
A HUMBLE EXHORTATION
Seriously To Undertake The Task Of Restoring The Church.
Presented In The Name Of All Those Who Wish Christ To Reign.
AUGUST EMPEROR,
You
have summoned this Diet, that, in concert with the Most Illustrious
Princes and other Orders of the Empire, you may at length deliberate
and decide upon the means of ameliorating the present condition of
the Church, which we all see to be very miserable, and almost
desperate. Now, therefore, while you are seated at this consultation,
I humbly beg and implore, first of your Imperial Majesty, and at the
same time of you also, Most Illustrious Princes, and distinguished
Personages, that you will not decline to read, and diligently ponder,
what I have to lay before you. The magnitude and weightiness of the
cause may well excite in you an eagerness to hear, and I will set the
matter so plainly in your view, that you can have no difficulty in
determining what course to adopt. Whoever I am, I here profess to
plead in defense, both of sound doctrine and of the Church. In this
character I seem at all events entitled to expect that you will not
deny me audience until such time as it may appear whether I falsely
usurp the character, or whether I faithfully perform its duties, and
make good what I profess. But though I feel that I am by no means
equal to so great a task, I am not at all afraid, that after you have
heard the nature
of my office, I shall be accused either of folly or presumption in
having ventured thus to appear before you. There are two
circumstances by which men are wont to recommend, or at least to
justify, their conduct. If a thing is done honestly, and from pious
zeal, we deem it worthy of praise; if it is done under the pressure
of public necessity, we at least deem it not unworthy of excuse.
Since both of these apply here, I am confident, from your equity,
that I shall easily obtain your approval of my design. For where can
I exert myself to better purpose or more honestly, where, too, in a
matter at this time more necessary, than in attempting, according to
my ability, to aid the Church of Christ, whose claims it is unlawful
in any instance to deny, and which is now in grievous distress, and
in extreme danger? But there is no occasion for a long preface concerning
myself. Receive what I say as you would do if it were pronounced by
the united voice of all those who either have already taken care to
restore the Church, or are desirous that it should be restored to
true order. In this situation are several Princes, of not the
humblest class, and not a few distinguished communities. For all
these I speak, though as an individual, yet so that it is more truly
they who at once, and with one mouth,
speak through me. To these add the countless multitude of pious men,
who, scattered over the various regions of the Christian world, still
unanimously concur with me in this pleading. In short, regard this as
the common address of all who so eminently deplore the present
corruption of the Church, that they are unable to bear it longer, and
are determined not to rest till they see some amendment. I am aware
of the odious names with which we are branded; but, meanwhile,
whatever be the name by which it is thought proper to designate us,
hear our cause, and, after you have heard, judge what the place is
which we are entitled to hold.
First,
then, the question is not, Whether the Church labors under diseases
both numerous and grievous, (this is admitted even by all moderate
judges,) but whether the diseases are of a kind the cure of which
admits not of longer delay, and as to which, therefore, it is neither
useful nor becoming to await the result of slow remedies. We are
accused of rash and impious innovation, for having ventured to
propose any change at all on the former state of the Church. What!
Even if it has not been done either with out cause or imperfectly? I
hear there are persons who, even in this case, do not hesitate to
condemn us; their opinion being, that we were indeed right in
desiring amendment, but not right in attempting it. From such
persons, all I would ask at present is, that they will for a little
suspend their judgment until I shall have shown from fact that we
have not been prematurely hasty — have not attempted any thing
rashly, any thing alien from our duty — have, in fine, done nothing
until compelled by the highest necessity. To enable me to prove this,
it is necessary to attend to the matters in dispute. We
maintain, then, that at the commencement, when God raised up Luther
and others, who held forth a torch to light us into the way of
salvation, and who, by their ministry, founded and reared our
churches, those heads of doctrine in which the truth of our religion,
those in which the pure and legitimate sonship of God, and those in
which the salvation of men are comprehended, were in a great measure
obsolete. We maintain that the use of the sacraments was in many ways
vitiated and polluted. And we maintain that the government of the
Church was converted into a species of foul and insufferable tyranny.
But, perhaps these averments have not force enough to move certain
individuals until they are better explained. This, therefore, I will
do, not as the subject demands, but as far as my ability will permit.
Here, however, I have no intention to review and discuss all our
controversies; that would require a long discourse, and this is not
the place for it. I wish only to show how just and necessary the
causes were which forced us to the changes for which we are blamed.
To accomplish this, I must take up together the three following
points.
First, I must briefly enumerate the evils which compelled us to seek for remedies.
Secondly, I must show that the particular remedies which our Reformers employed were apt and salutary.
Thirdly, I must make it plain that we were not at liberty any longer to delay putting forth our hand, in as much as the matter demanded instant amendment.
The
first point, as I merely advert to it for the purpose of clearing my
way to the other two, I will endeavor to dispose of in a few words,
but in wiping off the heavy charge of sacrilegious audacity and
sedition, founded on the allegation, that we have improperly, and
with intemperate haste usurped an office which did not belong to us,
I will dwell at greater length. If it be inquired, then, by what
things chiefly the Christian religion has a standing existence
amongst us and maintains its truth, it will be found that the
following two not only occupy the principal place, but comprehend
under them all the other parts, and consequently the whole substance
of Christianity, viz., a knowledge, first, of the mode in which God
is duly worshipped; and, secondly of the source from which salvation
is to be obtained. When these are kept out of view, though we may
glory in the name of Christians, our profession is empty and vain.
After these come the Sacraments and the Government of the Church,
which, as they were instituted for the preservation of these branches
of doctrine, ought not to be employed for any other purpose; and
indeed, the only means of ascertaining whether they are administered
purely and in due form, or otherwise, is to bring them to this test.
If any one is desirous of a clearer and more familiar illustration, I
would say, that rule in the Church, the pastoral office, and all
other matters of order, resemble the body, whereas the doctrine which
regulates the due worship of God, and points out the ground on which
the consciences of men must rest their hope of salvation, is the soul
which animates the body, renders it lively and active, and, in short,
makes it not to be a dead and useless carcass. As to what I have yet
said, there is no controversy among the pious, or among men of right
and sane mind.
Let
us now see what is meant by the due worship of God. Its chief
foundation is to acknowledge Him to be, as He is, the only source of
all virtue, justice, holiness, wisdom, truth, power, goodness, mercy,
life, and salvation; in accordance with this, to ascribe and render
to Him the glory of all that is good, to seek all things in Him
alone, and in every want have recourse to Him alone. Hence arises
prayer, hence praise and thanksgiving — these being attestations to
the glory which we attribute to Him. This is that genuine
sanctification of His name which He requires of us above all things.
To this is united adoration, by which we manifest for Him the
reverence due to his greatness and excellency, and to this ceremonies
are subservient, as helps or instruments, in order that, in the
performance of divine worship, the body may be exercised at the same
time with the soul.
Next
after these comes self-abasement, when, renouncing the world and the
flesh, we are transformed in the renewing of our mind, and living no
longer to ourselves, submit to be ruled and actuated by Him. By this
self - abasement we are trained to obedience and devotedness to his
will, so that his fear reigns in our hearts, and regulates all the
actions of our lives. That in these things consists the true and
sincere worship which alone God approves, and in which alone He
delights, is both taught by the Holy Spirit throughout the Scriptures
and is also, antecedent to discussion, the obvious dictate of piety.
Nor from the beginning was there any other method of worshipping God,
the only difference being, that this spiritual truth, which with us
is naked and simple, was under the former dispensation wrapt up in
figures. And this is the meaning of our Savior’s words, “The
hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the
Father in spirit and in truth,” (John 4:23.) For by these
words he meant not to declare that God was not worshipped by the
fathers in this spiritual manner, but only to point out a distinction
in the external form, viz., That while they had the Spirit shadowed
forth by many figures, we have it in simplicity. But it has always
been an acknowledged point, that God, who is a Spirit, must be
worshipped in spirit and in truth. Moreover, the rule which
distinguishes between pure and vitiated worship is of universal
application, in order that we may not adopt any device which seems
fit to ourselves, but look to the injunction of Him who alone is
entitled to prescribe. Therefore, if we would have Him to approve our
worship, this rule, which he everywhere enforces with the utmost
strictness, must be carefully observed. For there is a twofold reason
why the Lord, in condemning and prohibiting all fictitious worship,
requires us to give obedience only to his own voice. First, it tends
greatly to establish His authority that we do not follow our own
pleasures but depend entirely on his sovereignty; and, secondly, such
is our folly, that when we are left at liberty, all we are able to do
is to go astray. And then when once we have turned aside from the
right path, there is no end to our wanderings, until we get buried
under a multitude of superstitions. Justly, therefore, does the Lord,
in order to assert his full right of dominion, strictly enjoin what
he wishes us to do, and at once reject all human devices which are at
variance with his command. Justly, too, does he, in express terms,
define our limits that we may not, by fabricating perverse modes of
worship, provoke His anger against us. I
know how difficult it is to persuade the world that God disapproves
of all modes of worship not expressly sanctioned by His Word. The
opposite persuasion which cleaves to them, being seated, as it were,
in their very bones and marrow, is, that whatever they do has in
itself a sufficient sanction, provided it exhibits some kind of zeal
for the honor of God. But since God not only regards as fruitless,
but also plainly abominates, whatever we undertake from zeal to His
worship, if at variance with His command, what do we gain by a
contrary course? The words of God are clear and distinct, “Obedience
is better than sacrifice.” “In vain do they worship me, teaching
for doctrines the commandments of men,” (1 Samuel 15:22; Matthew.
15:9.) Every addition to His word, especially in this matter,
is a lie. Mere “will worship” ejqeloqrhskei
a is vanity. This is the decision, and when once the judge has
decided, it is no longer time to debate.
Will
your Imperial Majesty now be pleased to recognize, and will you, Most
Illustrious Princes, lend me your attention, while I show how utterly
at variance with this view are all the observances, in which,
throughout the Christian world in the present day, divine worship is
made to consist? In word, indeed, they concede to God the glory of
all that is good,
but, in reality, they rob him of the half, or more than the half, by
partitioning his perfections among the saints. Let our adversaries
use what evasions they may, and defame us for exaggerating what they
pretend to be trivial errors, I will simply state the fact as every
man perceives it.
Divine
offices are distributed among the saints as if they had been
appointed colleagues to the Supreme God, and, in a multitude of
instances, they are made to do his work, while He is kept out of
view. The thing I complain of is just what everybody confesses by a
vulgar proverb. For what is meant by saying, “the Lord cannot be
known for apostles,” unless it be that, by the height to which
apostles are raised, the dignity of Christ is sunk, or at least
obscured? The consequence of this perversity is, that mankind,
forsaking the fountain of living waters, have learned, as Jeremiah
tells us, to hew them out “cisterns, broken
cisterns, that can hold no water,” (Jeremiah 2:13.) For
where is it that they seek for salvation and every other good? Is it
in God alone? The whole tenor of their lives openly proclaims the
contrary. They say, indeed, that they seek salvation and every other
good in Him; but it is mere pretense, seeing they seek them
elsewhere. Of this fact, we have clear proof in the corruptions by
which prayer was first vitiated, and afterwards in a great measure
perverted and extinguished. We have observed, that prayer affords a
test whether or not suppliants render due glory to God. In like
manner, will it enable us to discover whether, after robbing Him of
his glory, they transfer it to the creatures. In genuine prayer,
something more is required than mere entreaty. The suppliant must
feel assured that God is the only being to whom he ought to flee,
both because He only can succor him in necessity; and also, because
He has engaged to do it. But no man can have this conviction unless
he pays regard both to the command by which God calls us to himself,
and to the promise of listening to our prayers which is annexed to
the command. The command was not thus regarded when the generality of
mankind invoked angels and dead men promiscuously with God, and the
wiser part, if they did not invoke them instead of God, at least
regarded them as mediators, at whose intercession God granted their
requests. Where, then, was the promise which is founded entirely on
the intercession of Christ? Passing by Christ, the only Mediator,
each betook himself to the patron who had struck his fancy, or if at
any time a place was given to Christ, it was one in which he remained
unnoticed, like some ordinary individual in a crowd. Then, although
nothing is more repugnant to the nature of genuine prayer than doubt
and distrust, so much did these prevail, that they were almost
regarded as necessary, in order to pray aright. And why was this?
Just because the world understood not the force of the expressions in
which God invites us to pray to him, engages to do whatsoever we ask
in reliance on his command and promises and sets forth Christ as the
Advocate in whose name our prayers are heard. Besides, let the
public prayers which are in common use in Churches be examined. It
will be found that they are stained with numberless impurities. From
them, therefore, we have it in our power to judge how much this part
of divine worship was vitiated. Nor was there less corruption in the
expressions of thanksgiving. To this fact, testimony is borne by the
public hymns, in which the saints are lauded for every blessing, just
as if they were the colleagues of God.
Then
what shall I say of adoration? Do not men pay to images and statues
the very same reverence which they pay to God? It is an error to
suppose that there is any difference between this madness and that of
the heathen. For God forbids us not only to worship images, but to
regard them as the residence of his divinity, and worship it as
residing in them. The very same pretexts which the patrons of this
abomination employ in the present day, were formerly employed by the
heathen to cloak their impiety. Besides, it is undeniable that
saints, nay, their very bones, garments, shoes, and images, are
adored even in the place of God. But some subtle disputant will
object, that there are divers species of adoration, — that the
honor of dulia, as they term it, is given to saints, their
images, and their bones; and that latria is reserved for God
as due to him only, unless we are to except hyperdulia a
species which as the infatuation increased, was invented to set the
blessed Virgin above the rest. As if these subtle distinctions were
either known or present to the minds of those who prostrate
themselves before images. Meanwhile, the world is full of idolatry
not less gross, and if I may so speak, not less capable of being
felt, than was the ancient idolatry of the Egyptians, which all the
Prophets everywhere so strongly reprobate. I am merely glancing at
each of these corruptions, because I will afterwards more clearly
expose their demerits. I
come now to ceremonies, which, while they ought to be grave
attestations of divine worship, are rather a mere mockery of God. A
new Judaism, as a substitute for that which God had distinctly
abrogated, has again been reared up by means of numerous puerile
extravagances, collected from different quarters; and with these have
been mixed up certain impious rites, partly sorrowed from the
heathen, and more adapted to some theatrical show than to the dignity
of our religion. The first evil here is, that an immense number of
ceremonies, which God had by his authority abrogated, once for all,
have been again revived. The next evil is, that while ceremonies
ought to be living exercises of piety, men are vainly occupied with
numbers of them that are both frivolous and useless. But by far the
most deadly evil of all is, that after men have thus mocked God with
ceremonies of one kind or other, they think they have fulfilled their
duty as admirably as if these ceremonies included in them the whole
essence of piety and divine worship. With regard to self-abasement,
on which depends regeneration to newness of life, the whole doctrine
was entirely obliterated from the minds of men, or, at least, half
buried, so that it was known to few, and to them but slenderly. But
the spiritual sacrifice which the Lord in an especial manner
recommends, is to mortify the old, and be transformed into a new man.
It may be, perhaps, that preachers stammer out something about these
words, but that they have no idea of the things meant by them is
apparent even from this, — that they strenuously oppose us in our
attempt to restore this branch of divine worship. If at any time they
discourse on repentance, they only glance, as if in contempt, at the
points of principal moment, and dwell entirely on certain external
exercises of the body, which, as Paul assures us, are not of the
highest utility, (Colossians 2:23; 1 Timothy 4:8.) What makes this
perverseness the more intolerable is, that the generality, under a
pernicious error, pursue the shadow for the substance, and,
overlooking true repentance, devote their whole attention to
abstinence, vigils, and other things, which Paul terms “beggarly
elements” of the world.
Having
observed that the sword of God is the test which discriminates
between his true worship and that which is false and vitiated, we
thence readily infer that the whole form of divine worship in general
use in the present day is nothing but mere corruption. For men pay no
regard to what God has commanded, or to what he approves, in order
that they may serve him in a becoming manner, but assume to
themselves a license of devising
modes of worship, and afterwards, obtruding them upon him as a
substitute for obedience. If in what I say I seem to exaggerate, let
an examination be made of all the acts by which the generality
suppose that they worship God. I dare scarcely accept a tenth part as
not the random offspring of their own brain. What more would we? God
rejects, condemns, abominates all fictitious worship, and employs his
Word as a bridle to keep us in unqualified obedience. When shaking
off this yoke, we wander after our own fictions, and offer to him a
worship, the work of human rashness; how much soever it may delight
ourselves, in his sight it is vain trifling, nay, vileness and
pollution. The advocates of human traditions paint them in fair and
gaudy colors; and Paul certainly admits that they carry with them a
show of wisdom; but as God values obedience more than all sacrifices,
it ought to be sufficient for the rejection of any mode of worship,
that it is not sanctioned by the command of God.
We
come now to what we have set down as the second principal branch of
Christian doctrine, viz., knowledge of the source from which
salvation is to be obtained. Now, the knowledge of our salvation
presents three different stages. First, we must begin with a sense of
individual wretchedness, filling us with despondency as if we were
spiritually dead. This affect is produced when the original and
hereditary depravity of our nature is set before us as the source of
all evil — a depravity which begets in us distrust, rebellion
against God, pride, avarice, lust, and all kinds of evil
concupiscence, and making us averse to all rectitude and justice,
holds us captive under the yoke of sin; and when, moreover, each
individual, on the disclosure of his own sins, feeling confounded at
his turpitude, is forced to be dissatisfied with himself and to
account himself and all that he has of his own as less than nothing;
then, on the other hand, conscience being cited to the bar of God,
becomes sensible of the curse under which it lies,
and, as if it had received a warning of eternal death, learns to
tremble at the divine anger. This, I say, is the first stage in the
way to salvation when the sinner, overwhelmed and prostrated,
despairs of all carnal aid, yet does not harden himself against the
justice of God, or become stupidly callous, but, trembling and
anxious, groans in agony, and sighs for relief. From this he should
rise to the second stage. This he does when, animated by the
knowledge of Christ, he again begins to breathe. For to one humbled in
the manner in which we have described, no other course remains but to
turn to Christ, that through his interposition he may be delivered
from misery. But the only man who thus seeks salvation in Christ is
the man who is aware of the extent of his power; that is,
acknowledges Him as the only Priest who reconciles us to the Father,
and His death as the only sacrifice by which sin is expiated, the
divine justice satisfied, and a true and perfect righteousness
acquired; who, in fine, does not divide the work between himself and
Christ, but acknowledges it to be by mere gratuitous favor that he is
justified in the sight of God. From this stage also he must rise to
the third, when instructed in the grace of Christ, and in the fruits
of his death and resurrection, he rests in him with firm and solid
confidence, feeling assured that Christ is so completely his own,
that he possesses in him righteousness and life.
Now,
see how sadly this doctrine has been perverted. On the subject of
original sin, perplexing questions have been raised by the Schoolmen,
who have done what they could to explain away this fatal disease; for
in their discussions they reduce it to little more than excess of
bodily appetite and lust. Of that blindness and vanity of intellect,
whence unbelief and superstition proceed, of inward depravity of
soul, of pride, ambition, stubbornness, and other secret sources of
evils they say not a word. And sermons
are not a whit more sound. Then, as to the doctrine of free will, as
preached before Luther and other Reformers appeared, what effect
could it have but to fill men with an overweening opinion of their
own virtue, swelling them out with vanity, and leaving no room for
the grace and assistance of the Holy Spirit? But why dwell on this?
There is no point which is more keenly contested, none in which our
adversaries are more inveterate in their opposition, than that of
justification, namely, as to whether we obtain it by faith or by
works. On no account will they allow us to give Christ the honor of
being called our righteousness, unless their works come in at the
same time for a share of the merit. The dispute is not, whether good
works ought to be performed by the pious, and whether they are
accepted by God and rewarded by him, but whether, by their own
worth, they reconcile us to God; whether we acquire eternal life at
their price, whether they are compensations which are made to the
justice of God, so as to take away guilt, and whether they are to be
confided in as a ground of salvation. We condemn the error which
enjoins men to have more respect to their own works than to Christ,
as a means of rendering God propitious, of meriting His favor, and
obtaining the inheritance of eternal life; in short, as a means of
becoming righteous in His sight. First, they plume themselves on the
merit of works, as if they laid God under obligations to them. Pride
such as this, what is it but a fatal intoxication of soul? For
instead of Christ, they adore themselves, and dream of possessing
life while they are immersed in the profound abyss of death. It may
be said that I am exaggerating on this head, but no man can deny the trite
doctrine of the schools and churches to be, that it is by works we
must merit the favor of God, and by works acquire eternal life —
that any hope of salvation unpropped by good works is rash and
presumptuous — that we are reconciled to God by the satisfaction of
good works, and not by a gratuitous remission of sins—that good
works are meritorious of eternal salvation, not because they are
freely imputed for righteousness through the merits of Christ, but in
terms of law; and that men, as often as they
lose the grace of God, are reconciled to Him, not by a free pardon,
but by what they term works of satisfaction, these works being
supplemented by the merits of Christ and martyrs, provided only the
sinner deserves to be so assisted. It is certain, that before Luther
became known to the world, all men were fascinated by these impious
dogmas; and
even in the present day, there is no part of our doctrine which our
opponents impugn with greater earnestness and obstinacy.
Lastly,
there was another most pestilential error, which not only occupied
the minds of men, but was regarded as one of the principal articles
of faith, of which it was impious to doubt, viz., that believers
ought to be perpetually in suspense and uncertainty as to their
interest in the divine favor. By this suggestion of the devil, the
power of faith was completely extinguished, the benefits of Christ’s
purchase destroyed, and the salvation
of men overthrown. For, as Paul declares, that faith only is
Christian faith which inspires our hearts with confidence, and
emboldens us to appear in the presence of God, (Romans 5:2.) On no
other view could his doctrine in another passage be maintained, viz.,
that “we have received the Spirit of
adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father,”
(Romans 8:15.) But what is the effect of that hesitancy which
our enemies require in their disciples, save to annihilate all
confidence in the promises of God? Paul argues, that “If
they which are of the law be heirs, faith is made void, and the
promise made of none effect,” (Romans 4:14.) Why so? Just
because the law keeps a man in doubt, and does not permit him to
entertain a sure and firm confidence. But they, on the other hand,
dream of a faith, which, excluding and repelling man from that
confidence which Paul requires, throws him back upon conjecture, to
be tossed like a reed shaken by the wind. And it is not surprising
that after they had once founded their hope of salvation on the merit
of works, they plunged into all this absurdity. It could not but
happen, that from such a precipice they should have such a fall. For
what can man find in his works but materials for doubt, and, finally,
for despair? We thus see how error led to error.
