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Ser3 ‘ pa i eee a We , bl Dye OT i 1, SRL SS “ a" a Ft oh ele ¢ og ——— foe yr’ 1 EAN ane et af Ap ~ . irm Fr. PusT + t) ght oN , 1 By E, STEINBACK, of the F yt ae op rs Yer & Co. pr ve i a. , aie wh , yy ~ a a ‘ "\ bad ' ’ ¥ " . 7 - , > . 4 a¢ te « - y - P ~ - ‘ » na) ae Ae ke iy ‘ oe 2. ~~ et - So g na" . . OP i... i 7 lu ‘ pa ree = 8 . " MA ir i 7 6 1 = : fm < oe & ~*~ J a ” ‘ “ ‘ \ - — ‘ ee — , ae iv = . , - : - i - : , P. ‘ » 2 , rad po 7 F. c ~ ‘ =. > ’ 34 s = Fs F + | yA ee es is Ae i ee =e - i > | ¢ Ss” «2 | @ — all TRANSLATORS PREFACE. B This third, and last, volume of Dr. Schanz’s Christian Apology deals with the Church. Apart from the inherent importance of its subject, the volume may fairly claim the attentive interest of every English student of Theology, because of its close inward connection with an Apology that not only breaks new ground, but is also the first of its kind, as we believe, in the English language. The author’s manner of treatment is especially commendable for its logical clearness and consis- tency. His subject is introduced by a preliminary chapter of great importance, and serving as a basis for all that follows, on the. Finality of Christian Revelation and the Development of Christian Belief. The Church is the connecting link be- tween Revelation in the abstract and Revelation in the concrete—between vague faith in an un- defined cloud of revealed doctrine, and precise belief in a catena of definite truths. In dealing with the Church the author scrupulously adheres to the strict historical method. The Kingdom of God upon earth gradually rises before our eyes in growing distinctness from the first shadowy outline ii. PREFACE. prophetically thrown upon the history of the past, to the brightness of the perfect. plan revealed in its actual completeness. We behold Christ build- ing it up, stone by stone, from its inception in the home of the Holy Family at Nazareth, till its glorious Dedication amid the flashing fires of the Spirit at Pentecost. Pentecost, says the author, witnessed, not its birth, but its crowning and consecration, From a study of this work of Christ we learn the true definition of the Church as a living reality. All along we are dealing with facts. ‘The Church grows out of a real Christ into a real thing. We follow Him with our eyes as He draws men to Himself, filling them with wisdom and grace; moulding, shaping, and sub- duing their character ; absorbing them into His purpose, and assimilating them into one body that lives in the pervading strength of His Spirit. Beneath our gaze the Church arises, and we see projected, as on a plane, her nature and constitu- tion, her office and work, her attributes and power, The new living organisation of the Apostolic college is the Church—it is Christ still living visibly in our midst, with like power and the self- same office. We thus understand what is meant by the Unity, Apostolicity, Catholicity, Infallibility of the Church; and we gain a view of the Church, that is not only true to fact and nature, but is also definite, consistent and harmonious. In the question of the Church does every PREFACE. iii. religious controversy centre. Here we are at the parting of the ways. Every reputed Church is either of Christ or of Belial, and we must commit ourselves wholly to one or to the other. [tis not ”) e lawful ‘“‘to run.after many lovers Here, if any- where, does the saying hold in all its force: “ Be- “ cause thou art luke-warm, and neither cold, nor “hot, I will begin to vomit thee out of my mouth.” Not to gather with Christ, is=to: scatter: @ [tis certainly good and useful for a Christian Apologist to deal with particular truths; but all particular “questions are simply dwarfed and lose their impor- tance when in presence of the paramount and all momentous question of the true Church. This is the master-point from which alone we can survey the wide sweep of revelation. Viewed from here, all teachers, all sects, all protestants, find their due location—Leo and Arius; Nicholas and Photius; Trent and the Confessio Augustana; the Vatican and Exeter Hall, or Lambeth Palace, or the Metropolitan Tabernacle. [From the very nature of the Christian religion this must be so; for, not only has the Christian revelation never existed otherwise than in a religious community—in the Church of Christ,—but the very institution of that community is a fact which, like the fact of the In- carnation, forms a main portion of the Christian revelation itself. Therefore must every religious community justify its existence, in the face both of reason and of revelation. It must show its begin- iv. PREFACE. nings—its living root, as the same definite Church, in the past. It must produce the charter of its unequivocal right to the full possession of the truth that was once for all revealed and committed to its authoritative keeping. It cannot advance one step till its feet have been set on the firm and solid ground of an origin undeniably divine. Every communion must, at the very outset, grapple with the historical challenge of Tertullian: edant origines suas. Nought else will avail—no ad captandum assertions; no unauthorised assump- tions of authority ; no beaming light of a royal countenance; no decrees of a Privy Council. What reasonable or prudent man wiil commit himself to an eternal issue—and here the issues are eternal—on the strength of anything less than a clearly credible and exclusive authority to teach ? The fact of a divine origin must, with perfect clearness, be established by an impartial and relentless logic. To trust to some probable, or conjectural, but untraced, link of connection with the past—to some problematical continuity that is supposed to find its way through the obscure mists surrounding, for instance, a defunct British Church—to act thus is most blindly to leap from inner into outer darkness. The feverish and frenzied assertions of continuity, that are heard arising from certain quarters, are so many frantic witnesses to a sober truth. This truth is the key of the whole position, Let the true Church be PREFACE, Vv. once found, and her voice once heard—and all doubt and hesitation will cease. The conscientious and earnest man will no longer find himself committed to the dreary task, ever beginning and never ending, of painfully searching out the claims of each apparent truth for himself, only to discover at last that he holds nothing by firm unwavering faith, but either by the loose and feeble grasp of slippery opinion, or, as the case may be, with the quivering tenacity of alarm and blank despair. Who wrote the books of the New Testament v. gr. the Epistles? Were the unknown writers inspired ? Are these books, indeed, the undoubted Word of God? How is this made clear to men? And what of the Old Testament Scriptures? Who were their authors? By what unfailing and absolutely reliable principle is the Canon of Scrip- ture to be determined? How is a good simple soul enabled so to steer his bark amid these stormy waters as safely to arrive on the firm shore of an immovable faith? All questions are resolved into the one clear issue of Church authority. Of side- issues, of shirking and shuffling, of unmeaning vagueness and unwarranted assumption, we are weary almost to death. Of course, this important matter has not been altogether overlooked. Much has been said and written about the Church, about her voice and authority, her beauty, her unfailing wealth of truth and grace. Anglicans are not unfrequently eloquent vi. PREFACE. in this department. Would they were as precise as they are eloquent! But the misfortune is that they never tell us what is the Church. It now appears to be something-concrete, real and palpable, but so soon as we attempt to touch it, it becomes a mere vague something of religious beauty and floats away through the lofty inaccessible.regions of the abstract and ideal. The Church must have had a clear meaning once; but now that meaning is as dark as the Sphinx’s riddle. Thus the Rev. W. H. Stanton, Ely Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge, will write on ‘The Place of Authority in Matters of Religious Belief,’ with a view to proving the necessity and reason- ableness of listening to the wozce of the Church, but declines, as his Reviewer, not without astonishment, remarks, to enter into an examination ‘of the true idea and definition of the Church.” * Occasionally, as in W. Burton Pope’s ‘Higher Catechism’ such an examination is attempted; and ends in the only too visible embarrassment of the writer. The Essayists of Lux AZundi afford no exception in the history of failure. They sail proudly along on a flood of phrase concerning the Church, her voice and authority, her office and power in the world, but when confronted with the questions: But what Church? And what authority? And how is it all proved ?—they are miserably silent. Why are they so timid? Of what are they afraid ? * “The Thinker,” March, 1892, No. 3, Pe 335- PREFACE, Vii. Why do they shrink back? Even their own friends can see the fatuity of this ostrich-like pro- Gecding. oaysithe -Rev.a fia |euLiaseMAAY tt the mistake made by the Reformed Churches is becoming yet more evident at the present time. For the doctrine of the infallibility of Scripture is everywhere being energetically attacked, and 1s daily becoming more and more difficult to defend. Cur present position is one of great peril. Men find the ground giving way under their feet, and there is danger of a headlong stampede to infidelity or to Rome, according as the non-religious or _ religious elements in our minds are the stronger.” And again: ‘The Church of England has occupied a position midway between the two disputants (_.e. between Rome and the Reformed Churches). There has always been a considerable number of her members inclined to fall back upon Church author- ity. But when confronted with. the question what Church authority, and how is its voice to make itself heard, they have often been inclined to give contradictory or evasive answers, Yet there can be little doubt that they were in the main right (?). The Roman Catholic view is clearly untenable” (?) We can admire the robust boldness of his cool unproved assumption that the claim of Rome is clearly untenable. But it is not as a model of boldness that we have quoted him. We have quoted him as an unimpeachable witness to the logical difficulty of the Anglican position, and to Vill. PREFACE. the manner in which Anglicans have attempted either to evade or to leap that difficulty. The position is this. Christianity is a necessity—hence we must secure it. The authority of Seripture is crumbling away—but Christianity itself is ever- living and true. It lives in the living authority of the Church. Yet that Church is evidently—as we shall assume—not the Church of Rome. Therefore it must—as the Anglican position demands—be somewhere found in the Anglican establishment. This is surely nothing else but the last wild move- ment of a mind hopelessly baffled in its search for truth. How else can we account for the distressing fact that men in their sober senses should set their immortal hopes at hazard on the flimsy strength of such reasonings! How vastly different it all is in the Church of Rome! How superior the method of her Theologians! No Babel of ‘contradictory or evasive answers” which, in spite of being contra- dictory, are yet, by some logical legerdemain, found to be right in the main. Pursuing their course with fearless courage and inexorable science, the Roman Theologians arrive at an assured and unanimous conclusion. The Church is clearly manifest in the brightness of her authority and in the infallibility of her teaching office. Her visible Head is known. We can put our hands on the very throne of her power. PREFACE, 1X. Bie In the recent Bampton Lectures, Mr. Gore essays to go a step further than his fellows in the way of explanation. He deals at length with the question of the Church, her function and authority. The upshot of his remarks is, that the Church rightly used her infallible power of defining doctrine at Nicaea, Ephesus and Chalcedon, but not at Trent or the Vatican Council. A plain man would have thought that the Church’s office and duty, as an infallible teacher, was perpetual; that it must be as living and necessary, as patent and effective in the roth century as in the fourth. But Mr. Gore completely puzzles us. Janus is outfaced. Even the Church smiles confidence only to betray. We walk for awhile under the shadow of her watchful protection, to be at length abandoned and sent wandering along unknown paths beneath the scorching rays. The Church was used to speak as the living teacher of mankind. But now for a long time, since a remote date not yet specified, she has been dumb. Her voice has gradually died away, or is no longer distinguishable! But we must consider the arguments with which Mr. Gore seeks to establish his theory. He rejects, as do we, the lifeless notion that we should at once return to the primitive state of an incipient Christianity, and be content with a few simple, clear-cut truths that are as exact in outline as pieces of hardware, xX. PREFACE. and just as incapable of growth and expansion. Such a view is entirely at variance with the most obvious lessons of history, and the best ascertained principles of nature. What lives must grow; it can never become, so long as it lives, absolutely devoid of activity and motion. Now, wherever there are doctrines upon which the restless mind of man is busy; wherever doubts, questions, difficulties arise; wherever faith is jeopardized by the up- heaval of heresies that ‘‘must needs” be; the authority of the Church, ever wakeful and on the alert, must be present to guard the doctrines, to solve the doubts and to crush the heresy. Thus our vision widens, and the faith grows. If heresy must needs come, development of the truth is a happy necessity borne upon the dark wings of heresy itself—provided however there is an authoritative voice to which we can securely turn for an answer. Thus authority and development are essentially correlative. Development moves along under the guiding influence of a living teacher, and develop- ment cannot cease till either man’s mind becomes the shroud of faith, or faith the shroud of man’s mind. The truth must expand and unfold itself more and more fully, unless it be dead in man’s heart, or man be dead to it. Yet this implies no addition to the primitive depositum of truth. The least of all seeds becomes the greatest of herbs; but what in the plant is a natural principle of this evolution, is, in the Church, a divinely-given magis- PREFACE, xi. terium. Mr. Gore adopts this view, but fails in its application; and fails for the simple reason that his application is merely arbitrary and partial. The Church, he contends, acted with divine power at Niceea, Ephesus and Chalcedon, but did not act with the same power at the Councils of Trent and the Vatican! Where is the difference ? The Church, he replies, exceeded the limits of her power in the later Councils, but kept well within them in the earlier Councils. This has been the angry cry of every heretic from the beginning until now. It was the burden of the charge made by Arians, Nestorians, Monophysites, Monothelites. This voice of discontent will be heard murmuring for ever. What, then, are the sure and certain limits of the Church’s defining power? Mr. Gore answers: ‘Scripture proves, the Church teaches.” There can be no truth of faith that is not expéecetly contained in Scripture, and the sole function of the Church, in face of the questions addressed to her, is a merely negative function restricted to the bare elimination of interpretations that are false, and unable directly to posit the interpretation that is true. We can confidently refer to our Author's pages for the effectual bursting of this fanciful bubble. But even were the theory true, it would not make the Anglican claims one whit the stronger. It is logically impossible to admit the overpowering magisterium of the Church in respect of the Canon of Scripture, the binding authority of General xii. PREFACE. Councils, the mysteries of the Trinity and the Incarnation, infant baptism and baptism by heretics, Sunday instead of Sabbath-day observance, and the far-reaching conclusions arrived at in the great controversy on Grace and Original Sin—it is logically impossible to advance thus far without assuming the obligation of advancing farther. How is the definition. of the Immaculate Con- ception more direct and positive than the decisions above mentioned? In what are the texts of Scrip- ture in favour of the points enumerated, more explicit than the great Petrine texts? The Anglican attempt to manipulate Tradition is like Phaeton trying to guide the chariot of the sun. Anglicanism lies prone and helpless on the floor of Tradition because, to use St. Augustine’s simile, it did not come in by the door, but fell in over the wall. Of course Mr. Gore is at perfect liberty to draw what pleasing horoscope he chooses for the Establish- ment; yet the sun of Rome, in all its splendour, majesty and power, will continue to roll on serenely just the same. At least one thing is evident— Anglicans in appealing to Tradition have uttered a spell “which evokes, whether they will or no, hosts of subtle associations, rising up like spirits out of the past centuries.” These spirits it will be beyond their power to lay. — Swe ee ee eee f. - le it tee a PREFACE. xill. ITT, There is another