that was indicated by the word, for it is the passage of the Lord, which also is given to the Israelites as a motive and a reason for the command given to them that they must keep themselves in readiness to depart and eat in haste. And in fact, the passage of the Lord was to be their signal for departure. Moreover, when Moses speaks of the lamb, he calls it neither passage nor sign of the passage, but the victim of the passage. It is to celebrate this event that the lamb is to be im- molated : it is to perpetuate the" remembrance of this famous epoch of their deliverance, that they are commanded to sacrifice the paschal lamb every year, and to reply to their children when they should ask them the meaning of this sacrifice : ' It is the victim of the passage of the Lord, when he passed over the houses of the children of Israel in Egypt, striking the Egyptians and saving our houses.' After this explanation given us by the sa- cred text in the Bame chapter, on what ground would the minis- t •!•- oblige as to n ive a different explanation, and compel us t<» belieye upon their interpretation, that the lamb is the sign of the passage, when the Holy Spirit assures us that it is the victim of the passage? The words objected to us do not refer to the lamb, but to the preparations commanded lor their journey an I to the quicfc despatch of their repast. They wore all to be equi^- 1 Exodus, xii. 2. 20 1 OX THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND pod for their journey, and cat in haste : and why? because the Lord is going to pass. In all this there is no occasion for sign or figure : every thing is taken literally and is wonderfully clear. There can be conceived no subject for Zuinglius's extravagant triumph in this discovery : it would appear that his black spirit turned his brain, and cast him into a perpetual delirium and ab- surdity. 2. And should we even be so indidgent to Zuinglius and his phantom, and also his numerous followers, as to grant that the text in question refers to the lamb, and that we must in conse- quence explain these words, it is the passage of the Lord, by, it is the sign of the passage of the Lord, what could they thence infer ? Let them keep in mind the general principle, that the name of the thing signified may be given to the sign, when we see in the minds of others that they regard it as a sign, and are only at a loss to understand what it signifies : but that it is never lawful to do so, when there is no reason to suppose this disposi- tion in those to whom we speak. This is the principle : now for the application. God commands them to take a lamb without blemish, a male, and one year old, to keep it four days, to immo- late it at the end of the fourth day, to sprinkle with its blood the outsides of the doors, to eat it roasted, to consume it entirely without reserving any thing for the next day, to eat it with bitter herbs, in the dress of travelers, with their reins girt, their shoes on their feet, and staves in their hands. What is the meaning of this display of strange ceremonies, this detail of extraordinary circumstances ? What mean all these preparations ? and why is this lamb commanded to be eaten in so mysterious a manner ? There was no Israelite but must have put similar questions, and must have found the reply in these words : it is the passage of the Lord. If these words were by them applied to the lamb, they must then have understood without difficulty that the lamb was the sign of this passage, because so great a number of strange and most unusual ceremonies had prepared them to regard it as a mysterious and significative object. But the bread had not been regarded as a sign, as an emblematical and mysterious ob- AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 205 ject : no anterior circumstance, no actual explication, no word of our Saviour tended to make the bread, which he held in his hand, be considered, as the matter of which he was going to make a sign. The apostles had clearly understood their master to speak of a particular bread upon some solemn occasion, and no doubt had taken care not to lose the remembrance of it : but this bread which he had promised them, had not been announced either as a sign, or as a figure : it was to be fledi, and flesh that would be meat indeed, flesh that must be eaten to obtain eternal life ; in fine, that very flesh which would be also delivered up for the life of the world. It is not likely that with such ideas, and such instructions imprinted on their minds, the apostles, upon hearing these positive words solemnly articulated, this is my body, should have imagined that they signified, this is the sign of my body. In truth, it is offering too great an insult to the word and to one's self to advance such chimeras as these, and to give them admit- tance into one's mind : and it is being too blind or too obstinate, not to see and not to acknowledge the essential difference that exists between the examples that they would fain compare to- gether, and not to be feelingly convinced that what renders the figure admissible in that of Exodus, renders it, in that of the Gospel, unadmissible and unreasonable. Let us pass from the examples to the arguments that our ad- versaries draw from scripture for the support of their opinion. The most specious, the only one in fact that deserves to be seri- ously examined, is that which seems to be favored by the words, that immediately follow the words of institutiou. We learn from St. Luke, that our Saviour after having said : Take and eat, this is my body, add e 1 ; Do this for a commemoration of me. They will have these hist words to be an explanation of those that pre- cede : and because, according to our adversaries, the remembrance can only be of tilings absent, we cannot suppose Jesus Christ to be present in the Eucharist, because, if he were really there, he would not have ordained it as a memorial and in remembrance of his person. You, Sir, as well as myself, must have heard this argument a thousand times ; it is in all the books of your reformed 18 206 on the cumcii of England theologian?, and in the mouth of the most ordinary laics. What- ever color and whatever likelihood it may appear to horrow from scripture, you will soon, I trust, judge of it in a different manner, when y<>u have read the following reasons. 1. It is a fact that none of the fathers, none of the ecclesias- tical writers have ever seen in these words the sense which the Calvinists have discovered in them. It is a fact again that none of those who first broached the doctrine of the figurative presence were led to do so by these words, Do this for a commemoration of me. Zuinglius, who must have had them a hundred times under his eyes, and who went every where in search of the figure, was unable to discover it there. He was taught to discover this precious pearl, as he himself calls it, only from the letter of a Dutchman, and to defend it in a way that seemed to him victori- ous, only by the revelation of a nocturnal phantom. But this figurative sense being once discovered and established, they thought it advisable, in order to give it consistency, to invent a necessary relation between the words of the institution and those immediately following, regard these latter as the explication of the former, and, by favor of an induction from one to the other, to find the so much desired figure even in the words of Jesus Christ. But what will for ever demonstrate that this com- bination of connexion and dependance between these words de- rives its origin from prepossession, and not from the text, is the fact of its remaining so long a time unknown in the world. In- deed it not only escaped the observation of all the Christians during a long succession of ages, but even of the innovators themselves, who had the greatest interest in discovering it : they themselves only adopted it, as an after thought ; and it is not by this pretended necessary relation that they arrived at the figure, but from the figurative sense they passed to this new and arbitrary supposition. 2. If the words, do this for a commemoration of me, are necessarily explanatory of the preceding ones, this is my body, and if from the reality they lead us to the figure, we must say that our Saviour wished to imitate the wanton jokes of certain AXD THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 207 persons who begin by announcing something very extraordinary, and conclude by giving it a most simple and natural turn. This way of acting may not be misplaced in company ; it may, in our conversations, have its point and agreeableness, by the surprise which it occasions at first, and by the pleasure that it afterwards produces by an unexpected explanation, which draws the minds of our hearers from a perplexity that till then had held them in suspense. But to impute to our Saviour any thing of this kind approaches to blasphemy. This kind of conversation is totally opposite to the Gospel in general, and above all to that imposing gravity which should characterize the last supper, so near his passiob, and so filled with thoughts of death : in fine it is totally inconsistent with the well-known character of the God-man, of whom it is not written that he ever was heard to indulge in a joke, or that he was ever even seen to laugh. 3. If the words this is my body convey in their insulated state and of themselves the sense of the reality, and if they are de- termined to that of the figure merely by the following words, do tin's fur a commemoration of me, it follows that these latter are, of absolute necessity, the explanation of the former, and that tiny must not be separated from one another, for if the latter were suppressed, we Bhould be necessarily obliged to admit the sense of the reality, which, in my present supposition, is that which Jesus Christ wished to exclude by adding: Do this for a commemoration of me. It is evident therefore that, in this hy- pothesis, it oannot be right, without contradicting the end and design of our Saviour, to relate the first words without the second. Ami yet St. Matthew and St. Mark; the two first evangelists, and for many years the only ones, passed over the second in silence. Tiny did not deem them necessary: they did not con- sider them us explanatory of tin' proceeding ones : and therefore they did not discover between them that connexion, that essential dependence, which your friends have sinee invented. 4. To come to the bottom of their argument, I observe that it goes upon the prinoiple thai .