Here,
mighty Emperor, and most Illustrious Princes, it will be necessary to
recall to your remembrance what I formerly observed, viz., that the
safety of the Church depends as much on this doctrine as human life
does on the soul. If the purity of this doctrine is in any degree
impaired, the Church has received a deadly wound; and, therefore,
when I shall have shown that it was for the greater part
extinguished, it will be the same as if I had shown that the Church
had been brought to the very brink of destruction. As yet, I have
only alluded to this in passing, but by-and-by I will unfold it
more clearly. I come now to those things which I have likened to the
body, viz., government and the dispensation of the sacraments, of
which, when the doctrine is subverted, the power and utility are
gone, although the external form should be faultless. What, then, if
there was no soundness in them externally or internally? And it is
not difficult to demonstrate that this was the fact. First, in regard
to the sacraments, ceremonies devised by men were placed in the same
rank with the mysteries instituted by Christ. For seven sacraments
were received without any distinction, though Christ appointed two
only, the others resting merely on human authority. Yet to these the
grace of God was held to be annexed, just as much as if Christ had
been present in them. Moreover, the two which Christ instituted were
fearfully corrupted. Baptism was so disguised by superfluous
additions, that scarcely a vestige of pure and genuine baptism could
be traced; while the Holy Supper was not only corrupted by extraneous
observances, but its very form was altogether changed. What Christ
commanded to be done, and in what order, is perfectly clear. But in
contempt of his command, a theatrical exhibition was got up, and
substituted for the Supper. For what resemblance is there between the
Mass and the true Supper of our Lord? While the command of Christ
enjoins believers to communicate with each other in the sacred
symbols of his body and blood, the thing seen at Mass ought more
properly to be termed excommunion. For the priest separates himself
from the rest of the assembly, and devours apart that which ought to
have been brought forward into the midst and distributed. Then, as if
he were some successor of Aaron, he pretends that he offers a
sacrifice to expiate the sins of the people. But where does Christ
once mention sacrifice? He bids us take, eat, and drink. Who
authorises men to convert taking into offering? And what is the
effect of the change but to make the perpetual and inviolable edict
of Christ yield to their devices? This is, indeed, a grievous evil.
But still worse is the superstition which applies this work to the
living and the dead, as a procuring cause of grace. In this way the
efficacy of Christ’s death has been transferred to a vain
theatrical show, and the dignity of an eternal priesthood wrested
from him to be bestowed upon men. If, at any time, the people are
called to communion, they are admitted only to half a share. Why
should this be? Christ holds forth the cup to all, and bids all drink
of it: In opposition to this, men interdict the assembly of the
faithful from touching the cup. Thus the signs, which by the
authority of Christ were connected by an indissoluble tie, are
separated by human caprice. Besides, the consecration, both of
baptism and of the mass, differs in no respect whatever from magical
incantations. For by breathings and whisperings, and unintelligible
sounds, they think they work mysteries. As if it had been the wish of
Christ, that in the performance of religious rites his word should be
mumbled over, and not rather pronounced in a clear voice. There is no
obscurity in the words by which the gospel expresses the power,
nature, and use of baptism. Then, in the Supper, Christ does not
mutter over the bread, but addresses the apostles in distinct terms,
when he announces the promise and subjoins the command, “this do in
remembrance of me.” Instead of this public commemoration, they
whisper out secret exorcisms, fitter, as I have observed, for magical
arts than sacraments. The first thing we complain of here is, that
the people are entertained with showy ceremonies, while not a word is
said of their significancy and truth. For there is no use in the
sacraments unless the thing which the sign visibly represents is
explained in accordance with the Word of God. Therefore, when the
people are presented with nothing but empty figures, with which to
feed the eye, while they hear no doctrine which might direct them to
the proper end, they look no farther than the external act. Hence
that most pestilential superstition, under which, as if the
sacraments alone were sufficient for salvation, without feeling any
solicitude about faith or repentance, or even Christ
himself, they fasten upon the sign instead of the thing signified by
it. And, indeed, not only among the rude vulgar, but in the schools
also, the impious dogma everywhere obtained, that the sacraments were
effectual by themselves, if not obstructed in their operation by
mortal sin; as if the sacraments had been given for any other end or
use than to lead us by the hand to Christ. Then, in addition to this,
after consecrating the bread by a perverse incantation, rather than a
pious rite, they keep it in a little box, and occasionally carry it
about in solemn state, that it may be adored and prayed to instead of
Christ. Accordingly, when any danger presses, they flee to that bread
as their only protection, use it as a charm against all accidents,
and, in asking pardon of God, employ it as the best expiation; as if
Christ, when he gave us his body in the sacrament, had meant
that it should be prostituted to all sorts of absurdity. For what is
the amount of the promise? Simply this, — that as often as we
received the sacrament, we should be partakers of his body and blood
— ”Take,” says he, “eat and drink; this is my body, this is
my blood. This do in remembrance of me.” Do we not see that the
promise is on either side inclosed by limits within which we must
confine ourselves if we would secure what it offers? Those,
therefore, are deceived who imagine that apart from the legitimate
use of the sacrament, they have anything but common and unconsecrated
bread. Then, again, there is a profanation common to all these
religious rites, viz., that they are made the subjects of a
disgraceful traffic, as if they had been instituted for no other
purpose than to be subservient to gain. Nor is this traffic conducted
secretly or bashfully; it is plied openly, as at the public mart. It
is known in each particular district how much a mass sells for. Other
rites, too, have their fixed prices. In short, any one who considers
must see that Churches are just ordinary shops, and that there is no
kind of sacred rite which is not there exposed for sale. Were I to
go over the faults of ecclesiastical government in detail, I should
never have done. I will, therefore, only point to some of the grosser
sort, which cannot be disguised. And, first, the pastoral office
itself, as instituted by Christ, has long been in desuetude. His
object in appointing Bishops and Pastors, or whatever the name be by
which they are called, certainly was, as Paul declares, that they
might edify the Church with sound doctrine. According to this view,
no man is a true pastor of the Church who does not perform the office
of teaching. But, in the present day, almost all those who have the
name of pastors have left that work to others. Scarcely one in a
hundred of the Bishops will be found who ever mounts the pulpit in
order to teach. And no wonder; for bishoprics have degenerated into
secular principalities. Pastors of inferior rank, again, either think
that they fulfill their office by frivolous performances altogether
alien from the command of Christ, or, after the example of the
Bishops, throw even this part of the duty on the shoulders of others.
Hence the letting of sacerdotal offices is not less common than the
letting of farms. What would we more? The spiritual government which
Christ recommended has totally disappeared, and a new and mongrel
species of government
has been introduced, which, under whatever name it may pass current,
has no more resemblance to the former than the world has to the
kingdom of Christ. If it be objected, that the fault of those who
neglect their duty ought not to be imputed to the order, I answer,
first, that the evil is of such general prevalence, that it may be
regarded as the common rule; and, secondly, that, were we to assume
that all the Bishops, and all the
Presbyters under them, reside each in his particular station, and do
what in the present day is regarded as professional duty, they would
never fulfill the true institution of Christ. They would sing or
mutter in the church, exhibit themselves in theatrical vestments, and
go through numerous ceremonies, but they would seldom, if ever,
teach. According to the precept of Christ, however, no man can claim
for himself the office of bishop
or pastor who does not feed his flock with the Word of the Lord.
Then
while those who preside in the Church ought to excel others, and
shine by the example of a holier life, how well do those who hold the
office in the present day correspond in this respect to their
vocation! At a time when the corruption of the world is at its
height, there is no order more addicted to all kinds of wickedness. I
wish that by their innocence they
would refute what I say. How gladly would I at once retract. But
their turpitude stands exposed to the eyes of all — exposed their
insatiable avarice and rapacity — exposed their intolerable pride
and cruelty. The noise of indecent revelry and dancing, the rage of
gaming, and entertainments, abounding in all kinds of intemperance,
are in their houses only ordinary occurrences, while they glory in
their luxurious delicacies, as if
they were distinguished virtues. To pass over other things in
silence, what impunity in that celibacy which of itself they regard
as a title to esteem! I feel ashamed to unveil enormities which I had
much rather suppress, if they could be corrected by silence. Nor will
I divulge what is done in secret. The pollutions which openly appear
are more than sufficient.
How many priests, pray, are free from whoredom? Nay, how many of
their houses are infamous for daily acts of lewdness? How many
honorable families do they defile by their vagabond lusts? For my
part, I have no pleasure in exposing their vices, and it is no part
of my design, but it is of importance to observe what a wide
difference there is between the conduct of the priesthood of the
present day, and that which true ministers
of Christ and his Church are bound to pursue. Not the least
important branch of ecclesiastical government is the due and regular
election and ordination of those who are to rule. The Word of God
furnishes a standard by which all such appointments ought to be
tested, and there exist many decrees of ancient Councils which
carefully and wisely provide for every thing which relates to the
proper method of election. Let our adversaries then produce even a
solitary instance of canonical election, and I will yield them the
victory. We know the kind of examination which the Holy Spirit, by
the mouth of Paul, (Epistles of Timothy and Titus,) requires a pastor
to undergo, and that which the ancient
laws of the Fathers enjoin. At the present day, in appointing Bishops
is anything of the kind perceived? Nay, how few of those who are
raised to the office are endowed even slenderly with those qualities
without which they cannot be fit ministers of the Church? We see the
order which the Apostles observed in ordaining ministers, that which
the primitive Church afterwards followed, and, finally, that which
the ancient Canons
require to be observed. Were I to complain that at present this order
is spurned and rejected, would not the complaint be just? What, then,
should I say that every thing honorable is trampled upon, and
promotion obtained by the most disgraceful and flagitious
proceedings? The fact is of universal notoriety. For ecclesiastical
honors are either purchased for a set price, or seized by the hand of
violence, or secured by nefarious actions, or acquired by sordid
sycophancy. Occasionally even, they are the hire paid for panderism
and similar services. In short, more shameless proceedings are
exhibited here than ever occur in the acquisition of secular
possessions. And would that those who preside in the Church, when
they corrupt its government, only sinned for themselves, or at least
injured others by nothing but by their bad example! But the most
crying evil of all is, that they exercise a most cruel tyranny, and
that a tyranny over souls. Nay, what is the vaunted power of the
Church in the present day, but a lawless, licentious,
unrestricted domination over souls, subjecting them to the most
miserable bondage? Christ gave to the Apostles an authority similar
to that which God had conferred on the Prophets, an authority exactly
defined, viz., to act as his ambassadors to men. Now, the invariable
law is, that he who is entrusted with an embassy must faithfully and
religiously conform to his instructions. This is stated in express
terms in the Apostolical commission, — ”Go and teach all nations
whatsoever things I have delivered
unto you.” Likewise “preach,” (not anything you please,) but
the “gospel.” If it is asked what the authority is with which
their successors were invested, we have the definition of Peter,
which enjoins all who speak in the Church to speak “the oracles”
of God. Now, however, those who would be thought the rulers of the
Church arrogate to themselves
a licence to speak whatsoever they please, and to insist that as soon
as they have spoken they shall be implicitly obeyed. It will be
averred that this is a calumny, and that the only right which they
assume is that of sanctioning by their authority what the Holy Spirit
has revealed. They will, accordingly, maintain that they do not
subject the consciences of believers to their own devices or caprice,
but only to the oracles of the Spirit,
which, being revealed to them, they confirm and promulgate to others.
Forsooth an ingenious pretext! No man doubts that in whatever the
Holy Spirit delivers by their hands they are to be unhesitatingly
obeyed. But when they add that they cannot deliver anything but the
genuine oracles of the Holy Spirit, because they are under his
guidance, and that all their decisions cannot but be true, because
they sit in chairs of verity, is not this just to measure their power
by their caprice? For if all their decrees, without exception, are to
be received as oracles, there is no limit to their power. What tyrant
ever so monstrously abused the patience of his subjects as to insist
that every thing he proclaimed should be received as a message from
heaven! Tyrants, no doubt, will have their edicts obeyed, be the
edicts what they may. But these men demand much more.
We
must believe that the Holy Spirit speaks when they obtrude upon us
what they have dreamed. We see, accordingly, how hard and iniquitous
the bondage is in which, when armed with this power, they have
enthralled the souls of the faithful. Laws have been piled above
laws, to be so many snares to the conscience. For they have not
confined these laws to matters of external order, but applied them to
the interior and spiritual government of the soul. And no end was
made until they amounted to that immense multitude, which now looks
not unlike a labyrinth. Indeed, some of them seem framed for the very
purpose of troubling and torturing consciences, while the observance
of them is enforced with not less strictness than if they contained
the whole substance of piety. Nay, though in regard to the violation
of the commands of God, either no question is asked, or slight
penances are inflicted, any thing done contrary to the decrees of men
requires the highest expiation. While the Church is oppressed by this
tyrannical yoke, any one who dares to say a word against it is
instantly condemned as a heretic. In short, to give vent to our grief
is a capital offense. And in order to ensure the possession of this
insufferable domination, they, by sanguinary edicts, prevent the
people from reading and understanding the Scriptures, and fulminate
against those who stir any question as to their power. This excessive
rigor increases from day to day, so that now on the subject of
religion it is scarcely permitted to make any inquiry at all. At the
time when divine truth lay buried under this vast and dense cloud of
darkness — when religion was sullied by so many impious
superstitions — when by horrid blasphemies the worship of God was corrupted,
and His glory laid prostrate — when by a multitude of perverse
opinions, the benefit of redemption was frustrated, and men,
intoxicated with a fatal confidence in works, sought salvation any
where rather than in Christ — when the administration of the
Sacraments was partly maimed and torn asunder, partly adulterated by
the admixture of numerous fictions, and partly profaned by
traffickings for gain — when the government of the Church had
degenerated into mere confusion and devastation — when those who
sat in the seat of pastors first did most vital injury to the Church
by the dissoluteness of their lives, and, secondly, exercised a cruel
and most noxious tyranny over souls, by every kind of error, leading
men like sheep to the slaughter; — then Luther arose, and after him
others, who with united counsels sought out means and methods
by which religion might be purged from all these defilements, the
doctrine of godliness restored to its integrity, and the Church
raised out of its calamitous into somewhat of a tolerable condition.
The same course we are still pursuing in the present day.
I
come now, as I proposed, to consider the remedies which we have
employed for the correction of these evils, not here intending to
describe the manner in which we proceeded, (that will afterwards be
seen,) but only to make it manifest that we have had no other end in
view than to ameliorate in some degree the very miserable condition
of the Church. Our doctrine has been assailed, and still is every
day, by many atrocious calumnies.
Some declaim loudly against it in their sermons; others attack and
traduce it in their writings. Both rake together every thing by which
they hope to bring it into disrepute among the ignorant. But the
Confession of our Faith, which we presented to your Imperial Majesty,
is before the world, and clearly testifies how undeservedly we are
harassed by so many odious accusations. And we have always been ready
in times past, as we are at the present day, to render an account of
our doctrine. In a word, there is no doctrine preached in our
churches but that which we openly profess. As to controverted points,
they are clearly and honestly explained in our Confession, while
every thing relating to them has been copiously treated and
diligently expounded by our writers. Hence judges not unjust must be
satisfied how far we are from every thing like impiety. This
much, certainly, must be clear alike to just and unjust, that our
reformers have done no small service to the Church, in stirring up
the world as from the deep darkness of ignorance, to read the
Scriptures, in laboring diligently to make them better understood,
and in happily throwing light on certain points of doctrine of the
highest practical importance.
In sermons little else was heard than old wives’ fables, and
fictions equally frivolous. The schools resounded with brawling
questions, but Scripture was seldom mentioned. Those who held the
government of the Church made it their sole care to prevent any
diminution of their gains, and, accordingly, had no difficulty in
permitting whatever tended to fill their coffers. Even the most
prejudiced, how much soever they may in other respects defame our
doctrine, admit that our people have in some degree reformed these
evils.
I
am willing, however, that all the advantage which the Church may have
derived from our labors shall have no effect in alleviating our
fault, if in any other respect we have done her injury. Therefore,
let there be an examination of our whole doctrine, of our form of
administering the sacraments, and our method of governing the Church;
and in none of these three things will it be found that we have made
any change upon the ancient
form, without attempting to restore it to the exact standard of the
Word of God.
To
return to the division which we formerly adopted. All our
controversies concerning doctrine relate either to the legitimate
worship of God, or to the ground of salvation. As to the former,
unquestionably we do exhort men to worship God neither in a frigid
nor a careless manner; and while we point out the mode, we neither
lose sight of the end, nor omit
any thing which bears upon the point. We proclaim the glory of God in
terms far loftier than it was wont to be proclaimed before, and we
earnestly labor to make the perfections in which His glory shines
better and better known. His benefits towards ourselves we extol as
eloquently as we can, while we call upon others to reverence His
Majesty, render due homage to His greatness, feel due gratitude for
His mercies, and unite in showing forth His praise. In this way there
is infused into their hearts that solid confidence which afterwards
gives birth to prayer; and in this way, too, each one is trained to
genuine self-denial, so that his will being brought into obedience to
God, he bids farewell to his own desires. In short, as God requires
us to worship Him in a spiritual manner, so we most zealously urge
men to all the spiritual sacrifices which He recommends. Even our
enemies cannot deny our assiduity in exhorting men to expect the
good
which they desire from none but God, to confide in His power, rest in
His goodness, depend on His truth, and turn to Him with the whole
heart — to recline upon Him with full hope, and recur to Him in
necessity, that is, at every moment to ascribe to Him every good
thing which we enjoy, and show we do so by open expressions of
praise. And that none may be deterred by difficulty of access, we
proclaim that a complete fountain
of blessings is opened up to us in Christ, and that out of it we may
draw for every need. Our writings are witnesses, and our sermons
witnesses, how frequent and sedulous we are in recommending true
repentance, urging men to renounce their own reason and carnal
desires, and themselves entirely, that they may be brought into
obedience to God alone, and live no longer to themselves, but to Him.
Nor, at the same time, do we overlook external duties and works of
charity, which follow on such renovation.
This, I say, is the sure and unerring form of worship, which we know
that He approves, because it is the form which His word prescribes,
and these the only sacrifices of the Christian Church which have His
sanction.
Since,
therefore, in our churches, only God is adored in pious form without
superstition, since His goodness, wisdom, power, truth, and other
perfections, are there preached more fully than any where else—since
He is invoked with true faith in the name of Christ, His mercies
celebrated both with heart and tongue, and men constantly urged to a
simple and sincere obedience; since, in fine, nothing is heard but
what tends to promote the sanctification of His name, what cause have
those who call themselves Christians to be so inveterate against us?
First, loving darkness rather than light, they cannot tolerate the
sharpness with which we, as in duty sound, rebuke the gross idolatry
which is every where beheld in the world. When God is worshipped in
images, when fictitious worship is instituted in His name, when
supplication is made to the images of saints, and divine honors paid
to dead men’s bones, against these, and similar abominations, we
protest, describing them in their true colors. For this cause, those
who hate our doctrine inveigh against us and represent us as heretics
who have dared to abolish the worship of God, as of old approved by
the Church. Concerning this name of church, which they are ever and
anon holding up before them as a kind of shield, we will shortly
speak.
Meanwhile,
how perverse, when these flagitious corruptions are manifest, not
only to defend them, but cloak their deformity, by impudently
pretending that they belong to the genuine worship of God! Both
parties confess, that in the sight of God idolatry is an execrable
crime. But when we attack the worship of images, our adversaries
immediately take the opposite side, and lend their support to the
crime which they had verbally concurred with us in condemning. Nay,
what is more ridiculous, after agreeing with us as to the term in
Greek, it is no sooner turned into Latin than their opposition
begins. For they strenuously defend the worship of images, though
they condemn idolatry — ingenious men denying that the honor which
they pay to images is worship; as if, in comparing it with ancient
idolatry, it were possible to see any difference. Idolaters pretended
that they worshipped the celestial gods, though under corporeal
figures which represented them. What else do our adversaries pretend?
But does God accept of such excuses? Did the prophets cease to rebuke
the madness of the Egyptians, when, out of the secret mysteries of
their theology, they drew subtle distinctions under which to screen
themselves? What, too, do we suppose the brazen serpent, whom the
Jews worshipped, to have been, but some thing which they honored as a
representation of God? “The Gentiles,” says Ambrose, (in Psalm
118,) “worship wood, because they think it an image of God, whereas
the invisible image of God is not in that which is seen, but specially
in that which is not seen.” And what is it that is done in the
present day? Do they not prostrate themselves before images, as if
God were present in them? Did they not suppose the power and grace of
God attached to pictures and statues, would they flee to them when
they are desirous to pray? I
have not yet adverted to the grosser superstitions, though these
cannot be confined to the ignorant, since they are approved by public
consent. They adorn their idols now with flowers and chaplets, now
with robes, vests, zones, purses, and frivolities of every kind. They
light tapers and burn incense before them, and carry them on their
shoulders in solemn state. When they pray to the image of Christopher
or Barbara, they mutter over the Lord’s Prayer and the angels’
salutation. The fairer or dingier the images are, the greater is
their excellence supposed to be. To this is added a new
recommendation from fabulous miracles. Some they pretend to have
spoken, others to have extinguished a fire in the church by trampling
on it, others to have removed of their own accord to a new abode,
others to have drop from heaven. While the whole world teems with
these and similar delusions, and the fact is perfectly notorious, we,
who have brought back the worship of the one God to the rule of his
Word, we, who are blameless in
this matter, and have purged our churches, not only of idolatry but
of superstition also, are accused of violating the worship of God,
because we have discarded the worship of images, that is, as we call
it, idolatry, but as our adversaries will have it, idolodulia.
But, besides the clear testimonies which are everywhere met with in
Scripture, we are also supported by the authority of the ancient
Church.
All
the writers of a purer age describe the abuse of images among the
Gentiles as not differing from what is seen in the world in the
present day; and their observations on the subject are not less
applicable to the present age than to the persons whom they then
censured. As to the charge which they bring against us for discarding
images, as well as the bones and relics of saints, it is easily
answered. For none of these things ought to be valued at more than
the brazen serpent, and the reasons for removing them were not less
valid than those of Hezekiah for breaking it. It is certain that the
idolomania, with which the minds of men are now fascinated, cannot be
cured otherwise than by removing bodily the source of the
infatuation. And we have too much experience of the absolute truth
of St Augustine’s sentiment, “No man prays
or worships looking on an image without being impressed with the idea
that it is listening to him.” (Ephesians 4:9.) And,
likewise, (in Psalm 115:4,) “Images, from having a mouth, eyes,
ears, and feet, are more effectual to mislead an unhappy soul than to
correct it, because they neither speak, nor see, nor hear, nor walk.”
Also, “The effect in a manner extorted by the external shape is,
that the soul living in a body, thinks a body which it sees so very
like its own must have similar powers of perception.” As to the
matter of relics, it is almost incredible how impudently the world
has been cheated. I can mention three relics of our Savior’s
circumcision; likewise fourteen nails which are exhibited for the
three by which he was fixed to the cross; three robes for that
seamless one on which the soldiers cast lots; two inscriptions that
were placed over the cross; three spears by which our Savior’s side
was pierced,
and about five sets of linen clothes which wrapt his body in the
tomb. Besides, they show all the articles used at the institution of
the Lord’s Supper, and an infinite number of similar impositions.
There is no saint of any celebrity of whom two or three bodies are
not in existence. I can name the place where a piece of pumice stone
was long held in high veneration as the skull of Peter. Decency will
not permit me to mention fouler
exhibitions? Undeservedly, therefore, are we blamed for having
studied to purify the Church of God from such pollutions. In
regard to the worship of God, our adversaries next accuse us,
because, omitting empty and childish observances, tending only to
hypocrisy, we worship God more simply. That we have in no respect
detracted from the spiritual worship of God, is attested by fact.
Nay, when it had in a great measure gone into desuetude, we have
reinstated it in its former rights. Let us now see whether the
offense taken at us is just. In regard to doctrine, I maintain that
we make common cause with the prophets. For, next to idolatry, there
is nothing for which they rebuke the people more sharply than for
falsely imagining that the worship of God consisted in external show.