matter we must, at least briefly, touch upon, though its importance would demand something more than the mere passing notice which we are able now to bestow—viz.: what is the true logical position held by Church Authority in the order of revealed truths? Is it the first, and the foundation of all? When can we first invoke it? Is it its own warrant? If not, upon what prior doctrines is it based? How are those prior doctrines known ?2—These, and similar, ques- tions immediately stare us in the face so soon as we enter upon an enquiry into the relations between faith and authority. The full bearing of such questions will be better understood from a short history, given by Rev. Principal Charies Chap- man, LL.D., in the January (1892) Number of the ‘Thinker. Mrs. Besant, then, torn with doubt as to what she should believe of Christ— whether in His true Divinity or no—secured an interview with Dr. Pusey. Instead of finding her doubts answered and her cbjections met, she was told: “It is not your duty to ascertain the truth. It is your duty to accept and believe the truth as laid down by the Church . . . Did not the Lord promise that the presence of the Spirit should be ever with His Church, to guide her into all truth 2” She answered: “ But the fact of the promise and its value are the very points on which I am doubt- XIV. PREFACE. ful . . . I must and will find out what is true, and I will not believe until J am sure.” Dr. Pusey rejoined: ‘‘ You have no right to make terms with God as to what you will believe and what you will not believe.” Mrs. Besant came away sad, hopeless, and unbelieving. Upon this narrative Dr. Chapman remarks: **No doubt Dr. Pusey was his true self in the demand made at the interview. For, strictly speaking, it is a superfluity for those who hold to the high doctrine of Church infallibility . . . to trouble themselves with reasoning’s to prove this or that Christian dogma . .. The only one con- sistent course 1s to prove, if possible, the right or power of the Church to decide . . . and then to demand of every one entire and instant submission. » « « Romanism is logical. High Anglicanism when dealing with doctrine is too often illogical. . . Dr. Pusey should have remembered that this doctrine of an infallible authority, over-riding all the thinking and judgments of individuals... is not itself an Article of Faith in the sense that the Deity of Christ is. It is a preliminary question to that of what is revealed concerning Christ. It cannot be established by assuming that the Church has right and power ex cathedré to settle it without appeal; for that is to beg the very question. It is to say, the infallible Church estab- lishes the doctrine of its infallibility—a piece of logical nonsense. Reasons appealing to the judg- ment of men alone can serve in such a case; and PREFACE, XV. thus, even though it be shown that the Church is as infallible as is claimed in settling dogmas, they and its infallibility are ultimately made to rest on an appeal to the reason as instructed by Scripture.” Dr. Chapman must pardon us for saying that he has been betrayed into unconscious, though none the less provoking, misrepresentation. A preliminary truth is one thing ; a dogma of faith is another thing. An example will explain. What would be the use, for instance, of speaking to one who did not believe in a God about the contents of a divine revelation ? Unless a man first holds it for truth that God exists, not only will he not believe the supposed revelation, but he must, on principle, deny even its possibility. Thus the doctrine of God’s existence is to us, here and now, a preliminary question to that of what has been revealed. Yet one of the truths contained in the Christian revelation—the very first Article of the Creed—is identical in terms with the preliminary truth on which all revelation depends, viz.: that of God’s existence. Is this revelation of God’s existence a piece of illogical nonsense? By no means. But what was only a preliminary doctrine has now put on the garb of a dogma. This gives us a reply to Dr. Chapman. So far is it from being a fact that the “ doctrine” of Church Authority is a ‘preliminary question” to that of the Deity of Christ, that the very opposite is the case. The dogma of Church Authority is logically antecedent to the dogma of the Deity of Christ ; xvi. PREFACE. : but the doctrine of the Deity of Christ is a truth preliminary to the dogma of Church Authority. The broad principle of the Catholic position is this: such a strong and firm assent of the mind as Is required in an act of true faith cannot be lawfully elicited until the assent itself has been antecedently justified on sure and solid grounds.* Without an antecedent and persuasive assurance of the prudence of belief, faith would fall from the lofty height of virtue into the dark abyss of blind creduiity ; and we should be most illogically logical were we to pretend that belief in the specific dogma of Church Authority formed any solitary exception to the rule. The first two volumes of Dr. Schanz’s Apology have dealt with the truths that a man must hold before he can accept with safety the Authority of the Church.—These preliminary truths are seven:— the Existence of God, the Possibility of Revelation, the Fact of Revelation, the History of the Old Testament as substantially genuine, the substantially Authentic Character of the New Testament, the Deity of Christ, the Institution of an enduring Apostolate. A man must be in reason satisfied about these points, before surrendering his mind to the dogma of the infallibility of the Church—unless, indeed, he clearly sees a way of establishing the Divine Authority of the Church by arguments not. drawn from the New Testament Scriptures. Catholic Theologians, then, no more claim for ® See Vol. II. of this Apology, c. ix. ‘‘ Reason and Revelation.” PREFACE, XVil. themselves the right cf assuming the Authority of the Church, than Protestants may claim the right of assuming the inspiration and Divine Authority of the Bible. Though we must confess that, if any assumption had necessarily to be made, it would be far more justifiable on our part than on theirs. The Catholic Church now is, and long has been, a potent and living factor in the history of mankind. Something of the brightness of her divine origin shines like a halo round her head. Incessu patuit Dea. Her influence for good, her marvellous authority, the charm of her unity, her inflexible courage, her infinite adaptability, her unwavering self-consistency, her wonderful energy, her untiring patience, her strange miraculous triumphs over eve.y vicissitude and danger, her enduring power, her indestructible vitality ; the long and glorious list of her saints; the keen and subtle intellects who have obeyed her; the vast creations of her administration, the touching works of her benefi- cence, the majesty and wisdom of her ritual and sacramental system—all these things furnish an evident and striking contrast to the spectacle of a Bible sadly mutilated by the hands of German criticism, and to the discordant and warring atoms of broken sects. The same complete misunderstanding of the Catholic position is apparent in the other passage of Dr. Chapman’s criticism, in which he says: “even though it be shown that the Church is as XVill. PREFACE. infallible as is claimed in settling dogmas, they and its infallibility are ultimately made to rest on an appeal to the reason as instructed by Scrip- ture.” He should have said—as instructed by history. Matthew or Mark might, without being inspired, have written history just as true and reliable as that of Thucydides or Lingard. Without any special Divine assistance, they could have given us a contemporary record which, in its breadth and substance, was faithful to fact. This simply historical and merely general accuracy is all the “Scriptural” instruction that is required as a preliminary to establishing the authority of the Catholic Church. But when Dr. Chapman sup- poses, as he seems to suppose, that the infallibility of the Church is ultimately made to rest on reason as instructed by Scripture, and by Scripture under- stands the unquestionably inspired word of God, he is simply setting Catholic Theology on its head, with its heels in the air. Such a deep, hidden, and stupendous doctrine as the dogma of Divine inspiration can be brought home to our hearts only on the commanding testimony of an undoubtedly Divine witness. Hence the famous saying of S. Augustine :* “For my part, I should not believe the Gospel except I were moved by the authority of the Catholic Church.” It were, perhaps, too much to hope that mistakes, such as that of Dr. Chapman, will in future cease ; but the ‘ Apology’ * Reply to Manichen’s Fundamental Epistle, c. 5. n. 6. PREFACE. X1X. of Dr. Schanz will, at any rate, furnish one reason more for holding such mistakes less excusable. In this third volume we have endeavoured to meet the wishes of those who criticized the two previous volumes. The criticisms were not only fair, but even kind and generous. We have used greater freedom in the translation than heretofore. Moreover, we have numbered all the paragraphs— some—marked thus *—we have re-arranged ; others—marked thus + —-we have ourselves added as well as a large number of notes.{ We have great confidence that the volume will commend itself to the English student of Theology. We must again express our obligations to the Rev. J. McIntyre, D.D., Professor of Sacred Scripture, for his constant assistance. S. Mary’s, OscottT, BIRMINGHAM, Feast of S. John Baptist, June 24th, 1892. t As aconsequence the number of pages has increased to such an extent that it was found impossible to join the promised Index to this III. volume. CO N lees. CHAPTER 1. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. PAGB t The Tutorship of Revelation ceasing with the Advent of Christ— 2 Revelation completed and closed by Christ: Christian Reve- lation Absolute and Final—3 John the Baptist the Last of the Prophets: Christ the Fulfilment of all Prophecy—4 The Reason being His Divine Sonship—5 The Advent of the Holy Ghost not for the Purpose of a New Revelation, but for the complete Understanding of Christ’s Revelation—6 Proof from the Words and Practice of the Apostles—7 Proof from the Post Apostolic Age: the Church claimed to teach no other Doctriae but that delivered by the Apostles—8 Private Revelations of no account to the Catholic Deposit of Faith— 9 Christian Revelation, though materially Absolute and Perfect, does not exclude Formal Per- fectibility—1o Christ implanted a New Vital Principle both in the Individual Man, and in the Church as a Living Society: Development and Growth a Necessary Consequence—11 The Law of Progress recognised by the Apostles—12 The Apostolic Deposit not delivered by way of a Full and Perfect Doctrinal System—13 The Contents of the Divine Deposit require Un- folding at the Hand of a Living, Intelligent Agent, and under the Assistance of the Holy Ghost—14 The Rule of S. Vincent of Lerin: Quod Semper, etc.—15 His Analogy from Living . Organisms applied to the Growth and Development of Dogma: Development not Change—16 The Principle of Tradition, that is, the Combination of Conservatism with Progress, distinguishes the Catholic Church from All Other Communions-—17 Develop- ment due to Causes Internal and External—18 Heresies, CONTENTS, XXi. PAGE according to the Fathers, are an Occasion for Development— 19 History confirms it—20 The Various Stages of Development may be traced in the Chief Doctrines on the Trinity and Incar- nation—2I1 Prohibition of the Council of Ephesus to add to the Nicene Creed—22 The Living Spirit in the Church never Inactive—23 Development in the Dogma of Grace, Free Will, Justification, Sacraments—24 Development in Cultus, Worship, Life of the Church—25 Difference between Catholic Church and Other Communions in this respect—26 Development the Law of every Religion—27 The Catholic Church holds the Golden Mean between the Fossil Conservatism of Greek and Protestant Churches, and the Infinite Material Perfectibility of Rationalism—28 Protestantism puts the Individuat Subjec- tive Spirit in Place of the Spirit of the Church—29 The Distinction between Fundamental and Non-Fundamental Truths a Snare and a Delusion—30 The Vatican Council on Develop- ment ° e ° ° @ r ° . I-39 CHAPTER II. THE KINGDOM OF GOD. t The Messianic Kingdom predicted by the Prophets: A Kingdom of Peace and Jusiice—2 The Name ‘‘ Kingdom of Heaven” first in Daniel: Established by the ‘*Son of Man”—3 Jewish Hopes of a New Kingdom—4 The Kingdom of Heaven in the Gospel of S. Matthew—5 In the Gospels of the other Evan- gelists—6 Further Description by S. Matthew: The Eight Beatitudes—7 The Spiritual Character of the New Kirngdom—8 Obligations and Duties in the New Kingdom on Earth—g Inter- nal and External Aspect of the New Kingdom: Its Visibility—10 Conditions of Membership: Corfession of the Name of Jesus, Bapiism, Observance of Precepts—1I Visible Sign of Com- munion : Eucharist—12 The Fortunes of the New Kingdom as illustrated by the Parables—13 Externai and Internal Growth— 14 Value of the Kingdom of Heaven—15 The Kingdom of God according to the Apostolic Epistles—r6 Both a Heavenly Gift and a Visible Community—i7 Christ’s Disciples the First Begin- ning of this New Society or Kingdom—18 Discipies in the PAGE Narrow and Wider Sense Election of the Twelve ; Their Gradual Understanding —19 Unity between Disciples and Believers—2zo The Good Shepherd—z21 Definition of the New Kingdom . e e e e e e 40-64 CHAPTER III. THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. 1 The Word ‘‘Church,” and its Meaning in the Gospel of S. Matthew—2 Twice used with Reference to Hierarchy—3 Omitted by Other Evangelists from Causes External ; Substiiu- tion of the Phrase, ‘* Kingdom of God ”—g Incidents in the Gospel of S. John having Reference to the Church, v. g. In- scription on the Cross; Seamless Garment ; Words of Jesus to His Mother standing by the Cross ; Piercing of the Side—5 The Church as represented in the Acts of the Apostles—6 The Church Universal and the Churches Particular—7 Organization of New Christian Communities : ecclesia Docens et Diéiscens—8 The Church and the Churches in the Pauline Epistles; All One Great Brotherhood ; the Church of God—g Rare Occurrence of the Word in the Epistles of James and John—ro Further Details on the Nature of the Church, especially from S. Paul— 11 Metaphor of Edifice—12 Metaphor of Organism, Body—13 Metaphor of Matrimony—14 The Church as the Continuation of the Incarnation, as the Intermediary Organ of applying the Work of Kedemption—15 Real Truths underlying all those Metaphors—16 Religious Life in the Apostolic Church ; Prayer and the Breaking of Bread in Separate Assemblies—17 The Lord’s Supper as the New Paschal Feast—18 Visible Guidance of the New Community by the Holy Spirit, communicated by Ordination—19 External Organization Necessary for the Con- tinuance of the Gospel ; Collections for the Poor in Jerusalem— 20 Definitions of the Church: Catholic Definitions—21 Non- Catholic Definitions : re F + . 65-103 — CHAPTER IV. MARKS OF THE TRUE CHURCH. t The Existence of False Churches, Sects, and Heresies renders it CONTENTS. XXill. PAGE necessary to have Evident Signs of Recognition or Distinctive Marks—2 Such are Sanctity, Unity, Apostolicity, Catholicity— 3 Indicated in Scripture, and urged by Fathers : Ignatius, Irenzus, Tertullian, Origen, Jerome, Augustine, Vincent of Lerin—4 The Same mentioned in Nicene Creed—5 The Vatican Council on the Subject—6 The General Aotiva Credibilitatis also of Use: The Notes themselves are otiva Credibilitatis—7 Degree of Credibility derived from Them— 8 Distinction between Marks and Properties—g The Mutual Relations between the Two, and between the Several Marks Themselves ; ; ; : é : 104-110 GHAPTERSV: THE CH URCH APOSTOLIC. L.— Testimony of Scripture— 1 The Apostles are Witnesses for Christ and Representatives of Him, and Dispensers of His Mysteries: Their Office must -continue—2 They are Witnesses, internally qualified by the Gift of the Holy Ghost, and by the External Commission or Authority of Christ—3 Proof from Gospels and Acts—4 The Apostolate, not a mere Missionary Duty, but an Ecclesiastical Office and Dignity—5 Objection against the Corporate Char- acter of the Apostolate—6 The Apostolate, not the Resuit of Historical Development, but a Divine Institution—7 Apostles Proper, and in the Wider Sense: Barnabas—8 Conditions of the Apostolate—g The Manner of Exercising It, no Proof against It: The Apostles are Representatives of God, not of the Community—11 The Need of being taught by Apostles never ceases ; Apostles, Prophets, Teachers : the Latter Two not necessarily Ecclesiastical Offices—12 Continuity of Apos- tles in Post- Apostolic Times—13 Not merely in Their Writ- ings, but rather in an Organized Ministry—14 Proof from Acts, Epistles, especially Pastoral Epistles I7.—Testimony of the Fathers— 15 Clement of Rome on the Apostolic Office—On Bishops, Pres- byters, and Deacons—16 Ignatius, Bishop and Martyr— XXIV. CONTENTS. PAGE 17 Apostolic Succession of Supreme Importance with the Fathers: Historical Proofs of Succession given by Hegesippus and [renzus—18 Apostolic Succession Part of the Living Faith of the Church, especially Succession in the Roman Church—1g The Apostle’s Creed—2o0 Irenzus on the Apos- tolic Succession as the Organ of Truth and Rule of Faith— ot Tertullian on the Same—22 Cyprian—23 The Alexandrian Fathers : Clement—24 Origen—25 Apostolicity applied to the Canon of Scripture—26 Augustine—27 His Main Argument not weakened by Collateral Arguments from Scripture—28 The Schoolmen : S. Thomas LTI.