-i memorial supposes an absence, and that consequently if -Jesus Christ were present in the Eucha- 208 ON THE CHURCII OF ENGLAND rist, he would not command that they should there bear him in remembrance. Now this principle, specious as it may appear, I hesitate not to pronounce absolutely false. I know that re- membrance is generally applied to things absent : you will never- theless agree with me that it is not opposed to absence, but to forgetfuluess, and that it is very proper that we should be ad- monished to keep in mind what we might forget.. Now there are many things present that we are liable to forget, because their presence is not sensible to us, and does not strike our eyes. Do we not forget God and the guardian angels ? do we not for- get our souls, &c? The presence of these objects is most cer- tain, but not being sensible, we are but too apt to forget them, and we have sufficient reasons to recall them to our remembrance. AYell : the presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist is of this kind ; real but not sensible. He might therefore very justly say to us, remember me when you take my body : because being in- visible to our senses, his body is only present to our faith. 5. As for the rest, Sir, I have gone into this detail for no other purpose than to convince you that there is no solidity in these so often refuted arguments, and that they can be supported on no side, the principle falling together with its consecpiences. You know however that the figurists of all countries place all their reliance upon it, and that this memorial ordained by our Saviour is the ground of their doctrine, the entrenchment where they think they are in safety. Now that you see the weakness of all its parts, would you wish to know the true and just signi- fication of these words, do this for a commemoration of me? it is not difficult to discover it : you must begin by ridding yourself of this essential connexion of which you have so often heard but with which neither St. Matthew, nor St. Mark nor any of the bishops or doctors of the Church were acquainted : and which was only taken up as an after- thought by those who renewed the doctrine of the figurative sense. These two passages, this is my body, do this for a commemoration of me, are independent of one another, and have each of them a separate, a peculiar and dis- tinct sense. The first gives the reality, the second supposes, AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 209 rather than destroj's it. The one is a proposition declaratory of what is presented — the body of Jesus Christ ; the other, a pre- cept as to the spirit and disposition in which we ought to receive it, that is, as we learn from St. Paul, by remembering that he was delivered up and that he suffered for us : ' For as often as you shall eat this bread, and drink this chalice, you shall shew the death of the Lord.' 1 Jesus Christ was desirous that our thoughts and our hearts should be fixed upon his passion, at the time of our receiving his adorable body. Of all the benefits conferred upon us, that which he wishes us to reflect upon the in rat and to choose by preference, is his death, that is, the pledge of our redemption, the only hope of our salvation, the most heroic act of his love for us, as being the dart best calculated to inflame our souls at the moment of our approaching his sacred table. Thus, Sir, although a memorial need not suppose absence, it is nevertheless true to say that the object of our remembrance i.i this great act of religion is not present in the Eucharist: for this object, which the memorial is to bring to our mind, is the ,■ as mad as himself to endure his angry effusions; that he dishonored his old age: that he rendered himself contemptible by his violent conduct: and that he might to be ashamed to till his books with so much abusive language and so many devils.' Indeed Luther had taken care tc put the devil within and without, ah >ve and below, before and behind the Zuing- lians, by inventing new phrases to penetrate them with demons, and repeating this odious word till men were tilled with horror, as Bossuet observes on this passage. 3 Hospine. ad. an. 1557. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 213 Supper are received not only the benefits of Jesus Christ, but his substance even and his own flesh: that the body of the Son of God is not proposed to use in it in figure only and by signifi- es fion symbolically as a memorial of Jesus Christ absent, but that he is truly and really made present with the symbols, which are not simple signs. And if we add (said they), that the man- ner in which this body is given to us is symbolical and sacra- mental, it is not that it is merely figurative, but because, under the species of visible things, God offers us, gives us, and makes present for us, together with the symbols, that which is there signified to us. This we say, in order that it may appear that w • retain in the Lord's Supper the presence of the true body and blood of Jesus Christ, and that if there remain any dispute, it will no longer refer to any thing but the manner.' Let people hold to this declaration, and disputes would easily be terminated. But why should I thus accumulate foreign authorities, while I can shew the same doctrines to have been supported in your country, by the most distinguished members of your Church, particularly in the reigns of Elizabeth, James, and Charles, I. ? ' You and I,' ' said Bishop Ridley, in the reign of Edward VI. to the Catholics, ' agree in this, that in the sacrament is the very true ami natural body and blood of Jesus Christ, even that which was born of the Virgin Mary, which ascended into heaven, which sits on the right hand of God the Father, &c, we only differ in the way and manner of being there.' Hooker, in his Ecclesiastical Polity, says that they, who in his time, held different opinions respecting the sacrament, were still found to accord in one; for ' They grant (says he), that these holy mysteries received in due manner, do instruinentally both make us partakers of the grace of that body and blood, which were given for the life of the world; and besides also impart unto us, even in a true and nal, though mystical manner, (In; very person of our Lord himself, whole perfect, and entire.' 3 •Ridley's Conftes ion, aa related in the acta and Monuments of John Fox, p. 169, ic. 'Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity. Book v. sec. (>7. p. 3G0. London 214 ON THE ClIURCH OF ENGLAND ' We believe, no less than you, in a true presence,' said James I and Bishop Andrews. 1 The same was said by Casaubon in his letter written bj order of the King to the Cardinal du Peron. We will now hear Bishop Montague on this subject. The con- tents of Chapter XXX. of his appeal are as follows. < A real presence maintained by us. The difference betwixt us, and the Popish writers is only about the Modus, the manner of Christ's presence in the Blessed Sacrament. Agreement likely to be made, but for the factions and unquiet spirits on both sides. Beat! Pacific!.' In the body of the chapter is the following passage. ' Concerning this point I said, and say so still, that if men were disposed, as they ought, unto peace, there need be no difference. And I added a reason, which I repeat again here : the disagree- ment is only in De modo proescntk? (the manner of the presence). The thing is yielded to on either side, that there is in the holy Eucharist a real presence. 2 Another of your Bishops exclaims : 3 < God forbid, we should deny, that the flesh and blood of Christ, are truly present and truly received of the faithful at the Lord's table. It is the doc- trine that we teach others, and comfort ourselves withal.' 4 In the explication of this question and the manner of the real presence it is much insisted upon, that it be inquired, whether when we say that we believe Christ's body to be reaUy in the Sacrament, we mean that body, that flesh that icas born of the Virgin Mary, that was crucified, dead and buried. I answer that I know none else that he had or hath : there is but one body of Christ natural and glorified : but he that says that body is glorified which was crucified says it is the same body, but not after the same manner : and so it is in the Sacrament ; we eat and drink the body and blood of Christ that was broken and poured forth : for there is no other body, no other blood of Christ : but though it is the same we eat and drink yet it is in another Th; r ,7 • "' V t' , BW,op Bilson - 4 Bishop Ta - vW on the real P>~ in h.s Collection of Polermcal Discourses New and Old.' p. 185, 186. Third edit. London, 1674. *""-u AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 215 manner They that do not confess the Eucharist to be the flesh of our Saviour, which flesh suffered for us, let them be an- athema: for sure it is, as sure as Christ is true.' ' ' The doctrine of those Protestants seems most safe, and true, who are of opinion, nay most firmly believe, the body and blood of Christ to be truly and really, and substantially present in the Eucharist and to be received by the faithful ; but that the manner of his being there, is incomprehensible in respect to human rea- son and ineffable ; is known to God, and not revealed in the Scriptures.' ' Of the real presence of the body and blood of Christ in the Eucharist none of the Protestant Churches entertain a doubt.' 3 In pages 10 and 11 he cites the passage adduced above of An- drews, Bishop of Winchester, and also asserts that Bishop Poinet one of his successors clearly shews in his Dialecticon, that the Eucharist is not merely the figure of our Lord's body, but also contains its true and real nature and substance, he then quotes these words of Antonius de Dominis; ' I have no doubt that all, who believe the gospel will acknowledge that in the holy communion we receive the true, real and substantial nature of Christ. 4 Cosin adduces also the testimony of the Saxon confession and of the Synod of Sandomir, and even that of Bucer, who said that 'the true body and true blood of Christ are exhibited and received together with the visible signs of bread and wine.' Read also again the little CatechiBm that your Church requires to be [earned by those whom she is preparing for confirmation : when asked ; ' What is the inward part or thing signified?' it is replied: 'The body and blood of Christ, which are verily and indeed taken and received by the faithful in the Lord's Supper.' Not to mention the learned Jeremy Collier, who lost his situ- fion for refusing to take the test oath and who published his rea- son for his refusal: nor Samuel Parker, bishop of Oxford, who would have procured the abrogation of the test, act if the people 1 lb. p. 258. "I'.