For what is the sum of their declarations? That God dwells not, and
sets no value on ceremonies considered only in themselves, that he
looks to the faith and truth of the heart, and that the only end for
which he commanded, and for which he approves them, is, that they may
be pure exercises of faith, and prayer, and praise. The writings of
all the prophets are
full of attestations to this effect. Nor, as I have observed, was
there any thing for which they labored more. Now, it cannot, without
effrontery, be denied, that when our Reformers appeared, the world
was more than ever smitten with this blindness. It was therefore
absolutely necessary to urge men with these prophetical rebukes, and
draw them off, as by force, from that infatuation, that they might no
longer imagine that God was satisfied with naked ceremonies, as
children are with shows. There was a like necessity for urging the
doctrine of the spiritual worship of God — a doctrine which had
almost vanished from the minds of men. That both of these things have
been faithfully performed by us in times past, and still are, both
our writings and our sermons clearly prove. In inveighing against
ceremonies themselves, and also in abrogating a great part of them,
we confess that there is some difference between us and the prophets.
They inveighed against their countrymen for confining the worship of
God to external ceremonies; but still ceremonies which God himself
had instituted; we complain that the same honor is paid to
frivolities of man’s devising. They, while condemning superstition,
left untouched a multitude of ceremonies which God had enjoined, and
which were useful and appropriate to an age of tutelage; our business
has been to correct numerous rites which had either crept in through
oversight, or been turned to abuse; and which, moreover, by no means
accorded with the time. For, if we would not throw every thing into
confusion, we must never lose sight of the distinction between the
old and the new dispensations,
and of the fact that ceremonies, the observance of which was useful
under the law, are now not only superfluous, but vicious and absurd.
When Christ was absent and not yet manifested, ceremonies, by
shadowing him forth, cherished the hope of his advent in the breasts
of believers; but now that his glory is present and conspicuous, they
only obscure it. And we see what God himself has done. For those
ceremonies which He had commanded for a time He has now abrogated
forever. Paul explains the reason, — first, that since the body has
been manifested in Christ, the types have, of course, been withdrawn;
and, secondly, that God is now pleased to instruct his Church after a
different manner, (Galatians 4:5; Colossians 2:4, 14, 17). Since,
then, God has freed his Church from the bondage which he had imposed
upon it, can anything, I ask, be more perverse than for men to
introduce a new bondage in place of the old? Since God has prescribed
a certain economy, how presumptuous to set up one which is contrary
to it, and openly
repudiated
by Him! But the worst of all is, that though God has so often and so
strictly interdicted all modes of worship prescribed by man, the only
worship paid to him consisted of human inventions. What ground, then,
have our enemies to vociferate that in this matter we have given
religion to the winds? First, we have not laid even a finger on
anything which Christ does not discountenance as of no value, when he
declares that it is vain to worship God with human traditions. The
thing might, perhaps, have been more tolerable if the only effect had
been that men lost their pains by an unavailing worship; but since as
I have observed God in many passages forbids any new worship
unsanctioned by his Word; since he declares that he is grievously
offended with the presumption which invents such worship, and
threatens it with severe punishment, it is clear that the reformation
which we have introduced was demanded by a strong necessity. I
am not unaware how difficult it is to persuade the world that God
rejects and even abominates every thing relating to his worship that
is devised by human reason. The delusion on this head is owing to
several causes, — “Every one thinks highly of his own,” as the
old proverb expresses it. Hence the offspring of our own brain
delights us, and besides, as Paul admits, this fictitious worship
often presents some show of wisdom.
Then,
as it has for the most part an external splendor which pleases the
eye, it is more agreeable to our carnal nature, than that which alone
God requires and approves, but which is less ostentatious. But there
is nothing which so blinds the understandings of men, and misleads
them in their judgments in this matter, as hypocrisy. For while it is
incumbent on true worshippers to give the heart and mind, men are
always desirous to invent a mode of serving God of a totally
different description, their object being to perform to him certain
bodily observances, and keep the mind to themselves. Moreover, they
imagine that when they obtrude upon him external pomp, they have, by
this artifice, evaded the necessity of giving themselves. And this is
the reason why they submit to innumerable observances which miserably
fatigue them without measure and without end,
and why they choose to wander in a perpetual labyrinth, rather than
worship God simply in spirit and in truth. It
is mere calumny, then, in our enemies to accuse us of alluring men by
facilities and indulgence. For were the option given, there is
nothing which the carnal man would not prefer to do rather than
consent to worship God as prescribed by our doctrine. It is easy to
use the words faith and repentance, but the things are most difficult
to perform. He, therefore, who makes the worship of God consist in
these, by no means loosens the reins
of discipline, but compels men to the course which they are most
afraid to take. Of this we have most pregnant proof from fact. Men
will allow themselves to be astricted by numerous severe laws, to be
obliged to numerous laborious observances, to wear a severe and heavy
yoke; in short, there is no annoyance to which they will not submit,
provided there is no mention of the heart. Hence, it appears, that
there is nothing to which the human mind is more averse than to that
spiritual truth which is the constant topic of our sermons, and
nothing with which it is more engrossed than that splendid glare on
which our adversaries so strongly insist. The very Majesty of God
extorts this much from us, that we are unable to withdraw entirely
from his service. Therefore, as we cannot evade the necessity of
worshipping him, our only remaining course is to seek out indirect
substitutes that we may not be obliged to come directly into his
presence; or rather, by means of external ceremonies, like specious
masks, we hide the inward malice of the heart, and, in order that we
may not be forced to give it to him, interpose bodily observances,
like a wall of partition. It is with the greatest reluctance that the
world allows itself to be driven from such subterfuges as these; and
hence the outcry against us for having dragged them out into the open
light of day, out of their lurking places, where they securely
sported with God. In prayer there are three things which we have
corrected. Discarding the intercession of saints, we have brought men
back to Christ, that they might learn both to invoke the Father in
his name, and trust in him as Mediator, and we have taught them to
pray, first, with firm and solid confidence, and, secondly, with
understanding also, instead of continuing as formerly to mutter over
confused prayers in an unknown tongue. Here we are assailed with
bitter reproaches as at once acting contumeliously towards the
saints, and defrauding believers of an invaluable privilege. Both
charges we deny. It is no injury to saints not to permit the office
of Christ to be attributed to them, and there is no honor of which we
deprive them, save that which was improperly and rashly bestowed upon
them by human error. I will not mention anything which may not be
pointed to with the finger. First, when men are about to pray, they
imagine God to be at a great distance, and that they cannot have
access to him without the guidance of some patron. Nor is this false
opinion current among the rude and unlearned only, but even those who
would be thought leaders of the blind entertain it. Then, in looking
out for patrons, every one follows his own fancy. One selects Mary,
another Michael, another Peter. Christ they very seldom honor with a
place in the list. Nay, there is scarcely one in a hundred who would
not be amazed, as at some new prodigy, were he to hear Christ named
as an intercessor. Therefore, passing by Christ, they all trust to
the patronage of saints. Then the superstition creeps in farther and farther,
till they invoke the saints promiscuously, just as they do God. I
admit, indeed, that when they desire to speak more definitely, all
they ask of the saints is to assist them before God with their
prayers. But more frequently, confounding this distinction, they
address and implore at one time God, and at another the saints, just
according to the impulse of the moment. Nay, each saint has a
peculiar province allotted to him. One gives rain, another fair
weather, one delivers from fever, another from shipwreck. But, to say
nothing of these profane heathen delusions which everywhere prevail
in churches, this one impiety may suffice for all, that the great
body of mankind, in inviting intercessors from this quarter and from
that, neglect Christ, the only one whom God has set forth, and
confide less in the Divine protection than in the patronage of
saints. But our censurers, even those of them who have somewhat more
regard to equity, blame us for excess in having discarded entirely
from our prayers the mention of dead saints. But will they tell me
wherein, according to their view, lies the sin of faithfully
observing the rule laid down by Christ, the Supreme Teacher, and by
the Prophets and Apostles, and of not omitting any thing which either
the Holy Spirit has taught in Scripture, or the servants of God have
practiced from the beginning of the world down to the days of the
Apostles? There is scarcely any subject on which the Holy Spirit more
carefully prescribes than on the proper method of prayer; but there
is not a syllable which teaches us to have recourse to the assistance
of dead saints. Many of the prayers offered up by believers are
extant. In none of them is there even a single example of such
recourse.
Sometimes,
indeed, the Israelites entreated God to remember Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, and David likewise. But all they meant by such expressions
was, that he should be mindful of the covenant which he had made with
them, and bless their posterity according to his promise. For the
covenant of grace, which was ultimately to be ratified in Christ,
those holy patriarchs had received in their own name, and in that of
their posterity. Wherefore, the faithful of the Israelitish Church do
not, by such mention of the patriarchs, seek intercession from the
dead, but simply appeal to the promise which had been deposited with
them until it should be fully ratified in the hand of Christ. How
extravagant, then, and infatuated, to abandon the form of prayer
which the Lord has recommended,
and without any injunction, and with no example, to introduce into
prayer the intercession of saints? But briefly to conclude this
point, I take my stand on the declaration of Paul, that no prayer is
genuine which springs not from faith, and that faith cometh by the
Word of God, (Romans 10:14.) In these words he has if I mistake not, distinctly
intimated that the Word of God is the only sure foundation for
prayer. And while he elsewhere says, that every action of our lives
should be preceded by faith, i.e., a conscientious assurance, he
shows that this is specially requisite in prayer, more so, indeed,
than in any other employment. It is, however, still more conclusive
of the point, when he declares that prayer depends on the Word of
God. For it is just as if he had prohibited all men from opening
their mouths until such time as God puts words into them. This is our
wall of brass, which all the powers of hell will in vain attempt to
break down. Since, then, there exists a clear command to invoke God
only; since, again, one Mediator is proposed, whose intercession must
support our prayers; since a promise has, moreover,
been added, that whatever we ask in the name of Christ we shall
obtain, men must pardon us, if we follow the certain truth of God, in
preference to their frivolous fictions. It is surely incumbent on
those who, in their prayers, introduce the intercession of the dead,
that they may thereby be assisted more easily to obtain what they
ask, to prove one of two things, — either that they are so taught
by the Word of God, or that men have licence to pray as they please.
But in regard to the former, it is plain that they are destitute of
authority from the Scriptures, as well as of any approved example of
such intercession, while, as to the latter, Paul declares that none
can invoke God, save those who have been taught by his Word to pray.
On this depends the confidence with which it becomes pious minds to
be actuated and imbued when they engage in prayer. The men of the
world supplicate God, dubious, meanwhile, of success. For they
neither rely upon the promise, nor perceive the force of what is
meant by having a Mediator through whom they will assuredly obtain
what they ask. Moreover, God enjoins us to come free from doubt,
(Matthew 21:22.) Accordingly, prayer proceeding from true faith
obtains favor with God; whereas prayer accompanied with distrust
rather alienates Him from us. For this is the proper mark which
discriminates between genuine invocation and the profane wandering
prayers of the heathen. And, indeed, where faith is wanting, prayer
ceases to be divine worship. It is to this James refers when he says,
“If any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God;
but let him ask in faith, doubting nothing. For he that doubteth is
like a wave of the sea, driven with the winds, and tossed,” (James
1:6.)
It
is not surprising that he who has no interest in Christ, the true
Mediator, thus fluctuates in uncertainty and distrust. For, as Paul
declares it is through Christ only that we have boldness and access
with confidence to the Father. We have, therefore, taught men when
brought to Christ no longer to doubt and waver in their prayers, as
they were wont to do, but to rest secure in the word of the Lord, a
word which, when it once penetrates
the soul, drives far from it all dubiety, which is repugnant to
faith. It
remains to point out the third fault in prayer, which I said that we
have corrected. Whereas men generally prayed in an unknown tongue, we
have taught them to pray with understanding. Every man, accordingly,
is taught by our doctrine to know, when he prays in private, what it
is he asks of God, while the public prayers in our churches are
framed so as to be understood by all. And it is the dictate of
natural reason that it should be so, even if God had given no precept
on the subject. For the design of prayer
is to make God the conscious witness of our necessities, and as it
were to pour out our hearts before him. But nothing is more at
variance with this design than to move the tongue without thought and
intelligence. And yet, to such a degree of absurdity had it come,
that to pray in the vulgar tongue was almost regarded as an offense
against religion. I can name an Archbishop who threatened with
incarceration, and the severer penances,
the person who should repeat the Lord’s Prayer aloud in any
language but Latin. The general belief, however, was, that it
mattered not in what language a man prayed at home, provided he had
what was called a final intention directed to prayer; but that in
churches the dignity of the service required that Latin should be the
only language in which prayers were couched.
There
seems, as I lately observed, something monstrous in this
determination to hold converse with God in sounds which fall without
meaning from the tongue. Even if God did not declare his displeasure,
nature herself, without a monitor, rejects it. Besides, it is easy to
infer from the whole tenor of Scripture how deeply God abominates
such an invention.
As to the public prayers of the Church, the words of Paul are clear —
the unlearned cannot say Amen if the benediction is pronounced in an
unknown tongue. And this makes it the more strange, that those who
first introduced this perverse practice, ultimately had the
effrontery to maintain, that the very thing which Paul regards as
ineffably absurd, was conducive to the majesty of prayer. The method
by which, in our churches,
all pray in common in the popular tongue, and males and females
indiscriminately sing the Psalms, our adversaries may ridicule if
they will, provided the Holy Spirit bears testimony to us from
heaven, while he repudiates the confused, unmeaning sounds which are
uttered elsewhere. In the second principal branch of doctrine, viz.,
that which relates to the ground of salvation, and the method of
obtaining it, many questions are involved: For, when we tell a man to
seek righteousness and life out of himself, i.e., in Christ only,
because he has nothing in himself but sin and death, a controversy
immediately arises with reference to the freedom and powers of the
will. For, if man has any ability of his own to serve God, he does
not obtain salvation entirely by the grace of Christ, but in part
bestows it on himself. On the other hand, if the whole of salvation
is attributed to the grace of Christ, man has no thing left, has no
virtue of his own
by which he can assist himself to procure salvation. But though our
opponents concede that man, in every good deed, is assisted by the
Holy Spirit, they nevertheless claim for him a share in the
operation. This they do, because they perceive not how deep the wound
is which was inflicted on our nature by the fall of our first
parents. No doubt, they agree with us in holding the doctrine of
original sin, but they afterwards modify its effects,
maintaining that the powers of man are only weakened, not wholly
depraved. Their view, accordingly, is, that man, being tainted with
original corruption, is, in consequence of the weakening of his
powers, unable to act aright; but that, being aided by the grace of
God, he has something of his own, and from himself, which he is able
to contribute. We, again, though we deny not that man acts
spontaneously, and of free will, when he is guided by the Holy
Spirit, maintain that his whole nature is so imbued with depravity,
that of himself he possesses no ability whatever to act aright. Thus
far, therefore, do we dissent from those who oppose our doctrine,
that while they neither humble man sufficiently, nor duly estimate
the blessing of regeneration, we lay him completely prostrate, that
he may become sensible of his utter insufficiency in regard to
spiritual righteousness, and learn to seek it, not partially, but
wholly, from God. To some not very equitable judges, we seem,
perhaps, to carry the matter too far; but there is nothing absurd in
our doctrine, or at variance either with Scripture or with the
general consent of the ancient Church. Nay, we are able, without any
difficulty, to confirm our doctrine to the very letter out of the
mouth of Augustine; and, accordingly, several of those who are
otherwise disaffected to our cause, but somewhat sounder in their judgments,
do not venture to contradict us on this head. It is certain, as I
have already observed, that we differ from others only in this, that
by convincing man of his poverty and powerlessness, we train him more
effectually to true humility, leading him to renounce all
self-confidence, and throw himself entirely upon God; and that, in
like manner, we train him more effectually to gratitude, by leading
him to ascribe, as in truth he ought, every good thing which he
possesses to the kindness of God. They, on the other hand,
intoxicating him with a perverse opinion of his own virtue,
precipitate his ruin, inflating him with impious arrogance against
God, to whom he ascribes the glory of his justification in no greater
degree than to himself. To these errors they add a third, viz., that,
in all their discussions concerning the corruption of human nature,
they usually stop short at the grosser carnal desires, without
touching on deeper-seated and more
deadly diseases; and hence it is, that those who are trained in their
school easily forgive themselves the foulest sins, as no sins at all,
provided they are hid.
The
next question relates to the value and merit of works. We both render
to good works their due praise, and we deny not that a reward is
reserved for them with God; but we take three exceptions, on which
the whole of our remaining controversy concerning the work of
salvation hinges. First,
we maintain, that of what description soever any man’s works may
be, he is regarded as righteous before God, simply on the footing of
gratuitous mercy; because God, without any respect to works, freely
adopts him in Christ, by imputing the righteousness of Christ to him,
as if it were his own. This we call the righteousness of faith, viz.,
when a man, made void and empty of all confidence in works, feels
convinced that the only ground of his acceptance with God is a
righteousness which is wanting to himself, and is sorrowed from
Christ. The point on which the world always goes astray, (for this
error has prevailed in almost every age,) is in imagining that man,
however partially defective he may be, still in some degree merits
the favor of God by works. But Scripture declares, “Cursed is every
one that continueth not in all things that are written in the book of
the law to do them.” Under this curse must necessarily lie all who
are judged by works — none being exempted save those who entirely
renounce all confidence in works, and put on Christ, that they may be
justified in Him, by the gratuitous acceptance of God. The ground of
our justification, therefore, is, that God reconciles us to himself,
from regard not to our works, but to Christ alone, and, by gratuitous
adoption, makes us, instead of children of wrath, to be his own
children. So long as God looks to our works, he perceives no reason
why he ought to love us.
Wherefore,
it is necessary to bury our sins, and impute to us the obedience of
Christ, (because the only obedience which can stand his scrutiny,)
and adopt us as righteous through His merits. This is the clear and
uniform doctrine of Scripture, “witnessed,” as Paul says, “by
the law and the prophets,” (Romans 3:21;) and so explained by the
gospel, that a clearer law cannot be desired. Paul contrasts the
righteousness of the law with the righteousness of the gospel,
placing the former in works, and the latter in the grace of Christ,
(Romans 10:5, etc.) He does not divide it into two halves, giving
works the one, and Christ the other; but he ascribes it to Christ
entirely, that we are judged righteous in the sight of God. There
are here two questions; first, whether the glory of our salvation is
to be divided between ourselves and God: and, secondly, whether, as
in the sight of God, our conscience can with safety put any
confidence in works. On the former question, Paul’s decision is —
let every mouth “be stopped, and the whole world become guilty
before God.” “All have sinned, and come short of the glory of God
— being justified freely by His grace, through the redemption that
is in Christ Jesus;” and that “to declare His righteousness, that
he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus,”
(Romans 3:19, etc.) We simply follow this definition, while our
opponents maintain that man is not justified by the grace of God, in
any sense which does not reserve part of the praise for his own
works.
On
the second question, Paul reasons thus: “If
they which are of the law be heirs, faith is made void, and the
promise made of none effect.” Whence he concludes “it
is of faith,” “to the end the promise might be sure to all the
seed,” (Romans 4:14, 16.) And again, “Being
justified by faith, we have peace with God,” (Romans 5:1;) and
no longer dread His presence. And he intimates that every one feels
in his own experience, that our consciences cannot but be in
perpetual disquietude and fluctuation, so long as we look for
protection from works, and that we enjoy serene and placid
tranquillity then only, when we have recourse to Christ as the only
haven of true confidence. We add nothing to Paul’s
doctrine; but that restless dubiety of conscience, which he regards
as absurd, is placed by our opponents among the primary axioms of
their faith.
The
second exception which we take relates to the remission of sins. Our
opponents, not being able to deny that men, during their whole lives
walk haltingly, and often times even fall, are obliged, whether they
will or not, to confess that all need pardon, in order to supply
their want of righteousness. But then they have imaginary
satisfactions, by means of which those who have sinned purchase back
the favor of God. In this class, they place first contrition, and
next works, which they term works of supererogation, and penances,
which God inflicts on sinners. But, as they are still sensible that
these compensations fall far short of the just measure required, they
call in the aid of a new species of satisfaction from another
quarter, namely, from the benefit of the keys. And they say, that by
the keys the treasury of the Church is unlocked, and what is wanting
to ourselves supplied out of the merits of Christ and the saints. We,
on the contrary, maintain that the sins of men are forgiven freely,
and we acknowledge no other satisfaction than that which Christ
accomplished, when, by the sacrifice of his death, he expiated our
sins. Therefore, we preach that it is the purchase of Christ alone
which reconciles us to God, and that no compensations are taken into
account, because our heavenly Father contented with the sole
expiation of Christ, requires none from us.
In
the Scriptures we have clear proof of this our doctrine, which,
indeed, ought to be called not ours, but rather that of the Church
Catholic. For the only method of regaining the divine favor, set
forth by the Apostle, is, that “He hath made
him to be sin for us who knew no sin, that we might be made the
righteousness of God in him,” (2
Corinthians 5:21.) And in another passage, where he is
speaking of the remission of sins, he declares that through it
righteousness without works is imputed to us, (Romans 6:5). We,
therefore, strenuously, yet truly, maintain that their idea of
meriting reconciliation with God by satisfactions, and buying off the
penalties due to his justice, is execrable blasphemy, in as much as
it destroys the doctrine which Isaiah delivers concerning Christ —
that “the chastisement of our peace was upon
Him,” (Isaiah 53:5)
The
absurd fiction concerning works of supererogation we discard for many
reasons; but there are two of more than sufficient weight — the
one, that it is impossible to tolerate the idea of man being able to
perform to God more than he ought; and the other, that as by the term
supererogation, they for the most part understand voluntary acts of
worship which their own brain has devised, and which they obtrude
upon God, it is lost labor and pains, so far are such acts from
having any title to be regarded as expiations which appease the
divine anger. Moreover, that mixing up of the blood of Christ with
the blood of martyrs, and forming out of them a heterogeneous mass of
merits or satisfactions, to buy off the punishments due to sin, are
things which we have not tolerated, and which we ought not to
tolerate. For, as Augustine says, (Tract. in Joan. 84,)
“No martyr’s blood has been shed for the remission of sins. This
was the work of Christ alone, and in this work he has bestowed not a
thing which we should imitate, but one we should gratefully receive.”
With Augustine Leo admirably accords, when he thus writes, (Ep.
81, item, 97,) “Though precious in the sight of God has been
the death of his many saints, yet no innocent
man’s slaughter was the propitiation of the world; the just
received crowns, did not give them, and the constancy of the faithful
has furnished examples of patience, not gifts of righteousness.”