— Testimony of Heretics. 29 Early Heretics—3o0 Protestants—31* British and Northern Sects, False Idea of Apostolicity . ; EAs 3 . I1I-169 GCHAPRTVERAVL THE CHURCH ONE. 1 Love and Selfishness Causes of Union and Division: Babel and Confusion of Tongues—2 Religious Divisions—3 God's Care for Restoring Unity in the Old Testament—4 Greek Language and Roman Empire a remote Preparation—5 Prophecies concerning the One Messianic Kingdom—6 Christianity the Fulfilment of the Prophecies: Unity of God, of Truth, of Church—7 Unity of Faith, Life, Constitution, a Mark of the Church—8 Proof of Unity from the First Pentecost—g Baptism and Eucharist as Means of Union—10 The Apostleate as a Means of Union between Jews and Gentiles: Warning against Schism and Heresy—11 Unity of Faith in the Church as a Whole —12 Baptism the Symbol of Unity—13 Not of itself, but by means of the Visible Church guided by the Holy Ghost—14 The Enemies of the Church favour Separatist Tendencies ; Julian the Apostate—15 The Fathers of the Church connect the Proof of Unity with that of Apostolicity ; Ignatius, Polycarp—16 Hegesippus, Justine, Hermas, Cyprian—17 Heresies a Witness to the Unity of the Church—18 Cyprian on the Unity of the Church—1g the Donatists and St. Augustine—20 Greek Schism —Western, or Papal Schisms—22. Reformation ' . 170-197 _ Se eee —_* ee CONTENTS. XXV PAGE ‘ CHAPTER VII. THE CHURCH CATHOLIC. § The Name not Biblical ; but Universality of the Church clearly predicted by the Prophets—2 The First Traces of the Word in the Ignatian Epistles, and in the Account of the Martyrdom of Polycarp : Its Meaning—3 Also in the Fragmentum Muratori— 4 The Term applied to the Canonical Epistles—§ The Apostolic and Nicene Creeds—6 Patristic Explanations of the Catholicity ef the Church : Augustine—7 Heretics obliged to call the Church by that Name—8 The Argument from Catholicity as used by the Fathers against Heretics—g Numerical Preponderancy of the Catholic Church—1io Territorial Universality as compared with that of Sects—11 Missionary Activity of the Catholic Church: The Sects generally recruit from the Church—12 Protestant Missions: The 707 mz/a Concordieg—13 No Change in the Primi- tive View of the Church Catholic—14 Nothing short of a Com- munity will satisfy the Cravings of the Human Heart « 198-214 COAP TE BV LIT THE CHURCH JNFALLIBLE, i* Absolute Revelation and Infallible Authority ; Are they Correla- tives? Thea griort Argument 4 ; A . 6—Infallibility of the Apostles, and the Apostolic Church— 2 Infallibility promised to the Apostles, and to the Apostolic Church, in Perpetuity—3 Testimony of Dollinger : Vain Attempts at explaining away the Promises—4 Promises how applied to Ali the Faithful—5 The Apostles claimed Infallie bility —6 Peter’s Uncertainty as to the Reception of Heathens : No Argument to the Contrary—7 Paul’s Rebuke of Peter according to Ancients and Moderns-—-8 Apostles, though Infal- lible, not all at once Perfect in the Knowledge of how Revealed Truths were to be applied —9* Difference between the Infallibility of the Apostles and that of the Church . ° . “ XXVI. CONTENTS. : ‘PAGE U.—Formal Proof for the Infallibility of the Church— 10 Historical Proof; Irenzeus; Tertullian; Origen ; Lactantius —11 How the Fathers conceived it, and to whom they attributed it—z2 Infallibility manifested in QMEcumenical Councils—13 Augustine on the Authority of Bishops and Councils—14 Councils never erred: Chalcedon and Constantinople on the Three Chapters—15 Councils of Constance and Lateran on the Superiority of Councils over the Pope—16 Councils of Ariminum and Seluucia—17 The Ladsocinium of Ephesus—18 Adverse Statements at the Time of the Western Schism: Pierre d’Ailly and Nicolas of Cusa; S. Antoninus of Florence—1g Middle Ages—20 Council of Trent—21 Infallibility and the Reformers: Their Own Infallibility—22 Infallibility of the Bible . ° 11,— Material Proof— 23 Proof from the Actual Fact—24 Millenium not to the Point —z25 Constitution of Church ever the same—26 Pelagianism of the Schoolmen a Fiction—27 Hase’s Objection against In ‘alli- bility: Forsaken by Scripture—28 Unsupported by Firm Tra- dition—29 Made to rest only on a Philosophical Basis of Sup- posed Necessity—30 A Brilliant Dream to suit Circumstances 1V.—Nature and Extent of Infallibility— 31 Assistance, not Revelation, or Inspiration; In Matters of Faith and Morals; In formal definitions—32* Further Ex- planation as to Who is Infallible, How, and When? 215-266 CHAP DE Re LX. THE CHURCH NECESSARY FOR SALVATION. 1 The Old Theocracy Exclusive and Particularistic—2 Its Tendency to Universality in the Future—3 The New Israel both Universal and Exclusive—q4 The Teaching of the N. T. as to Salvation - in Jesus alone—5 S. John’s Gospel lays stress on the Necessity of Faith, Baptism, and Eucharist—6 Testimonies of the Apostles on the Subject: S. John—7 S. Paul—8& S. Peter— 9 S. James—10 Marked Opposition between the Church and the World foretold by Christ—11 S. Paul on Christians as CONTENTS. XXVIII. PAGE the Elect—12 Baptism as the Symbol and Cause of our Death and Life in Christ—13 What is True of Christianity, is True of the Church—14 Application of this Principle by the Apostles Themselves—The Post-Apostolic Age knows of No Christianity outside the Church: Ignatius, Polycarp, Clement of Rome, Ireneus, Tertullian, Clement of Alexandria—16 The Sects not the Cause, but the Occasion for affirming That Doctrine— 17 The Example of Noah’s Ark used by the Fathers, especially S. Cyprian-——18 S. Cyprian and Augustine deny True Martyr- dom to Heretics—19 Augustine’s View of Heretical Baptism: Valid, but Ineffectual, and Unprofiting outside the Church— 20 Augustine on Invisible Members of the Church : Fulgentius of Ruspe—21 The Greek Fathers on the Subject—22 First Ecclesiastical Utterances in Africa—23 The Athanasian Creed —24 Boniface VIII.’s Dictum a mere Summing Up of an Old and General Doctrine: Tertullian, Augustine—25 Ecclesiastical Decision on the Subject Unnecessary. Some, however, exist: Lateran Council, Professio fidei required of the Waldenses, Council of Trent, Creed of Pius IV.—26 Modern Theologians on * Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus’’—27 Reformers equally Exclusive: Confessio, Apologia, Luther, Calvin—28 Laxer View adopted by later Protestants—29 Non-Catholic Theo- logians of Modern Days less Unjust to the Catholic Doctrine— 30 Real Meaning of the Catholic Principle: Principle and Application, Augustine—31 S. Thomas—32 Modern Theo- logians: Pius IX., Syllabus—33* Various Kinds of Members of the Church—34 God’s Providence and Saving Will Universal —35 The Church’s Attitude towards Sinners—36 Treatment of Heretics in General—37 Extreme Penalty of Death: View of the Fathers—38 The Doctrine and Practice of the Middle Ages —39 The Inquisition: Protestant and other Impartial Testi- monies—qo Religious Toleration: Protestant Views of it—qr Conclusion: The Catholic Doctrine thoroughly Consistent . 267-315 GCHAR TE Ram: THE CHURCH HOLY. t Holiness both a Property and a Mark of the True Church—2 Early Heretics have misapplied this Mark—3 The Sanctity of the + XXViil. CONTENTS, PAGE Church as understood by the Fathers. First Element Her Doctrine—4q Second Element Her Means of Grace—5 The Sacramental System as explained more fully by the Schoolmen with Holy Eucharist as Centre—6 Congruity of Seven Sacra- ments according to Roman Catechism—7 Goethe on the Won- derful Organism of the Catholic Sacraments—8 Influence of the External Worship upon the Internal and Moral Life : Holiness +n the Moral Sense shown forth in the Members of the Church —g The Fathers on this Holiness—Ic Practice of the Evangel- ical Counsels—11 The Saints of the Past and from the Begin- ning belong to the Catholic Church—12 The Church on Earth comprises Saints and Sinners—13 Corruption of the Church in the 16th Century much exaggerated: The so-called Reforma- tion No Advance towards Holiness—14 Contempt of the Re- formers for Evangelical Counsels—15 True Reformation on the Side of the Council of Trent—16 Church’s Holiness as In- dependent of that of her Members—17 Bellarmine on Sanctity as a Note of the Church—18 Statistics of Holiness Impossible —1g Statistics of Crime Unreliable—2o Miracles as a Sign and Means of Further Holiness ; Irenzeus ; Luther—21 TheChurch Militant and Triumphant; Eight Beatitudes ; Roman Cate- chism—22 Purgatory, or, the Church Suffering~ 25} Definition of Holiness. : ; ‘ F , ; 316-346 CHAPTER AL SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION. 1 Grace and Truth Destined for All Men: How are they to reach the Individual? Historical Solution of the Question . : I.—In the Time of Christ and the Apostles— 2 Personal Teaching of Christ—3 Christ, though familiar with the Written Method, left No Writings—4 Reasons Why? The Might of the Living Word; Example of Other Founders of -Religion—5 Apostles not commanded to Write, but to Preach and Teach: ReasonsWhy ?—6 Living Tradition,especially Nec- essary in Matters of Worship—7 External Reasons such as Fear of Profanation of the Divine Mysteries—8 Measures taken by the Apostles to provide for the Future: Appointment of CONTENTS, XX1X, PAG Pastors and Teachers—o The Apostolic Epistles merely Occa- sional—r1o Gospels not a Substitute for Preaching—ir But intended to deepen and strengthen Oral Teaching—12 Apostolic Preaching implies Authority and Assistance of the Holy Ghost ¢ Teaching by the Power of the Spirit—13 The Scripture Prin- ciple, therefore, Unbiblical and Unhistorical e a x L1,—Jn the Ante-Nicene Ase— 14 The Principle of Faith according to the Apostolic Fathers, Clement of Rome, Ignatius Martyr: Truth is with the Apostolic Succession—1I5 The Epistle to Diognetus: Papias—r6 Poly- carp: The Clementines—17 Tradition the Ordinary Method of Faith—18 Irenzus—1g9 Tertullian—20 Testimony of the Church—21 Origen confesses to the Principle of Tradition with Scripture in Support—22* A Change of Principle Impossible . L1I.— Objections considered — 23 Alleged Protest of the African Church against the Sovereignty of Tradition—24 Tertullian’s Objection against Custom—25 Cyprian’s Objection against Custom in Matters of Re-Baptism— 26 Firmilian’s Objection against the Roman Tradition — 27 Augustine on Cyprian’s Attitude: On the Creed as an Epitome of Scripture Truths—28 Cyril of Jerusalem: Instruction of Catechumens—29 The True Scriptures are received at the Hands of the Church: Faith without Authority unknown to the Ancients—30 Reading of Scripture Unpracticable: True Pesi- tion of Scripture as an Instrument of Doctrine for the A/agizs- terium Lcclestasticum—3 i The Schools of Antioch and Alexan- dria : Arius—-32 No Change at Nicaea—33 Eusebius of Emesa— 34 Augustine’s Dictum, ‘‘ Faith will totter if the Authority of Scripture begin to shake "—35 Suffictentia Scriplur@ « ° LV.—In the Post-Nicene Ave. 36 Athanasius, Gregory ef Nyssa, Chrysostom, Theodosius—37 Vincent of Lerin: His Canon and Commonitorium—38 Auguctine’s Canon: Negative and Positive Element in Tradi- tion-—39 Tradition in Matters of Sacred Liturgy ; Basil—qo The Apostolic Constitutions—4q1 Lex Supplicandi est Norma Credenadi—42 The Schoolmen on the Principle of Faith —43 Opposition Insignificant ; Abelard, Nominalists ° ° - XXX, CONTENTS. PAGE V.—At the Time of the Reformation and Since— 44 Luther’s Material and Formal Principle—45 Many Contra- dictions involved in His System— 46 It undermines the whole Fabric of the Church—47 Tradition and the Council of Trent— 48 Further Inconsistencies of the Reformers—4g Hase’s Con- tention that Both the Catholic and Protestant Churches have acted consistently with regard to Tradition—s0 Catholic Tradi- tion even humanly considered the Highest Guarantee Possible of Truth: Kepler’s Testimony—s1 The Catacombs—s2 Histo- rical Demonstration from Tradition at times Difficult—53 Tra- dition and Development go hand in hand—54* Alleged Doc- trines in which the Principle of Tradition is said to break down —55 Twofold Character of Tradition; Divine and Human Element—Witnesses not All of the Same Authority—56 Con- tents of the Catholic Faith the Same Now as in Antiquity—s7 The Church Her own Witness to Tradition ; Vatican Council —58}+ R. H. Hutton on Tradition, Development, and Author- ity of the Church . ; 2 A ‘ . 347-416 CHAPTER XII. THE PRIMACY OF S. PETER. 1 A Visible Church requires a Visible Head—2 Direct Scriptural Evidence for Peter’s Pre-eminence: His Call according to Matthew and Mark—3 His Call according to Luke—4 His Position in the Apostolic College—s5 His Confession of Faith— ° 6 Peter at the Transfiguration and at the Passion : Denial—7 His Position after the Resurrection—8 Cumulative Evidence from all the Various Incidents—g The Special Petrine Texts of Scripture: Matthew xvi. 18-19—10_ Historical- Grammatical Interpretation decisive against all Evasions— 11 The Patristic Interpretation of the Passage—12 Metaphor- ical Character No Difficulty—13 Foundation a Relative Term: Applied to Christ, Peter, Apostles ; Explanation of S. Leo, Augustine, Thomas—14 Relation of Peter to the other Apostles—15 Metaphor of the Keys, of Binding and Loosing— 16 Key of Knowledge too Narrow and Interpretation—17 The Fathers on the Subject—18 Matthew xviii. 18, no Objection— 19 Patristic Appeal to Matthew xvi. for Episcopal Succession in CONTENTS. XX XI, PAGE General—2o} The Second Great Petrine Text: Luke xxii. 31, 32; Repetition of the Promise of Primacy—21 The Third Special Petrine Text: John xxi. 15-173; Fulfilment of the Promise ; Collation of Primacy—22 Patristic Interpretation—23 Extension of the Text to the Church at large—24 Peter’s Primacy one of Real Jurisdiction—25 Juxta-Position of Peter and Paul in the Roman Church—26 The Zxercise of the Primacy in Apostolic Times—27 According to the Acts of the Afostles—28 According to the Pauline Lpistles—29 Dispute at Antioch—30 Vatican Definition . ° 8 ‘ 417-464 CHAPTER XIII. THE PRIMACY OF THE POPE, L—Perpetuity of Peter’s Primacy— 1* The Church being Perpetual, Peter’s Primacy must needs be Per- ‘petual—2 The Primacy more Necessary in Post-Apostolic Times than in the Apostolic Age—3* Its Perpetuity not a mere Inference from Reason or Scripture, but @zvect/y declared in Scripture—4t The Primacy is the Only Means of continuing the Apostolate which is certainly Perpetual--5 Historical Conviction of the Perpetuity : Consensus Pairunt ¢ e . e ° di.—The Roman Successton— 6 Who are Peter’s Successors? Answer from History: The Roman Bishops by Right Divine and Apostolic—7 Indirect Evidence from Mew Zestament as to Peter’s Roman Sojourn 3 The Acts and Epistle to the Romans—8 First Epistle of S. Peter ; Babylon ; Gospel of S. John—g Tradition Unanimous as to Peter’s Roman Sojourn; Clement; Ignatius ; Papias— 10 Further Testimonies: Dionysius, Irenzeus, Tertullian, Cajus— 11 Verdict of Protestant Historians—12 Peter’s Roman Episco- pate of Twenty-five Years—13 Papal Catalogues and Roman Succession . ° ° ° ° ° ° ° Lll.—Evidence for the Existence and Development of Papal Primacy— 14* Gradual Development of the Primacy—15§ Eartiest Testi- monies: Clement of Pome and Ignatius M.—16 Classical Passage of Irenzeus—17 Cyprian—18 Ambrose—19 Jerome—20 SOULE CONTENTS. PAGE Augustine—21 General Councils—22 Testimony of Eastern Church—-23 Eastern Councils: Niczea, Constantinople, Eph- esus, Chalcedon, Antioch A.D. 340, Sardica A.D. 344—24 Afri- can Church in the Pelagian Controversy—25 Reasons why Rome elected as Seat of the Primacy ; Leothe Great ; Political Recognition of the Primacy—-26 Papal Titles—27 Testimony of Heretics : Roma semper Victrix—28 Papal Supremacy in the Middle Ages ; Nicholas I.—29* Pseudo-Isidore, and the False Decretals—30 The Schoolmen: Bonaventure, Thomas—31 Medizval Councils ; Lateran iv., v.; Council of Florence ; [ Trent—32 Council of the Vatican summing up the Entire Pre- vious Tradition—33 Conclusion: Discourse of S. Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury 4 ° : 465-503 CHAPTER@AIN, THE INFALLIBILITY OF THE POPE. 1* Impossible to define @ priori every single Right included in the Primacy ; Schulte; History must be consulted—2* The Infal- lible Magisterium a Chief Function of the Primacy: Conse- quently subject to Development like the Primacy—3t Internal Connexion between Magisterium and Primacy: The Power of Teaching an Act of Order and Jurisdiction é ° - L.—LEvidence of Scripture— 4 Papal Infallibility implied in Matthew xvi. 16-19—5 Likewise in John xxi, 15-17—6 Directly taught in Luke xxii. 31, 32; Déllinger on the Text—7} Infallibility attached to the Aposto- late (John xiv.-xvii.); but the Apostolate survives only in Peter’s Successor, the Pope—8 Patristic Interpretation of Luke xxii., 31, 32; Ambrose, Chrysostom, Theodoret, Leo, Pelagius II., Martin I., Agatho—g} Evidence summed up by Cardinal Manning . L1,—LEvidence of Tradition in the First Seven Centuries 10 Necessity for carefully sifting the Evidence of Tradition ; Two Faults to be avoided ; Case as stated by Cardinal Manning in his Religio Viatoris—11 Ecclesia Romana, Meaning of the CONTENTS. XXX, PAGE Expression ; Ireneus, Ambrose, Jerome—12 Augustine on the Ecclesia Romana-—13* Testimony of the Earliest Greek Church, Ignatius, Clement, Ireneus ; Unique Testimony of Ireneus— 14 The Greek Fathers: Epiphanius, Gregory Naz., Theodoret, Ephrem, Stephen of Dori, Abbot Maximus—15 Testimony of the Popes: Julius I., InnocentI., Sixtus III., Leo I., Felix II., Gelasius—16 Formula Hormisde testifies to Infallibility as a Historical Fact and as a Dogmatic Necessity ; Pope Agatho determines the Elements of Infallibility ; Szdzectzm, Objectum, Causam et Conditionem ; Bishop Hefele on Agatho’s Letter; Roman Synod under Agatho—17 Popes not always deciding Questions of Faith zz Synod—18* Councils and Synods not Useless on the Hypothesis that the Pope is Infallible—1o9{ There are not Two Infallibilities in the Church, as there is but One Apostolic Magisterium —2o0 History of Pope Honorius: Effect of His Letter upon the Catholic World at the Time ; His Con- demnation by the VIth General Council—21 Various Methods adopted by Catholic Apologists to meet the Difficulty against Papal Infallibility—-22 Hefele’s Solution preferred—23 Subse- quent Effects of the Condemnation upon East and West LTI.