„Im. DeEueharutia, I,. I. <•. I. qeo. 7. s.Cosin. Bitt. Tram. cap. II. par. I. p. 6. I don, Mi?:.. * Antom. de Dom. De Rep. Eccles, L F. No. 216 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND of his time could have understood and tasted the truth, that he developed with as much strength as erudition : the two hishops whose learning and reputation procured for them the honor of being consulted by the Duchess of York before her conversion, gave her clearly enough to understand that they themselves re- cognised the presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist. 1 In fine, Sir, after all the proofs I have just laid before you in this letter, what ought to surprise you is, not the reckoning amongst your able theologians zealous defenders of the real presence, but the finding that there are afterwards to be discovered so many others who have rejected and combated a mystery, so positively and so certainly revealed in the scriptures, and against which there cannot be reasonably brought a single passage of the sa- cred books. You are now in a condition to judge of it by our answers to their difficulties, and the proofs that will be eternally established in favor of the real presence, both by the words of the promise and of the institution. Transubstantiation. We have shown, against the reformed Zuinglians, Calvinists or Anglicans, that a figurative sense cannot be given to the words, this is my body. We are now going to shew against the Lu- therans, that the literal sense that must there be admitted, and which they admit with us, necessarily conducts to the dogmas of transubstantiation. This word, which is not in scripture, but which the Church has adopted to give its doctrine with more pre- cision, expresses the change of the substance of bread into the substance of the body of Jesus Christ. Now the literal sense most necessarily supposes this change. In fact, what our Sa- viour blesses and distributes to his apostles, he assures them, when giving it to them, that it is his body. Before, it was visi- bly bread and nothing else : actually, after his assertion, it is his body. A change therefore, has taken place ; for no substance whatever can at one and the same time remain what it is, and 1 See the Declaration of the Duchess of York. AND TUB REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 217 become another, because then it would bo and would not be it- self at the same time : it would be itself, having remained what it was: it would not be itself, having become something else, which is evidently absurd. "Will it be said, with Luther, that the bread having undergone no change, the body is come to be joined, or united to it? In thai Case, the words of our Saviour are changed; and his propo- sition amounts to one or other of these two, this is at once bread ami my body, or this bread is also my body. The literal sense of the words is manifestly abandoned by explaining them in this manner, or rather the words are not explained at all, but others are substituted in their place. Who in fact does not see that, this is my body, and this bread is also my body, are two different prepositions? Moreover this latter is in every respect opposed to the grammatical expression of the phrase. Our Saviour did noi Bay, this bread, but this, employing and indefinite term, a demonstrative neater pronoun, which interpreters render by hoc. Now the neuter pronoun cannot refer to bread, which is of another gender; it must then refer to the body, or be taken in general to denote, indistinctly the object that our Saviour was holding in his hand : and then the literal sense is, this, that is to say what T hold in my hand, is my body, but in no wise this bread is my body. The rules of grammcr could not permit it neither does good sense admit of it: for bread, remaining such cannot be the body : it is one or the other, but not both one and the other at once : there is therefore necessarily a change of the bread into the body, that these words, this is my body may be found true to the Letter. Again, the words of institution are explicit on the subject : • I L*e took bread says St. Paul, 1 and giving thanks broke and said : ' Take yt and eat, this is my body, which shall be de- livered for you ? and St. Matthew:' 'Drink yc all of this, for this is n, y blood of the New Testament which shall be shed for you." Jesus Christ gives to his apostles the body which icas i I. Corinth, xi. 21. -' xxvi. 26, 27. ■ irdj m.I'Ii-i- ■■■>] exclusively to tin- apostles and their successors, could ibliah fin -all tin' faithful the divine precept of communion under both 19 218 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND going to he delivered, tlio blood, ichich was going to he shed: and most certainly there was no mixture of bread iu the body that was going to be delivered. The Calvinists have perceived this as well as ourselves. They have felt the necessity of a change in the bread : but this change, according to them, is not real; it is only moral. For them, from ordinary aliment, the bread becomes the figure of the body, and the words signify, this is the figure of my hody. This opinion is absolutely inadmissible as we have proved in the first part, and the Lutherans join with us in shewing them that they must absolutely adhere to the literal sense. In their turn the Calvi- nists here unite with us against the Lutherans, and demonstrate to them that their defending the literal sense must lead them to transubstantiation, and to acknowledge that dogma of the Catholic Church. As they borrow from her the arguments they employ against the Lutherans on this question I will press them into my service for the purpose of laying those arguments before you. Our proofs may perhaps appear stronger to you when coming from their mouths. At least, by bringing them on the stage one after another, you will find it more singular and striking to hear the Calvinists prove to the Lutherans the Catholic dogma. Let us produce first the great enemy of the real presence. Zuinglius speaks out plain upon this point in his reply to Billi- canus : ' Certainly (says he) 1 if we take the word is in its literal signification, those who follow the Pope are right, and we must believe that the bread is flesh.' That is to say, according to Zuinglus, the simple and literal sense of these words, this is my hody, necessarily includes transubstantiation. He has recourse to the same argument in his treatise on the Lord's Supper. 2 If kinds. It might be collected more speciously from the vi. chapter of St. John. But \, when we have proved that Jesus Christ is entirely under each kind, we receive him entirely under that of bread : and then it is true to say : ' Unless von eat my flesh and drink my blood you shall not have life eternal in you;' for in eating tho body, we drink also the blood. 2. Jesus Christ seems to inform us of this in this very discourse. He says, verse 52, 'If any man cat of this bread, he shall live for ever,' and verse 59, 'he that eateth this bread shall live for ever,' where we see the promise of eternal life attached to the manducation of bread alone, that is of the body. ■Fol. 261. * Fot. 276. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 219 wo explain without figure the word is; in the ' sentence this is ma body, it is impossible that the substance of bread should not be changed into the substance of the body of Jesus Christ, and that, thus what before was bread is no longer bread. Fieri ne- quit quin panis substantia in sipam carnis substantiam convertatur. Panis ergo amplius non est, qui antea panis erat.' He expresses himself moreover in the same manner, in a work against Luther: ' If the word this marks the bread, and no figure can be toler- ated in these words, it follows that the bread becomes the body of Jesus Christ, and that what was bread, on a sudden is made the body of Jesus Christ. Jam panis transit in corpus Christi, et est corpus subito, quod jam panis erat.' 1 He had said to him a little before : ' If you obstinately persist in not receiving the figure, it follows that the Pope is right in saying that the bread is changed into the body of Jesus Christ.' Beza maintains against the Lutherans in the conference of Monbelliard, that of the two explications which confine them- selves to the literal sense ' that of the Catholics departs less from the words of institution, if they are to be expounded word for word.' 2 And he proves it thus: 'the advocates for transub- stantiation say, that, by virtue of these divine words, what be- i'..;v was bread, having changed its substance, becomes instantly the very body of Jesus Christ, in order that the proposition this is ,,ni body may thus be correct: whereas the exposition of the for consubstantiation saying that the words this is my body, signify my body is essentially, within, with, or under this bread, docs not declare what the bread has become, nor what it is that is the body, but merely where the body is.' This proof i- striking and decisive. For Jesus Christ, when he says this is '■'.'/ body, declares that such an object is his body, whereas in Lather's explication he declares where bis body is, within, with, ->r under the bread; but in no wise what his body is. ' It is cjear (observes Bossueton this passage) thai Jesus Chris! having taken bread to make something of it, was hound to declare to us 1 A'.../ against Lather, p. 336. ^Oonferena i •/■ ifonlobel, Geneva, Lfe87, p. i'j. 220 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND what it was he wished to make it : and it is not less evident that this bread became what the Almighty wished it to be made. Now these words shew that he wished to make it his body, in whatever manner it may be understood: because he said this h my body. If then this bread did not become his body in figure, it became so in effect : and we must necessarily admit either the change in figure or the change in substance. Thus by merely attending with simplicity to the word of Jesus Christ, we must pass to the doctrine of the Church ; and Beza is right in saying that it has fewer inconveniences, as far as relates to the manner of speaking, than that of the Lutherans, that is, the literal sense is better preserved by it.' 1 Tlospinian every where makes the same acknowledgment, as when he says, in refuting a work of Luther's : If we must ex- clude all figure from the words of Jesus Christ, the opinion of those who follow the Pope is correct.' 2 The same author, as well as other defenders of the figurative sense, remark with much correctness against Luther, that Jesus Christ did not say my body is here, or my body is under this and with this: or, this contains my body ; but simply, this is my body. Whence it fol- lows that he in no wise wished to give his disciples a substance which contains or accompanies his body, but his body without mixture of any foreign substance.' Calvin frequently insists upon this same truth ; 3 but not to dwell too long upon particular authorities, let us listen to an en- tire synod of Zuinglius : that of Czeuger in Poland, related in the Geneva collection. This synod demonstrates that the con- substantiation of Lutherans is indefensible, 'because, says the synod, as the rod of Moses could not have become a serpent without transubstantiation, and as the water was not blood in Egypt, nor wine at the marriage feast of Cana without a change : so in like manner the bread of the Lord's Supper cannot be sub- stantially the body of Jesus Christ, if not changed into his flesh, • by loosing the form and the substance of bread.' 