Our
third and last exception relates to the recompence of works — we
maintaining that it depends not on their own value or merit, but
rather on the mere benignity of God. Our opponents, indeed, admit
that there is no proportion between the merit of the work and its
reward; but they do not attend to what is of primary moment in the
matter, viz., that the good works of believers are never so pure as
that they can please without pardon. They consider not, I say, that
they are always sprinkled with some spots or blemishes, because they
never proceed from that pure and perfect love of God which is
demanded by the Law. Our doctrine, therefore, is, that the good works
of believers are always devoid of a spotless purity which can stand
the inspection of God; nay, that when they are tried by the strict
rule of justice, they are, to a certain extent, impure. But, when
once God has graciously adopted believers, he not only accepts and
loves their persons, but their works also, and condescends to honor
them with a reward. In one word, as we said of man, so we may say of
works, — they are justified not by their own desert, but by the
merits of Christ alone; the faults by which they would otherwise
displease being covered by the sacrifice of Christ. This
consideration is of very great practical importance, both in
retaining men in the fear of God, that they may not arrogate to their
works that which proceeds from his fatherly kindness; and also in
inspiring them with the best consolation, and so preventing them from
giving way to despondency, when they reflect on the imperfection or
impurity of their works, by reminding them that God, of his paternal
indulgence, is pleased to pardon it. Having considered the two
principal heads of doctrine, we come now to the Sacraments, in which
we have not made any correction which we are unable to defend by sure
and approved authority. Whereas, seven sacraments were supposed to
have been instituted by Christ, we have discarded five of the number,
and have demonstrated them to be ceremonies of man’s devising, with
the exception of marriage, which we acknowledge to have been indeed
commanded by God, but not in order that it might be a sacrament. Nor
is it a dispute about nothing when we separate
rites thus superadded on the part of men, though, in other respects,
they should be neither wicked nor useless, from those symbols which
Christ with his own lips committed to us and was pleased to make the
testimonials of spiritual gifts, — gifts to which, as they are not
in the power of man, men have no right to testify. It is assuredly no
vulgar matter to seal upon our hearts the sacred favor of God, to
offer Christ, and give a visible representation of the blessings
which we enjoy in him. This being the office of the sacraments, not
to discriminate between them and rites originating with man, is to
confound heaven with earth. Here, indeed, a twofold error had
prevailed. Making no distinction between things human and divine,
they derogated exceedingly from the sacred Word of God, on which the
whole power of the sacraments depends, while they also
falsely imagined Christ to be the author of rites which had no higher
than a human origin. From
baptism, in like manner, have we rescinded many additions which were
partly useless, and partly, from their superstitious tendency,
noxious. We know the form of baptism which the apostles received from
Christ, which they observed during their lifetime, and which they
finally left to posterity. But the simplicity which had been approved
by the authority of Christ, and the practice of the apostles, did not
satisfy succeeding
ages. I am not at present discussing whether those persons were
influenced by sound reasons, who afterwards added chrism, salt,
spittle, and tapers. I only say, what every one must know, that to
such a height had superstition or folly risen, that more value was
set on these additions than on the genuineness of baptism itself. We
have studied also to banish the preposterous confidence which stopped
short at the external acts and paid not the least regard to Christ.
For, as well in the schools as in sermons, they so extolled the
efficacy of signs, that, instead of directing men to Christ, they
taught them to confide in the visible elements. Lastly, we have
brought into our Churches the ancient custom of accompanying the
administration of the sacraments with an explanation of the doctrine
contained in it, and at the same time expounding with all diligence
and fidelity both their advantages and their legitimate use; so that,
in this respect,
even our opponents cannot find any ground of censure. But nothing is
more alien to the nature of a sacrament than to set before the people
an empty spectacle, unaccompanied with explanation of the mystery.
There is a well known passage quoted by Gratian out of Augustine —
“If the word is wanting, the water is nothing but an element.”
What he means by word he immediately explains when he says, “That
is, the word of faith which we preach.” Our opponents, therefore,
ought not to think it a novelty when we disapprove of mere exhibition
of the mystery. For this is a sacrilegious divorce, which reverses
the order instituted by Christ. Another additional fault in the mode
of administration,
commonly used elsewhere, is that the thing which they consider as a
religious act is not understood, just as is the case in the
performance of magical incantations. I have already observed, that
the other sacrament of the Christian Church, the
Holy Supper of our Lord, was not only corrupted, but nearly
abolished. Wherefore it was the more necessary for us to labor in
restoring its purity. First, it was necessary to eradicate from the
minds of men that impious fiction of sacrifice, the source of many
absurdities. For, besides the introduction of a rite of oblation in
opposition to the express institution
of Christ, there had been added a most pestilential opinion, that
this act of oblation was an expiation for sin. Thus, the dignity of
the priesthood, which belonged exclusively to Christ, had been
transferred to mortal men, and the virtue of his death to their own
act. Thus, also, it had come to be applied in behalf of the living
and the dead. We have, therefore, abrogated that fictitious
immolation and restored communion, which had been in a very great
measure obsolete. For, provided men went once a year to
the Lord’s Table, they thought it enough, for all the remainder of
that period, to be spectators of what was done by the priest, under
the pretext, indeed, of administering the Lord’s Supper, but
without any vestige of the Supper in it. For what are the words of
the Lord? Take, says he, and distribute among yourselves. But in the
mass, instead of taking, there is a pretense of offering, while there
are no distributions and even no invitation. The priest, like a
member cut off from the rest of the body, prepares it for himself
alone. How immense the difference between the things! We have,
besides, restored to the people the use of the cup, which, though it
was not only permitted, but committed to them by our Lord, was taken
from them (it could only be) at the suggestion of Satan. Of ceremonies,
there are numbers which we have discarded, partly because they had
multiplied out of measure, partly because some savored too much of
Judaism, and others, the inventions of ignorant men, ill accorded
with the gravity of so high a mystery. But, granting that there was
no other evil in them than that they had crept in through oversight,
was it not a sufficient ground for their abolition that we saw the
vulgar gazing upon them in stupid amazement?
In
condemning the fiction of transubstantiation, and like wise the
custom of keeping and carrying about the bread, we were impelled by a
stronger necessity. First, it is repugnant to the plain words of
Christ; and, secondly, it is abhorrent to the very nature of a
sacrament. For there is no sacrament where there is no visible symbol
to correspond to the spiritual truth which it represents. And with
regard to the Supper, what Paul says is
clear, — “We being many are one bread, and
one body: for we are all partakers of that one bread,” (1
Corinthians 10:17.) Where is the analogy or similitude of a
visible sign in the Supper to correspond to the body and blood of our
Lord, if it is neither bread that we eat,
nor wine that we drink, but only some empty phantom that mocks the
eye? Add that to this fiction a worse superstition perpetually
adheres, viz., that men cling to that bread as if to God, and worship
it as God, in the manner in which we have seen it done. While the
sacrament ought to have been a means of raising pious minds to
heaven, the sacred symbols of the Supper were abused to an entirely
different purpose, and men, contented with gazing upon them and
worshipping them, never once thought of Christ. The carrying about
of the bread in solemn state, or setting it on an elevated spot to be
adored, are corruptions altogether inconsistent with the institution
of Christ. For in the Supper the Lord sets before us his body and
bloods but it is in order that we may eat and drink. Accordingly, he,
in the first place, gives the command, by which he bids us take, eat,
and drink,
and then he, in the next place, subjoins and annexes the promise, in
which he testifies, that what we eat is his body, and what we drink
is his blood. Those, therefore, who either keep the bread set apart,
or who carry it about to be worshipped, seeing they separate the
promise from the command, in other words, sever an indissoluble tie,
imagine, indeed, that they have the body of Christ, whereas, in fact,
they have nothing but an idol which they have devised for themselves.
For this promise of Christ, by which he offers his own body and blood
under the symbols of bread and wine, belongs to those only who
receive them at his hand, to celebrate the mystery in the manner
which he enjoins; while to those who at their own hand pervert them
to a different purpose, and so have not the promise, there remains
nothing but their own dream.
Lastly,
we have revived the practice of explaining the doctrine and unfolding
the mystery to the people; whereas, formerly, the priest not only
used a strange tongue, but muttered in a whisper the words by which
he pretended to consecrate the bread and wine. Here our censurers
have nothing to carp at, unless it be at our having simply followed
the command of Christ. For he did not by a tacit exorcism command the
bread to become his body, but with clear voice declared to his
apostles that he gave them his
body. At
the same time, as in the case of Baptism, so also in the case of the
Lord’s Supper, we explain to the people faithfully, and as
carefully as we can, its end, efficacy, advantages, and use. First,
we exhort all to come with faith, that by means of it they may
inwardly discern the thing which is visibly represented, viz., the
spiritual food by which alone their souls are nourished unto life
eternal. We hold, that in this ordinance the Lord does
not promise or figure by signs, any thing which he does not exhibit
in reality; and we, therefore, preach that the body and blood of
Christ are both observed to us by the Lord in the Supper, and
received by us. Nor do we thus teach that the bread and wine are
symbols, without immediately adding that there is a truth which is
conjoined with them, and which they represent. We are not silent in
proclaiming what, and how excellent the fruit
is which thence redounds to us and how noble the pledge of life and
salvation which our consciences therein receive. None, indeed, who
have any candor will deny, that with us this solemn ordinance is much
more clearly explained, and its dignity more fully extolled, than is
ever done elsewhere.
In
the government of the Church we do not differ from others in anything
for which we cannot give a most sufficient reason. The pastoral
office we have restored, both according to the apostolic rule, and
the practice of the primitive church, by insisting that every one who
rules in the Church shall also teach. We hold that none are to be
continued in the office but those who are diligent in performing its
duties. In selecting them our advice has been, that more care and
religion should be exercised, and we have ourselves
studied so to act. It is well known what kind of examination bishops
exercise by means of their suffragans or vicars, and we might even be
able to conjecture what its nature is from the fruit which it
produces. It is needless to observe how many lazy and
good-for-nothing persons they every where promote to the honor of the
priesthood. Among us should some ministers be found of no great
learning, still none is admitted who is not at least tolerably apt to
teach. That all are not more perfect is to be imputed more to the
calamity of the times than to us. This, however, is, and always will
be, our just boast, that the ministers of our Church cannot seem to
have been carelessly chosen if they are compared with others. But
while we are superior in a considerable degree in the matter of trial
and election, in this we particularly excel, that no man holds the
pastoral office amongst us without executing its duties. Accordingly,
none of our churches is seen without the ordinary preaching of the
Word.
As
it would shame our adversaries to deny these facts, (for in a matter
so clear, what could they gain by the denial?) they quarrel with us,
first, concerning the right and power, and, secondly, concerning the
form of ordination. They quote ancient canons, which give the
superintendence of this matter to the bishops and clergy. They allege
a constant succession by which this right has been handed down to
them, even from the apostles themselves. They deny that it can be
lawfully transferred elsewhere. I wish they had, by their merit,
retained a title to this boasted possession. But if we consider,
first, the order in which for several ages bishops have been advanced
to this dignity, next, the manner in which they conduct themselves in
it, and, lastly, the kind of persons whom they are accustomed to
ordain, and to whom they commit the government of churches, we shall
see that this succession on which they pride themselves was long ago
interrupted. The ancient canons require, that he who is to be
admitted to the office of bishop or presbyters shall previously
undergo a strict examination, both as to life and doctrine. Clear
evidence of this is extant among the acts of the fourth African
Council. Moreover, the magistracy and people had a discretionary
power (arbitrium) of approving or
refusing the individual who was nominated by the clergy, in order
that no man might be intruded on the unwilling or not consenting.
“Let him who is to preside over all,” (says Leo, Ep. 90.,) “be
elected by all; for he who is appointed, while unknown and
unexamined, must of necessity be violently intruded.” Again, (Ep.
77.,) “Let regard be had to the attestation of the honorable, the
subscription of the clergy, and the consent of the magistracy and
people. Reason permits not any other mode of procedure.” Cyprian
also contends for the very same thing, and, indeed, in stronger
terms, affirming it as sanctioned by Divine authority, that the
priest be elected in presence of the people, before the eyes of all,
that he may be approved as fit and worthy by the testimony of all.
This rule was in force for a short time while the state of the church
was tolerable; for the letters of Gregory are full of passages which
show that it was carefully observed in his day.
As
the Holy Spirit in Scripture imposes on all bishops the necessity of
teaching, so in the ancient church it would have been thought
monstrous to nominate a bishop who should not, by teaching,
demonstrate that he was a pastor also. Nor were they admitted to the
office on any other condition. The same rule prevailed in regard to
presbyters, each being set apart to a particular parish. Hence those
decrees, “Let them not involve themselves in secular affairs, let
them not make distant excursions from their churches, let
them not be long absent.” Then it was enjoined by synodal decrees,
that at the ordination of a bishop all the other bishops of the
province should assemble, or if that could not be conveniently done,
at least three should be present. And the object of this was, that no
man might force an entrance by tumult, or creep in by stealth, or
insinuate himself by indirect artifices. In the ordination of a
presbyter, each bishop admitted a council of his own presbyters.
These things, which might be narrated more fully, and confirmed more
accurately in a set discourse, I here only mention in passing,
because they afford an easy means of judging how much importance is
due to this smoke of succession with which our bishops endeavor to
blind us. They maintain that Christ left as a heritage to the
apostles, the sole right of appointing over churches whomsoever they
pleased, and they complain that we, in exercising the ministry
without their authority, have, with sacrilegious temerity, invaded
their province. How do they prove it? Because
they have succeeded the apostles in an unbroken series. But is this
enough, when all other things are different? It would be ridiculous
to say so; they do say it, however. In their elections, no account is
taken either of life or doctrine. The right of voting had been
wrested from the people. Nay, even excluding the rest of the clergy,
the dignitaries have drawn the whole power to themselves. The Roman
Pontiff, again, wresting it from the provincial Bishop, arrogates it
to himself alone. Then, as if they had been appointed to secular
dominion, there is nothing they less think of than episcopal duty. In
short, while they seem to have entered into a conspiracy not to have
any kind of resemblance either to the Apostles or the holy Fathers of
the Church, they merely clothe themselves
with the pretense that they are descended from them in an unbroken
succession; as if Christ had ever enacted it into a law, that
whatever might be the conduct of those who presided over the Church,
they should be recognized as holding the place of the Apostles, or as
if the office were some hereditary possession, which transmits alike
to the worthy and the unworthy. And then, as is said of the
Milesians, they have taken
precautions not to admit a single worthy person into their society;
or if, perchance, they have unawares admitted him, they do not permit
him to remain. It is of the generality I speak. For I deny not that
there are a few good men among them, who, however, are either silent
from fear, or not listened to. From those, then, who persecute the
doctrine of Christ with fire and sword, who permit no man with
impunity to speak sincerely of Christ, who, in every possible way,
impede the course of truth, who strenuously
resist our attempt to raise the Church from the distressed condition
into which they have brought her, who suspect all those who take a
deep and pious interest in the welfare of the Church, and either keep
them out of the ministry, or, if they have been admitted, thrust them
out — of such persons, forsooth, it were to be expected that they
would, with their own hands, install into the office faithful
ministers to instruct the people
in pure religion! But, since the sentiment of Gregory has passed
into a common proverb, that “those who abuse privilege deserve to
lose privilege,” they must either become entirely different from
what they are, and select a different sort of persons to govern the
Church, and adopt a different method of election, or they must cease
to complain that they are improperly and injuriously despoiled of
what in justice belonged to them. Or, if they would have me to speak
more plainly, they must obtain their bishoprics by different means
from those by which they have obtained them, they must ordain others
to the office after a different way and manner; and if they wish to
be recognised as bishops, they must fulfill their duty by feeding the
people. If they would retain the power of nominating and ordaining,
let them restore that just and serious examination of life and
doctrine, which has for many ages been obsolete among them. But this
one reason ought to be as good as a thousand, viz., that any man,
who, by his conduct,
shows that he is an enemy of sound doctrine, whatever title he may
meanwhile boast, has lost all title to authority in the Church. We
know what injunctions ancient councils give concerning heretics, and
what power they leave them. They certainly in express terms forbid
any man to apply to them for ordination. No one, therefore, can lay
claim to the right of ordaining, who does not, by purity of doctrine,
preserve the unity of the
Church. Now, we maintain that those who, in the present day, under
the name of bishops, preside over churches, not only are not faithful
ministers and guardians of sound doctrine, but rather its bitterest
enemies. We maintain that their sole aim is, to banish Christ and
the truth of his gospel, and sanction idolatry and impiety, — the
most pernicious and deadly errors. We maintain that they, not only in
word, pertinaciously impugn
the true doctrine of godliness, but are infuriated against all who
would rescue it from obscurity. Against the many impediments which
they throw in the way, we studiously ply our labors in behalf of the
Church, and for so doing, they expostulate with us as if we were
making an illegal incursion into their province! As to the form or
ceremony of ordination, it is, forsooth, a mighty matter about which
to molest us. Because with us the hands of priests are not anointed,
because we do not blow into their face, because we do not clothe them
in white and such like attire, they think our ordination is not duly
performed. But the only ceremony we read of, as used in ancient
times, was the laying on of hands. Those other forms are recent, and
have nought to recommend them but the exceeding scrupulosity with
which they are now generally observed. But what is this to the point?
In matters so important, a higher than human authority is required.
Hence, as often as the circumstances of the times demand, we are at
liberty to change such rites as men have invented without express
sanction, while those of more recent introduction are still less to
be regarded. They put a chalice and paten
into the hands of those whom they ordain to be priests. Why? That
they may inaugurate them for sacrificing. But by what command? Christ
never conferred this function on the apostles, nor did he ever wish
it to be undertaken by their successors. It is absurd, therefore, to
molest us about the form of ordination, in which we differ not either
from the rule of Christ, or the practice of the apostles, or the
custom of the ancient Church,
whereas that form of theirs, which they accuse us of neglecting, they
are not able to defend by the Word of God, by sound reason, or the
pretext of antiquity.
On
the subject of ecclesiastical regimen, there are laws of which we
readily adopt such as are not snares for the conscience, or such as
tend to the preservation of common order; but those which had either
been tyrannically imposed to hold consciences in bondage, or were
more subservient to superstition than to edification, we were forced
to abrogate. Now, our enemies first charge us with fastidiousness
and undue haste, and, secondly,
accuse us of aiming at carnal indulgence, by shaking off the yoke of
discipline, in order that we may wanton as we please. But, as I have
already observed, we are by no means averse to the reverent
observance of whatever rules are fitted to ensure that all things be
done decently and in order, while, in regard to every single
observance which we have abrogated, we refuse not to show cause why
it behoved us so to do. Assuredly there is no difficulty in proving
that the Church labored exceedingly under a load of human traditions,
and that it was necessary, if her interest were consulted, that this
load should be lessened. There is a well known complaint by
Augustine, wherein he deplores it as the calamity of his time, that
the Church which God, in his mercy, wished to be free, was even then
so overburdened, that the condition of the Jews was more tolerable,
(Epist. 2, ad Januarium.) It is probable that since
that period the number has increased almost tenfold. Much more has
the rigorous exaction of them increased. What then, if that holy man
were now to rise and behold the countless multitude of laws under
which miserable consciences groan oppressed? What if, on the other
hand, he were to see the strictness with which the observance of them
is enforced? Our censurers will, perhaps, object that we might, with
Augustine, have lamented over any thing which displeased us, but that
we ought not to have supplied our hand to the work of correction.
This objection is easily refuted. For, this pernicious error of
supposing that human laws were necessary to be observed, required to
be corrected. As I have said, we deny not that laws enacted with a
view to external policy ought to be carefully obeyed, but in regard
to the regulation of the conscience, we hold that there is no
legislator but God. To Him alone, then, be reserved this authority,
which He claims for himself in many passages of Scripture. In this
matter, however, were subverted, first, the honor of God, from which
it is impious to derogate in any degree, and, secondly, genuine
liberty of consciences — a
liberty which, as Paul strenuously insists, must not be subjected to
the will of men. As it was, therefore, our duty to deliver the
consciences of the faithful from the undue bondage in which they were
held, so we have taught that they are free and unfettered by human
laws and that this freedom which was purchased by the blood of
Christ, cannot be infringed.
If
any one thinks we are blameable in this he must attribute the same
blame to Christ and his Apostles. I do not yet enumerate the other
evils which compelled us to set our face against human traditions. I
will mention only two, and I am confident that, after I have
mentioned them, all impartial readers will be satisfied. The one is,
that as some of these traditions demanded things which it was
impossible to perform, their only effect was to lead men to
hypocrisy, or plunge them into despair; and the other, that all of
them had practically realized what our Savior rebuked in the
Pharisees — they had made the commandments of God of none effect. I
will here adduce examples by which this will be made more clear. There
are three things, in particular, for which they are offended with
us:— First, that we have given liberty to eat flesh on any day;
secondly, that we have permitted marriage to priests; and, thirdly,
that we have rejected the secret confession which was made in a
priest’s ear. Let our opponents answer honestly. Is not the man who
may have tasted flesh on Friday punished more severely than the man
who may have spent the whole year in a constant course of lewdness?
Is it not deemed a more capital offense in a priest to marry than to
be caught a hundred times in adultery? Do they not pardon him who has
contemned many of the divine precepts on easier terms than him who
may have neglected once a-year to confess his sins into the ear of a
priest? Is it not monstrous, I ask, that it should seem a slight and
venial offense to violate the holy law of God, and that
it should be judged an inexpiable crime to transgress the decrees of
men? The case, I admit, is not without precedent. For, as I have
already observed, the wickedness with which our Savior charges the
Pharisees is, “Thus have ye made the
commandment of God of none effect through your tradition,” (Matthew
15:6.)
Moreover,
the arrogance of antichrist, of which Paul speaks, is, “That
he, as God, sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that he is
God,” (2 Thessalonians 2:4.) For
where is the incomparable majesty of God, after mortal man has been
exalted to such a height that his laws take precedence of God’s
eternal decrees? I omit that an apostle describes the prohibitions of
meats and of marriage as a doctrine of devils, (1 Timothy 4:1-3.)
That is surely bad enough; but the crowning impiety is to set man in
a higher rank than God. If they deny the truth of my statement, I
appeal to fact. Then,
what are those two laws of celibacy and auricular confession but dire
murderers of souls? As all the ministers of their churches vow
perpetual chastity, it becomes unlawful for them, ever after, from
the terms in which the vow is conceived, to take wives. What, then,
if one has not received the gift of continence? “There must be no
exception here,” is the answer. But experience shows how much
better it would have been never to have imposed this yoke upon
priests, than to shut them up in a furnace of lust, to burn with a
perpetual flame. Our adversaries recount the praises of virginity;
they recount also the advantages of celibacy, in order to prove that
priests have not been rashly interdicted from marrying. They even
talk of it as decent and honorable. But will they by all these things
prove the lawfulness of fettering consciences which Christ not only
left free and unfettered, but whose freedom he has vindicated by his
own authority, and at the price of his own blood? Paul does not
presume to do so, (1 Corinthians 7:35.) Whence, then, this new
license? Then, though virginity be extolled to the skies, what has
this to do with the celibacy of priests, with whose obscenity the
whole air is tainted? If the chastity which they profess in word they
also exhibited in deed, then, perhaps, I might allow them to say that
it is comely so to do. But when every man knows that the prohibition
of marriage is only a license to priests to commit gross sin, with
what face, I ask, dare they make any mention of comeliness? As to
those whose infamy is not notorious, that it may not he necessary for
me to discuss the matter with them at length, I leave
them to the tribunal of God, that they may there talk of their
chastity. It will be said that this law is imposed on none but those
who vow spontaneously. But what greater necessity can be imagined
than that by which they are forced to vow? The condition announced to
all is, that none shall be admitted to the priesthood who has not
previously, by vow, bound himself to perpetual celibacy, and that he
who has vowed must be forced, even against his will, to perform what
he has once undertaken — that no excuse for the contrary can be
listened to. Still, they maintain that a celibacy so exacted is
voluntary. But, while rhetoricians may be allowed to detail the
disadvantages of marriage, and the advantages of celibacy, that, by
declaiming on such topics in the schools they may improve their
style, nothing they can say will prove the propriety of leading
miserable consciences into a deadly snare, in which they must
perpetually writhe till they are strangled. And the ridiculous part
is, that, amidst all this flagitious turpitude, even hypocrisy finds
a place. For, whatever their conduct may be, they deem themselves
better than others, for the simple reason that they have no wives.