—Evidence of Tradition in the Middle Ages. 24 Distinction between Personal and Official Infallibility ; Pos- sibility of a Heretical Pope—25 Official Infallibility recognized in the Middle Ages: Aldhelm, Theodore Studita, Ignatius, Patriarch of Constantinople, Nicholas I., A/neas of Paris, Peter Damian, Leo [X.—26* Langen’s Misrepresentation of Papal Infallibility—27* New Stage of Development in the XIIIth Century ; Doctrine of S. Thomas; Janus’ Imputation—28 S. Bonaventure : Duns Scotus—29* The Gallican Reaction ex- plained—30 The Definition of the Vatican Council . 504-552 CELLAR AE Reak: Ve THE CHURCH AND CIVILIZATION. 1 The Church is the Mother of True Civilization—Necessity for insist- ing on the Fact—2 The Influence of Religion in general recognized by Antiquity—3 The Old Religions incapable of regenerating the XXXIV. CONTENTS. PAGE World—Christianity alone able to accomplish it—4 Example of Jesus—His Kingdom Spiritual—5 The Apostolic Church and Her Example—Charity and Care of the Poor—Deacons—6 Christianity and Slavery—Christian Relationship between Mas- ter and Slave—Universal Brotherhood—7 Complete Revolution of Ideas—Care for Sick and Poor—8 The Early Apologists :— M. Felix—Tertullian--Cyprian—Gregory of Naz. and Nyssa on the Subject—g Bishops the Fathers of the Poor and Widows —FEarly Attempts at Organized Charity—1o Testimony of Ju- lian the Apostate—11 Monasteries became New Homes for the Poor—12 The Church not encouraging Indolence, but enno- bling Labour--13 Her Influence upon the whole System of Polit- ical Economy—14 Gradual Abolition of Slavery—I5 Universal Regeneration of Society—16 Islam arresting the Work of Civiii- zation—17 Christianity and the Position of Woman—18 Chris- tianity and Civil Legislation—19 The Compact Organization of the Catholic Church alone could save Europe from a Return to Barbarism—20 Christian Virtues the Seed of True Culture—21 Social Regeneration of Mankind used as an argument by the Early Apologists for the Truth of Christianity—22 Gradual Re- laxation of Christian Morals—23* Christianity a Source of In- tellectual Progress—24 Conversion of Many Philosophers—25 Contempt of the Fathers for Philosophy explained—26 Faith and Philosophy join hands—Augustine, Thomas—27 Modern Philosophy indebted to Christianity—28 Study of Classics in the Church—29 Study of Nature and Natural Science encguraged by Bible, Fathers, Church—30 Judgment of Fathers liberal, though, at times, severe—31 The same Principles ever main- tained in the Church—32 Prohibition of the Study of Physical Science in the Middle Ages explained—33 Albertus Magnus and Roger Bacon—34 Christopher Columbus, Vasco de Gama, Co- pernicus, Kepler—Men of Faith as well as Science—The Works of Missionaries, especially Jesuits—35 The First Reformers had no part in this Scientific Movement of the Age—36 Giordano Bruno Galileo—37 Conflicts at times unavoidable—38 The Church and the Fine Arts—32 The Church brings into Har- mony all the Powers of Man—4o The Vatican Council on Faith and Reason—Christian Nations are still heading the March’of Civilization—Jesus Christ the Alpha and Omega 553-600 CONTENTS. XXXV. PAGE APPENDIX I. + The Anglican View of the Pope’s Primacy, by Dr. W. Bright . 601-608 APPENDIX II. + The Reunion of Christendom . : : : . 609-618 CHAPTER I. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, 1. Divine Revelation, following the law of progress, came by slow degrees. It opened with the Protevangelium* in Paradise, and closed with the complete revelation of the Father in His only begotten Son. All revelation, from first to ast, had for its aim and object Him who was to come in the ‘fulness of time” (Ephes. 1. 10; Gal. Iv. 4) to save mankind. Hence as the time which God in His eternal counsels had appointed for the redemption of mankind drew near, the rays of prophecy gained in brilliancy, and the image of the pro- mised Messias stood out more clearly and more distinctly on the horizon. God, in His wisdom, stooped to man’s capacity, and trained him to fix his weak eyes on the blazing sun of truth by letting in a little light at a time,—just as much as he, could bear, and no more. ‘Thus each streak of light prepared * the way for one to follow, and this again expanded and de- veloped the preceding. But when the day dawned, shadows had to flit away. As soon as the Expected One of Israel and the nations appeared, preparation was at an end. With the advent of Christ and the establishment of the Kingdom of God, the mere tutorship of revelat:on ceased; for Christ, the * First Gospel or message of future salvation. Strictly speaking this is not quite correct. The supernatural condition of Adam and Eve before the Fall pre- supposes a supernatural revelation. See Vatican Council Sess. III. C. II. quoted in Christian Asology Vol. II. p. 279. Tr. = A 2 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. fulness of truth, was the goal of the Old Testament, and in the truth revealed by Him, truth attained its zenith. ‘“T know,’’ said the woman at Jacob’s well, ‘‘ that the Mes- ““ sias cometh, who is called Christ ; therefore when he is “come, he will tell us all things.’’ (John tv. 25). Julsteas the tutor’s office ceases, as soon as the pupil has grown into a full and perfect man, so, in like manner, mankind were sure, sooner or later, to be sufficiently educated to receive God’s revealed truth in its entirety. 2. Furthermore, the universality of Christian revelation stamps it as the highest and fullest truth. Unlike the Old Testament revelation, it is not addressed to one man, family or people, but to all men, and all nations and peo- ples, of all ages and climes. It has cast aside its national garb, broken down the barriers of particularism, and opened wide its gates to all peoples and tribes. But it was enabled to effect this result, because it is as universal in its contents as in its purpose. Both in its extent and intensity it appeals to all men, and concerns all alike. All religious truth, whether natural or supernatural, is con- tained within its grasp, and is there blent in one with that highest truth which the Only-begotten, who is in the bosom of the Father, has brought down to earth. In the Chris- tian revelation both Jews and Gentiles can slake their thirst for sovereign truth, and satisfy their pantings for the fountains of living waters. By Faith Christian truth was to become the common property of all men of all times.’ 3. With Christ, as both the Prophets and the Apostles have told us, came the fulness of time, and the world entered onits last stage. Only one act in the great drama remains,—the coming of the Judge of the living and the dead to apportion everlasting wealorwoetoeach man. Christ, therefore, is the t See Chr. Apology, vol. Il. ch. viii. Kuhn, Eznlettung in die Kathol. Dogmatick, p. 117. Kleutgen, 7heol. der Vorzeit III. 905. From a rationalistic point of view, the perfectibility of revealed religion is treated by Strauss, Die Christliche Glaubenslehre, Tiibingen, 1840, I. 254. See on it, Hitzfelder, in Airchenlexicon, I, Edit. xii. 942. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 3 fulfilment of all prophecy. Hence John the Baptist, Christ’s forerunner, who, as it were, stood on the threshold of the New Covenant without entering therein, proclaimed aloud that the Kingdom of God was at hand. In him-—the last and greatest of the prophets—the prophetic spirit, which had long lain dormant, was revived, in order that a seal might be set to the work of the prophets. John’s office was to point out Him whom all the prophets had foretold. His watchword in the wilderness, ‘‘ Do penance, for the King- dom of God is at hand,”’ signalled the approach of the new king and the long-desired kingdom. Like an electric spark it fired the hearts of the faithful Israelites, and purified the sons of the Covenant for the coming of their God. Jesus Himself has set John above all the prophets, and called him the greatest of them that are born of women, significantly adding, however: ‘* Yet he that is the lesser in the King- ‘‘dom of heaven is greater than he.’’ ‘“‘ And from the days ‘‘of John the Baptist until now, the Kingdom of heaven ‘‘suffereth violence, and the violent bear it away. For all ‘‘the prophets and the Law prophesied until John ; and if ‘you will receive it, he is Elias that is to come.’’ (Matth. XI. 11-14). With John’s summons to penance Christ joined a call to believe the Gospel: ‘‘ The time is accomplished, ‘‘and the Kingdom of God is at hand: repent and believe “the Gospel.” (Mark 1. 15).\ Such, at least, is the sense Peter’s disciple attaches to the words in Matth. 1v.17. And what was this Gospel? It was good tidings for the poor and the wretched, for publicans and sinners ; the good tid- ings of redemption from sin, and death, and the devil ; the good tidings that a new and imperishable Kingdom was to be setup, with Christ, the second Adam, asits head. Thus not only does Christ array His teaching in opposition to that of the Scribes and Pharisees, but He also far outstrips the entire range of the Old Testament, comparing and contrast- ing His authority with that of Moses, and declaring that He has come to fulfil all the Law and the Prophets, and to 4 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, give a new commandment of love, on the observance of which man’s eternal salvation will depend. Nay, he goes still further, and places His commandments on the same footing as the Father’s: “Not every one that saith to me, Lord, Lord, shall ‘“onter into the Kingdom of heaven, but he that doeth the “will of my Father who is in heaven, he shall enter into thie “Kingdom of heaven.” (Matth. vil. 21) To Him the Father hath given to have life in Himself, and to give life and salvation to mankind. (Matth. x1. 27; Luke x. 22; John v. 26). Him the Father has constituted the all-seeing Judge of the world. Those whom He receives into favour shall live; those whom He spurns shall go into judgment. The blessed of His Father He will place in the Kingdom prepared from the foundation of the world; the accursed He will thrust into everlasting fire, “that all men may honour the Son, as they honour the Father.” (John v. 23). ‘Every one therefore ‘that shall confess me before men, I will also confess him “before my Father who is in heaven. But he that shall deny “me before men, I will also deny him before my Father who is “in heaven.” (Matth. x. 32, 33). 4. To the question what is meant by confessing or denying Christ before men, the Gospels give no uncertain answer. Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God. In this truth lies, in the last instance, the supreme reason why the Christian revelation is absolute and final, and why Christ’s laws and teaching are perfect and indestructible. ‘All things are “delivered to me by my Father. And no one knoweth the **Son, but the Father; neither doth any one know the Father, *but the Son, and he to whom it shall please the Son to reveai “Him.” * (Matth. x1. 27: ‘Luke *x; 227 9] ohnyvie40 siya rs Vil. 28. 29; VIII 19; X. 15). He calls His Apostles blessed, because to them it was given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of God. To His disciples, He said: ‘ Blessed are ‘the eyes that see the things which you see. For J say to you “that many prophets and kings have desired to see the things FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 5 ‘that you see, and have not seen them ; and to hear the things “that you hear, and have not heard them.” (Luke x. 23. 24). As all power is given to Him in heaven and on earth, He can say to His Apostles: “Going, therefore, teach ye all nations. . “teaching them to observe all things whatsoever | have com- “yranded you ~: .... >'.(Matth.xxvill 19. 20); ** He that “believeth and is baptized, shall be saved; but he that believeth “not, shall be condemned.” (Mark xvi. 16). And again, He said that: “penance and remission of sins should be preached “in His name unto all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.” (Luke xxiv. 45). Henceforth belief in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is the one thing necessary. ‘ He that believeth in the Son, ‘hath life everlasting, but he that believeth not the Son, shall “not see life, but the wrath of God abideth in him.” (John 11. 36). ‘Amen, Amen I say unto you, that he who heareth my “word, and believeth Him who sent me, hath life everlasting, “and cometh not into judgment, but is passed from death to “life.” (John v. 24). “He that eateth my flesh and drinketh “my blood, hath everlasting life: and I will raise him up in ‘the last day.” (John vi. 54). ‘Christ is the resurrection and “the life.” .(xi. 25). ‘‘ He is the way, and the truth and the ‘life. No one comes to the Father but by Him.” (xiv. 6). “Now this is eternal life; that they may know Thee, the only “true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent.” (XVII. 3). s. And now a further question arises: Is the knowledge imparted by the Son of God to remain ever the same? or will it be subject to modifications and variations? Can the founda- tion of our faith laid by Christ be supplanted by any other foundation? Can it be that Christ Himself promised His disciples that their knowledge should grow deeper, and their faith wax stronger? Holy Writ supplies the answer. For He promised to send the Holy Ghost, who would teach them all things, and bring to their minds all the things He had taught them. (John xiv. 26). For He had still many things to teach ‘them, but they were too weak to bear them. ‘“ But when he, . 6 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. ‘the Spirit of truth is come, he will teach youall truth. . ‘and the things that are to come he shall shew you.”’ (XVI. 12, 13). Any difference, therefore, that there may be be- tween the teaching of the Son and of the Spirit of God, will affect not the matter itself, but the understanding of the recipient. ‘‘ For He shall not speak of Himself, but ‘what things soever He shall hear, He shall speak7-7 3. ‘He shall glorify me, because He shall receive of mine, ‘“and shall shew it to you. All things whatsoever the Fa- ‘ther hath, are mine. Therefore I said, that he shall re- ‘ceive of mine, and shew it to you. (Xvl. 13-15.) The Holy Spirit is the Spirit both of Christ and of God. To the disciples He is the Paraclete, taking the place of Christ who had said : ** Behold I am with you all days, even ‘unto the consummation of the world.’’ (Matth. xxvii. 20.) The truth of Christ and that of the Holy Spirit are the same, for Christ said: ‘* Heaven and earth shall pass away, ‘‘but my words shall not pass away.’’ (Luke xxI1. 33). 6. In this way the Apostles understood their Master, in this spirit they conceived and exercised their office. Christ crucified and risen from the dead is their beginning and end, the subject matter of their preaching, the foundation of their faith, the goal of their hopes. Before the Council S. Peter solemnly declares: “‘ Neither is there salvation in “‘any other. For there is no other. name under heaven ‘“‘ given to men, whereby we must be saved.”’ (Acts Iv. 12.) And S. Paul says: ‘‘ There is one God and one mediator ‘of God and men, the man Jesus Christ : who gave Him- “self a redemption for all, a testimony in due times.”’ (1 Tim. 11. 5-6; Gal. m1. 20). The Old Covenant was tem- porary, and passed away with its fulfilment. The New Covenant, the Covenant of the spirit, not of the letter, re- mains. for ever. ‘‘ For if that which is done away is ‘glorious, much more that which remaineth is in glory.” (m1 Cor. m1. 11.)? The Kingdom of God in Christ is ‘‘.an 2 See also Rom. x.4; Gal. mr. 24-25. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 7 ‘‘immovable Kingdom” (Heb. xu. 28) ; Christ’s Priesthood is eternal (vu. 21-28). Christ is “ Alpha and Omega, the ‘“Grst and the last, the beginning and the end.’’ (Apoc. ipo), The Apostles received from the Holy Ghost light and strength to understand the Gospel, to defend it against all comers, and to hand it on intact and entire to others. The Gospel they preached was not of their own fashioning ; it was not the device of man, but the work of the Holy Ghost. And no man can set himself against the work of God with- out compassing his own destruction. When the Apostles were forbidden to preach, Peter and John simply answered that it was just to obey God rather than man (Acts Iv. 19). S, Paul emphatically declares: “‘ But though we or an ‘angel from heaven preach a Gospel to you besides that ‘‘ which we have preached to you, let him be anathema.” (GaliriesS hee SEW Cr CTC approved by God that the Gos- ‘‘ pel should be committed to us ; even so we speak, not as ‘pleasing men, but God who proveth our hearts.”’ (1 Thess. 1. 