4 Let us say 1 History of the Variations, Book II. No. VI. " Fol. 49. ^ Inst. 13. iv. xvii. No. j0. *Syn. C;at. tit. Ccena hi Syn. Geneven, part I. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 221 with Bossuet, 1 that good sense dictated this decision. In fact, this bread remaining such, can no more be the body of our Sa- viour, than the rod, remaining a i*od, could be a serpent, or than the water remaining water could be blood in Egypt, and wine at the marriage-feast of Cana. Moreover, it is worthy of remark, that in spite of the bitter- ness and vehemence of Luther and his followers against transub- stantiation, they did not entertain so terrible an idea of it in the beginning. The simplicity of the words, which has always in- duced them to preserve the dogma of the real presence, for a long time kept them in the belief of the change of substance. Luther commenced by teaching it most positively in the fol- lowing terms : 2 ' Every action of Christ is an instruction for us, as he himself has told us : I have given you an example that as I have done, so you do also. Do this in commemoration of me, said he. "What is the meaning of do this? Is it not what I have just been doing, with you ? But what does he do ? he takes broad and by this word, this is my body, he changes it into his body, and gives it to his disciples to eat.' But soon after Luther changes his own doctrine, and proposes another quite different, sf ill however leaving his followers to adopt which of the two they pleased. ' I permit, says he, that each one may hold which opinion he pleases Let each one know that he is free, without endanger- ing his salvation, to embrace which of the two he pleases.' 3 He had so little aversion to the Catholic belief upon this change of the substance, that he himself declares that his only reason for rejecting it was because he was so much pressed to receive it. 4 'Hiat.de. Variations, liv. II. No. 33. 2 . 96, Edit, in t. Amsterdam, 17C3. 226 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND altar, by virtue of the union with the sensible species, what was not there before. I mean the person of Jesus Christ.' 1 Such is the explanation given by a profound theologian attached to the confession of Augsburgh, who had no intention of giving offence on the subject of the Eucharist. He thought, and with great reason, according to what we have brought forward, that the change of the substance accorded with the ancient prin- ciples of Lutheranism laid down at the diet in the solemn con- fession of its belief. Would to God that those who at the pre- sent day belong to the same communion would regulate their sentiments according to the same principles with the learned and virtuous Molanus ! We might then entertain greater hopes of the union so much to be desired by the upright and well disposed of both parties. In addition to these favorable sentiments of the Lutherans and Calvinists, we have some testimonies of your own country- men in our favor. Bishop Forbes acknowledges the possibility of transubstantiation in the following terms ; ' There is too much temerity and danger in the assertion of many protestants who refuse to God the power of transubstantiating bread into the body of Christ. Every one allows, it is true, that what implies con- tradiction cannot be done. But as no individual person knows with certainty the essence of each thing, and in consequence what does or does not imply contradiction, it is an evident te- merity for any one whomsoever to place bounds to the power of God. I approve of the opinion of the theologians of Wittem- berg, who are not afraid to avow that God has power to change the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ.' Thorndike allows of the change, and tells us in plain terms that ' the elements are really changed from ordinary bread and wine, into the body of Jesus Christ, mysteriously present, as in a sacrament : and this by virtue of the consecration, and in no wise by the faith of the receiver.' 2 1 The result of a conference touching the Eucharist agitated between some re- ligious and M. Molanus, abbe of Lokkum. I regret that I cannot cite the whole of it at length. Let me recommend vou to read the whole of it, in this same volume of Bossuet. a Epi. li,= 3, c. V. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 227 Bishop Montague declares ' that the change is produced by the consecration of the elements. In support of this assertion, he cites passages from St. Cyril of Jerusalem, from the liturgy of St. Basil, from St. Cyprian and St. Ambrose : he translates the expressions employed by these Fathers, by the words trans- mutation and transelemenfation. Still after having confessed the change produced by the consecration, after asserting that it was recognised by the primitive Church, he changes sides and concludes by declaring against transubstantiation. 2 Samuel Parker, bishop of Oxford, defends and proves it, as follows; ' In the first place then it is evident to all men, that are but ordinarily conversant in ecclesiastical learning, that the ancient Fathers, from age to age asserted the real and substantial presence in very high and expressive terms. The Greeks stiled it, MKTABOLE, MBTAURIIUTHMISIS, METASKEUASMOS, METAPOIESIS, mktastoicheiosis. And the Latins agreeable with the Creeks, Conversion, Transmutation, Transformation, Transfiguration, Transch mentation, and at length Transubstantiation : By all which they expressed nothing more nor less than ' the real and substantial Presence in the Eucharist.' 3 The Bishop of Oxford was well aware that transubstantiation not only supposes the real presence but is actually the foundation of it, since, by virtue of the words, the substance of the body of Jesus Christ could not 1 Appeal, eh. xxxi. 8 From all appearance ho would have returned to it. This learned man thought almost in every thing with the Catholic Church, to which, it is said, he would have united himself, if hi- d iath which happened in 1G11, had not prevented him from executing this resolution. Four years later, the same cause unfortunately h ■ - i ae proj «t of a character still more celebrated for his learning and genius. Grottos, on quitting Paris, confided to his learned and worthy friend If. Bignon, that on his return from Sweden, where he was going to settle his , he w Bishop Parker's reasons foj abrogating the Test, page 13, Oct. 30. an. 1C78. printed an. less, London. 228 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND be found in the Eucharist, unless it had taken the place of the substance ef the bread. ' Thus far proceeded the Old Church of England, which as it was banished, so it was restored with the crown. But by reason of the interval of twenty years be- tween the rebellion and restitution there arose a new generation of divines that knew not Joseph. 1 .... In short, .... If they own a real Presence, we see from the premises how little the controversie is between that and Transubstantiation, as it is truly and ingeniously understood by all the reformed Churches. If they do not, they disown the doctrine both of the Church of England, and the Church Catholic, and then if they own only a figurative Presence (and it is plain they own no other) they stand condemned of Heresie by almost all the Churches in the Chris- tian world : and if this be the thing pretended to be set up (as it certainly is by the authors and contrivers of it) by renouncing Transubstantiation, then the result and bottom of the law is under this pretence to bring a new Heresie by law into the Church of England.' 2 You see, Sir, that if the doctrine of the real presence has found in your country a great number of defenders, that of transub- stantiation has also had its distinguished advocates. You have seen them among the Lutherans, who in general are now become its declared enemies : moreover, (what indeed you yourself must be convinced of) even at the present day, the persons most at- tached to the confession of Augsburgh and to their first reformers may still, without injury to their principles, enter completely into the Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist, after the example of the pious and learned Hanoverian, the Abbe of Lokkuni. You have heard the Lutherans prove with us to the Calvinists that it was impossible to admit the figurative sense, and not hold to the literal sense : and the Calvinists joining us afterwards, in proving like us to the Lutherans that the literal sense ought no less necessarily to conduct them to the change of the substance. Thus you have seen them alternately ranged under the Catholic standard, victoriously attacking one another with the arms they ' Page G2. •■< Pages 65, 66. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 229 borrowed from us, and the Church triumphing in turns from the blows and the defeats they mutually inflicted upon each other. I will here spare you the detail of the grammatical cavils in- vented by the Calvinists to authorize the figurative sense against the change of substance. I know what bickering they have borrowed from the rules of grammar, which have been as incor- rectly forged us applied by them to each of the words, this is my body. I know also that they are not worth the trouble of being refuted, after having been so completely refuted by M. Nicole, with that depth , correctness and clearness which distinguish that great controvertist ' They easily vanish when brought in con- tact with the examples, of which the Holy Scripture furnishes us the idea and the subject. Could not Moses have said : This rod is a serpent, this water is blood? Could not Jesus Christ, at the marriage feast at Caua, have equally said : This water is wine? and when raising to life Lazarus or the only son of the widow of Nairn, this dead person is living? Would not all these propositions have been true to the letter in spite of the pretended rules of grammar 1 and would the reformed ever succeed in de- monstrating to us their incorrectness, by saying that if it is a rod, it is not really a serpent ? if it is water, it is not really blood or wine ? if they are dead they are not in reality living? Why persist obstinately in not seeing, and not acknowledging that in the month of God, or by his order these propositions operate what they declare? The Almighty commands, and nature in- stanrly obeys. Jesus Christ commands, and