The
case is the same with confession. For they number up the advantages
which follow from it. We, on the contrary, are equally prepared to
point out not a few dangers which are justly to be dreaded, and to
refer to numerous most grievous evils which have actually flowed from
it. These, I say, are the kind of arguments which both parties may
employ. But the perpetual rule of Christ, which can not be changed or
bent in this direction or in that; nay, which cannot, without
impiety, be controverted, is, that conscience must not be brought
into bondage. Besides, the law on which our opponents insist is one
which can only torture souls, and ultimately destroy them. For it
requires every individual to confess all his sins, once a year, to
his own priest; when this is not done, it leaves him no hope of
obtaining pardon. It has been experimentally found by those who have
made the trial seriously, that is, in the true fear of God, that it
is not possible
thus to confess even a hundredth part of our sins. The consequence
was, that not having any mode of extricating themselves, they were
driven to despair. Those, again, who desired to satisfy God in a more
careless manner, found this confession a most complete cloak for
hypocrisy. For, thinking that they obtained an acquittal at the bar
of God as soon as they had disgorged their sins into the ear of a
priest, they were sold to sin more freely, in consequence of the
expeditious mode in which they were disburdened. Then, having in
their minds a fixed persuasion that they fulfilled what the law
enjoined, they thought that of whatever sort the enumeration might
be, it comprehended all their sins, though, in point of fact, it did
not embrace the thousandth part. See, then, on what ground our
adversaries vociferate that we have destroyed the discipline of the
Church, — simply because we have studied to succor miserable
consciences when perishing under the pressure of a most cruel
tyranny, and dragging hypocrites out of their lurking-places into
open day, that they might both examine themselves more closely, and
begin to have a better idea of the Divine justice, which they
formerly evaded. But some one will say, that however numerous the
abuses, and however deserving of correction, still laws, in other
respects sacred and useful, and in a manner consecrated by a high
antiquity, ought not to have been thus abolished instantly and
altogether.
In
regard to the eating of flesh, my simple answer is, that the doctrine
we hold accords with that of the ancient Church, in which we know
that it was free to eat flesh at all times, or to abstain from it.
The prohibition of the marriage of priests I admit to be ancient, as
is also the vow of perpetual continence, taken by nuns and monks. But
if they concede
that the declared will of God outweighs human custom, why, when
perfectly aware that the will of God is with us, and clearly supports
our views do they seek to quarrel with us about antiquity? The
doctrine is clear, “marriage is honorable in all,” (Hebrews
13:4.) Paul expressly speaks of Bishops as husbands, (1 Timothy 3:2;
Titus 1:6.) As a general rule, he enjoins marriage on all of a
particular temperament, and classes the interdiction of marriage
among the “doctrines of devils,” (1 Timothy 4:3.) What avails it
to set human custom in opposition to the clear declarations of the
Holy Spirit, unless men are to be preferred to God? And it is of
importance to observe how unfair judges they are, who, in this
matter, allege against us the practice of the ancient Church. Is
there any antiquity of the Church, either earlier, or of higher
authority, than the days of the Apostles? But our opponents will not
deny, that at that time marriage was permitted to all the ministers
of the Church, and used by them. If the Apostles were of opinion that
priests ought to be restrained from marrying, why did they defraud
the Church of so great a boon? Yet, after them, about two hundred and
fifty years elapsed, until the Council of Nice, when, as Sozomen
relates, the question of enjoining celibacy on ministers was
agitated, but by the interference of Paphnutius, the whole affair
went off. For it is related, that after he, being himself a bachelor,
had declared that a law of celibacy was not to be tolerated, the
whole council readily assented to this opinion. But superstition
gradually increasing, the law, which was then repudiated, was at
length enacted. Among those Canons, which, as well from their
antiquity, as the uncertainty of their author, bear the name of
Apostolical, there is one which does not permit any clerical persons,
except singers and readers, to marry, after they have been admitted
to office. But by a previous Canon, priests and deacons are
prohibited from putting away their wives under the pretext of
religion. And in the fourth Canon of the Council of Gangra, anathema
is pronounced against those who made a difference between a married
and an unmarried clergy man, so as to absent themselves when he
officiated. Hence it appears that there was still in those times
considerably more equity than a subsequent age manifested. Here,
however, it was not my intention to discuss this subject fully. I
only thought it proper to indicate in passing, that the primitive and
purer Church is not in this matter so adverse to us as our enemies
pretend. But grant that it is, why do they accuse us as fiercely as
if we were confounding things sacred and profane, or as if we could
not easily retort against them, that we accord far better with the
ancient Church than they do? Marriage, which the ancients denied to
priests, we show! What do they say to the licentiousness which has
everywhere obtained among them? They will deny that they approve it.
But if they were desirous to obey the ancient Canons, it would become
them to chastise it more severely. The punishment which the Council
of Neo-Cesarea inflicts on a presbyter who married was deposition,
while one guilty of adultery or fornication it punishes far more
severely, adding to deposition excommunication also. In the present
day, the marriage of a priest is deemed a capital crime, while for
his hundred acts of whoredom he is mulcted in a small sum of money.
Doubtless, if those who first passed the law of celibacy were now
alive, instructed by present experience, they would be the first to
abrogate it. However, as I have already said, it would be the height
of injustice to condemn us on the authority of men, in a matter in
which we are openly acquitted by the voice of God. With
regard to confession, we have a briefer and readier defense. Our
opponents cannot show that the necessity of confessing was imposed
earlier than Innocent III. For twelve hundred years this tyranny, for
which they contend with us so keenly, was unknown to the Christian
world. But there is a decree of the Lateran Council! True! But of the
same description as many others. Those who have any tolerable
knowledge of history are aware of the equal ignorance and ferocity of
those times. This, indeed, is in accordance
with the common observation, that the most ignorant governors are
always the most imperious. But all pious souls will bear me witness,
in what a maze those must be entangled who think themselves obliged
by that law. To this cruel torturing of consciences has been added
the blasphemous presumption of making it essential to the remission
of sin. For they pretend that none obtain pardon from God but those
who are disposed
to confess. What is this, pray, but for men to prescribe at their own
hand the mode in which a sinner is reconciled to God — God offering
pardon simply, while they withhold it until a condition which they
have added shall have been fulfilled? On the other hand, the people
were possessed with this most pernicious superstition, viz., that as
soon as they had disburdened themselves of their sins, by pouring
them into the ear of a priest, they were completely freed from guilt.
This opinion many abused to a more unrestrained indulgence in sin,
while even those who were more influenced by the fear of God paid
greater regard to the priest than to Christ. That public and solemn
acknowledgment, (exomologesis, as Cyprian calls it,) which penitents
were anciently obliged to make when they were to be reconciled to the
Church, there is no sane man who does not commend and willingly
adopt, provided it be not stretched to some other end than that for
which it was instituted. In short, we have no controversy in this
matter with the ancient Church; we only wish, as we ought, to rid the
necks of believers of a modern tyranny of recent date. Besides, when
any person, in order to obtain consolation and counsel, visits his
minister in private, and familiarly deposits in his breast the causes
of his anxiety, we by no means object, provided it is done freely,
and not of constraint. Let every man, I say, be left at liberty to do
in this matter what he feels to be expedient for himself; let no
man’s conscience be tied down by fixed laws.
I
hope your Imperial Majesty, and you, Most Illustrious Princes, will
be satisfied with this apology. It is certainly just. But how
deservedly soever we complain that the doctrine of truth was
corrupted, and the whole body of Christianity sullied by numerous blemishes,
still our censurers deny that this was cause sufficient for so
disturbing the Church, and, in a manner, convulsing the whole world.
We, indeed, are not so stupid as not to perceive how desirable it is
to avoid public tumults, nor so savage as not to be touched, and even
to shudder in our inmost soul, on beholding the troubled condition in
which the Church now is. But with what fairness is the blame of
existing commotions imputed to us, when they have not been, in the
least degree, excited by us? Nay, with what face is the crime of
disturbing the Church laid to our charge by the very persons who
obviously are the authors of all these disturbances? This is just the
case of the wolves complaining of the lambs.
When
Luther at first appeared, he merely touched, with a gentle hand, a
few abuses of the grossest description, now grown intolerable. And he
did it with a modesty which intimated that he had more desire to see
them corrected, than determination to correct them himself. The
opposite party forthwith sounded to arms; and when the contention was
more and more inflamed, our enemies deemed it the best and shortest
method to suppress the truth by cruelty and violence. Accordingly,
when our people
challenged
them to friendly discussion, and desired to settle disputes by calm
arguments, they were cruelly persecuted with sanguinary edicts, until
matters have been brought to the present miserable pass. Nor is this
calumny against us without precedent. With the very same charge which
we are now forced to hear, wicked Ahab once upbraided Elijah, viz.,
that he was the disturber of Israel. But the holy Prophet by his
reply acquitted us; “I,”
says he, “have not troubled Israel,
but thou and thy father’s house, in that ye have forsaken the
commandments of the Lord’s and thou hast followed Baalim,” (I
Kings 18:17, 18.)
It
is unfair, therefore, to load us with odium, on account of the fierce
contest concerning religion which this day rages in Christendom,
unless, in deed, it be thought proper first to condemn Elijah, with
whom we have a common defense. His sole excuse is, that he had fought
only to vindicate the glory and restore the pure worship of God, and
he retorts the charge of exciting contention and disturbances upon
those who stirred up tumults as a means of resisting the truth. And
what is it that we have done hitherto, and
what do we even now, but strive that the one God may be worshipped
amongst us, and that his simple truth may reign in the Church? If our
adversaries deny this, let them, at least, convict us of impious
doctrine before they charge it upon us as a fault, that we dissent
from others. For what were we to do? The only terms on which we could
purchase peace were to betray the truth of God by silence. Though,
indeed, it would not have been enough to be silent, unless we had
also, by tacit consents approved of impious doctrine, of open
blasphemies against God, and the most degrading superstitions. What
else, then, at the very least, could we do, than testify with a clear
voice that we had no fellowship
with impiety? We have, therefore, simply studied to do what was our
duty. That matters have blazed forth into such hostile strife is an
evil, the blame of which must rest with those who chose to confound
heaven and earth, rather than give a place to pious and sound
doctrine — their object being, by whatever means, to keep
possession of the tyranny which they had usurped. It
ought to be sufficient, and more than sufficient, for our defense,
that the sacred truth of God, in asserting which we sustain so many
contests, is on our side, whereas our adversaries, in contending with
us, war not so much against us as God himself. Then it is not of our
own accord that we engage in this fervor of contention. It is their
intemperance which has dragged us into it against our expectation.
Let the result, then, have been what it may, there is no reason why
we should be loaded with hatred. For as it is not ours to govern
events, neither is it ours to prevent them. But there is an ancient
practice which the wicked have resorted to in all ages, viz., to take
occasion from the preaching of the gospel to excite tumult, and then
to defame the gospel as the cause of dissension — dissension which,
even in the absence of opportunity, they wickedly and eagerly court.
And, as in the primitive Church, the prophecy behoved to be
fulfilled, that Christ should be to his own countrymen a stone of
stumbling and rock of offense, so it is not surprising if the same
thing holds true in our time also. It may well indeed be thought
strange for the builders to reject the stone which ought to occupy
the principal place in the foundations but as this happened at the
beginning, in the case of Christ, let it not surprise us that it is
also a common event in the present day. Here I entreat your Imperial
Majesty, and you, most Illustrious Princes, that as oft as this
unhappy rending of the Church, and the other countless evils which
have sprung from dissension, either occur to your own thoughts, or
are suggested by others, you would, at the same time, call to mind
that Christ has been set up as a sign to be spoken against, and that
his gospel, wherever it is preached, instantly inflames the rage and
resistance of the wicked. Then, from
conflict a shock must necessarily ensue. Hence the uniform fate of
the gospel, from its first commencement, has been, and always will
be, even unto the end, to be preached in the world amid great
contention. But it is the part of the prudent to consider from what
source the evil springs. Whoever does this will readily free us from
all blame. It certainly behoved us to bear testimony to the truth, as
we have done. Woe to the world if it chooses to challenge Christ to
combat, rather than embrace the peace which He offers! The man who
will not bear to be corrected will undoubtedly be crushed by Him.
But here again it is objected, that all the corruptions of the Church
are not to be corrected by such harsh remedies — that they are not
to be cut in to the quick — that not even is medicine to be applied
to all, but some are to be treated gently, and others submitted to,
if they cannot without difficulty be removed. I answer, that we are
not so unacquainted with ordinary life as not to know that the Church
always has been, and always will be, liable to some defects which the
pious are indeed bound to disapprove, but which are to be borne
rather than be made a cause of fierce contention. But our adversaries
are unjust when they accuse us of being excessively morose, as if we
had brought the Church into trouble on account of small and trivial
errors. For to their other misrepresentations they add this one also,
of endeavoring, by every artifice in their power, to extenuate the
importance of the things which we have made the subject of
controversy; the object being to make it seem that we have been
hurried on by a love of quarrelling, and not that we were drawn into
it by a just cause. This they do, not in ignorance, but with cunning
design, namely, because they know that there is nothing more odious
than the rash haste which they impute to us. And yet they, at the
same time, betray their own impiety in speaking so contemptuously of
matters of the greatest moment. And is it indeed so, that when we
complain that the worship of God was profaned — that His honor was
utterly impaired — that the doctrine of salvation was entangled
with numerous destructive errors—that the virtue of Christ’s
death was suppressed—and that, in short, all things sacred were
sacrilegiously polluted; is it indeed so, that we are to be derided
and charged with the folly of disturbing ourselves and the whole
world besides, to no purpose, with disputes about insignificant
questions? But as a cursory glance at these things is not sufficient,
it will now be necessary more diligently to explain to you the
dignity and importance of the points in dispute, so as to make it
manifest, not only that they were not
unworthy of notice, but that we could not possibly overlook them
without involving ourselves in the greatest guilt, and becoming
chargeable with impious perfidy towards God. This is the third of the
three heads, of which at the outset I proposed to treat.
First,
then, I wish to know, with what face they can call themselves
Christians, when they charge us with rashly disturbing the Church
with disputes about matters of no importance. For, if they set as
much value on our religion as the ancient idolaters did on their
superstitions, they would not speak so contemptuously of zeal for its
preservation, but, in imitation of idolaters, would give it the
precedence of all other cares and business. For, when idolaters spoke
of fighting for their altars and their hearths, they alleged
what they believed to be the best and strongest of all causes. Our
opponents, on the contrary, regard as almost superfluous a contest
which is undertaken for the glory of God and the salvation of men.
For it is not true, as has been alleged, that we dispute about a
worthless shadow. The whole substance of the Christian religion is
brought into question. Were nothing else involved, is the eternal and
inviolable truth of God, that truth to which he rendered so many
illustrious testimonies, in confirming which so many holy prophets
and so many martyrs met their death, truth heralded and witnessed by
the Son of God himself, and ultimately sealed with his blood, is that
truth of so little value, that it may be trampled under foot, while
we look on and are silent? But I descend to particulars. We know how
execrable a thing idolatry is in the sight of God, and history
abounds with narratives of the dreadful punishments with which He
visited it, both in the Israelitish people and in other nations. From
his own mouth, we hear the same vengeance denounced against all ages.
For to us he speaks when he swears by his holy name, that he will not
suffer his glory to be transferred to idols, and when he declares
that he is a jealous God, taking vengeance, to the third and fourth
generation, upon all sins, and more especially on this one. This is
the sin on account of which Moses, who was other wise of so meek a
temper, being inflamed by the Spirit of God, ordered the Levites “to
go in and out from gate to gate throughout the camp, and slay every
man his brother, and every man his companion, and every man his
neighbor,” (Exodus 32:27;) the sin on account of which God
so often punished his chosen people, afflicting them with sword,
pestilence, and famine, and, in short, all kinds of calamity; the sin
on account of which, especially, the kingdom, first of Israel, and
then of Judah, was laid waste, Jerusalem the holy city destroyed, the
temple of God (the only temple then existing in the world) laid in
ruins, and the people whom he had selected out of all the nations of
the earth to be peculiarly his own, entering into covenant with them,
that they alone might bear his standard, and live under his rule and
protection — the people, in short, from whom Christ was to spring,
were doomed to all kinds of disaster, stript of all dignity, driven
into exile, and brought to the brink of destruction. It were too long
here to give a full detail, for there is not a page in the Prophets
which does not proclaim aloud that there is nothing which more
provokes the divine indignation. What then? When we saw
idolatry openly and everywhere stalking abroad, were we to connive at
it? To have done so would have just been to rock the world in its
sleep of death, that it might not awake.
Be
pleased, Most Invincible Cæsar, and Most Illustrious Princes, to
call to mind the many corruptions by which, as I have already shown,
the worship of God was polluted, and you will assuredly find that
impiety had broken out like a deluge, under which religion was
completely submerged. Hence, divine honors were paid to images, and
prayers everywhere offered to them, under the pretense that the power
and deity of God resided in them. Hence, too, dead saints were
worshipped exactly in the manner in which of old the Israelites
worshipped Baalim. And by the artifice of Satan, numerous other modes
had been devised by which the glory of God was torn to pieces. The
Lord exclaims, that he burns with jealousy when any idol is erected,
and Paul demonstrates, by his own example, that His servants should
be zealous in asserting His glory, (Acts 17:16.) It is no common zeal
for the house of God which ought to penetrate and engross the hearts
of believers. When, therefore, the Divine glory was polluted, or
rather lacerated, in so many ways, would it not have been perfidy if
we had winked or been silent? A dog, seeing any violence offered to
his master, will instantly bark; could we, in silence, see the sacred
name of God dishonored so blasphemously? In such a case, how could it
have been said, “The reproaches of them that
reproached thee are fallen upon me?” (Psalm 49:9.) The
mockery which worships God with nought but external gestures and
absurd human fictions, how could we, without sin, allow to pass
unrebuked? We know how much he hates hypocrisy, and yet in that
fictitious worship, which was everywhere in use, hypocrisy reigned.
We hear how bitter the terms in which the Prophets inveigh against
all worship fabricated by human rashness. But a good intention, i.e.,
an insane licence
of daring whatever man pleased, was deemed the perfection of worship.
For it is certain that in the whole body of worship which had been
established, there was scarcely a single observance which had an
authoritative sanction from the Word of God. We are not in this
matter to stand either by our own or by other men’s judgments. We
must listen to the voice of God, and hear in what estimation he holds
that profanation of worship which is displayed when men, overleaping
the boundaries of His Word, run riot in their own inventions. The
reasons which he assigns for punishing the Israelites with blindness,
after they had lost the pious and holy discipline of the Church, are
two, viz., the prevalence of hypocrisy, and will-worship,
eqeloqrhskeian, meaning thereby a form
of worship contrived by man. “Forasmuch,”
saith he, “as the people draw near me
with their mouth, and with their lips do honor me, but have removed
their heart far from me, and their fear toward me is taught by the
precept of men; therefore I will proceed to do a marvelous work among
this people, even a marvelous work and a wonder: for the wisdom of
their wise men shall perish, and the understanding of their prudent
men shall be hid,” (Isaiah 29:13, 14.)
When
God stirred us up, a similar or worse perversity openly domineered
throughout the Church. While God, then, was thundering from heaven,
were we to sit quiet? Perhaps they will consider as a trivial error
the custom which prevailed, in defiance
of the clear prohibition of God, of repeating the public prayers in
an unknown tongue. But since it is manifest that by such procedure
God was mocked, they cannot deny that we had too good cause to object
to it. Then, what shall I say of the blasphemies which rung in the
public hymns, and which no pious man is able to hear without the
utmost horror? We all know the epithets which they applied to Mary —
styling her the gate of heaven, hope, life, and salvation; and to
such a degree of infatuation and madness had they proceeded, that
they even gave her a right to order Christ! For still in many
churches is heard the execrable and impious stanza, “Ask the
Father; command the Son.” In terms in no respect more modest do
they celebrate certain of the saints, and these, too, saints of their
own making, i.e., individuals whom they, on their own judgment, have
admitted into the catalogue of saints. For, among the multitude of
praises which they sing to Claud, they call him “the light of the
blind,” “the guide of the erring,” “the life and resurrection
of the dead.” The forms of prayer in daily use are stuffed with
similar blasphemies. The Lord denounces the severest threatenings
against those who, either in oaths or in prayers, confounded his name
with Baalim. What vengeance, then, impends over our heads when we not
only confound him with saints as minor gods, but with signal insult
rob Christ of the proper and peculiar titles with which he is
distinguished, in order that we may bestow them on creatures? Were we
to be silent here, also, and by perfidious silence call down on
ourselves his heavy judgments? I say nothing of the fact that no man
prayed, and that indeed no man could pray, to God with firm faith,
i.e., in good earnest. For Christ being, in a manner, buried, the
necessary consequence was, that men were always in doubt whether God
had a Father’s kindness toward them — whether he was disposed to
assist them — and whether he took any interest in their salvation.
What! was it an error either trivial or tolerable, when the eternal
priesthood of Christ, as if it had been set up to be preyed upon, was
bestowed, without distinction, on any individual among the saints?
Let us remember that Christ, by his death, purchased for himself the
honor of being the eternal advocate and peace-maker to present our
prayers and our persons to the Father; to obtain supplies of grace
for us, and enable us to hope we shall obtain what we ask. As he
alone died for us, and redeemed us by his death, so he admits of no
partnership in this honor. Therefore, what fouler blasphemy than that
which is ever and anon in the mouths of our opponents, viz., that
Christ is indeed the only mediator of redemption, but that all the
saints are mediators of intercession? Is not Christ
in this way left inglorious? as if, after having once in his death
performed the office of priest, he had ever after resigned it to the
saints. Are we, then, to be silent when the peculiar dignity of
Christ, the dignity which cost him such a price, is wrested from him
with the greatest contumely, and distributed among the saints, as if
it were lawful spoil? But it seems that when they speak thus they do
not deny that Christ intercedes for us even now; only we are to
understand that he does it along with the saints, i.e., just as any
other one in the catalogue. It must have been a mighty honor which
Christ purchased for himself by his blood, if all he obtained was to
be the associate of Hugo, Lubin, or some of the merest dregs of
saintship which the Roman Pontiff has conferred at his own pleasure.
For the question is not, whether the saints even do pray, (this being
a subject of which it is better to have no knowledge, as Scripture
does not mention it,) but the question is, whether, after passing by
Christ, or treating him with neglect, or positively abandoning him
altogether, we are entitled to look round for the patronage of
saints, or, if they will have it in plainer terms, whether Christ is
the only priest who opens up an asylum for us in heaven, leads us
thither by the hand, and, by his intercession, inclines the Father to
listen to our prayers, so that we ought to cast ourselves entirely on
his advocacy, and present our prayers in his name; or whether, on the
contrary, he holds this office in common with the saints? I have
shown above that Christ was in a great measure defrauded, not of the
honor of the priesthood merely, but also of the gratitude due for his
benefits. True, he is called a Redeemer, but in a manner which
implies that men
also, by their own free will, redeem themselves from the bondage of
sin and death. True, he is called righteousness and salvation, but so
that men still procure salvation for themselves, by the merit of
their works; for this inestimable gift, which no eloquence of men or
angels is able adequately to describe, the schoolmen are not ashamed
to restrict, telling us that though he confers the first merit, i.e.,
as they explain it, the occasion of meriting, yet after receiving
this help, we merit eternal life by our own works. True, they confess
that we are washed from our sins by the blood of Christ, but so that
every individual cleanses himself by washings elsewhere obtained.