3). Mindful of the words our Lord had spoken to the Pharisees : ‘‘ Every plant which my heavenly Father ‘hath not planted, shall be rooted up” (Matth. xv. 3), 5. Paul bids the Corinthians remember that the Apostles are only the ‘‘ ministers of him whom you have believed, and ‘to every one as the Lord hath SiVeN. wlri ~ 3p Gocks CO- adjutors,’’ as the faithful were © God’s husbandry,” and ““God’s building.’ (1 Cor. 1. 7-9 ; Iv. 1). In like manner, S. Paul strictly exacts from his disciples that they shall preach no other doctrine than that which they had received, that is, which Christ had revealed and the Apostles preached. ‘* Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and ‘hold the traditions which you have learned, whether ‘by word or by our Epistle.”’ (11 ehesshale tf )yene ce Leates peatedly exhorts Timothy® neither to preach nor to allow others to preach a different doctrine ; “‘ to hold the form of ‘‘ sound words,” “* to avoid the profane novelties of words, 3 1 Tim. 1. 3; Iv. 6; VI. 20-215 I Tim, I. 13-14. 8 FINALILTY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, “and oppositions of knowledge falsely so called”; to guard what had been committed to his trust, and thus to stand firm in the faith and love of Jesus Christ. To the Ephesians he says: You are “built upon the foundations of the apostles “aad prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner- “stone; in whom all the building, being formed together, “groweth up into a holy temple in the Lord; in whom also “you are built together into a habitation of God in the Spirit.” (phes. 1, 20-22). The faithful, therefore, must be educated by Apostles, Prophets and Evangelists, Pastors and Doctors, so as to be buiit up into one body of Christ, “until “we all meet into the unity of faith, and of the knowledge “of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure “of the age of the fulness of Christ, that henceforth we be- “no more children tossed to and fro, and carried about with “every wind of doctrine by the wickedness of men, by. “cunning craftiness by which they lie in wait to deceive.” (Ephes, tv, 13-14). 7. The Church of the post-apostolic age, too, held fast to the principle that none but Apostolic doctrine was to be. received as Christian, It clung to the pure and unadultera- ted Apostolic doctrine whole and entire, whether handed down by word of mouth or in writing. The rule laid down by — the sacred authors in regard to their writings was written in lines of light for future guidance: “‘ Keep what you have “received, without addition or diminution,” 4 When the Montanists proclaimed the advent of a new era, the era of the Spirit, to which the Gospel was to succumb, as the Law had already succumbed to the Gospel, the Fathers loudly protested against such a preposterous innovation, devised soleiy in the interests of heresy. Two reasons were alleged by the Montanists in support of their opinion: the coming of the Holy Ghost, and the law of natural development. ‘he descent of the Holy 4 Barnabas xix, 11. Vincent. Lerin. Commonit. c. 32, See Deut. iv, 2 ;Apoc, xxii, 28 seq. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, 9 Ghost, they argued, was as much the complement of the New Testamenz, as the coming of God the Son was the complenient of the Old. This, they urged, was the meaning of the promised coming of the Holy Ghost. Men could not drink down all at once the full draught of Christian doctrine; they must inibibe it by degrees. All nature bends the knee to the law of gradual development. The plant springs up from the seed, and the tree g ows out of the shrub.® Strange to say, however, Lertullian, in his Catholic days, had trampled down the very argu- ments with which he now seeks to bolster up the Montanist view. ‘To the Gnostics, who alleged that the text “ Seek and ye shall find” (Matth,. vi. 7), favoured their error, Tertullian replies: “ But there can be no indefinite seeking for that which “has been taught as one only definite thing. You must ‘seek’ “until you ‘find, and believe when you have found ; nor have “you anything further to do, but to keep what you have “believed, provided you believe this besides, that nothing else ‘is to be bel eved, and, therefore, nothing else is to be sought, after you have found and believed what has been taught by “him who charges you to seek no other thing than that which “he has taught. When, indeed, any man doubts about this, “ proof will be forthcoming that we have in our possession that “which was taught by Christ.”6 The rule of faith, according to Tertullian, is one and unchangeable. Christ is all in all, and Christianity is the absolute religion. S. Augustine also denounced the presumption ‘of those heretics, who supported their error with the plea that the Holy Spirit was to teach His friends many things that the disciples could not bear. 8. Thus the Church has ever been pervaded with the firm conviction that no new revelation is to be expected. Individ- uals, indeed, may receive a reve:ation from God ; but such private revelations can never exercise a determining influence 5 Tertull., De Virg.,c.1. De Resurrect., exili. 6 Tertull., Me Prascript. c. ix. (Clark's Translation), See also Kuhn l.c. p. 335, @ August. /# Joann. 97, 2 Seqe rO FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, upon the faith and morals of the universal Church. Nay, they are branded with the note of suspicion the moment they seem, even if it be but formally, to deviate from the Church’s doctrine and practice. The Fathers fought might and main against those who, dissatisfied with the received rule of faith, were ever hankering afier novelties and change; for a heaven- born religion needs to be revealed but once.? A departure from existing tradition is what the Apostle styles the “‘ oppo- sitions of knowledge falsely so called.” Gregory the Great,8 indeed, says that the portals of eternal wisdom will open wider, the nearer the end of the world approaches. But his words do not tell against what has been said. He, like the Apostles, says that the world is near its end, and he views the Christian era as a short epoch crowning the long ages of preparation and education through which mankind had passed. But Christian- ity, to complete and crown what had gone before, must assuredly be the highest revelation. Gregory, however, is comparing Christianity with the gradual revelation in the Old Testament, not one epoch of Christianity with another. Nor is it to the purpose to argue that some Scholastics, in discuss- ing the difficulties about the Sacraments, contended that a later and special revelation had been vouchsafed to the Church It is true, they hazarded this as a possible hypothesis along with others ; but Duns Scotus quickly demonstrated its utter un- tenableness, by pointing out that, as all revelation affecting the Church at large was concluded with the Apostles, the Church had no power to change the essence of a Sacrament. This view of the matter is fully in harmony, not only with the nature, office and constitution of the Church, but also, more particularly, with the Scholastic teaching on the relations between Apostolic and ecclesiastical doctrine.® Progress, 7 Prov. xxii. 28; I Tim. vi. 20. See Kleutgen, III. 908-952, 8 Jn Ezech. II Homil. iv. x2, | § Quia quanto mundus ad extremitatem ducitur, tanto nobis aeternae scientiae aditus largius aperitur.’ The New Testament, of course, awaits a new and more perfect revelation, as S. Gregory says (ib. n. 15), but that is the great revelation of the beatific vision. Tr, 9 See Schwane, Dogmengeschichte der Mittlerenzeit. F reiburg, 1882, iii. P. 498, 513. ss ee a FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. II indeed, there must be, says Albertus Magnus; but it is rather the progress of the believer in faith, than of faith in the believer. S. Thomas states in the clearest language, that our faith rests on the revelation made to the Prophets and Apostles, not on that made to any other teachers.!0 And he lases his statement on the well-known dictum of S, Augustine: “ Only to the books of Scripture that are called canonical have “J Jearnt to pay such reverence as to firmly believe that none “of their authors has erred in anything.” In other words, only the inspired authors were infallible in everything. Bellarmine also bears witness to the Church’s doctrine on this head. The Church of God, he says, is no longer guided by new revelations, but she holds fast to that which has been delivered to her by the ministers of the word. Hence she is said to be built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets. 9. In saying, however, that Christian Revelation was com- pleted and closed with the Apostles, and that it admits of no objective and material additions or alterations, we are by no means denying a forma/ perfectibility. Christian revelation though absolute truth, was not given in an absolutely perfect form. This, considering the imperfections inherent in human language and man’s limited capacity, was impossible. In revelation, God comes down to man’s level. Christ adapted His discourses to the intelligence of His hearers. He expounded divine truth, not only in human thought and language, but in a particular form, viz. in parables. He saw, how slow and dull the disciples were to understand the mysteries of the Kingdom of God, and the divine plan of redemption. He sent the Holy Ghost to open out their understanding, and to give them more insight; but even so their knowledge still remained broken and refracted. ‘For we know in part and Jo S. Thom. I. q. I. a. 8 ad2; Il. Il. q. clxxii. a. 6ad 1. Albertus M. III Dist. a5.a.tadx. S, Aug. Ep. xix. 1 ad Hieron. xx De Verbo Dei, iv. 9. I2 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, we prophesy in part; but when that which is perfect is “come, that whith is in part, shall be done away . . . ‘We see now through a glass in a dark manner, but then ‘face to face. Now I know in part, but then I shall know “even as I am known.” (1 Cor. xi. 9-12). ‘The Apostles, though filled with the Divine Spirit that searcheth even the deep things of God, had to impart divine truth to men through the medium of human ideas and human language. No harm was thereby done to the absolute truth and matter of revelation, because the natural truths in the human mind, besides being necessarily true, are likewise indispensable as a foundat on on which to rear the edifice of a higher religious knowl dge which, since it is revealed, does not trespass on matters that are the object of the several branches of human science, but stonds unmoved amid the ever fluctuating con- ditions of human knowledge. All that is required as a foundation, is the natural light of reason, and the religious and moral disposition implanted in man. Thus divine revelation is part of the mental life of man, and as such cannot but be capable of formal perfectibility or development. ro. We have to consider, furthermore, that God the Son, in becoming man, breathed into humanity a new vital principle which was destined to work a marvellous change. Progress and perfection were to be the law set not for individuals alone, but for the whole organism whose head is Christ. Christ Him- self has illustrated the principle in the parable of the seed that grew into a tree. Perhaps it may be argued, that this parable has reference merely to the external growth and development of the Kingdom of Christ that was to spread over the whole world. But the same objection cannot be urged against the parable of the leaven. Here the whole mass as such is saturated and transformed. Not merely individual believers, but the whole body of believers, as a community, are leavened. To the Apostles, as witnesses of Christ’s resurrection, and as the living embodiment of His words and works, the divine Spirit was first FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 13 given. Without this infallible Spirit, they could not have preached Christ’s doctrine pure and undefiled. And, if the Apostolic preaching was to be preserved intact and unadulterated, it was equally necessary that their successors should inherit the like divine gift. Now this infallible Spirit, like the spirit of man, is living and active, and vivifies and quickens the whole body. At all times it pervades the whole life of the Church. And thus the Church unfolds her faith as the need arises, and applies it under ever varying circumstances. Thus her doctrines expand and develop day by day. The difference between the Patristic and Montanist teaching did not consist in denying on the one hand, and affirming on the other, that the Holy Spirit abides in the Church and aids in its development. On the contrary, the Fathers lifted up their voice in protest, because the Montanists claimed for themselves a special Paraclete who had only just come; a Paraclete, who had not been abiding in the Church from the beginning, and who was teaching new doctrines that were at variance with the faith and life heretofore existing in the Church. rz, Nor were the Apostles unaware of this law of progress They exhort the faithful to grow in the knowledge of Christ, that they may all be built up into a perfect man. ‘They entreat them to put to good use the gifts received, that God may finish the work He had begun. ‘Lhat they themselves were conscious of advancing in the knowledge of divine truth, a glance at S. Paul’s Epistles will abundantly prove. In all his Epistles, the truths set forth are substantially the same. Yet how vastly the Epistles written during his captivity differ in character and tone from the earlier ones, especially those addressed to the Romans ancl Galatians! Again, the so-called pastoral Epistles exhibit the practical side oi their author. Some writers exaggerate these differences with a view to challenging S. Paul’s authorship, while others, with the contrary purpose, have pared away both sides and left nothing in the middle. Both processes are needless, x2. Ephes. iv. 53; Coloss. i. r0; 11 Peter, ili. 18. - 14 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, for the differences, though real, are only formal, not mate- rial. Then again, S. John’s Gospel, in comparison with the Synoptists and S. Paul, also reveals progress. Each of the Catholic Epistles, too, has its own peculiarities. Here we need only remind the reader of the idea of Christian hope as set forth in S. Peter’s first Epistle, and of the re- lation in which S. James’ Epistle stands to Romans. Lat- terly a great deal has been said, in an exaggerated strain, of the peculiar doctrinal concepts of the New Testament writers. Still there isno denying that in the manner of con- ceiving, propounding and applying the fundamental truths of Christianity, a clear stream of progress is discernible. The Apostles, assuredly, were not automatic witnesses of our Lord’s sayings and doings. They were not merely passive organs of the Holy Ghost, but they had an intel- lectual grasp of revealed truth. The Holy Ghost while guiding them to acquire a deeper knowledge of the divine dispensation, and to impart that knowledge to the faith- ful, was thereby confirming and strengthening their faith. | 12. The post-apostolic age entered upon the full inher- itance of Christian revelation, both written and oral, that the Apostles had preached and taught. But the Apostolic teaching was not a systematised body of doctrine, nor yet a mere conglomerate of words and deeds without internal con- nexion, which the human mind was left to understand and explain, as best it might, with its own lights. True, the revelation bequeathed to the Church by the Apostles was conceived in the common forms of the human mind, and expressed in the language and according to the needs of the times ; but from this it does not follow that these forms were to be exposed to the changes and ever shifting influ- ences that girdle human science. We must beware of two excesses : either of supposing that the Church became conscious only by slow degrees of the contents of reve- lation, or that she had been fully conscious of all its dog- mas from the beginning. For the first view would fail to do justice both to the contents of the New Testament ~ OO ey ee see ee FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 15 writings, and to the faith and life of the ancient Church ; while the latter would shut out from sight the historical development of such dogmas as the Trinity and Unity of God, the Incarnation and Person of Christ, and the salva- tion of mankind by God’s grace. Now such historical development is inconceivable except under two conditions : first, that the various aspects of the dogma, subsequently set out in clear light, were already contained, somehow or other, in revelation and in the pre- vious teaching of the Church ; and second, that the Church had not from the outset a clear and full view of all these different aspects, and of all the different bearings of the dogma. We must not suppose that development was wholly brought about by wicked heretics. Nor again can we account for it by supposing that certain truths had been blotted out from the memory of latet generations. Such a supposition-is as unreasonable as it is incompatible with the principle of Tradition on which the whole fabric of faith rests. On the contrary, development is and must be due to causes that are at work within the Church. Igno- rance and doubt may at times cloud the minds of the faith- ful and good, because new questions concerning faith may arise, as time goes on. And were not heretics, too, some- times in a position to prop up their heresy by singling out passages from Scripture or the Fathers? Not all things in Scripture and Tradition are written in lines of light. Melchior Canus mentions the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son, the Beatific Vision, the Im- maculate Conception, the Sacraments, and the doctrine of the nature and privileges of the Church as problems, the solution of which is not unmistakably clear from Scripture or Tradition. 