the grave gives back Lte prey, and death releases its victim. He speaks, and the water has changed its substance into that of wine, and the bread its Bubstance into that of his body. 2 1 S'-'- Defeim de l» perpetuite de la Fox, torn. T. - ' Who can Bpeak in this manner, except him who holds all things in liis hand '.' who can make himself be believed except him to Whom doing and saying is the thing? My soul, stop here without i'll>' discussion I believe as simply, as Brmry as thy Saviour hath Bpoken, and with as mncfa submission as li" Bbewed authority and power. He desires in faith tin' same simplicity as he pul into his words. This it my body ; therefore it is his body. Thisismy blood; it i . fore his blood. In tin: ancient manner of communicating, the Priest said: the 20 230 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND But if instead of the bread which we perceive, it is the sub- stance of the body that we must believe, our senses will have deceived us, you will say, and their testimony, on which re- poses the certainty of the facts in the Gospel, will then be sha- ken. No, Sir, our senses do not deceive us here, for they do not pronounce sentence, they simply report; and their report is true in the Eucharist. They tell us that they there find the taste, the color, the appearance of bread, all which is there in effect. It is the mind which, from the report of the senses, judges and pronounces : at the sight of the species it would natu- rally and with reason conclude, that the substance of bread is also there, if on this particular occasion, it had not been admon- ished to check its natural propensity and to reform its judgment. After the instructions of Jesus Christ, the apostles must have judged, and all of us after them, not from what they saw, but from what they had heard. This is the exception, it is the only one. Except in this instance, and whenever there is no reason from distance or malady for mistrusting our senses, we ought confidently to rely upon them, remembering that our Saviour has himself appealed to them in testimony of his resurrection. See my hands and my feet, that it is I myself; handle me and see : for a spirit has not flesh and bones as you see me to have." It is high time to bring this long discussion to a conclusion In concluding it, I entreat the adversaries of the real presence and of the change of the substance, candidly and conscientiously to say, whether it be the text of scripture that induces them to deny either of these dogmas ; whether, on the contrary, putting aside every other consideration, the text does not of itself natu- rally conduct them to it : whether they do not stand in need of exertion or violence to turn it from the proper to the figurative sense : whether they have not, with a view to sanction their supposed metaphor, been obliged to bring all the Bible into requisition, for the purpose of extracting a few examples, which, . after all, do not agree with the case in question, and can neither hor agee of the Church will be struck with a point of discipline which I propose here to investigate with you, and which regards the inviolable secrecy observed by all the faithful on the sacra- ftente, and especially on that of the altar. Jesus Christ gave it as a precept to his disciples, when he commanded them under figurative expressions, not to ( eating blood, issn 'I in the eld law, and confirmed by Hie council of the apostles. ■ApoL cap, i ii. second oenturj . 21 242 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND said he, what it is you taste in secret before all nourishment? and if he perceives that it is bread, will he not imagine it to be that which is SO much spoken ofV" Origcn in his noble refutation of the work of Celsus after say- ing in answer to his reiterated reproaches of secrecy, that in general the doctrine of the Christians was better known than that of the philosophers ; ' It is nevertheless true, he adds, that there are certain points among us, that are not communicated to every one, but this is so far from being peculiar to the Christians that it was observed among the philosophers as well as among us. In vain then docs Celsus undertake to render odious the secrecy observed by the Christians, since he does not even know in what it consists.' 2 This passage proves at once that the secret was observed both in the time of Origen and in that of Celsus, who knew not in what it consisted, that is, at the commencement of the third century and at the end of the first. Thus all kinds of proofs conspire to shew the discipline of the secrecy relative to the Eucharist during the four first ages. The fact is acknowl- edged by all for the fourth : and good sense demonstrates that it could not then have been established, if it had not existed from the very time of the apostles. The calumnies of unbelievers, the attacks of the philosophers, the tortures employed by gover- nors to extort a confession of the pretended crimes, are indirect, but convincing proofs of secrecy, and in addition to this, we have positive testimonies for the first, second and third centuries. 3 I have been anxious to set this historical fact beyond dispute, and invest it with all the certainty you can desire, because the general discipline of secrecy necessarily supposes the universal belief of the five first ages upon the Eucharist, to be such as the Catholic Church has always taught: in fact, if, on the one hand, this discipline agrees exactly with our belief respecting the Eu- charist, and if, on the other, it should be found irreconcilable with the opinion which the Calvinists have formed of it, it must. i Tn his wife, B. ii. v. a Orig. contra Cehum, Lib. I. Sec in the Apjundix many authorities which establish the discipline of secrecy £. om the apostles to the commencement of the fifth century. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 243 of strict necessity be concluded that what was concealed in the primitive Church is not what the reformed believe, but what we believe. In those times the concealment was made either of the doctrine" of the figurative sense, or of that of the reality; there is no medium, and if secrecy excludes the first, it necessarily admits of the second. All that remains therefore is to establish the truth of these two propositions ; first that the discipline of secrecy exactly tallies with the Catholic sense of the reality ; in the second place that it cannot be reconciled with the calvinistic • of the figure. I am persuaded that of yourself you will catch the argument before I explain it, so striking does it appear to me. 1. I maintain that the ancient discipline of secrecy exactly chimes in with our belief upon the Eucharist. It would be su- perfluous to enter into a long dissertation to shew the incapa- bility of reason to attain to the inaccessible sublimities which are found in the dogma, such as the Church proposes to us and as we believe it. The reformed confess this, since they have made it the cause of their rejecting and attacking it. But in the sup- p isition that the primitive Church believed as we do, what was it to do ? and how must it manage with regard to the unbelievers? It must before all things, prove to them the certainty of the ition, convince them, by the miracles of Jesus Christ and by the sublimity of his morality, of the divinity of his mission, and Defer attempt to confide to thorn respecting the Eucharist, dogmas bo elevated, so alarming to human comprehension, until it hail sufficii n'lv prepared their minds and hearts for them: it mn-t have done precisely what it did. If the Christians had be- gun by bringing forward these mysteries, if they had commenced by Bpeaking openly of the real presence of Jesus Christ upon the altar, and of the miraculous change; of the substance which follows from it. they would have Bhoeked the senses and the imagination of men, and have driven thos:> from their religion whom they were desirous of attracting to it. What language, in fact, and what a strange doctrine for the Jews an I Pagans! What would not their senses and the pretended wisdom on which 244 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND they prided themselves, have suggested against it ? Let us judge what would have been said by men who were not Christians, by what we are continually hearing from men, who, unfortunately for them have ceased to be so. It was necessary then for their interest charitably to spare their weakness : it was necessary also for the interest of truth, not to expose it to the railleries of those who were not yet in a state to hear it: and on the supposition that the dogma was then the same as it is for us, it cannot be denied that it was reasonable and even necessary to establish this discipline of secrecy. And to shew still more evidently the analogy of our actual belief with that of the first ages, I observe, that in supposing an exact parity between them, not only must the greatest secrecy have been then recommended, but it must moreover have been recommended from the two kinds of motives just mentioned, the one relative to the weakness of the persons, or if you please, the ignorance and blindness of the unbelievers, the other, to the dignity and divine institution of the mysteries : in order, that on one side, the unbelievers might not be injured or scandalized, and thus driven away from Christianity ; and on the other, that the mysteries might not be exposed to the railleries, sarcasms and objections of carnal minds. Now, in point of fact, (and this must strike you,) the discipline of secrecy turned exactly upon these two kinds of motives. They are each of them dis- tinctly pointed out by the Fathers. ' We make use of obscure expressions before the catechumens, said St. Cyril of Jerusalem, in order that those who are not instructed may not be injured by them.' Now hear the whole synod of Alexandria : ' It is not lawful openly to disclose the mysteries to the uninitiated, lest through ignorance they shou'd ridicule thorn, and lest tho cate- chumens should happen to be scandalized by an indiscreet curi- osity.' Such is the first kind of motives, relative to the state of the unbelievers or catechumens. You will recollect the reason alleged by St. Cyril of Alexandria for his concealment : He would have been afraid of being under- stood by the uninitiated, because, said he, people generally ridi- AND THE REFORMATION" IN GENERAL. 245 cule what they do not understand, and ignorant persons, not aware of the weakness of their own minds, despise what they should most of all admire.' An author, anonymous indeed, bat of very high antiquity, since we find him translated by Rufinus in the fourth age, proves that it is extremely difficult to preach to a mixed multitude of persons, and often necessary in their presence to shroud the mysteries in ambiguous terms. 