True, the death of Christ receives the name of a sacrifice, but so
that sins are expiated by the daily sacrifices of men. True,
Christ is said to have reconciled us to the Father, but with this
reservation, that men, by their own satisfactions, buy off the
punishments which they owe to the justice of God. When supplementary
aid is sought from the benefit of the keys, no more honor is paid to
Christ than to Cyprian or Cyricius. For, in making up the treasury of
the Church, the merits of Christ and of martyrs are thrown together
in the slump. In all these things, have we not just as many execrable
blasphemies as we have words, blasphemies by which the glory of
Christ is rent, and torn to shreds? For, being in a great measure
despoiled of his honor he retains the name, while he wants the power.
Here, too, no doubt, we might have been silent, though we saw the
Son, on whom the Father hath bestowed all authority, and power, and
glory, and in whom alone he bids us glory, so classified
with his servants, that he had scarcely any pre-eminence above them.
When we saw his benefits thus in oblivion — when we saw his virtue
destroyed by the ingratitude of men — when we saw the price of his
blood held in no estimation, and the fruits of his death almost
annihilated — when, in fine, we saw him so deformed by false and
profane opinions, that he had more resemblance to an unsubstantial
phantom than to himself, did it behove us to bear it calmly and
silently? O accursed patience, if, when the honor of God is impaired,
not to say prostrated, we are so slightly affected, that we can wink
and pass on! O ill-bestowed benefits of Christ, if we can permit the
memory of them to be thus suppressed by impious blasphemies! I again
return to the second branch of Christian doctrine. Who can deny that
men are laboring under a kind of delirium, when they suppose that
they procure eternal life by the merit of their works? I admit that
they conjoin the grace of God with their works, but in as much as
their confidence of obtaining acceptance is made to depend on their
own worthiness, it is clear that the ground of their confidence and
boasting lies in their works. The trite and favourite doctrine of the
schools, the opinion deeply seated in almost all minds, is — that
every individual is loved by God in exact proportion to his deserts.
Entertaining this view, are not souls, by means of a confidence which
the devil inspires, raised to a height, from which, as from a loftier
precipice, they are afterwards plunged into the gulf of despair?
Again, when they pretend to merit the favor of God, it is not merely
by true obedience, but by frivolous observances, of no value.
The
meritorious works to which the first place is assigned are these —
to mumble over a multitude of little prayers, to erect altars, and
place statues or pictures thereon — to frequent churches, and run
up and down from one church to another — to hear many masses and to
buy some — to wear out their bodies, by I know not what abstinences
— abstinences having nothing in common with Christian fasting; and,
in particular, to be most careful in observing the traditions of men.
In the matter of satisfactions, is it not even a greater infatuation
which makes them, after the manner of the heathen, set out in quest
of expiations, by which they may reconcile themselves to God? After
all these attempts, after great and long fatigue, what did they gain?
Doing every thing with a dubious and trembling conscience, they were
always exposed to that fearful anxiety, or rather that dire torment,
of which I have already spoken, because they were enjoined to doubt
whether their persons and their works were not hateful to God.
Confidence being in this way overthrown, the necessary consequence
was, as Paul declares, that the promise of the eternal inheritance
was made void. In such circumstances, what became of the salvation of
men? Where there was such necessity for speaking, had we kept
silence, we should have been not only ungrateful and treacherous
towards God, but also cruel towards men, over whom we saw eternal
destruction impending, unless they were brought back into the proper
path.
Were
a dog to see an injury offered to his master, equal to the insult
which is offered to God in the sacraments, he would instantly bark,
and expose his own life to danger, sooner than silently allow his
master to be so insulted. Ought we to show less devotedness to God
than a brute is wont to show to man? I say nothing of the fact that
rites, founded merely on human authority, have been put on a footing
with the mysteries instituted by Christ, and recommended by his
Divine authority, though the procedure is deserving of the severest
rebuke. But when the mysteries themselves were thus corrupted, by the
many superstitions, and dishonored by the many false opinions, to
which we have already adverted, for base and filthy lucre, ought we
to have dissembled and borne it, or pretended not to see? Christ with
a whip drove the money-changers out of the temple, threw down their
tables, and scattered their merchandise. I admit it is not lawful for
every man to take the whip into his own hand, but it is, incumbent on
all who professedly belong to Christ to burn with the zeal with which
Christ was animated, when he vindicated the glory of his Father.
Therefore, that profanation of the temple, at which he,
in a manner so marked, expressed his strong displeasure, it is at
least our part to condemn, in a free, firm, and decided tone. Who is
ignorant that sacraments have now for a long time been sold in
churches, as openly as the wares which stand exposed in the public
market? Other rites, too, have their fixed price, while as to some a
bargain is not struck till after long higgling. But since the
instances which are exhibited in the Lord’s Supper are manifest,
and of a nature more heinous than in the case of other rites, come and
say with what conscience could we have connived at profanations of
it, at once so numerous and so blasphemous? Seeing that even now I
want words to express them, with what justice are we charged with
excessive vehemence in inveighing against them? By the sacred body of
Christ, which hung in sacrifice for us, by the holy blood which he
shed for our ablution, I here beseech your Imperial Majesty, and you,
Most Illustrious Princes, that you will be pleased seriously to
consider how great must be the mystery in which that body is set
before us for meat, and that blood for drink; to consider how
carefully, how religiously, it ought to be kept unpolluted. What
ingratitude, then, must it be when this heavenly mystery, which
Christ has committed to us like a most precious jewel, is trodden
under feet of swine, for any man to look on, and be silent? But we
may see it not only trodden, but also defiled by every species of
pollution. What an insult was offered, when the efficacy of Christ’s
death was transferred to a theatrical performance by men — when
some priestling, as if he had been the successor of Christ,
interposed himself as a Mediator between God and man—when, after
destroying the virtue of the only sacrifice, a thousand sacrifices of
expiation were daily offered in a single city — when Christ was
sacrificed a thousand times a-day, as if he had not done enough in
once dying for us? In heaping all these insults upon Christ, they
abused the character of the Holy Supper; for they are all included in
this single notion of sacrifice. I am not ignorant of the glosses
which our opponents employ, in order to screen their absurdities. Up
to the present age, they impudently practiced all the abominations to
which I have referred; but being now detected, they burrow in new
holes, without being able, however, to hide their turpitude. They
taught that the mass was a sacrifice, by which the sins not only of
the living, but also of the dead, were expiated. What do they now
gain by quibbling, except it be to betray their impudence? How
deeply, too, is the sacrament polluted, when, instead of the open
preaching of the Word, which constitutes its legitimate consecration,
a charm is wrought with the bread by means of whiffs and whispers?
When, instead of being distributed among the assembly of the
faithful, it is devoured apart by one man, or set aside for another’s
use? And when, even in the case where a kind of distribution is
made, the people are, in defiance of the clear injunction of our
Lord, defrauded of the half, I mean the cup? What delirium to fancy
that by their exercises the substance of bread is transmuted into
Christ? How shameful to see a trade in masses plied as unblushingly
as a trade in shoes! For if it is true, as they say, that the thing
they vend is the merit of Christ’s death, the insult which they
offer to Christ is not less gross than if they spat in his face. Be
pleased, Most Invincible Emperor, and Most Illustrious Princes, to
call to mind the disaster which of old befell the Corinthians on
account of one, and that not at first sight, so very heinous an abuse
of this sacrament. Each brought from home his own supper, not as a
common contribution, but that the rich might feast luxuriantly while
the poor hungered. For this cause the Lord chastised them with a
severe and deadly pestilence. Such is the account of Paul, who, at
the same time, bids us regard it as a paternal rod, by which the Lord
called them to repentance. From this infer what we have at this day
to expect, who have not declined merely in some little iota from the
genuine institution of Christ, but wandered to an immeasurable
distance from it; who have not only corrupted its purity in one
instance, but defaced it in numerous instances, and these, too, of a
shocking description; who have not merely interfered with its
legitimate end, by some single abuse, but perverted its whole
administration. Nor can it be doubted, that now, for some time, God
has begun to avenge this impiety.
Now,
for many years in succession, the world has been pressed by numerous
varying troubles and calamities, until it has at length arrived at
almost the extreme of wretchedness. We, indeed, stand amazed at our
disasters, or suggest other reasons why God so afflicts us. But if we
reflect how slight the error by which the Corinthians had vitiated
the sacred Supper was, if contrasted with all the defilements by
which, in the present day, it is sullied and polluted amongst
ourselves, it is strange not to perceive that God, who so severely
punished them, is justly more offended with us. Were I to follow out
all the flagitious corruptions of ecclesiastical government, I should
enter an interminable forest. Of the lives of the priests, for many
reasons, I at present decline to speak; but there are three vices of
an intolerable description, on which each individual may reflect for
himself: First, Disregarding the character of a holy vocation,
clerical offices are everywhere acquired either by violence or by
simony, or by other dishonest and impious arts: Secondly, The rulers
of the Church, in so far as regards the performance of their duties,
are more like empty shadows or lifeless images than true ministers;
and, Thirdly, When they ought to govern consciences in accordance
with the Word of God, they oppress them with an iniquitous tyranny,
and hold them in bondage by the fetters of many impious laws. Is it
true, that, not only in contempt of the laws of God
and man, but in the absence of everything like a sense of shame, foul
disorder reigns in the appointment of Bishops and Presbyters? That
caprice assumes the place of justice, simony is seldom absent, and,
as if these were evils of no consequence, the correction of them is
deferred to a future age? What is become of the duty of teaching —
the proper characteristic of the ministry? As to true liberty of
conscience, we know how many struggles Paul engaged in, and how
earnestly he contended in its defense; but every person who judges
impartially must certainly perceive, that at the present time we have
much more cause to contend for it. In a corruption of sound doctrine
so extreme, in a pollution of the sacraments so nefarious, in a
condition of the Church so deplorable, those who maintain that we
ought not to have felt so strongly, would have been satisfied with
nothing less than a perfidious tolerance, by which we should have
betrayed the worship of God, the glory of Christ, the salvation of
men, the entire administration of the sacraments, and the government
of the Church. There is something specious in the name of moderation,
and tolerance is a quality which has a fair appearance, and seems
worthy of praise; but the rule which we must observe at all hazards
is, never to endure patiently that the sacred name of God should be
assailed with impious blasphemy — that his eternal truth should be
suppressed by the devil’s lies — that Christ should be insulted,
his holy mysteries polluted, unhappy souls cruelly murdered, and the
Church left to writhe in extremity under the effect of a deadly
wound. This would be not meekness, but indifference about things to
which all others ought to be postponed. I trust I have now clearly
shown, as I proposed, that in correcting the corruption of the
Church, we have by no means been more urgent than the case demanded.
Even those who blame us are aware of this, and, accordingly, they
have recourse to another charge, viz., that the utmost we have
gained by our interference has been to fill the Christian world,
which was formerly at peace, with intestine discord — that so far
from any amendment appearing, things have gone on to worse — that
of those who have embraced our doctrine few have been made better,
nay, that some have been emboldened, if not to greater, at least to
more unrestrained licentiousness. They object, moreover, that in our
churches there is no discipline,
no laws of abstinence, no exercises of humility; that the people,
thrown loose from the yoke, riot with impunity in vicious courses.
Lastly, they throw upon us the odium of seizing on the property of
ecclesiastics, asserting that our princes have made a rush upon it as
if it had been lawful spoil; that in this way the Church has been
violently and shamefully plundered, and that now the patrimony of the
Church is possessed indiscriminately
by those who, amid the uproar of contention, have usurped it without
law or any proper title. I, for my part, deny not that when impiety
reigned, her kingdom was disturbed by us. But if, at the moment when
the light of sound and pious doctrine beamed upon the world, all, as
in duty bound, had spontaneously, and with ready mind, lent their
aid, there would at the present day be no less peace and quietness in
all the churches, (the kingdom of Christ flourishing,) than in the
days when Antichrist tyrannised. Let those who, it is manifest impede
the course of truth, desist from waging war with Christ, and there
will instantly be perfect concord; or let them desist from throwing
upon us the blame of dissensions, which they themselves excite. For
it is certainly most unfair, while they refuse all terms of peace
unless Antichrist be permitted, after putting the doctrine of piety
to flight, and as it were again consigning Christ to the tombs to
subjugate the Church; it is most unfair not only to boast as if they
themselves were innocent, but also to insult over us; and that we,
who desire nothing else than unity, and whose only bond of union is
the eternal truth of God, should bear all the blame and odium, as
much as if we were the authors of dissension. In regard
to the allegation, that no fruit has been produced by our doctrine, I
am well aware that profane men deride us, and allege that in probing
sores which are incurable, we only enlarge the ulcer. For their
opinion is, that the desperate condition of the Church makes it vain
to attempt remedies, there being no hope of cure; and they hence
conclude that the best course is not to meddle with an evil well
fixed. Those who speak in this way understand not that the
restoration of the Church is the work of God, and no more depends
on the hopes and opinions of men, than the resurrection of the dead,
or any other miracle of that description. Here, therefore, we are not
to wait for facility of actions either from the will of men, or the
temper of the times, but must rush forward through the midst of
despair. It is the will of our Master that his gospel be preached.
Let us obey his command, and follow whithersoever he calls. What the
success will be it is not ours to
inquire. Our only duty is to wish for what is best, and beseech it of
the Lord in prayer; to strive with all zeal, solicitude, and
diligence, to bring about the desired result, and, at the same time,
to submit with patience to whatever that result may be.
Groundless,
therefore, is the charge brought against us of not having done all
the good which we wished, and which was to be desired. God bids us
plant and water. We have done so. He alone gives the increase. What,
then, if he chooses not to give according to our wish? If it is clear
that we have faithfully done our part, let not our adversaries
require more of us: if the result is unfavourable, let them
expostulate with God. But the pretense that no benefit has resulted
from our doctrine is most false. I say nothing of the correction of
external idolatry, and of numerous superstitions and errors; though
that is not to be counted of no moment. But is there no fruit in
this, that many who are truly pious feel their obligation to us, in
that they have at length learned to worship God with a pure heart,
and to invoke him with a calm conscience, have been freed from
perpetual torments, and furnished with true delight in Christ, so as
to be able to confide in him? But if we are asked for proofs which
every eye can see, it has not fared so unhappily with us that we
cannot point to numerous sources of rejoicing. How many who formerly
led a vicious course of life have been so reformed as to seem
converted into new men? How many whose past lives had been free from
censure, nay, who were held in the highest estimation, have, instead
of retrograding, been able to testify by their conduct that our
ministry has proved neither barren nor unfruitful?
Our
enemies, no doubt, have it in their power to traduce and lacerate us
by their calumnies, especially among the ignorant; but this they can
never wrest from us, viz., that in those who have embraced our
doctrine, greater innocence, integrity, and true holiness, are found,
than in all who among them are deemed of greatest excellence. But if
there are any (and we confess the number is but too great) who
pervert the gospel, by giving loose reins to their passions, the
circumstance, assuredly, is not new; and if it was, how can we be
made to bear the blame of it? It is admitted that the gospel is the
only rule of a good and holy life; but in the fact that all do not
allow themselves to be ruled by it, and that some, as if set free
from restraint, even sin more presumptuously, we recognize the truth
of Simeon’s saying, that Christ “is set up,
that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed,” (Luke 2:35.) If
God sees meet to kindle the light of the gospel, in order that the
hidden iniquity of the wicked may be exposed, out of this to concoct
a charge against the ministers of the gospel, and their preaching, is
the utmost stretch of malice and effrontery. But I do them no injury
when I retort upon them the very thing out of which they attempt to
rear up a charge against us. For where do the despisers of God learn
their daring licentiousness, except it be from imagining, amid the
uproar of dissensions, that there is nothing which they are not
licensed to do? In this, therefore, let them recognize it as their
own crime, viz., that by retarding the course of truth, they
encourage the wicked with hopes of impunity.
As
to the vituperative allegation, that we are devoid of discipline and
laws, fitted to keep the people under due restraint, we are provided
with a twofold answer. Were I to say that discipline is adequately
established among us, I should be refuted by the daily discourses, in
which our teachers lament that it still lies neglected. But while I
deny not that we want the blessing of thorough discipline, still, I
say, it ought to be considered who the persons are to whom it has
hitherto been, and still is, owing that we do not enjoy it, in order
that they may be made to bear the blame. Let our enemies deny, if
they can, that they employ every artifice for the purpose, not only
of hampering our exertions in forming and constituting our churches,
but also of defeating and overthrowing whatever we
begin. We labor sedulously in building up the Church, and when we are
intent on the work, they, ever and anon, make a hostile entrance to
disturb our operations, and allow us no interval which we might
employ in arranging the domestic concerns of the Church. After this
they upbraid us with the dilapidation of which they are themselves
the cause. What kind of ingenuousness is this, to give us constant
annoyance, and then make it a charge
against us, that, in consequence of that annoyance, we are not at
leisure to arrange all the departments of the Church? God is witness
to our grief, men witnesses to our complaints, on account of the
distance we still are from perfection. But then it is said, there are
some things pertaining to discipline which we have discarded. True;
but as men are wont, in rebuilding a fallen edifice, to drag out and
collect the fragments which lie in heaps,
or scattered about, in order that they may fit each into its proper
place, so were we obliged to act. For if any part of ancient
discipline survived, it was so mixed and buried with the confused
mass of ruins; it had so lost its pristine form, that no use could be
made of it till it was gathered out from amidst the confusion. I
wish, at all events, our opponents would stimulate us by their
example. But how? The discipline which they clamorously maintain
that we have not, do they themselves possess? Would it not be better
were they to unite with us in admitting and confessing their fault
before God, than to upbraid us with what may instantly be retorted on
their own heads?
Discipline
consists of two parts, the one relating to the clergy, the other to
the people. Now, I wish to know with what strictness they confine
their clergy to an upright and chaste behavior. That purer and more
refined holiness to which the ancient canons bind the clergy, I exact
not of them. For I know how they laugh in their hearts when any one
raises up from oblivion those laws which have now been dead for
several ages. All I ask of their clergy is common decency, so that,
if they are not distinguished for purity of life, they may, at least,
not be infamous for turpitude. When any one, by means of gifts, or
favor, or sordid obsequiousness, or surreptitious certificates, winds
his way into the priesthood, the canons pronounce it simony, and
order it as such to be punished. How many, in the present day, enter
the priesthood by any other means? But adieu, as I have said, to that
stern rigour. Still, were no enactment on the subject in existence,
how disgraceful is it that the houses of bishops should be forges of
open and adulterous simony? What shall I say of the Roman See, where
it now seems matter of course that sacerdotal offices are openly
disposed of to the highest bidder, or where they are the hire paid
for panderism and sorcery, and the obscene crimes? If common sense
has any influence amongst us, can it but seem monstrous that boys of
twelve years of age should be made archbishops? When Christ was
buffetted, was he more insulted than by this? Can there be a greater
mockery to God and man, than when a boy is set to rule a Christian
people, and installed in the seat of a father and pastor? The
injunctions of the canons concerning bishops and presbyters are, that
all should be vigilant in their stations, and no one long absent from
his church. But, let us suppose that there was no such precept, who
sees not that the Christian name is subjected to the derision even of
Turks, when the denomination of pastor of a church is given to one
who does not pay it a single visit during his whole life? For, as to
constant residence in the place where he has been appointed pastor,
it is now long since an example of it became rare. Bishops and abbots
either hold their own courts, or dwell in ordinary in the courts of
princes. Each, according to his disposition, selects the place where
he may live in luxury. Those, again, who
take more pleasure in their nest, are truly said to reside in their
benefices, for they are lazy bellies, to whom nothing is less known
than their duty!
It
was forbidden by the ancient canons to give two churches to one
individual. Well, let this prohibition be as if it had never been.
Still, with what gloss will they excuse the absurdity of bestowing
five benefices, or more, on one man? of allowing one, and that one
sometimes a boy, to possess three bishoprics, seated at such a
distance from each other that he could scarcely make the circuit of
them in a year, were he to do nothing else? The
canons require, that in promoting priests, a strict and minute
examination be made into life and doctrine. Let us concede to the
present times, that they cannot be tied down to so stern a rule. But
we see how the ignorant, and those utterly devoid both of learning
and prudence, are inducted without discrimination. Even in hiring a
mule-driver, more regard is paid to his past life than in choosing a
priest. This is no fiction, no exaggeration. True, they go through
the form like players on a stage, that they
may exhibit some image of ancient practice. The bishops, or their
suffragans, put the question, whether those whom they have determined
to ordain are worthy? There is some one present to answer that they
are worthy. There is no occasion to go far for a witness, or to bribe
him for his testimony. The answer is merely a form; all beadles,
tonsors, and doorkeepers, know it by heart.
Then,
after ordination, the least suspicion of lewdness in the clergy
ought, according to the ancient canons, to be corrected, and the
proof of it punished with deposition and excommunication. Let us
remit somewhat of this ancient rigour. Yet, what will be said to such
a toleration of daily lewdness, as might almost imply a right to
commit it? The canons declare, that on no account shall a clergyman
be permitted to indulge in hunting, or gaming, or revelry, and
dancing. Nay, they even expel from the ministry every man to whom any
kind of infamy attaches. In like manner, all who involve themselves
in secular affairs, or so intermeddle in civil offices as to distract
their attention from the ministry — all, in fine, who are not
assiduous in the discharge of their duties, they order to be severely
censured, and, if they repent not, deposed. It will be objected, that
these severe remedies, which cut all vices to the quick, this age
cannot bear. Be it so, I do not call upon them for so much purity.
But that an unbridled licentiousness should reign in the clergy, a
licentiousness so unbridled that they, more than any other order,
give additional taint to a world already most corrupt, who can
forgive them? With regard to the discipline exercised over the
people, the matter stands thus:
— Provided the domination of the clergy remains intact, provided no
deduction is made from their tribute or plunder, almost any thing
else is done with impunity, or carelessly overlooked. We see the
general prevalence of all kinds of wickedness in the manners of
society. In proof of this, I will call no other witnesses than your
Imperial Majesty and Most Illustrious Princes. I admit that the fact
is attributable to many causes, but among the many, the primary cause
is, that the priests, either from indulgence or carelessness, have
allowed the wicked to give loose reins to their lusts. How do they
act at the present hour? What care do they employ in eradicating
vices, or at least in checking them? Where their admonitions? Where
their censures? To omit other things, what use is made of
excommunication, that best nerve of discipline? True, they possess,
under the name of excommunication, a tyrannical thunderbolt which
they hurl at those whom they call contumacious. But what contumacy do
they punish, unless it be of persons who, when cited to their
tribunal about money matters, have either not appeared, or, from
poverty, have failed to satisfy their demands? Accordingly, the most
salutary remedy for chastising the guilty, they merely abuse in
vexing the poor and the innocent. They have, moreover, the ridiculous
custom of sometimes flagellating hidden crimes with an anathema, as
in the case where a theft has been committed and the thief is
unknown. This practice is altogether at variance with the institution
of Christ. But, though so many disgraceful proceedings take place
openly before the eyes of all, as to them excommunication is asleep.
And yet the very persons among whom all these disorders prevail have
the hardihood to upbraid us with want of order! No doubt, if we are
equally guilty, we gain nothing by accusing them; but in what I have
hitherto said, my object has not been, by recrimination, to evade the
charge which they bring against us, but to show the real value of
that discipline which they complain that we have overthrown.