13. Holy Scripture is adapted, ina wonderful manner, to give a permanent form to the contents of revelation. Itslan- guage and manner of thought, itis true, are borrowed froma particular people, the Semitic and Hellenistic Jews ; but these are an accidental and transient factor which leaves the 16 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, thoughts and substance untouched ; and they are consequently matters of less importance, and lie, as it were, on the confines of faith and science. But, for this very reason, the Church, when defining doctrines of faith, has ever been reluciant to deviate from the letter of Holy Scripture. In questions about God and divine things, the Fathers often remark that. we must believe nothing but what is in the Scrip- tures. “For, concerning the divine and sacred mysteries,” says 5S. Cyril of Jerusalem, “nothing whatever is to be set “forth without the sacred Scriptures, nor may we yield to “clever persuasion or artful words. For the power of faith “that worketh salvation comes not from proofs from reason, ““howsoever cleverly put, but from proofs from Holy Scripture.” From Pseudo-Dionysius, too, the well-head of Scholasticism, the saying has passed current among the Scholastics, that no one may say or think concerning the Godhead aught but what God Himself has revealed in the sacred Books. Before him S. Basil had said. ‘‘ Believe what is written, and be not “inquisitive about things unwritten.” And the reason for this extreme caution is given by S. Augustine: “In disputing “about matters so thickly obscure, human reascn must hold “back when the proofs from Scripture are not clear and “certain.” 18 Nevertheless, these and such like passages from the Fathers refer directly to the mysteries, and hence they cannot be applied generally to the whole cycle of the doctrines of faith. They were designed to warn off human ingenuity from tamper- ing with the revealed mysteries, not to stunt these and other doctrines of the faith in their legitimate growth, which takes place under the authority of the Church and with the assistance of the Holy Ghost. Nay, when change of circumstances gave rise to concrete questions about faith and morals, such de elop- ment grew into a necessity. When the Christian faith was 13 See Petavius, Prolegomenai.7. M. Canus, Loci Theol. iii. x. Roesler, Der Kathol. Dichter A. Prudentius Clemens, Freiburg, 1886, p- 318. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, 17 first preached, the several Christian communities had but few wants. Coniroversies, such as they were, hinged upon the question whether Christianity were preferable to Judaism and Heathenism. The Chi ‘ian religion found its immediate expression, not in the theorizings and intellectual speculations of the learned, but in the virtue and life of the Church. But as time went on, Christianity came in closer contact with heathenism, and proportionately its opposition to worldly wis- dom waxed louder and stronger. Then the several tenets of faith had to be strengthened against ali incursions of doubt from within and from without. Misconceptions and misrepre- sentations had to be guarded against. And thus the continuous progressive movement imparted to the Church’s faith and worship is really due to the combined action of two forces: the attacks of heretics, and that tendency towards development which is inherent in all living faith. To the objection that Chiistianity was an unnecessary inno- vation, the Apologists, as we have seen in an earlier voluine, made a twofold reply. In the first place, they claimed for Christianity a greater antiquity than idvlatry and philosophy, because the preparation for Christianity began in the Old Testament, and the natural knowledge of God was an indis- pensable condition of revelation. In the second place, they urged that progress is an innate law in all things human, relig ous life included. To stand still in religion, is to go back. If religion is permeated by a living spirit, if the God-man dwells in His Church, then, however final and absolute Christianity be as a religion, its doctrines must be instinct with life and movement, progress and development. But conserva- tism must go hand in hand with progress. 14. In discussing this question, it is usual to refer to the celebrated Commonitorium of S. Vincent of Lerins, and to follow up his line of argument. S. Vincent emphasizes both conservatism and progress, and shews that the two are mutuaily and internally connected. And firstly, he lays it down as B 18 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. absolutely certain, that all revealed truth is to be traced back in an unbioken line to the Apostles. “ Quod semper, quod ubigue, et ab omnibus,” is his rule. In a word, only that is to be held as an article of faith which all men, in all parts of the world, have at all times believed. It is not our present purpose to explain this famous saying in detail; we merely quote it as pointing the dagger at innovations in faith. S. Vincent then goes on to ask: Is progress, which is present in all things else, absent from religion? Is religion the only exception to the law of progress? In the Catholic Church, he answers, the progress of religion is very great. Is there any man, he asks so mean and hateful in God’s sight, as to dare to block it? But, be it noted, he insists that it be really and truly progress, and not change. By progress things are unfolded and expand; whereas change turns one thing into something else quite different. Hence the Church and all its members must ever be growing in knowledge and wisdom and understanding, according to times and circumstances. But they must grow in the same doctrines, in the same meaning and sense, so that while the manner is new, the thing itself is unchanged (ove, non nova)\4 15. S. Vincent illustrates his meaning by an analogy from the growth of organisms. Spiritual development is governed by the same laws as organic development. As years roll by, the human body grows and develops, but it is ever essentially one and the same. ‘The youth differs from the man, but whether young or old he is the same man. So, in like manner, the tree is other than the shrub, and the shrub is not the seed, yet both tree and shrub have grewn out of the seed. From these comparisons it is clear that S, Vincent was not debarred by the absolute, final and unchangeable character of ~ revelation ‘rom holding that religious growth and development are the law both in individuals and the Church at large. And he does not merely mean, that they grow in the knowledge that 14 Commonitorium c. 28. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 19 springs from faith, or that the dogmas of faith become more fully understood, ‘but that there is real progress in religion itself. In a word, he means that the Church’s doctrinal teaching, not merely its theology, or science of faith, is pro- gressive. Dogmas fixed and formulated in later times were not taught clearly and explicitly in the early ages, but only implicity and obscurely, and in general terms. Were it other- wise, the Church’s teaching could neither progress nor develop. Scientific theology and ecclesiastical teaching, far from being in opposition, are mutually correlated, as we may see from the influence wielded in the Western Church by S. Augustine and S. Thomas. Still they are not identical. We must beware of supposing that the teaching Church ( Ecclesia Docens} is a blind tool in the hands of theology for raising to the rank of a dogma the one theological opinion, from among the many, that seems at the time to be most in harmony with revelation. On the contrary, she consistently follows her own course of develop: ment, and thus arrives at the decision that is, for the time being, best calculated to grapple with error and misunder- standings, and to give instruction and edification to the faithful. As theology is the pioneer of ecclesiastical teaching, so it, in turn, is piloted by the authoritative teaching of the Church. The various dogmatic decisions issued by the Church upon one and the same point of faith, while encircling the truth with light, and giving a spurt to theology, have ever kept pace with the progress of human science. In her decisions the Church has scrupulously adhered, as far as may be, to the words and phrases of Scripture ; but this only proves that she avoids new terms, lest she should incur the slightest suspicion of innovation. The very necessity of new definitions also shows the extreme difficulty of giving, at all times, adequate positive expression to the faith of the Church. Were these definitions framed for no other purpose than to determine more precisely the true sense of God’s word, they would be readering no mean Service. zs Kleutgen iii. 968. 20 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, ~ The comparison of the Church with a living organism is as old as the Church herself. S. Paul, as we have seen, insists on it repeatedly and at length. The Church, he says, grows and expands, both within and without, yet never becomes a different body. Its life, grace and energy flow from Jesus Christ, its head ; while all its truth and strength are derived from the Divine Spirit animating it. But a Church, with Christ and the Divine Spirit as head and soul, must needs grow, both in extent and intensity, in intellectual and moral life. llow could she otherwise repel hostile encroachments from without, ~ and beat down human frailty within? Thust he struggle for self-preservation, and the fight to keep all that she has received, becomes to the Church a means of continuous progress in faith and sanctity. 16. It is this unique combination of conservatism with progress, this double action in at once keeping intact and yet ever developing the faith committed to her, that distinguishes the Catholic Church from all other communions. In this she differs from the rationalistic school, which simply looks upon the Apostolic deposit as a form of cognition moulded to suit the early ages; from those Christian communities (e.g., the Greek) which conceive tradition as a stagnant pool; and again from Protestants, who wish to go back to the initial stage of the first centuries, and, as it were, to force the whole stream of social and moral development back to its source. Even Strauss ridicules this absurdity: ‘“‘To stand still and adhere slavishly “to what is written in matters of faith and morals, as some “teachers, mostly of the school of Antioch, have recommended, “‘is merely to bury the talent that should be put out at interest. “By its very nature the human mind cannot but seek to know “more precisely what is only indefinitely contained in Scrip- “ture, and also to transform (!) and adapt what is no longer “suitable to chanzed times and circumstances. Of course the “Church was only conscious of the former operation,’ xr Glaubenslehvel. 108, See Kuhn, Ainlertung p. 130. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 28 -Rationalists assume that Christianity is capable of infinite material perfectibility, while the orthodox Protestant theory, with its irrational supernaturalism, denies all development. Under other conditions, both would be right; the latter, were there no living Spirit at work in the Church; the former, if supernatural revelation were not final, and if it were without an infallible interpreter. But since these suppositions are false, the two theories built upon them are also false. Supernatural revelation, though absolute and final, may be given in a finite form, and enly the Spirit that gave it, can infallibly expound it and make it fruitful for all ages and climes.* 17. Hence progress and development are a necessity in the Church, and they are due, as we have said, to two causes: heresies from without, and a desire to understand the faith from within. Were the latter wanting, the former would force the Church to develop. Heresies are often regarded as mere abortions or monsters, the products of giddy minds or depraved wills, as, indeed, they sometimes are; but they were not always so, especially in the first centuries. At times they derived partial support from doctrines and institutions previously in existence; and the enor lay in giving too much prominence to one side of the dogma, and unduly disregarding the other. vt Once the ball of contradiction was set rolling, it was sure to give a start to many aberrations 18. While lashing heresies with all their might, the Fathers recognized their negative worth as indirect aids in shedding light on revealed truth. In this sense, from Tertullian onwards, they were wont to explain I Cor. x1. 19: “There must needs ‘be heresies.” Heresies prompt deeper enquiry into Christian truths, and cause them to be more fully explained. Heresy, remarks Tertullian, may be a bugle-call to the Doctors of 17 Hagemann, Die Rémische Kirche, Freiburg, 1864, p. 21. * It is interesting to see how the greatest witness to the Catholic faith in the roth century, the late Cardinal Newman, long before he became a Catholic, had fully realized the truth that development was a necessary mark of the true Church, and that development, to be sure and safe, demanded, as a collateral factor, a divine and authoritative exponent of the faith, Tr. 22 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT ©F CHRISTIAN REVELATION. the Church, summoning them to develop a doctrine anew, or it may be a chastisement on them for neglecting the duty of development. To Origen heresy seems the necessary resultant of the contact of two forces: divine truth with the human mind. ‘‘When the working and serving classes, and “men of culture in Greece, began to perceive something - “venerable in Christianity, heresies became inevitable, both ‘by reason of the lust of dispute and contradiction, and of the “desire of the learned to penetrate deeper into the Christian “mysteries.” 5S. Augustine also says that heresies, by forcing upon the Church particular questions, have thereby caused the Sacred Scriptures to be studied more diligently than they would otherwise have been. From personal experience he learnt that understanding of the faith may be sharpened, deepened, and perfected by opposition. He confesses that Pelagianism, besides forcing him to study God’s word more attentively, made him a defender of grace. Had not Semi- pelagianism arisen, he says, the question, how faith begins, would perhaps have never occurred to him, or he might have thought wrongly concerning it. The heresy, however, helped to open his eyes, and was the occasion of his writing his retractations. But he begs his opponents, when judging his doctrine, or that of the early Fathers on grace, to bear in mind the doctrine he is combating, in the face of which he is striving to defend some Christian truth. 18 19. ‘The history of the Church, from the very beginning, also bears witness that heresy has been indirectly instrumental in unfolding Catholic doctrine. The judaizing school in Galatia prompted S. Paul to show that the New Testament was superior to the Old, and to explain more exactly the necessity and power of faith working through charity. By the disputes and schisms that were rife in Corinth, he was led to draw out 18 Tertull. De Praescript, c. 39. Orig. C. Cels, iii. 12, Aug. De Civ. Def, xvi. 2, te Enarr. in Ps. 55, 22; Epist. 143, 2. De dono fervsev. xxi. 55. Relract. Prol. n. % Cf. Petav. De Poen. ii. 7,2. Kleutgen, iii, 883, 955. Kuhn, Zis/eit. p. 166. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 23 in detail the relation subsisting between the charismata and the one God and one Lord. The dangers lurking in Rome and other churches induced him to proclaim aloud his Gos- pel and Apostolic office. So, again, the errors of the Gnostics and Manichzans made it incumbent on defenders of the faith to adjust the bearings between redemption and creation, and to state in what relation God stands to the world and to evil.” The Gnostics, according to some mod- ern writers, were the first dogmatic theologians and bibli- cal scholars. To them we owe, they say, the first attempt to reduce the faith to system, and to fix the canon.” Ec- clesiastical decisions, indeed, are often slow and late in coming; but this is the natural and inevitable course of Catholic development. The struggle surging within the Church, on the rise of heresy, is preparing the way for them. Thus, on the dispute concerning the validity of heretical baptism S. Augustine remarks: ‘‘ How could a ‘‘ subject, so wrapped up in the mists of controversy, have ‘‘ been encircled with a halo of light by a plenary council, ‘unless bishops in different parts of the world have previ- ‘‘ ously met in consultation and worked the problem out ?””” It may be frankly conceded that at times individual apolo- gists, while assuming the common truth to be self-evident, confronted error with its extreme, thus, as it were, taking pattern by the gardener who tries to make a stormblown tree straight by bending it in the opposite direction. To defend what all admitted and none denied were to waste both time and labour. But the Church herself has ever avoided extremes in her decisions, as we may see from her attitude towards the doctrine of grace as advocated by S. Augustine.” 