'For what is amongst us cannot be told indiscriminately to all persons exactly as it is, on account of those who lend a captious and malignant ear. What then must be done by one who addresses a crowd of persons strange and unknown to him ? Shall he con- ceal the truth ? But iu that case how is he to instruct those who arc deserving of instructions ? And yet if he display the naked truth before those to whom salvation is a thing of indifference, he is false to him by whom he is sent, and from whom he has received injunction not to cast the pearls of true doctrine before swine and dogs, who would fly in its face with sophisticated argu-. ments, would cover it with the mud of their carnal conceptions, and by their barking, and their disgusting replies would worry to death the preachers of G-od." Here you see a second series of motives relating to the dignity of the mysteries. You will find-both of them set forth in many ecclesiastical writers, such as Tertullian, Zeno, bishop of Verona, &c. They are precisely such as they must have been, on the supposition that the real presence or change of substance were then concealed in secrecy. Their fears and anxieties were such as they must certainly have entertained on this hypothesis : (heir precautions were those that if requires, and they were influenced by all the motives that it commands. The identity of apprehensions, dangers and mea- sures denotes the identity of* principles and belief. We have then solid grounds for concluding that it was the real presence together with its change of substance, that all the Churches of the world kept shut up in those times so scrupulously in their bosom. This is disclosed to us by He secrecy itself, as well as by the motives of the secrecy, BO exactly do they tally with this 1 Lib, x i i tognit, 246 on the cuuncn of England belief, as you have just seen. I add, for the completion of this moral demonstration, that they tally with this alone ; and prove it. 2. In fact, what is there I ask, in the Zuinglian opinion re- quiring to be made so great a secret to pagans and catechumens? Ac-cordinjr to it, we become united to our Saviour, but only in spirit and by faith : prayers and homage are addressed to Jesus Christ at the right hand of God, but in no-wise upon the altar, from which he is supposed to be as far removed as earth from h saven : they call to mind his death, but without pretending to renew the oblation made by him upon the cross. For this opin- ion acknowledges neither sacrifice nor victim : it exposes, it is true, and distributes to its followers the bread and wine, but still remaining in effect as our senses perceive them : according to it, every change of substance is a gross error, and adoration an act of idolatry- These ordinary aliments, bread and wine, have here no other excellency than that of having been cho- sen by Jesus Christ as figures of his body and blood. What fault could the most obstinate Jew or unbeliever find with this? Is it not a common and received custom to leave some pledge of one's self to our friends on quitting them, that thus we may be brought to their recollection during our absence or after death ? and is it not a thing quite indifferent whether this or that object be selected to awaken remembrance, warm the heart, and fulfil between absent friends this ministry of reciprocal tenderness ? It is even plain that our Saviour, when dying for mankind, had nothing better to select and leave them as a memorial and pledge, than the common aliment of all mankind. In all this you will discover nothing revolting to the mind, nothing calculated to give a shadow of scandal to men and by consequence nothing that required secrecy. I know that the ministers ' have sometimes taken it into their heads to speak of the great wonders of their Eucharist, and of the incomprehensibilities to be found in it, without the real presence or any change of substance. But I also know that they affect his language merely to resemble that of antiquity, and to 1 Calvin, Aubeitin, Clande. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 247 shew that the passages in which the Fathers enlarge upon the difficulty of believing in the mystery, from its opposition to the senses and to human reason, correspond with their doctrine as well as with ours. But in point of fact, Zuinglius and Beza discovered no mystery at all in the Eucharist : they prided them- selves upon the discovery of the figurative sense, because it re- iinvtjd at once the difficulties and the scandal, and rendered the belief simple and easy to every understanding. No other than this is the judgment formed of it by the Zuinglians of your country, as I have often had occasion to learn from their conver- .-liinn and writings. ' In my judgment, said a writer well known amongst you, nothing has occasioned the loss of that due rever- ence, which is owing to the sacraments, so much, as the making more of them than the scripture has done : and representing them as mysteries, when they are plain religious actions. The unintelligible part of a sacrament is what the free-thinkers have chiefly made the object of their ridicule : but had the Eucharist been represented, as I have represented it, it could never have been mentioned by infidels with disrespect, at least it would have given them no occasion of treating it with any.' 1 1 Bishop Pearce's second letter, written in 1730, to Doctor Waterland's Works. London, 1777, vol. II. p. 452. It may also be found in a note of Dr. Sturges refections on Popery, p. 100. To one who has reflected upon the texts of the New Testament, upon the doc- trine of th>- :j|».-t'»]i'- and primitive agC3; to one who is not a stranger to the testimonies of the holy Fathers; some of which I shall continue to produce to the end of tlii- dissertation, I know nothing more unchristian and more revolting than this system of the anglican prelate. It strips the Eucharist of all the wonders which our Lord had thrown round it, and with which his first, and faith- ful servants have at ;ill times 1) ileved El to b i invesl -1 : and boasts to have by this manoeuvre, re ooved from what are called men of strong minds, but who are more appropriately called a of weak minds, every pretext for irreverent de- clamation. \Yiih the admirable principles of these conciliating divines, it only remains for them to drawtheir pen over all the mysteries oi religion, because, i,, mod truth, ill • proud and of roars • weak « it- of the age, employ by prefer- ence th iir sarcasms and abuse against whatet us in doctrine. \.ll this uew example to the examples I have already adduced, of the infinite variations and perpetual discord into which the uncontrolled liberty of dogma- i iadi the members of your Church, and even the verj inmates of its sanc- toary, as you .-•■■ in these thri 2 48 ON TIIE CHURCH OF ENGLAND Had the primitive Church thought after the fashion of this modern theologian, never would it have had any reason to with- hold its altars from the sight of the catechumens and the knowl- edge of unbelievers. Sheltered from the shafts of ridicule and malice, it might have celebrated its Eucharist with open doors, and have discoursed and written upon it without obscurity or dis- guise. But how did it act? Precisely contrary, and during full four centuries it rigorously maintained the discipline of secrecy respecting the mysteries, particularly respecting the one of which we speak. Let your Bishop Pearce, and whatever associates he can reckon in the world, acquaint us, if they can, with a plausi- ble reason, for such conduct. There is none : there can be none, according to their ideas of the Eucharist : their opinion and dis- cipline of secrecy cannot go together ; they are at eternal va- riance. All mystery being once removed from the sacrament, the primitive Church had no longer any cause for silence and secrecy. But what am I saying ? She would moreover have been urged by the most pressing motives to make a full explanation ofit. Atrocious and abominable actions are publicly laid to her charge, and she does not attempt her justification ! though this justifica- tion would be easily accomplished, by the simple declaration of her belief and practice. And if a candid explanation of this nature were found to be insufficient for the purpose, why did she not throw open her doors and admit her accusers or their emis- saries into her assemblies, and celebrate her religious repast in their presence ? Nothing could be more natural than this, on the supposition that she adopted the system of the figurative sense, at which the pagans could take no offence. The declaration published by these witnesses, of what had passed under their own eyes, would immediately have put an end to the calumnies that had gone abroad to the world. And, observe, it was not the common people alone among whom such ideas were current: they had reached the highest and the most enlightened classes of society. Numbers took up their pen iinst the Christians, and boasted that they had proved these AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 249 crimes, on the grounds of their clandestine assemblies and the secrecy of their doctrine. What reply would the Christian apolo- gists have to make, on the Zuinglian hypothesis? Simply, or nearly this : ' So far are we from perpetrating the crimes which you lay to our charge, that we take, in our sacred repast, noth- ing more than a little bread and wine in memory of our divine master; the bread, as the figure of the body which he delivered, and the wine, as the figure of his blood which he shed for us. He himself, on the eve of his passion, instituted this holy and moving ceremony, commanding us to do it after his departure, in remembrance of his death, and also as a sign of union between us and him : we merely obey his commands.' But was this sat- isfactory and natural reply ever given ? Attend and see : ' Our accusers, says Justin, themselves commit the crimes of which they accuse us, and they attribute them to their gods. As for us, as we have no share in them, so we trouble not ourselves about them, having God for the witness of our actions and thoughts We entreat you that this apology may be rendered public, after you have replied to it as to you may seem fitting, to the end that others, may know what we are, and we may be delivered from the false suspicions, that expose us to punishment. They know not that we condemn the infamies publicly laid to our charge, and that we therofore renounce the gods who com- mitted such enormities, and who require the same from their adorers. If you will grant our request, we shall then lay open our maxims to the world — to convert it, if its conversion is pos- sible." Observe, he does not say ; we will expose our mysteries, we will celebrate before witnesses, we will throw open our doors. This however would have put an end to all calumnies and re- moved all suspicions. On the Zuinglian hypothesis, it is difficult to- imagine what could have prevented .Justin from publicly making an offer at once so simple and so natural.' 