If it is thought proper to compare the two, we are confident that our
disorder, such as it is, will be found at all events some what more
orderly than the kind of order in which they glory. I mean not to
palliate or flatter our defects, when I thus speak. I know how much
we require to be improved. Undoubtedly, were God to call us to
account, excuse would be difficult; but when called to answer our
enemies we have a better cause, and an easier victory than we could
wish. With similar effrontery, they clamor that we have seized upon
the wealth of the Church, and applied it to secular purposes. Were I
to say that we have not sinned in this respect, I should lie. Indeed,
changes of such magnitude are seldom made without bringing some
inconveniences along with them. If, herein, aught has been done
wrong, I excuse it not. But, with what face do our adversaries
present this charge against us? They say, it is sacrilege to convert
the wealth of the Church to secular uses. I admit it.
They
add, that we do so. I reply, that we have not the least objection to
answer for ourselves, provided they, too, in their turn, come
prepared to plead their cause. We will immediately attend to our own
case; meanwhile, let us see what they do. Of bishops I say nothing,
except what all see, that they not only rival princes in the splendor
of their dress, the luxuries of their table, the number of their
servants, the magnificence of their palaces, in short, every kind of
luxury; but also, that they dilapidate and squander ecclesiastical
revenues, in expenditure of a much more shameful description. I say
nothing of field sports, nothing of gaming, nothing of the other
pleasures which absorb no small portion of their incomes. But, to
take from the Church, in order to spend on pimps and harlots, is
surely too bad. Then how absurd, not only to plume themselves on pomp
and show, but to carry them to the utmost excess. Time was, when
poverty in priests was deemed glorious. So it was in the Council of
Aquila. On one occasion, too, it was decreed that a bishop should
reside within a short distance of his church in a humble dwelling,
with a scanty table and mean furniture, (Conc. Carth.
4. cap. 4 Can. 14.) But, without going to that ancient rigor, after
numerous corruptions had crept in with the progress of wealth, even
then the ancient law was again confirmed which divided ecclesiastical
revenues into four portions; one to go to the bishop for hospitality,
and the relief of those in want, another to the clergy, a third to
the poor, and a fourth to the repairing of churches. Gregory attests
that this rule was in full observance even in his day. Besides, were
there no laws on the subject, and at one time there were none, (for
that which I have mentioned was, as in the case of other laws,
rendered necessary by the corruption of manners,) still there is no
man who will not admit the truth of what Jerome says, (ad
Nepotianum,) that it is the glory of a bishop to provide for the
wants of the poor, and the disgrace of all priests to have a
hankering after private wealth. It will, perhaps, be thought that
another injunction, which he gives in the same passage, is too
severe, viz., that open table should be kept for the poor, and for
strangers. It is, however, equally well-founded.
The
nearer abbots approach to bishops in extent of revenue, the more they
resemble them. Canons and parish priests, not deriving enough from
one cure for gluttony, luxury, and pomp, soon found out a compendious
method of remedying the inconvenience. For there is nothing to
prevent him who could, in one month, swallow much more than he draws
in a year, from holding four or five benefices. The burden is nothing
thought of. For there are vicars at hand ready to stoop, and take it
on their shoulders, provided they are allowed to gobble up some small
portion of the proceeds. Nay, few are found who will be contented
with one bishopric, or one abbacy. Those of the clergy who live at
the public expense of the Church, though able to live on their
patrimony, Jerome styles sacrilegious, (C. Cler. I. Quaest.
2.) What, then, must be thought of those who at once engulf three
bishoprics, i.e., from fifty to a hundred tolerable patrimonies?
And, lest they complain that they are unjustly traduced for the fault
of a few, what are we to think of those who not only luxuriate on the
public revenues of the Church, but abuse them in paying the hire of
panders and courtesans? I speak only of what is notorious. Then, were
we to ask, I say, not at the whole order, but at the few who reside
in their benefices, by what right they receive even a frugal and moderate
stipend, even such a question they are not able to answer. For what
duties do they perform in return? In the same way as anciently, under
the law, those who served at the altar lived by the altar, “even
so hath the Lord ordained, that they which preach the gospel should
live of the gospel,” (1 Corinthians 9:9.) These are Paul’s
words. Let them, then, show us that they are ministers of the gospel,
and I will have no difficulty in conceding their right to stipend.
The ox must not be muzzled that treadeth out the corn. But is it not
altogether at variance with reason that the ploughing oxen should
starve, and the lazy asses be fed? They will say, however, that they
serve at the altar. I answer, that the priests under the law deserved
maintenance, by ministering at an altar; but that, as Paul declares,
the case under the New Testament is different. And what are those
altar services, for which they allege that maintenance is due to
them? Forsooth, that they may perform their masses and chant in
churches, i.e., partly labor to no purpose, and partly perpetrate
sacrilege, thereby provoking the anger of God. See for what it is
that they are alimented at the public expense!
There
are some who accuse our princes of inexpiable sacrilege, as having,
with violence and the greatest injustice, seized upon the patrimony
of the Church, which had been consecrated to God, and as now
dilapidating it for profane uses. I have already declared that I am
unwilling to be the apologist of everything that is done amongst us;
nay, rather, I openly declare my dissatisfaction that more regard is
not paid to the due application of ecclesiastical revenues to those
purposes only for which they were destined. This I deplore in common
with all good men. But the only point under discussion at present is,
whether our princes sacrilegiously seized on the revenues of the
Church, when they appropriated what they had rescued out of the hands
of priests and monks? Is it profanation to apply these to some other
purpose than stuffing such lazy bellies? For it is their own cause
which our adversaries plead, not the cause of Christ and his Church.
No doubt, heavy judgments are denounced against those who rob the
Church, and carry off for their own use what belongs to her. But the
reason is at the same time added, viz., because they defraud true
ministers of their maintenance, and because, starving the poor to
death, they are guilty of their blood. But what have our opponents to
do with this? For who among their whole tribe can make the
declaration which Ambrose once made, that whatever he possessed was
the revenue of the needy; and again, that every thing which a bishop
possesses belongs to the poor? (Ambrose, Epist. Lib. 5.
Ep. 31 et 33.) say, how few of them do not abuse what
they possess with as much license as if it had been given to be
profusely squandered as they list? It is vain, therefore, for them to
expostulate, because deprived of that which they possessed without
any right, and wasted with the greatest iniquity. And it was not
only lawful, but necessary also, for our princes so to deprive them.
When they saw the Church absolutely destitute of true ministers, and
the revenues destined for their support absorbed by lazy idle
men; when they saw the patrimony of Christ and the poor either
ingulfed by a few, or dissolutely wasted on expensive luxuries, were
they not to interfere? Nay, when they saw the obstinate enemies of
the truth lying like an incubus on the patrimony of the Church, and
abusing it, to attack Christ, to oppress sound doctrine, and
persecute its ministers, was it not right immediately to wrest it
from their hands, that, at all events, they might not be armed and
equipped by the resources of the Church to vex the Church? King
Josiah is commended, on the authority of the Holy Spirit, because, on
perceiving that the sacred oblations were improperly consumed by the
priests, he appointed an officer to call them to account, (2
Chronicles 24:14.) And yet they were priests whom God had entrusted
with the ordinary administration. What, then, is to be done with
those who exercise no lawful ministry, and who not only, like them,
neglect the repairing of the temple, but exert all their nerves and
resources to pull down the Church? But some one will ask, how are
the appropriated revenues administered? Certainly not in a manner
altogether free from blame, but still in a manner far better and
holier than by our enemies. Out of them, at all events, true
ministers are supported, who feed their flocks with the doctrine of
salvation, whereas, formerly, churches left utterly destitute of
pastors were
burdened with the payment of them. Wherever schools or hospitals for
the poor existed they remain; in some instances their revenues have
been increased; in none have they been diminished. In many places,
also, in lieu of monasteries, hospitals have been established where
there were none before; in others new schools have been erected, in
which not only have regular salaries been given to the masters, but
youths also are trained, in the hope of being afterwards of service
to the Church.
In
fine, churches derive many advantages in common from these revenues,
with which, before, only monks and priests were gorged. Nor is it a
small portion which is devoted to extraordinary expenses, though
these are well entitled to be taken into account. It is certain that
much more is consumed when matters are in disorder, than would be if
proper arrangements were made among the churches. But nothing could
be more unjust than to deny to our princes and magistrates the right
of making expenditure of this kind, not for their private benefit,
but to meet the public necessities of the Church. Besides, our
adversaries forget to deduct their spoliations and unjust exactions,
by which communities were pillaged for sacrifices, of which they are
now relieved. But there is one reason which renders all this
discussion, in a great measure, superfluous. More than three years
ago, our princes declared their readiness to make restitution,
provided the same course were enforced against those who detain a
much larger amount for a less honorable cause, and who are guilty of
much greater corruption in the administration of it. Our princes,
therefore, stand bound to your Imperial Majesty by their promise. The
document also is before the world; so that this should not be any
hinderance to uniformity of doctrine. The last and principal charge
which they bring against us is, that we have made a schism in the
Church. And here they boldly maintain against us, that in no case is
it lawful to break the unity of the Church. How far they do us
injustice, the books of our authors bear witness. Now, however, let
them take this brief reply — that we neither dissent from the
Church, nor are aliens from her communion. But, as by this specious
name of Church, they are wont to cast dust in the eyes even of
persons otherwise pious and right-hearted, I beseech your Imperial
Majesty, and you, Most Illustrious
Princes, first, to divest yourselves of all prejudice, that you may
give an impartial ear to our defense; secondly, not to be instantly
terrified on hearing the name of Church, but to remember that the
Prophets and Apostles had, with the pretended church of their days, a
contest similar to that which you see us have in the present day with
the Roman Pontiff and his whole train. When they, by the command of
God, inveighed freely against idolatry, superstition, and the
profanation of the temple, and its sacred rites, against the
carelessness and lethargy of priests, and against the general
avarice, cruelty, and licentiousness, they were constantly met with
the objection which our opponents have ever in their mouths — that
by dissenting from the common opinion, they violated the unity of the
Church. The ordinary government of the Church was then vested in the
priests. They had not presumptuously arrogated it to themselves, but
God had conferred it upon them by his law. It would occupy too much
time to point out all the instances. Let us, therefore, be contented
with a single instance, in the case of Jeremiah.
He
had to do with the whole college of priests, and the arms with which
they attacked him were these, “Come, and let
us devise devices against Jeremiah; for the law shall not perish from
the priest, nor counsel from the wise, nor the word from the
prophet,” (Jeremiah 18:18.) They
had among them a High Priest, to reject whose judgment was a capital
crime, and they had the whole order to which God himself had
committed the government of the Jewish Church concurring with them.
If the unity of the Church is violated by him, who, instructed solely
by Divine truth, opposes himself to ordinary authority, the prophet
must be a schismatic; because, not at all deterred by such menaces
from warring with the impiety of the priests, he steadily persevered.
That the eternal truth of God, preached by the prophets and apostles,
is on our side, we are prepared to show, and it is indeed easy for
any man to perceive. But all that is done is to assail us with this
battering-ram, “Nothing can excuse withdrawal from the Church.”
We deny out and out that we do so. With what, then, do they urge us?
With nothing more than this, that to them belongs the ordinary
government of the Church. But how much better right had
the enemies of Jeremiah to use this argument? To them, at all events,
there still remained a legal priesthood, instituted by God; so that
their vocation was unquestionable. Those who, in the present day,
have the name of prelates, cannot prove their vocation by any laws,
human or divine. Be it, however, that in this respect both are on a
footing, still, unless they previously convict the holy prophet of
schism, they will prove
nothing against us by that specious title of Church. I have thus
mentioned one prophet as an example. But all the others declare that
they had the same battle to fight — wicked priests endeavoring to
overwhelm them by a perversion of this term Church. And how did the
apostles act? Was it not necessary for them, in professing themselves
the servants of Christ, to declare war upon the synagogue? And yet
the office and dignity of the priesthood were not then lost. But it
will be said, that, though the prophets and apostles dissented from
wicked priests in doctrine, they still cultivated communion with them
in sacrifices and prayers. I admit they did, provided they were not
forced into idolatry. But which of the prophets do we read of as
having ever sacrificed in Bethel? Which of the faithful, do we
suppose, communicated in impure sacrifices, when the temple was
polluted by Antiochus, and profane rites were introduced into it?
On
the whole, we conclude that the servants of God never felt themselves
obstructed by this empty title of Church, when it was put forward to
support the reign of impiety. It is not enough, therefore, simply to
throw out the name of Church, but judgment must be used to ascertain
which is the true Church, and what is the nature of its unity. And
the thing necessary to be attended to, first of all, is, to beware of
separating the Church from Christ its Head. When I say Christ, I
include the doctrine of his gospel, which he sealed with his blood.
Our adversaries, therefore, if they would persuade us that they are
the true Church, must, first of all, show that the true doctrine of
God is among them; and this is the meaning of what we often repeat,
viz., that the uniform characteristics of a wellordered Church are
the preaching of sound doctrine, and the pure administration of the
Sacraments. For, since Paul declares that the Church is “built
upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets,” (Ephesians 2:20)
it necessarily follows that any church not resting on this
foundation must immediately fall. I come now to our opponents. They,
no doubt, boast in lofty terms that Christ is on their side. As soon
as they exhibit him in their word we will believe it, but not sooner.
They, in the same way, insist on the term Church. But where, we ask,
is that doctrine which Paul declares to be the only foundation of the
Church?
Doubtless
your Imperial Majesty now sees that there is a vast difference
between assailing us with the reality and assailing us only with the
name of Church. We are as ready to confess as they are that those who
abandon the Church, the common mother of the faithful, the “pillar
and ground of the truth,” revolt from Christ also; but we mean a
Church which, from incorruptible seed, begets children for
immortality, and, when begotten, nourishes them with spiritual food,
(that seed and food being the Word of God,) and which, by its
ministry, preserves entire the truth which God deposited in its
bosom. This mark is in no degree doubtful, in no degree fallacious,
and it is the mark which God himself impressed upon his Church, that
she might be discerned thereby. Do we seem unjust in demanding to see
this mark? Wherever it exists not, no face of a church is seen. If
the name, merely, is put forward, we have only to quote the wellknown passage
of Jeremiah, “Trust ye not in lying words,
saying, The temple of the Lord, The temple
of the Lord, The temple of the Lord, are these,” (Jeremiah
7:4.) “Is this house, which is called by my name, become a
den of robbers in your eyes?” (Jeremiah
7:11.) In like manner, the unity of the Church, such as Paul
describes it, we protest we hold sacred, and we denounce anathema
against all who in any way violate it. The principle from which Paul
derives unity is, that there is “one Lord, one faith, one baptism,
one God and Father of all” who hath called us into one hope,
(Ephesians 4:4, 5.) Therefore, we are one body and one spirit, as is
here enjoined, if we adhere to God only, i.e., be sound
to each other by the tie of faith. We ought, moreover, to remember
what is said in another passage, “that faith cometh by the word of
God.”
Let
it, therefore, be a fixed point, that a holy unity exists amongst us,
when, consenting in pure doctrine, we are united in Christ alone.
And, indeed, if concurrence in any kind of doctrine were sufficient,
in what possible way could the Church of God be distinguished from
the impious factions of the wicked? Wherefore, the Apostle shortly
after adds, that the ministry was instituted “for the edifying of
the body of Christ: Till we all come in the unity of the faith, and
of the knowledge of the Son of God: That we be no more children
tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, but
speaking the truth in love, may grow up into him in all things, which
is the Head, even Christ,” (Ephesians 4:12-15.) Could he more
plainly comprise the whole unity of the Church in a holy agreement in
true doctrine, than when he calls us back to Christ and to faith,
which is included in the knowledge of him, and to obedience to the
truth? Nor is any lengthened demonstration of this needed by those
who believe the Church to be that sheepfold of which Christ alone is
the Shepherd, and where his voice only is heard, and distinguished
from the voice of strangers. And this is confirmed by Paul, when he
prays for the Romans, “The God of patience
and consolation grant you to be like minded one toward another,
according to Christ Jesus; that ye may with one mind and one mouth
glorify God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,” (Romans
15:5, 6.)
Let
our opponents, then, in the first instance, draw near to Christ, and
then let them convict us of schism, in daring to dissent from them in
doctrine. But, since I have made it plain, that Christ is banished
from their society, and the doctrine of his gospel exterminated,
their charge against us simply amounts to this, that we adhere to
Christ in preference to them. For what man, pray, will believe that
those who refuse to be led away from
Christ and his truth, in order to deliver themselves into the power
of men, are thereby schismatics, and deserters from the communion of
the Church? I certainly admit that respect is to be shown to priests,
and that there is great danger in despising ordinary authority. If,
then, they were to say, that we are not at our own hand to resist
ordinary authority, we should have no difficulty in subscribing to
the sentiment. For we are not so rude, as not to see what confusion
must arise when the authority of rulers is not respected. Let
pastors, then, have their due honor — an honor, however, not
derogatory in any degree to the supreme authority of Christ, to whom
it behoves them and every man to be subject. For God declares, by
Malachi, that the government of the Israelitish Church was committed
to the priests, under the condition that they should faithfully fulfill
the covenant made with them, viz., that their “lips should keep
knowledge,” and expound the law to the people, (Malachi 2:7.) When
the priests altogether failed in this condition, he declares, that,
by their perfidy, the covenant was abrogated and made null. Pastors
are mistaken if they imagine that they are invested with the
government of the Church
on any other terms than that of being ministers and witnesses of the
truth of God. As long, therefore, as, in opposition to the law and to
the nature of their office, they eagerly wage war with the truth of
God, let them not arrogate to themselves a power which God never
bestowed, either formerly on priests, or now on bishops, on any other
terms than those which have been mentioned. But, because they hold
that the communion of the Church is confined to a kind of regimen
which they have struck out for themselves, they think it sufficient
to decide the victory in their favor, when they point to our
alienation from the Romish See. But to this vaunted primacy of the
Romish See it is not difficult to reply. It is a subject, however, on
which I will not here enter, both because it would occupy too much
time, and because it has been amply discussed by our writers. I will
only beg your Imperial Majesty, and Most Illustrious Princes, to
listen to Cyprian, when he points out a better method of ascertaining
the true communion of the
Church, than that of referring it, as our opponents do, to the Roman
Pontiff alone. For, after placing the only source of ecclesiastical
concord in the episcopal authority of Christ, which episcopal
authority he affirms that each bishop, to the extent to which it has
been communicated, holds entire, he thus proceeds: “There is one
church, which, by the increase of its fruitfulness, spreads into a
multitude, just as there are many rays of the sun,
but only one light, many branches in a tree, but one trunk, upheld by
its tenacious root; and when many streams flow from one fountain,
though, from the copiousness of the supply, there seems a division
into parts, still, in regard to the origin, unity is preserved.
Separate a ray from the body of the sun, the unity of the light is
not divided. Break a branch from a tree, that which is broken cannot
germinate. Cut off a stream from the
fountain, and it dries up. So, also, the Church of God, irradiated
with light, sends its beams over the whole world. Still it is one
light which is everywhere diffused. The unity of the body is not
violated.” (Cyprian De Unitat. Ecclesiae.) Heresies and Schisms,
therefore, arise when a return is not made to the origin of truth,
when neither the head is regarded, nor the doctrine of the heavenly
Master preserved. Let them then show us a hierarchy
in which the bishops are distinguished, but not for refusing to be
subject to Christ, in which they depend upon him as the only head,
and act solely with reference to him, in which they cultivate
brotherly fellowship with each other, bound together by no other tie
than his truth; then, indeed, I will confess that there is no
anathema too strong for those who do not regard them with reverence,
and yield them the fullest obedience. But is there any thing like
this in that false mask of hierarchy on which they plume themselves?
The Roman Pontiff alone as Christ’s vicar is in the ascendant, and
domineers without law and without measure, after the manner of a
tyrant, nay, with more abandoned effrontery than any tyrant. The rest
of the body is framed more according to his standard than that of
Christ. The light of which Cyprian speaks is extinguished, the copious
fountain cut off; in short, the only thing exhibited is the tallness
of the tree, but a tree dissevered from its root. I am aware that our
adversaries have good reason for laboring so strenuously to maintain
the primacy of the Romish See. They feel that on it both themselves
and their all depend. But your part, Most Invincible Emperor, and
Most Illustrious Princes, is to be on your guard in order that they
may not with vain glosses deceive you, as they are wont to deceive
the unwary. And, first, this vaunted supremacy, even themselves are
forced to confess, was established by no divine authority, but by the
mere will of man. At least, when we give proof of this fact, though
they do not expressly assent, they seem as if ashamed to maintain the
opposite. There was a time, indeed, when they audaciously perverted
certain passages of Scripture to confirm this palpable falsehood, but
as soon as we came to close quarters, it was found easy to pluck out
of their hands the bits of lath, to which, when at a distance, they
had given the appearance of swords. Abandoned, accordingly, by the
Word of God, they flee for aid to antiquity. But here, also, without
much ado, we dislodge them. For both the writings of holy Fathers,
the acts of Councils, and all history, make it plain that this height
of power, which the Roman Pontiff has now possessed for about four
hundred years, was attained gradually, or rather was either craftily
crept into, or violently seized. But let us forgive them this, and
let them take for granted that primacy was divinely bestowed on the
Romish See, and has been sanctioned by the uniform consent of the
ancient Church; still there is room for this primacy only on the
supposition that Rome has both a true church and a true bishop. For
the honor of the seat cannot remain after the seat itself has ceased
to exist. I ask, then, in what respect the Roman Pontiff performs the
duty of a bishop, so as to oblige us to recognize him as a bishop?
There is a celebrated saying of Augustine, “Bishopric is the name
of an office, and not a mere title of honor.” And ancient Synods
define the duties of a bishop to consist in feeding the people by the
preaching the Word, in administering, the sacraments, in curbing
clergy and people by holy discipline, and, in order not to be
distracted from these duties, in withdrawing from all the ordinary
cares of the present life. In all these duties, presbyters ought to
be the bishop’s coadjutors. Which of them do the Pope and his
Cardinals pretend to perform? Let them say, then, on what ground they
claim to be regarded as legitimate pastors, while they do not, with
their little finger, in appearance even, touch any part of the duty.
But let us grant all these things, viz., that he is a bishop who
entirely neglects every part of his duty, and that a Church which is
destitute, as well of the ministry of the Word as of the pure
administration of the Sacraments; still, what answer is made when we
add not only that these are wanting, but that every thing which
exists is directly the reverse? For several centuries that See has
been possessed by impious superstitions, open idolatry, perverse
doctrines, while those great truths, in which the Christian religion
chiefly consists, have been suppressed. By the prostitution of the
Sacraments to filthy lucre, and other abominations, Christ has been
held up to such extreme derision, that he has in a manner been
crucified afresh. Can she be the mother of all churches, who not
only does not retain, I do not say the face, but even a single
lineament, of the true Church, and has snapt asunder all those bonds
of holy communion by which believers should be linked together? The
Roman Pontiff is now opposing himself to the reviving doctrines of
the gospel, just as if his head were at stake. Does he not, by this
very fact, demonstrate that there will be no safety for his See
unless he can put to flight the kingdom of Christ?
Your
Imperial Majesty is aware how wide a field of discussion here opens
upon me. But to conclude this point in a few words: I deny that See
to be Apostolical, wherein nought is seen but a shocking apostacy —
I deny him to be the vicar of Christ, who, in furiously persecuting
the gospel demonstrates by his conduct that he is Antichrist — I
deny him to be the successor of Peter, who is doing his utmost to
demolish every edifice that Peter built — and I deny him to be the
head of the Church, who by his tyranny lacerates and dismembers the
Church, after dissevering her from Christ, her true and only Head.