20. This development, the causes of which we have assigned in the preceding pages, is still traceable, at least in the chief 19 Moehler, Sysbolick, p. 371. Hagemann, p. ig. zo Kuhn, p. 332. Harnack, Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte, I. p. 188. 21 De Bapt., 11. 12 seq. Kleutgen, III. 976 seq. 22. See Kuhn, Zinxdettung, p. 161 seq, 24 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, doctrines of faith, and in the life of the Chu-ch. Asa rule, we can indicate the main stages through which it has passed. Broadly speaking, they correspond or coincide with the very points that the Church’s decisions have subsequenily made clear, as may be seen by a glance at the Apostles’ Creed, the Creeds of Nicsea and Chalcedon, and the so-called Athanasian (Anas- tasian?) Creed. In them we sce, as in a mirror, the course that development has run in regard to two main dogmas, the Theological and the Christological, as they are called, which are both unmistakably contained in Holy Scripture. The Theo- logical dogma, or that concerned with the mystery of the Blessed Trinity, while supposing that the Godhead is absolutely one, teaches that the Sen ard ely Ghost, and not the Father alone, are each truly God. The attack on these truths proceeded from the various sections of what is known as the Monarchist heresy.* Hence the Church was summoned to do battle and to buckle on her armour in defence of the whole truth. She was obliged not only to emphasize the distinction between Father and Son, but also to state in what re'ation the divine persons stand to the divine nature and to one another. Against the Sabellian Modalists she defended the real Trinity of persons; against the Arians she declared that the Son is consuhstantial with the Father; against the Pneumatomachi she taught that the Holy Ghost is God equally with the Father and Son. Moreover, she taught that the distinction of persons rests on the acts of generation and procession. Nothing now remained but to define more exactly the relation between the Son and the Holy Ghost, and this was accomplished by the declaration that the Holy Ghost proceeds from both Father and Son (ad utrogue). Thus the Western Church, in conflict indeed with the Greek Church, but in perfect harmony with Holy Scripture, gave the finishing stroke to the dogmatic development of this fundamental truth. * Socalled, because of their motto: “We believe ina Monarchy,” f.e. {n one nature and One person. In their view the Son and Holy Ghost were either mere names for the same person (Modalists), or they were inferior in rank and being (Arians). Tr. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, 25 The process in regard to the Christological dogma was very similar. The struggle raged with equal fierceness, wher Ebionites and Docetists* sounded the clarion of war, the one _leading the attack on the divinity, the otner on the rea] humanity of Christ. Difficult as the task of reconciling the two may have seemed, it was the Church’s bounden duty to defend the two natures, perfect and entire, in the one Christ. Nor did the struggle end there. It lasted for centuries. Arianism, of ‘which we have already spoken, pitted the divine unity against a real Trinity. This was its cardinal error. Then by holding that Christ was verily a distinct person from the Father, but had not the same divine nature, it denied two perfect natures in Christ. Next Apollinaris reinforced the Arian attack by depriving the human nature of a human soul, the piace of which he supplied with the Adyos. And now development entered on a further stage. Belief in Christ’s two natures opened out a new vista of q:iestions; to wit the union of the natures. Nestorius taught that the two were united imorally and externally only, thus implying a twofold person. Eutyches and the Monophysites, on the contrary, tavght that the two natures were blent in one confusion, one being completely absorbed in the other. This long struggle issued in the definition that in the one person of the Logos are two natures, entire and perfect, distinct and not confused (wa persona in duabus naturis). Yet again the cry to arms resounded through- cut Christendom, when some sought to tone down the definition by contending that Christ had only one will and one energy. These last combatants were the Monothelites,t who were driven from the field by the Sixth General Council. Thus heresies were the means of developing the Catholic Christology. To some it will seem surprising that these fundamental dogmas, So clearly and explicitly set forth in the faith of the Church, in * Docetists (Soxéwv to seem), so called because they taught that Christ had only seemingly not really a human body. Tr. P / , t Monothelites (pL0vov OeAnpa), so called because they taught that Christ had only one wiii, the divine, and no human will. Tr, | 26 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. Holy Writ and Tradition, should have become the object of controversies that stirred the Eastern world to its depths, and should have been fully developed only after long and bitter struggles. But if we look beneath the surface, we shall see that these struggles were deadly duels between faith and philosophy, between divine wisdom and humar: reason, between true and false development. Heretics sought to confine faith within the prison bars of reason, while the Church tried to accommodate reason to faith, and to widen the categories of reason with the help of revelation. Hence, in her definitions, the Church could appeal to both Scripture and Tradition, whereas heretics had to readjust their instiuments of proof. So at least Tertullian seems to say: “There, then, must the corruption both of the “ Scriptures and the expositions thereof be regarded as existing, “where diversity of doctrine is found. On those, whose “ purpose it was to teach differently, lay the necessity of « differently arranging the instruments of doctrine,” (i.e. the Scriptures, especially of the N.T.). And again, the author of the “Little Labyrinth’ (Hippolytus ?) refers the Artemonites to the writings of the Apostolic I’athers and Apologists, that is to Tradition, in order to show that Christ was worshipped as God. . 21. And here it may seem that, on the whole, or at all events in particular doctrines, the process of dogmatic develop- ment has reached its final stage and come to a standstill. This is the view taken by Protestants who allow the oldest creeds to be an accurate expression of the doctrines of Scripture, but set their face against all further development in Christian doctrine. The Council of Ephesus, by commanding under pain of anathema that no creed but that of Niczea** should be used, seems to lend support to this view. But how a3 Tertullian, De Prescrift. c. 37, 38; (Clark’s Translition). On the Labyrinth see Euseb., Hist, Eccl. v. 28. Dillinger, Hif/olyius und Callistus. Regensburg, 1853, p. 3 seq. Kuhn Die Christliche Lehie von der géttlichen Dreieinigkett. Tiibingen, 1857, p 306. e4 Mansi, iv, p. 1338. Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, and edit. ii, 207. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 27 slender ind fragile a prop this is to lean upon, is seen from the fact that the Council of Chalcedon, after approving the Nicene symbol, together with Cyril’s explanations given at Ephesus, proceeded forthwith to expand the teaching con- cerning the union of the two natures in the one person, Hence S. Thomas says, that the prohibition “was aimed at “private persons, who have no business to fix the faith; but “it was not meant to prevent a subsequent synod from issuing “a new edition of the creed that should throw mor= light “on one and the same faith. And so each synod, owing to “the exigencies of heresy, has been a step in advance of its “predecessor.”*5 An example of this apparently inconsistent action on the part of the Church is furnished by the history of the Fiviogue. These words were first inserted in a creed at Toledo (447), but’ only found their way into the symbol of Niczea and Constantinople in 589. Nevertheless the Roman Church, however convineed that the words adequately expressed the true faith, was unwilling to act against even the letter of the prohibition, and consequently refused to ratify the addition for several centuries. And when at length it was inserted, the Greeks reproached Rome with falsifying the Creed! Rome has retained in her liturgy the Apostles’ Creed together with the Creed of Nicxa and Constantinople ; and yet the Greeks, who have completely lost the Apostles’ Creed, accuse Rome of tampering with the symbol of faith! Is not this surpassing strange? Surely they forget that the definitions of Councils need explanation and development as much as the doctrines of Scripture. 22. How is it possible for the living spirit in the Church ever to become inactive? The life of faith in the Church can never sink down to a “dead level of monotony.” To say nothing of the spread of Christianity among the nations, which ever makes fresh demands on the Church’s teaching office and work, the very progress of general education, the springing #5 S. Thom. II. II, Qu. I. a. 10. ad 2. 4 28 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. up of new heresies, or the reappearance of old heresies under new forms, compel theologians to study the dogmas more deeply, and the Church to define them more clearly. Dogmatic truth is divine and consequently inexhaustible. Reason, on the other hand, being a living force, is by nature ceaseless in its activity. And hence the same eternal and unchangeable truths both can and must develop. 23. An instance in point is the dogma of redemption. Holy Vrit states emphatically that we are saved by the grace of Christ. In what relation, however, does grace stand to good works? What bearing have good works on just:ying faith? What connection has grace with the Sacraments? In answer to these questions Holy Scripture supplies certain data, but it does not answer them clearly and direétly.% At the outset there was no complete systematic treatise on Grace or the Sacraments. The Greek Fathers, trained in Greek wisdom, after the manner of their masters in philosophy, were wont to speak of virtue firstly and chiefly as the work of man. Gnostic and Manichzan Dualism made it still more imperative on theologians to urge that man is free to determine the course that his actions shall take. Hence their writings are coloured by phrases that tone down the necessity of grace as a principle preceding all man’s endeavours to attain salvation. But when the Pelagians set liberty on a higher pinnacle than grace, and proclaimed that the Christian religion was not a positive means given to man to atiain a supernatural end, but only a moral means of attaining his natural end more easily, S. Augustine who, when arguing against the Manicheans, had placed human liberty in the van, was compelled to thrust it into the rear in order to give prominence to the absolute necessity of divine grace. He saw clearly that the very first beginning of faith, that is the sinner’s first wish to believe, must be ascribed to grace and not, as the Semipelagians held, to the effort made by the sick man in desiring to obtain help from a physician. Thus Augustine FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVEDATION. 2G threw a mantle of light over the whole question of grace, and cleared the ground for the Chureh’s decrees against the Pelagians and Semipelagians, _ Nor was this all. ‘That controversy failed to settle all questions, for even now there ere many awaiting solution, L[vyen the keenest and brightest intellects stand perplexed in presence of the problem raised by the manner in which grace acts through free-will. These the Apostolic See has left undecided, and for the present abandoned to the turmoil of theological discussion, Again, the controversy on heretical baptism, by eliciting that the effect did not depend on the character of the minister, partially solved the question of sanctifying grace as conferred by the Sacraments. . Nevertheless the same controversy broke out afresh in one form or another in the Middle Ages, and finally, in the XVI century, the whole question of grace was reopened by the Reformers who, in opposition to all existing teaching, propounded a brand new doctrine on justification and the Sacraments, which obliged the-Church to give fall and explicit expression to her teaching in the Council of Trent. Closely Inked with the Sacraments is the doctrine concern: ing the Church, ‘The Reformers, by placing each individual in direct relationship to Christ by faith, and by promising salvation without the Church’s intervention, denied authority to the Church as a visible Divine institution, and thereby cut the ground from under her as a means and condition of Salvation. In effect they decried the Church set up by Christ as the Kingdom of Antichrist. And as that great revolt still endures and, leagued with the spirit and errors of Rationalism, is still battering at the faith and authority of the Church, the Chuich, as in duty bound, has in the Vatican Council given a further development to her doctrines on the nature and authority of the Church. ; 23. The Cultus and Liturgy of the Church furnish yet another instance of doctrinal development, not indeed directly, but only indirectly, because of their connection with the 3° FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. doctrines they symbolize. Nevertheless, as is easily understood, development in this sphere is naturally greater and more notable than in the domain of faith and doctrine, because, besides being the worship of God, Liturgy is intended to raise man up to God, by bringing into play the elements of sense and reason, and thus stirring up the spiritual influences lying dormant within him. Christian Liturgy has its foundations laid deep down in Scripture and Tradition. Our Lord Himself taught the disciples how to pray; He Himself instituted the sacrifice of the new and eternal Testament, and commanded His Apostles to do it in memory of Him; He Himself instituted the Sacraments, some of which, Bap- tism and Confirmation for example, used to be administered with the Holy Eucharist. Again, Christ’s words: ‘‘ odife dare sanctum canibus, neque muttatis margaritas ante porcos” (Matth. vil. 6), besides prompting the disciples to withdraw sacred things from the profane, also taught them to treat these sacred things with the greatest reverence. The faithful in Jerusalem, we learn from the Acts, assembled together to break bread. ‘This breaking of bread became to them a solemn divine service, in other words, a liturgical action. They met, S. Paul teils us, on the first day of the week (Sunday). S. Paul's directions about the celebration of the Lord’s Supper point to a regular divine service. Furthermore, from his epistles it would seem that hymns and edify ng discourses added to the solemnity. “. . - Be ye filled,” he says, “with the Holy Spirit. Speaking to yourselves in “psalms and. hymns, and spiritual canticles, singing and making “ melody in your hearts to the Lord: Giving thanks always for ‘all things in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to God and “the Father.” (Ephes. v. 18-20; Col. M1. 16).* Do not the ® It may be urged that these words refer to private life, not to public worship. That they refer directly to private life may be granted, but the Apostle borrowed the words from the divine service which sets forth Christian life in its perfection, and of which private life ought to be a copy. And thus his words bear indirectiy on the Liturgy. Tr. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 31 following words also sound like part of a liturgical hymn? “And evidently great is the mystery of piety which was “manifested in the flesh, was justified in the spirit, appeared “to angeis, hath been preached to the Gentiles, is believed in “the world, is taken up in glory.”% From these indications we may fairly infer that, even in Apostolic times, the liturgy had been considerably developed not only in the communities of Jewish Christians, who retained their own usages and forms of prayer, but also among Gentile Christians. In the post-apostolic Churches these ordinances of the Apostles continued in force, and received still further deve'opment, as we learn from several historical documents and from the old Liturgies, which emanated in substance from the Apostles whose names they bear. Pliny the Younger, in his letter to Trajan, distinctly asserts that the Christians met on a_ certain day before sunrise and sang hymns to Christ their God. ~ Eusebius also states that, in his time, the faithful were still wont to sing canticles, handed down from the early Christians, in which they honoured Christ as God.% From the writings of Justin, and the recently discovered Aisa, we gather that divine worship centred in the reading of Scripture and the celebration of the Holy Eucharist. The liturgical prayer of thanks (evxapioria) contained the Apostolic rule of faith, and hence was called the Canon. Speaking of the liturgy of his time, Tertullian invokes Tradition on its behalf, saying that it originated in Tradition, was observed in faith, and was ratified by constant use. The Fathers by affirming that usages in the Church, not historically traceable to positive institution, have come down from the Apostles, recognize Tradition as their leading principle. Not that they were unaware that cultus and liturgy had undergone develop- ment since Apostolic times. But they knew that these were a natural growth from the seeds sown by the Apostles, From 26 I Tim. iii. 16. 