2 If we always 1 A/in/, mill,. Am-'l. an. 117. i According to the Zuinglian system, again, how aro we to conceive that a nri -tian should ever be reduced bo have recourse to the following as- tonishing proposal, in proof o£ his ignorance. ' Even one of our brethren, at Alexandria, to convince the world, that in our mysteries there are none of the 250 ox the crimen of exglaxd remain concealed, replied Tertullian, how have they discovered what we do? and by whom has it been discovered? Assuredly, not by the accused, for it is the common law of all mysteries to keep them secret. It must then have been by strangers. But whence could these know it, since the sacred initiations admit no strangers and reject the profane ?' In vain was their clandes- tine worship objected to them by the pagans : far from denying or renouncing it, Tertullian takes up its justification, and employs it to demonstrate how futile must be the accusations of those who know nothing of the matter. ' Do you really believe it possible, exclaims Octavius, that the tender little body of an in- fant should be destined to fall beneath our blows, and that we should shed the blood of a new-born babe, almost before it has received the shape of human being. Let him believe it, whose cruelty could accomplish such a deed as for us, we are not permitted to assist at a homicide, nor even to hear it spoken of: so far, indeed, are we from spilling human blood, that we forbid even the blood of animals at our meals. " The secrecy of the Christians is cruelly misrepresented and aspersed ; and yet Oc- tavius does no more than shew that they are incapable of com- mitting the imputed crimes, never discovering what it is that they really do. 'If our accusers be asked,' says Athenagoras, ' whether they have seen what they assert of us, they will not have the impudence to say they have How can those be ac- cused of killing and eating men, who, as it is well known, can- not endure to behold even the death of one executed by law 1 those who have renounced, as we have, the shows of the gladia- tors and of the beasts, believing that there is but little difference between him who beholds, and him who commits the murder.' You have seen Origen justifying their profound silence respect- ing the mysteries by the example of the philosophers, of the infamous practices attributed to us, presented a petition to Felix the governor, for permission to have a surgeon to make a eunuch of him (for it was said that this permission was necessary). Felix gave no reply of tins petition and the young man remained unmolested, satisfied with the testimony of his conscience." Justin in his Apology addressed to Antoninus, 150 years after the birth of Jesus Christ. ' In Minutius Felix. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 251 Greeks and barbarians ; you have seen him in bis turn reproach- ing Celsus for reprobating the secret kept by the Christians, while he knew not in what that secret consisted. Such were the replies of the apologist : and such also they must have been, to be consistent with our belief. But according to the doctrine of the reformation these replies become inconceivable and absurd. For is it not absurd to establish a secret, and instead of being induced by the most powerful- reason to break it, still to continue obstinately to preserve and justify it, even when they knew nothing in if worth concealing V 1 Truth obliges me to say that one of these apologists has not hesitated to re- move the veil and lay open the mystery of the altar. Justin has done it in his g •. We shall endeavor soon to detect his motive for so doing. But as h ■• thought proper to act in this manner, we will ask: what did he discover? what did hs make known? This is a curious and important point to ascertain : for most assuredly the doctrine that he discovered was the doctrine of the Church —the precise doctrine so carefully concealed by the other Christians. This dis- closure must for ever decide the question between us. Let the Reformation tri- umph, as is just, if the apologist here declares in formal or equivalent terms, that the bread and wine blessed by the bishop were received by the faithful, mere- ly as signs of the body and blood of Jesus Christ, absent in heaven : that the bread, without undergoing any change, ceased notwithstanding to be regarded as ordi- nary bread, because it was offered to Cod as an emblematical figure representing his Son. Will Justin hold such language as this? Let us hear him with atten- tion : these are the word- to the point; they are big with interest and importance: •This food we call the Eucharist, of which they alone are allowed to partake, who believe the doctrines taught by us, and have been regenerated by water for the remission of sin, and who live ae Chrisl ordained. For we do not take these immon bread and common drink, but as Jesus Christ, our Saviour, mad ■ in m by the word of Qod, took fle3h and blood for our Salvation; in like manner we h tve b en taught, that the food which has been blessed by the prayer Of the word- evhieb he -poke, and by which our flesh and blood, in the change, are nourished, becomes the flesh and blood of Jesus incarnate.' Such is the doctrine which Justin mad • ao difficulty in revealing to the Emp sror : you have here the word of Go I compared to the prayer of Jesus Chrisl : the same power and efficacj i-- attributed to each ; by the former Jesus became man, by the lat- ter, the bread and wine become his body and blood, and this change is not less real than was that of his incarnation. From this Bprings the following short and decisive argument. Justin here discovers that, which the Christians were uni- i T-.illi concealing in tfow what he discovers is the Catholic doctrine ; therefore the Catholic doctrine bad b *n universal^ concealed in secrecv among the Christians. Pray, reflect upon this argument; it al should open pour he" system. of belief thai you are seeking in tin- primitive Church. 252 on the church op enoland Again, it is worthy of observation, that the public calamities were frequently attributed to the Christians, as being an impious and detestable race of men. Away with the Christians to the beasts; Christianas ad bestias. This enfuriated and brutal cry was very often resounded in the amphitheatres. Long were the Christians persecuted by the Emperors ; from the savage Nero, who first drew the sword against them, to the time of Diocletian and Licinius. 1 They were inhumanly put to death at Rome, But what motive could induce the apologist to make so public an exposure, contrary to the general discipline of secrecy, to which we find but this single exception recorded in history. To form a correct judgment upon the conduct of Justin, we should thoroughly understand how the writer was circumstanced. For my own part, I should be inclined to consider this first apology as a private memorial presented to the Emperor alone ; he probably having called for such a declaration from the Christians. The title professing the document to be ad- dressed to the Emperor j the Senate, and the Roman people, in no wise deters me from venturing this conjecture, since it was possibly nothing more than the usual form of petitions. In his second apology addressed to Marcus Aurelius and the Senate, he entreats him to publish it, that the world may be enabled to form an opinion upon the Christians. We find no such request in the first: from which, we may infer that he neither intended nor desired its publication. As he exposes the great mysteries of religion, which it was forbidden to publish, we are to presume, that he did not apprehend that they would be published, and that his object was, not to divulge the secret, but merely to make a confidential communication of it, to one most deserving of confidence, an excellent Prince, who was considered as a second Socrates upon the throne. The Prince does not appear to have betrayed the confidence reposed in him, for we do not find the pagans any better informed, in consequence of it. Thus the event would have justified the apologist, on the supposition that he confided the secret to Antoninus alone, with the hope, that so just and sensible a prince could terminate the bloody persecutions of the Christians, when once he became better acquainted with their real character. Although this expectation was not entirely, it was at least par- tially, realized. Whether it was that Antoninus did not do all that he could, or, what is perhaps more probable, could not do all that he wished, the persecu- tions did not entirely cease, and, on his account, we regret to find considerable numbers of martyrs in the subsequent years of his reign. This much however is certain, that he published edicts favorable to the Christians. He had received letters from various governors of provinces consulting him on the mode of treat- ment to be adopted in their regard, to which he replied, that they must not be molested, unless they were discovered plotting against the state. He wrote also to the cities of his empire, prohibiting the Christians to be disturbed ; and by name, to Larissa, Thessalonica and Athens and to all the Greeks. Of this we are informed by the historians, Rufinus and Eusebius, and also by Me'.ito, bishop of Sardes, in his apology addressed shortly after to Marcus Aurelius. 