Let these denials be answered by those who are so bent on chaining
the hierarchy of the Church to the Romish See, that they hesitate not
to subordinate the sure and tried doctrines of the gospel to the
authority of the Pope. Yea, I say, let them answer; only do you, Most
Invincible Emperor, and Most Illustrious Princes, consider whether,
in so calling upon them, the thing I ask is just or unjust. From
what has been said, it will doubtless be easy for you to perceive how
little attention is due to the calumny of our adversaries, when they
accuse us of impious presumption, and as it were inexpiable audacity,
in having attempted to purify the Church from corruption, both in
doctrine and ceremonies, without waiting for the beck of the Roman
Pontiff. They say we have done what private individuals have no right
to do. But, in regard to ameliorating the condition of the Church,
what was to be hoped from
him to whom we were required to give place? Any man who considers how
Luther and the other Reformers acted at the outset, and how they
afterwards proceeded, will deem it unnecessary to call upon us for
any defense. When matters were still entire, Luther himself humbly
besought the Pontiff that he would be pleased to cure the very
grievous disorders of the Church. Did his supplication succeed? The
evils having still increased, the necessity of the case, even had
Luther been silent, should have been stimulus enough to urge the Pope
to delay no longer. The whole Christian world plainly demanded this
of him, and he had in his hands the means of satisfying the pious
wishes of all. Did he do so? He now talks of impediments. But if the
fact be traced to its source, it will be found that he has all along
been, both to himself and to others, the only impediment.
But why insist on these lighter arguments? Is it not in itself alone
an argument of sufficient clearness and sufficient weight, that, from
the commencement up to the present time, he gives us no hope of
transacting with him until we again bury Christ, and return to every
impiety which formerly existed, that he may establish them on a
firmer basis than before? This, unquestionably, is the reason why
still, in the present day, our opponents so strenuously maintain that
we had no right to intermeddle with the revival of the church — not
that the thing was not necessary, (this it were too desperate
effrontery to deny,) but because they are desirous that as well the
safety as the ruin of the Church should be suspended on the mere beck
and pleasure of the Roman Pontiff.
Let
us now attend to the only remedy left us by those who think it
impiety to move a finger, how great soever the evils by which the
Church is oppressed. They put us off to an universal council. What?
If the major part, from obstinacy, rush upon their own destruction,
must we therefore perish along with them, when we have the means of
consulting for our own safety? But they tell us it is unlawful to
violate the unity of the Church,
and that unity is violated if any party decide an article of faith by
themselves, without calling in the others. Then they enlarge on the
inconveniences to which such a course might lead — that nothing
could be expected but fearful devastation and chaotic confusions were
each people and nation to adopt for itself its peculiar form of
faith. Things like these might be said justly, and even appositely to
the occasion, if any one member
of the Church, in contempt of unity, should of its own accord
separate itself from the others. But that is not the point now in
dispute. I wish, indeed, it were possible for all the monarchs and
states of the Christian world to unite in a holy league, and resolve
on a simultaneous amendment of the present evils. But since we see
that some are averse to amelioration, and that others involved in
war, or occupied with other cares, cannot give their attention to the
subject, how long, pray, must we, in waiting for others, defer
consulting for ourselves? And more freely to explain the source of
all our evils, we see that the Roman Pontiff, if he can prevent it,
will never permit all churches to unite, I do not say in due
consultation, but in assembling any council at all. He will, indeed,
as often as he is asked, give promises in abundance, provided he sees
all the ways shut up, and all modes of access interrupted, while he
has in his hand obstructions which he can every now and then throw
in, so as never to want pretexts for tergiversation. With a few
exceptions, he has all the cardinals, bishops, and abbots, consenting
with him in this matter, since their only thought is how to retain
possession of their usurped tyranny. As to the welfare or
destruction of the Church, it gives them not the least concern.
I
am not afraid, Most Invincible Caesar, and Most Illustrious Princes,
that my statement will seem incredible, or that it will be
difficult to persuade you of its truth. Nay, rather I appeal to the
consciences of you all, whether I have stated any thing which your
own experience does not confirm. Meanwhile, the Church lies in the
greatest peril. An infinite number of souls, not knowing in what
direction to turn, are miserably perplexed;
many even, forestalled by death, perish, if not saved miraculously by
the Lord; diversified sects arise; numbers, whose impiety was
formerly hid, assume, from the present dissensions, a license to
believe nothing at all, while many minds, otherwise not ill disposed,
begin to part with their religious impressions. There is no
discipline to check these evils; amongst us who glory in the name of
Christ only, and have the same baptism, there is no more agreement
than if we professed religions entirely different. And the most
miserable thing of all is, that there is at hand, nay, almost in
sight, a breaking up of the whole Church, for which, after it has
taken place, it will be in vain to seek for remedies. Seeing,
therefore, that in bringing assistance to the Church in her great
distress and extreme danger, no celerity can be too rapid, what else
do those who put us off to a General Council, of which there is no
prospect, but insult both God and man? The Germans must therefore
submit to have this sentence passed upon them, that they choose to
look on quietly and see the Church of God perish from their land,
when they have the means of curing her disorders, or they must
instantly bestir themselves to the work. This second alternative they
will never adopt so speedily, as not to be even now deservedly
condemned for not adopting sooner. But those persons, whoever they
be, who, under the pretext of a General Council, interpose delay,
clearly have no other end in view, than by this artifice to spin out
the time, and are no more to be listened to than if they confessed in
word what they in deed demonstrate, that they are prepared to
purchase their private advantage by the destruction of the Church. But
it is said that it would be unprecedented for the Germans alone
to undertake this reformation; that in no case when controversy has
arisen concerning the doctrines of religion, was it ever heard that a
single province could undertake the investigation and decision. What
is this I hear? Do they
imagine that by their mere assertion they will persuade the world to
believe what the histories of all times refute? As often as some new
heresy emerged, or the Church was disturbed by some dispute, was it
not the usual custom immediately to convene a Provincial Synod, that
the disturbance might thereby be terminated? It never was the custom
to recur to a General Council until the other remedy had been tried.
Before bishops from the whole Christian world met at Nice to confute
Arius, several Synods had been held with that view in the East. For
the sake of brevity, I pass over the other instances, but the thing
which our enemies shun as unusual is proved by the writings of the
ancients to have been the ordinary practice. Have done, then, with
this lying pretense of novelty.
Had
this superstitious idea possessed the African Bishops, they would
have been too late in meeting the Donatists and Pelagians. The
Donatists had already gained over a great part of Africa to their
faction, nor was any place entirely free from the contagion. It was a
controversy of the greatest moment, relating to the unity of the
Church and the due administration of baptism. According to the new
wisdom of our opponents, the orthodox Bishops,
in order not to cut themselves off from the other members of the
Church, ought to have referred the question to a General Council. Is
this what they do? Nay, rather, knowing that in extinguishing an
actual fire no time can be lost, they press and follow close upon the
Donatists, now summoning them to a Synod, now coming, as it were, to
close quarters with them in discussion.
Let
our enemies condemn of impious separation from the Church, Augustine,
and the other holy men of that age who concurred with him, for
having, by imperial authority, without convoking a General Council,
forced the Donatists to dispute with them, and hesitated not to treat
in a Provincial Synod of a most difficult and dangerous controversy.
There, too, Pelagius had shown his horns; instantly a Synod was held
to repress his audacity. When, after having for a short time feigned
penitence, he had returned
to his vomit, with the stigma which had been fixed on his impiety in
Africa he betook himself to Rome, where he was received with
considerable favor. What course do the pious Bishops take? Do they
allege that they are only a member of the Church, and must wait for
relief from a General Council? Nay, they them selves assemble on the
very first opportunity, and again and again anathematise the impious
dogma with which many had now been infected, freely deciding and
defining what ought to be held on the subjects of original sin and
regenerating grace. Afterwards, indeed, they send to Rome a copy of
their proceedings, partly that, by a common authority and consent,
they may the more effectually crush the contumacy of the heretics,
partly that they may admonish others
of a danger, against which all ought to stand upon their guard. The
flatterers of the Roman Pontiff give the matter a different turn, as
if the Bishops had suspended their judgment until the proceedings
were ratified by Innocent V., who then presided over the Church of
Rome. But this impudent averment is more than refuted by the words of
the holy Fathers. For they neither ask Innocent to counsel them as
to what they ought to do, nor do they refer it to him to decide, nor
do they wait for his nod and authority, but they narrate that they
had already taken cognisance of the cause, and passed sentence,
condemning both the man and the doctrine, in order that Innocent,
too, might imitate their example, if he desired not to fail in his
duty. These things were done while as yet the churches agreed with
each other in sound doctrine. Now, then, when all things threaten
ruin if not speedily remedied, why hang waiting for the consent of
those who leave
not a stone unturned to prevent the truth of God, which they had put
to flight from again beaming forth? Ambrose, in his day, had a
controversy with Auxentius on the primary article of our faith, viz.,
the divinity of Christ. The Emperor favored the view of Auxentius. He
does not, however, appeal to a General Council, under the pretext of
its being unlawful that so important a cause should be decided in any
other manner. He only demands, that, being a question of faith, it
should be discussed in the church in presence of the people. And to
what end the Provincial Synods, which were once regularly held twice
a-year, unless that Bishops might consult together on emerging
circumstances, as the nineteenth Canon of the Council of Chalcedon
explains. An ancient enactment orders that the Bishops of every
province shall convene twice a-year. The Council of Chalcedon gives
us the reason, that any errors which may have emerged may be
corrected. Our
opponents,
contrary to what all know, deny the lawfulness of touching a
corruption of doctrine or manners, until it has been laid before a
General Council. Nay, the very subterfuge by which the Arians
Palladius and Secundinianus declined the Council of Aquileia was,
because it was not full and general, all the Eastern Bishops being
absent, and few even of the West making their appearance. And it is
certain that of the Italians scarcely
a half had convened. The Roman Bishop had neither come in person, nor
sent any one of his presbyters to represent him. To all these
objections Ambrose replies, that it was not a thing with out example
for the Western Bishops to hold a synod since the practice was
familiar to those of the East — that the pious Emperors who
summoned the Council had acted wisely in leaving all at liberty to
come, without compelling any; and, accordingly, all who thought
proper had come, none being prohibited. Though the heretics
continued to press their quibbling objections, the holy Fathers did
not, therefore, abandon their purpose. Assuredly, after such
examples, your Imperial Majesty is not to be prohibited from using
the means within your reach of bringing back the body of the empire
to sacred concord. Though,
as has been observed, our enemies, who advise procrastination, do it
not with the view of shortly after consulting for the welfare of the
Church, but only of gaining time by delay, knowing, that if they can
throw us back to a General Council, the truce will be long enough;
let us, however, assume that there is no obstacle to a General
Council being immediately called; let us even assume that it has been
summoned in good earnest, that the day of meeting is at hand, and all
things prepared. The Roman Pontiff will, of course, preside, or if he
declines to come, he will send one of his Cardinals as Legate to
preside in his stead, and he will doubtless select the one whom he
believes will be most faithful to his interests. The rest of the
Cardinals will take their seats, and next them the Bishops and
Abbots. The seats beneath will be occupied by ordinary members, who
are, for the most part, selected for subservience to the views of
those above. It will, indeed, happen, that some few honest men will
have seats among them, but they will be despised for the smallness of
their number, and, made weak by fear, or dispirited by the
hopelessness of doing any good, will be silent. Should any one of
them, per chance, attempt to speak, he will instantly be put down by
noise and clamor. But the great body will be ready to suffer any
thing, sooner than allow the Church to be restored to a better
condition. I say nothing of doctrine. Would that they could only
come to the cause with an honest and docile temper. But it is certain
as certainty itself, that the single resolution of all will be not to
listen to any thing that is said, or to the arguments by which it is
supported, be they what they may. Nay, they will not only stuff their
ears with stubbornness and obstinacy, that they may not obey the
truth, but will also arm themselves with ferocity to resist it. And
why? Is it credible that those who do not admit into their ears any
mention of sound doctrine, will spontaneously withdraw their opposition,
as soon as it comes to be a matter of present practice? Can we hope
that those who are constantly plotting to prevent the fallen kingdom
of Christ from again rising in the world, will give a helping hand to
raise it up, and advance it? Will those who are now, with fire and
sword, raging against the truth, and doing all they can to whet and
inflame the cruelty of others, show themselves moderate and humane?
But were there nothing else, I leave it to your rudence, Most
Invincible Emperor, and yours, Most
Illustrious Princes, to consider whether or not it is for the private
interest of the Roman Pontiff, and his whole faction, that the Church
should be restored to true order, and its most corrupt condition
reformed, according to the strict standard of the gospel. How much it
is their wont to forget their own advantage, and, in disregard of it,
to engage with heart and soul in promoting the common welfare, you
have learned by a sure experience!
Sire,
will you leave the Church to them, that they may decide concerning
its reformation at their own will, or rather their own
caprice? Will you remain waiting for their nod, resolved never to
consult for the Church till they consent? If they know this to be
your intention, they will disentangle themselves by an easy process.
They will decide that things must remain as they are. But let us
suppose that they will be so overcome, either by a sense of shame, or
by the authority of your Majesty, and the other Princes, as to put on
some appearance of moderation, and part with some small portion of
their power; will they, even of their own accord, condescend so far
as to allow themselves to be reduced into order, that the kingdom of
Christ may be upraised? But if they will not, to what end is the care
of reforming the Church committed to them, unless it be to expose the
sheep to the wolves? If there is no other alternative, it were better
that the Church should be given up as desperate, than that she should
fall into the hands of such physicians. It had, indeed, become those
who have the name and hold the office of pastors, to be the first of
all to fly to her assistance. It had, I admit, become them to come
forward as leaders, and unite the princes with them, as associates
and coadjutors in this holy work. But what if they decline to do it
themselves? What if they are unwilling it should be done by others?
What if they leave not a stone unturned in order to prevent it? Are
we, then, still to have regard to them? must no man move till they
give the signal? Must we still listen to that solemn saw of theirs,
“Nothing must be attempted till the Pope has approved?” Let your
Majesty, then, be assured, and do you also, Most Illustrious Princes
and distinguished personages, lay it to heart, as a certain fact,
that the Church, not only betrayed, deserted, and left destitute by
her pastors, but vexed, overwhelmed with calamity, and doomed to
destruction, throws herself on your protection. Nay, rather view it
in this way — God has now furnished you with the means of giving a
sure and striking proof of your fidelity towards Him. There is
nothing in which all men ought to feel a deeper interest, nothing in
which God wishes us to exhibit a more intense zeal, than in
endeavoring that the glory of His name may remain unimpaired, His
kingdom be advanced, and the pure doctrine, which alone can guide us
to true worship, flourish in full vigor. How much more, therefore,
does it become princes to make these things their care, to design,
commence, and prosecute them to a close, seeing God has honored them
with a communication of His name, that they may be on earth the
guardians and vindicators of His glory? Be unwilling, I beseech you,
to lend an ear to ungodly men, who either cajole you with a false
show of counsel, in order that the Church may receive no alleviation
at your hand, or disparage the cause — though it is the greatest of
all causes — that you may be more remiss in undertaking it, or urge
you to violent methods of proceeding in it. Hitherto, Most Invincible
Emperor, in endeavoring to inflame you with rage, and, in a manner,
clothe you in armor, they have lost
their labor, and you will certainly transmit to posterity the
distinguished praise, both of mildness and prudence, in not having
suffered yourself to be once moved from moderation by the turbulent
counsels, which have been so often and so strongly pressed upon you.
Be it at all times your care that this praise be not wrested from you
by the importunity
of our enemies. Augustine acknowledges the discipline to be bad which
terrifies heretics, but does not teach them. If heretics, who, by
their intemperance, and without any just cause, disturb the Church,
are to be treated with a mildness ensuring that instruction shall
always precede chastisement, how much more becoming is it to use
humanity in this cause, in which we call God and men to witness that
we seek nothing but a sincere consent on both sides to the pure
doctrine of God? That the Roman Pontiff and his followers breathe
nothing but blood and slaughter, you yourself, Sire, are the best
witness. Had you yielded to their fury, Germany had long ago been
deluged with her own blood. You, too, Most Illustrious Princes, well
know the fact. Can it be that it is the Spirit of God which drives
them on headlong to such cruelty? But thus it is; licentiousness,
which has long stalked abroad without hinderance, no sooner feels the
curb than it breaks out into madness. If there are any, besides those
who desire to see us crushed by violence and arms, either enkindled
by the breath of others, or instigated from within by an
inconsiderate zeal, they hate a cause which they know not. For the
very same thing of which Tertullian complains in his Apology, as
having happened to the Church when she first arose, is also
experienced by us in the present day. We are condemned merely from
prejudice against our name, without any investigation of our cause.
And what do we contend for now, save that our cause, after due
cognisance has once been taken of it, may at length be decided,
according to truth and equity, and not according to any falsely
preconceived opinion? Sire, it is, indeed, a noble proof both of
humanity and of singular wisdom, that you have hitherto resisted the
urgency with which our enemies have endeavored to hurry you into an
unjust severity. The next best thing is not to yield to the
pernicious counsels of those who, under specious pretexts for delay,
have for a long time hindered this holy work, (I mean the reformation
of the Church;) and what is worse, are endeavoring to prevent it
altogether.
There
is, perhaps, one remaining difficulty which prevents you from
commencing the work. Very many, not otherwise indisposed, are
deterred from engaging in this holy undertaking, merely because
antecedently to the attempt they despair of its success. But here two
things ought to be considered; the one, that the difficulty is not so
great as it appears to be, and the other, that, however great it be,
there is nothing in it which ought to
dispirit you, when you reflect that it is the cause of God, and that
He overruling it, both our hopes may be surpassed and our impressions
prove erroneous. The former of these it is no part of my present
design to explain; a fitter opportunity will be found, when once the
matter comes to be taken into serious consideration. This only I will
say, that the execution will be more expeditious, and of less
difficulty than is commonly supposed,
provided there is courage enough in attempting it. However,
considering, according to the well known sentiment of an old proverb,
that there is nothing illustrious which is not also difficult and
arduous, can we wonder, that in the greatest and most excellent of
all causes, we must fight our way through many difficulties? I have
already observed, that if we would not give deep offense to God, our
minds must take a loftier view. For
it is just to measure the power of God by the extent of our own
powers, if we hope no more of the restoration of the Church than the
present state of affairs seems to promise. How slender soever the
hope of success, God bids us be of good courage, and put far away
every thing like fear, that we may with alacrity begirt ourselves for
the work. Thus far, at least, let us do Him honor. Confiding in his
Almighty power, let us not decline to try what the success is which
He may be pleased to give. In the present condition of the empire,
your Imperial Majesty, and you, Most Illustrious Princes, necessarily
involved in various cares, and distracted by a multiplicity of
business, are agitated, and in a manner tempest-tossed. But be always
assured, that of all works this one is undoubtedly entitled to take
precedence. I feel what nerve, what earnestness, what urgency, what
ardor, the treatment of this subject requires. And I am well aware
that persons will not be wanting to express their surprise, that on a
subject so noble and splendid I should be so cold. But what could I
do? I bend under its weight and magnitude; and I therefore see not
how I can do better than set the matter before you simply, without
any embellishment of words, that you may afterwards ponder and
scrutinize it. First, call to mind the fearful calamities of the
Church, which might move to pity even minds of iron. Nay, set before
your eyes her squalid and unsightly form, and the sad devastation
which is everywhere beheld. How long, pray, will you allow the spouse
of Christ, the mother of you all, to lie thus prostrated and
afflicted — thus, too, when she is imploring your protection, and
when the means of relief are in your hand?
Next, consider how much
worse calamities impend. Final destruction cannot be far off, unless
you interpose with the utmost speed. Christ will, indeed, in the way
which to him seems good, preserve his Church miraculously, and beyond
human expectation; but this I say, that the consequence of a little
longer delay on your part will be, that in Germany we shall not have
even the form of a Church. Look round, and see how many indications
threaten that ruin which it is your duty to prevent, and announce
that it is actually at hand. These things speak loud enough, though I
were silent. Such indications, however, ought not only to move us by
their actual aspect; they ought also to remind us of coming
vengeance. Divine worship being vitiated by so many false opinions,
and perverted by so many impious and foul superstitions, the sacred
Majesty of God is insulted with atrocious contumely, his holy name
profaned, his glory only not trampled under foot. Nay, while the
whole Christian world is openly polluted with idolatry, men adore,
instead of Him, their own fictions. A thousand superstitions reign,
superstitions which are just so many open insults to Him. The power
of Christ is almost obliterated from the minds of men, the hope of
salvation is transferred from him to empty, frivolous, and nugatory
ceremonies, while there is a pollution of the Sacraments not less to
be execrated. Baptism is deformed by numerous additions, the Holy
Supper is prostituted to all kinds of ignominy, religion throughout
has degenerated into an entirely different form. If we are negligent
in remedying these evils, God assuredly will not forget himself. How
could He who declares that he will not allow his honor to be in any
way impaired, fail to interpose when it is cast down and destroyed?
How
could He who threatens with destruction all the nations among whom
prophecy shall have failed, permit our open and contumacious contempt
of the prophecies to go unpunished? How could He who punished a
slight stain on his Supper so severely in the Corinthians, spare us
in presuming to pollute it with so many unutterable blasphemies? How
could He who, by the mouths of all his prophets, testifies and
proclaims that he is armed with vengeance against idolatry, leave
untouched in us so many monstrous idolatries? Assuredly He does not
so leave them, for we see how, sword in hand, he urges and pursues
us. The Turkish war now occupies the minds of all, and fills them
with alarm. It well may. Consultations
are held to prepare the means of resistance. This, too, is prudently
and necessarily done. All exclaim that there is need of no ordinary
dispatch. I admit that there cannot be too much dispatch, provided,
in the meantime, the consultation which ought to be first, the
consultation how to restore the Church to its proper state, is
neither neglected
nor retarded. Already delays more than enough have been interposed.
The fuel of the Turkish war is within, shut up in our bowels, and
must first be removed, if we would successfully drive back the war
itself. In future, therefore, as often as you shall hear the
croaking note — The business of reforming the Church must be
delayed for the present — there will be time enough to accomplish
it after other matters are transacted — remember, Most Invincible
Emperor, and Most Illustrious Princes, that the matter on which you
are to deliberate is, whether you are to leave to your posterity some
empire or none. Yet, why do I speak of posterity?
Even
now, while your own eyes behold, it is half bent, and totters to its
final ruin. In regard to ourselves, whatever be the event, we will
always be supported, in the sight of God, by the consciousness that
we have desired both to promote his glory and do good to his Church;
that we have labored faithfully for that end; that, in short, we have
done what we could. Our conscience tells us, that in all our wishes,
and all our endeavors, we have had no other aim. And we have essayed,
by clear proof, to testify the fact. And, certainly, while we feel
assured, that we both care for and do the work of the Lord, we are
also confident, that he will by no means be wanting either to himself
or to it. But be the issue what it may, we will never repent of
having begun, and of having proceeded thus far. The Holy Spirit is a
faithful and unerring witness to our doctrine. We know, I say, that
it is the eternal truth of God that we preach. We are, indeed,
desirous, as we ought to be, that our ministry may prove salutary to
the world; but to give it this effect belongs to God, not to us. If,
to punish, partly the ingratitude, and partly the stubbornness of
those to whom we desire to do good, success must prove desperate, and
all things go to worse, I will say what it befits a Christian man to
say, and what all who are true to this holy profession will
subscribe:—We will die, but in death even be conquerors, not only
because through it we shall have a sure passage to a better life, but
because we know that our blood will be as seed to propagate the
Divine truth which men now despise.