1 Primuin Neronem csesariano gladio ferocisse. Tertul AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 253 accused indeed, but never convicted of setting fire to the city. Tacitus asserts their innocence of this crime, when he says that they perished, the victims of popular hatred and execration, which originated not less in calumnious imputations than in the refusal of the Christians to sacrifice to idols and to swear by the genius of the Emperors. The tribunes and governors of pro- vinces put them to the torture, to force from them an acknowledg- ment of the crimes imputed to them. To this, Justin 2 bears positive testimony, and complains that ' to establish these calum- nies, slaves, children, and women were put to the rack and tor- tured in the most horrible manner, to extort from them a con- fession of the incests and the feasting upon human flesh, of which the Christians were accused.' Call to mind the women whom Pliny interrogated on the rack after this manner : but, above all, remember the heroic Blandina and her companion Biblis : Some pagan slaves in the service of the Christians, fearing the torments endured by the faithful, and instigated by the soldiers, falsely accused the Christians of Thyestean feasts and incestuous marriages and of every abomination that decency forbids to mention or think upon, and which we cannot even believe men capable of committing. These calumnies being spread abroad, the popular fury was excited against us : even those who had hitherto been somewhat friendly disposed towards us, were then filled with the general indignation against us. Then was accom- plished the prophecy of our Saviour, that they, who should put b|S disciples in death, would think that they rendered a service (0 God ' Speaking afterwards of Blandina : 'We all of us, and particularly her mistress, he says, were apprehensive that she would n at have the courage to confess, by reason of her bodily weakness. She however wearied out those, who one after the other, tortured her in every way, from morning till night. They acknowledged themselves vanquished, not being able to discover any other way of tormenting her: ;m 1 \vc\-t' ast mished to find her still breathing after the laceration and dislocation of her whole body The confession of the name of Christian seemed 22 'Apol. II. 254 ON THE CHURCH OP ENGLAND to invigorate her frame : her refreshment and consolation was to exclaim: I am a Christian, and no evil is committed amongst us." St. Irenaeus, a contemporary, and an eye witness, mentions that she holdly and judiciously added ; How can they, who, from motives of religion, abstain from meats otherwise lawful, be ca- pable of perpetrating the crime which you allege against us ?' I have before observed that, in the Zuinglian opinion, the Christians would never have suffered these calumnies to gain ground, but would have instantly upset them, by making a pub- lic declaration of all their practices and ceremonials, and by in- viting the pagans to attend their assemblies and witness the celebration of their harmless repast. But supposing that this simple means of sheltering their name from infamy was over- looked ; you must allow that it was high time to think of it, when punishment and torture stared them in the face. When Blandina and Biblis were interrogated respecting these pretended abominations, why did they not say : ' We take indeed a little bread and wine in memory and in figure of our absent Saviour, and also as a mark of our union together. ' This is our only repast ; to which you may, if you please, yourselves bear ocular testimony?' Would they submit to torture and death, when both might be avoided by a declaration at once so natural and so likely to open the eyes of their judges ? Is it consistent with any principle of reason or Christianity to maintain an obstinate and unmeaning silence upon that which could innocently be ac- knowledged, which there was not a shadow of a reason for con- cealing, and which, had it been but named, would have instantly disabused the minds of the people ? Does not such conduct ren- der a person guilty of permitting the commission of the enormi- ties and murders, which he might so easily have prevented ? Blandina however holds no such language and makes no such disclosure. In the midst of her torments, not a word of that kind escapes her lips. Her constant courageous reply is ap- plauded by the Christians for its judiciousness. Zuinglius and 1 Letter of the Christians at Lyons to those of Asia, an : 177 under Marcos Auielius. Euseb. V. Hist: init. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 255 his followers "would iu vain attempt to explain in what the dis- cretion and judgment of the martyr consisted. It can be satis- factorily shewn in the Catholic belief alone, in which, for the honor of Christ, and the interest and salvation of the persecutors, the mysteries were not permitted to be divulged. As it was im- possible to say any thing that might betray the secret, nothing remained for the accused but modestly to repel the calumny, which was, in fact, admirably done by this illustrious slave. It is truly noble and even more than human, in the midst of pro- tracted and horrible tortures, thus to bear in mind the wise and charitable discipline of secrecy: and the generous sacrifice of lilandina, crowned in heaven, will be a just subject of admira- tion to the end of time. Such, Sir, are the observatious I had to submit to your atten- tion respecting the discipline of secrecy. I remember well, the first time I discovered it, the greater part of these same ideas confusedly rushed upon my mind. Since then, it has frequently been to me a subject of serious consideration and deep investiga- tion. I flatter myself that my view of the subject is correct; and, if I am not mistaken, I have convinced you that it is so. For, on the one hand, it is perfectly unintelligible and inexplica- ble according to the Zuinglian opinion ; an unmeaning discipline, rigidly enforced and scrupulously practised, without motive or n, or rather against every motive and every urgent reason. On the other hand, it accords with the Catholic doctrine, and even .supposes it ; and on the supposition of this belief, is found to be wise, charitable and necessary at the period when religion v. i- proclaimed to a world of unbelievers. In a word, since this general discipline is necessarily interwoven with our belief, and from the fifth century is traced back to the apostolic age, itr is mosl evident, that in these first ages the Catholic dogma was both believed and taught in all Churches of the world. 256 ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND APPENDIX. DISCIPLINE OF SECKECY DURING THE FIVE FIRST AGES. FIRST AGE. Proofs drawn from the ignorance of the pagans respecting the Eucharist. 'We are traduced as the most wicked of men, as capable of murdering infanta and feeding on their flesh, and afterwards of abandoning ourselves to shameful incests, having previously employed some dogs, accomplices in our debaucheries, to upset the lamps and thus give darkness and audacity to our abominations. — Thy imputation of these crimes is to be dated from the reign of Tiberius, as I have already said. The hatred of truth commenced with truth itself: no sooner did it appear that it became the object of general detestation. It counts as many enemies as strangers, and each according to their own fashion, the Jews by jealousy, the soldiers by exaction, and all of you by nature.'* ' One might say that Celsus was desirous of imitating the Jews, who, on the preaching of the Gospel, spread false reports against those who embraced it : that the Christians sacrificed a little infant and devoured its flesh in their assemblies ; that to perform works of darkness, they put out the lamps, and then each one abandoned himself to his lusts with the first person he met. This most gross calumny for a long time made great impression on the minds of an infinity of persons, who, having no intercourse with us, permitted themselves to be per- suaded that this portrait of the Christians was faithfully drawn : and even to this time there are individuals so prejudiced amongst us that they will not even enter into conversation with a Christian. 't Kusebius writes, that ' the devil made use of Carpocrates, Saturninus and Meander, disciples of Simon, who fell after being baptized by Philip, to seduce many of the faithful : and that by their means, they had furnished to the pagans ample materials for calumniating and blackening the Church: that all the re- cently invented slanders were circulated by them to the disgrace of the Christian name ; and by this means has been circulated among the unbelievers an opinion respecting the Christians as absurd as it is impious: as if it was our custom to * Calumnies against the Christians, Tertul, Apol. ch. vii. t Origen against Celsus, No. -2U4, B. VI. p. -244, edit, in 40. AND THE REFORMATION IN GENERAL. 257 abandon ourselves to shameful incests with our sisters and mothers and feed upon execrable meat-.'* Tacitus, speaking of the burning of Rome, says that Nero laid it to 'a people odious by their crimes, who were called Christians.' He adds : ' This name came from Christ, whom Pontius Pilate had put to death under the Emperor Tiberius. And this impious superstition, repressed for the time, appeared again, not only in J udea, the source of the evil, but in Rome itself, where every thing that is black and infamous is collected together and put in practice. At first those only were taken, who confessed, then a great multitude, upon their report, were convicted, not to much of the burning of the city, as of hatred to all mankind.'! He after- v. a ds mentions them as wretches, who deserved the most exemplary punishments. Pliny, who belonged to the close of the first century, but who did not enter upon the government ofBithynia before the commencement of the second, wrote t>. the Emperor, J on occasion of the rumors spread abroad respecting the Chris- tiana, 'that he thought it necessary, for coming at the truth, to question two i, the rack, who were said to have waited in the secret assemblies. But 1 discover nothing, continued he, more than an ill guided and excessive superstition.' Celsus an epicurean philosopher living at the close of the first and commence- ment of the second centuries, composed and published under Adrian, || a libel against the Christians and Jews under the bold and lying title of A True narra- tive. It has not come down to us, and is only known by the splendid refutation of it from the pen of Origen, who exposes and destroys his calumnies, and, among others, those which regarded the secrecj' observed by the Christians, and on ac- count of which Celsus most bitterly inveighed against them. SECOND AGE. ' Were we to ask our accusers whether they ever saw what they report of us, there will not be found one, impudent enough to say that he has seen it. How can they accuse those of killing and rating human creatures, who, they are well aware, cannot bo much as endure to see a man even justly put to death. '§ • It will be -aid to us : Let every one of you destroy yourselves, and thus you Will go to wiui' God and disturb us no more. 'If lie replies that their faith in Providence forbade such an action, and he adds that f to substantiate the calum- nies heaped upon the Christians, they interrogated slaves, children and women, and put them to excruciating torments to extort from them a. confession of the repasts of human flesh, which were laid to the charge of the Chris- tian- 1 . Those uho accuse us of these crimes are thems Ives tie' perpetrators of them, while they attribute them to their gods: as lor as, as we have nothing to do with such abominations, we do not trouble ourselves about them, hai ing Cod for the witness of our actions and of our tie a In the persecution at Lyon-.** the magistrates, on the di io ition of some slaves, persuaded themselves that the Christians actualrj practi ed whal was imputed to • lli<