27H. E. v, 28 (32, 5). See Chrtstian Apology M1. c. vii, 32 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. the fundamental Christian mysteries, as it were from a root, have sprung up the many branches and fragrant flowers of the liturgy. As these mysteries bear chiefly on our Lord’s life, they naturally issued in a corona of feasts which, as the year runs its course, call to mind Christ and the redemption that He accomplished. In this way arose feasts in honour of our Lord and the martyrs, to which were added others in honour of the Apostles and the Blessed Virgin, which gave new life and solemnity to the divine liturgy. 25. And here we may be allowed to point out once more how the Catholic Church differs from other communions in this matter. The first great liturgical dispute, that, namely, concerning the celebration of Easter, seems to show that the Eastern Church began to regard Tradition as a dead principle. Nowhere had the liturgy developed so rapidly and so richly as in the Greek Church, which was, in an especial manner, the liturgical Church. But the vigorous life that at first pulsated in her liturgical veins soon ceased to flow, and then she became listless and shrivelled up into a skeleton of antique forms. What avails her boast of having preserved the most ancient traditions, if life and energy have gone out of them ? The conservative principle, as understood or rather misunder- stood by her, has dammed the stream of progress in the- ology, worship and discipline. What a different sight meets our eyes in the Catholic Church. How beautifully the old blends with the new in her worship! Like an ever- green planted by the side of the running waters, the living Church is ever sending forth new offshoots. But however varied its manifestations, however new at first blush they often seem, they have all grown out of thertrec>- planted by the Apostles, and have derived their nourish- ment from the life-force tnat has animated Catholic wor- ship for centuries.* Of a truth, in comparing modern a& Doctrina Ap.c.9. Justin, AZ. 1., 65,67. See Krauss Real-Encyclopidie tz, 311- 313. Ireneus, Adv. Her iii., 3, 8; Tertull, De Cor, c. 4, Adv, Mare, iv., 5. Probst, Litureie, &’c., Ttibingen, 1870. Thalhofer, Handbuch der Kathol. Liturgtk, Freiburg, 1883, 1887. , FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, 33 worship with the worship of the first two centuries, or in tracing modern liturgy to its rise and early growth, we cannot fail to notice a manifold diversity side by side with resemblance in main outline. But in this, even more than in doctrinal development, we must beware of cutting down to the roots the great tree that, in the course of centuries, has overspread the whole earth. If the Holy Spirit abides in the Church, her whole life must expand under His guidance, 26. So vital an element is consistent development in every religious principle, that its presence may be detected even in religions invented by man. “If we turn our attention ‘o the Chinese, Parseces, or Mohammedans, we shall stand astonished at the consistency with which they have drawn conclusions and built up details from first principles. Anyone who studies Greek heathenism critically, cannot fail to see how perfectly all successive religious developments harmonized with its funda- mental principles. And is not the same thing perceptible in mather’s work. 4, £°°Eheé symbolical developments of doctrine in his Church are, on the whole, so ciearly the outcome of his spirit, that their genuine Lutheran character is unmis- takable.”*® Do not our Lord’s words hold good here: ‘By their fruits you shall know them?” Should not he who ‘enunciated adoration in spirit and truth as the principle of Christian worship, have looked to the fact that. his work would endure? Granting that faith has never quite succeeded, in destroying superstition root and branch, or in choking all the ? weeds that crop up in the matter of worship, such shortcomings are no argument against it. If the Spirit of God was promised to the Church to safeguard the faith, he will also make His presence felt in ecclesiasticel worship, 27. ‘Thus the Catholic Church has ever held to the golden mean between a fossil conservatism and infinite material perfectibility. Both the Greek and Protestant Churches are rigidly conservative; the former admitting development for 29 Mohler, Sysb0lik, p. 350. 34 FINALITY AND DEVELOPNENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. only a very limited period, the latter considering that the “true development of Christianity Nes in a return to the “pure form of primitive Biblical Christianity.”8° The other extreme, infinite material perfectibility, is the watchword of rationalists of all shades and hues. But the Catholic Church, while recognizing the absolute character of the revelation given by Christ, is also conscious that there is a living Spirit dwelling within her till the end of time. Not that she is inspired, as Protestants*! interpret the doctrine that she is assisted by the Holy Ghost, but the reiigion founded by God the Son cannot rest on a dead letter. It must be a living force. It must have an unchangeable basis, and still be capable of being expanded by the Holy Spirit, even as God the Son unites in one person the cternal nature of God with the temporal nature of man, which latter admits of development. Protestant writers, like Hase, imagine that the Catholic Church is bound to pass off her new doctrines as old. Thus, they think, she hopes to cloak the mistrust with which her own members regard the presence of the creative power of the Spirit within her. It is clear that these writers neither understand the nature of development, nor the presence of the vivifying Spirit. For the living spirit, at work within her, makes the very letter of Holy Scripture quiver with life. Though deeply convinced that the Christian religion was capable of development, the Catholic Church has never supposed that this development depended on an everflowing stream of revelations, as the following words from Irenzeus abundantly prove. After brushing aside the errors of the Gnostics on creation and redemption, he proceeds thus: “The “preaching of the Church is everywhere consistent, and “continues in an even course, and receives testimony ‘from “the prophets, the apostles and all the disciples—as I have 20 Strauss i. 259. 3x Hase, Handbuch der Protest. Polemik, 4th edit. 1878, p. 70: Tschakert, Evangelische Polemik, Gotha, 1885, p. 50. Scheele, Handbuch der Theol. Wissenschaft vor Zoeckler, Nordiingen, 1834, il. 399 —— FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 25 “proved—through [those in] the bezinning, the middle, and “the end, and through the entire dispensation of God, and “that well-grounded system which tends to man’s salvation, “namely, our faith: which; having been received from the “Church, we do preserve, and which always, by the Spirit “of God, renewing its youth, as if it were some precious “deposit in an excellent vessel, causes the vessel itself “containing it to renew its youth also. For this gift of God “has been entrusted to the Church, as breath was to the first “created man, for this purpose that all the members receiving ‘it may be vivified . . . For in the Church, it is. said, “*God hath set apostles, prophets, teachers,’ and all the “other means through which the Spirit works; of which “all those are not partakers, who do not join themselves to “the Churcn, but defraud themselves of life through their “perverse opinions and infamous behavour.” Later theologians, iike S. Thomas and the Scholastics, Turrecremata and others, adopted, as we have said, the same standpoint.®? * 32 Irenzeus, Adv. Hereses iii. 24. 12 (Clack’s Trans lation). S. Thomas, Sum. Theol, li. ii. r. 9. Turrecr. (Torguemada) Summa de Ecclesia i, 78. * This is a point of capital importance, on which we wish to lay particular stress, as there are many, non-Catholics especially, who fail to grasp the distinction clearly and precisely. The Church, in her office of teacher, is assisted by the Holy Ghost, who explains and develops truths that have been revealed once for all, and that are contained somehow in the Apostolic deposit. So, in drawing inferences and conclusions from the data furnished by the deposit, the Church cannot make a mistake. But He does not, as it'were, simply whisper these inferences into her . ear, and relieve her of the trouble of conducting her researches and investigations ina human way. And hence the Church is not an organ for receiving new revela ‘ions, but for preserving in its fulness and entirety the revelation already given In this respect she stands in a totally different position from the old prophets and also from tne Apostles. Their function was twofold: To supplement existing . revelctions with new matter, and to explain and preserve, independently of their own researches, the révelation that alre: ady existed. Hence they are called organs of revelation. The Church, then, merely requires the assistance of the Holy Spirit. But this is absolutely necessary. For if, in pursuance of her duty and office, she is to lay down the law of belief for the faithful, she must be able to give an absolute guarantee that her teaching is undoubtedly and unmistakably God’s revealed word. Belief, as we understand it, demands absolute certainty that the object prsposed to our belief is the very word of God Himself. But the Church cannot guarantee such absolute certainty, except in virtue of the divine assistance vouchsafed to her when she teaches with authority Now under the name development the author comprises the chief functions of the Eeclesta docens. And hence Christian development postulates the presence cf the Holy Ghost, and vice-versa the presence of the Holy Ghost necessarily entails development. See Chapter viii. Tr. 30 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION, 28. From the Protestant theory, which denied that the Toly Ghost was abiding in the Church and gu'd'ug her, and which held that Revelation—the water of lie —was sealed up in the vessels of Scripture, twd inconveniences inevitably resulted. In the hypothesis that the Chuzch had departed from the letter of Scripture, a return to primiiive Chuistianity became impossible; for, as Hase says, no living tody ever reverts to a previous state.®3 Again, despite al! checks imposed by symbols and confessions, the need for liv ag development will make itself felt with such irresistible force that, as Strauss observes, another source will have to be substituted for the Spirit of God, to wit, the spirit of man.?* And so it came to pass that, when the living spirit was banished from the Church, the chain of historical continuity was snapped. The truths that had hitherto developed in a direct line from Christ, and had grown naturally out of the primitive stock of revelation, that had moulded human ideas and institutions, and subjected the whole cycle of human life to the Spirit of Christ, were henceforth thrown a prey to human fancy and caprice. Of course there was no intention of departing from the spirit of the sacred writers; but the human spirit unconsciously ousted the Spirit of Holy Scripture, and usurped His place. And soon it roamed at large, over the New Testament as well as the Old, and appointed reason supreme arbiter of Holy Scripture and Christianity. Reason had burst its bonds and could no longer be held in restraint, for the power inherent in the principle asserted itself. Writers of the vulgar Rationalistic School, by means of grammatical and _ historical glosses, explained away the supernatural element in revelation, put Holy Scripture on the same level as profane writings, and set up a shallow religion of natural reason and a weak-kneed morility. Speculative rationalists, on the other hand, considered religion a necessary form of knowledge for the uneducated, that 33 Hase, p. 68. 34 Strauss, l.c. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT DOF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 37 would disappear with progress, when the mind should rise to the knowledge of the absolute. ‘Truth and perfection are not to be found at the beginning, but at the end.® Thus this school, while pretending to hold Christ. in high esteem, degraded Christianity to the level of other religions and made it a mere link in the history ot religion. 29. To avoid this conclusion, a distinction has been drawn between fundamental and non-fundamental dogmas. But this distinction, besides resting ona purely external aspect of the doc- trinal edifice, cuts the ground from under Holy Scripture. How is it possible to hold fast to the Trinity and Christ’s divinity, the work of redemption and belief in eternal life, and yet to hand over to individual fancy all the other doctrines that Scripture and the Church teach with equal certitude? For ounce the principle of infallible revelation is broken through, no limit can be set to the principle of free rational enquiry. Where authority fails, subjectivity steps in. Unity -ecomes impossible, save the unity cf opposition to Church authority. “The business of Protestantism,” says a modern theologian,*6 ‘is to fight Rome, and at the same time to further the interests of pure Christianity. But Protestants hold widely divergent views as to what constitutes the inalienable truths of Christianity.” Substantially, they say, it is the grace of Christ that brings pardon to the repentant sinner for his past transgressions, that gives him strength to do good, that enables him who, amid life’s turmoil and trouble, turns with his whole heart and with confidence to the God revealed by Jesus, to attain inwaid peace and joy, and to succeed in doing good. “It should not be forgotten, by those schools of thought, whose direct aim it is to safeguard the faith once delivered, that the worth of the highest goods cannot be proved, but only ‘elt. And those, who make it their business to effect a reconciliation between the Church’s 35 See Kuhn, Zinleitung p* 131 seq. 36 Holtzmann, » heol. Literatur Zeitung, 1885, No.9. See Hase viii. and Ddéllinger, Kirche und Kirchen, Papstthum und Kirchenstaat. Miinchen 186r, p. 412, 485, seq. 38 FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. teaching and modern philosophy, should beware lest, through their negligence, religious life should suffer shipwieck.”* How ill Christianity would fare, were there no mean between these two extremes! Has Christ wholly abandoned the saving gifts of the gospel to the inner experience of the faithful and the unsteady verdict of human reason? No, the common deposit of the Apostles and the living word of Christ cannot have been committed to a ship without rudder or compass. ‘The Spirit of Christ must steer Christ’s work. The Church of Christ must be an inexhaustible fountain ever giving living water to the thirsty ; a vine ever producing wine to gladden the heart of man. And as good ground blights not the husband- man’s hopes, but yields corn for daily bread, so the Church of Christ must be a fertile soil producing fruits of grace. And our heavenly Father who prunes the vine, and plants the vineyard, and fences it round, and makes the soil fertile, will take care that in the Church of His Son, new life and vigour are ever streaming forth from a supernatural source. It will be His work to see that redemption, without let or hindrance, brings to all men, at all times, youth and strength. ‘This His solicitude we see realized in the Church, the guardian of absolute revelation, which, by dispensing the grace of the Holy Spirit, establishes the Kingdom of God on earth. 30. The Vatican Council concludes its exposition of the relations between faith and reason with the words: ‘For the “doctrine of faith which God hath revealed has not been pro- “posed, like a philosophical invention, to be perfected by “human ingenuity, but has been delivered as a divine deposit “to the Spouse of Christ, to be faithfully kept and infallibly “declared. Hence also that meaning of the sacred dogmas is ** perpetually to be retained which our Holy Mother the Church * The English reader will not be unfamiliar with this kind of cant. It is wide- spread in our time and country.. In plain words, it means that the religieus life of man is quite independent of religious truth, Yet strange to say, this_ unnatural and atsurd dualism between mind and heart is seriously asserted, at times, by men of no mean intellectual power. Tr. FINALITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION. 39 “has once declared, nor is that meaning ever to be departed *‘ from, under the pretence or pretext of a deeper comprehension “of men. Let, then, the intelligence, science, and wisdom of “each and all, of individuals and of the whole Church, in all ‘ages and all times, increase and flourish in abundance and “vigour; but simply in its own proper kind, that is to say, in “one and the same doctrine, one and the same sense, one and “same judgment (Vincent of Lerins Common. n. 28). 37 Constit. dogm. de fide Cath. C 4 Cardinal Manning’s translation in Petré Privilegiusm p. 200. CHAPTER II. THE KINGDOM OF GOD. r. It was incumbent on Christ, the Messias promised by the prophets, to strike a new covenant with His people and the nations, and to establish a new kingdom in place of the old theocracy. In describing Christ’s triple office of king, priest and prophet, the prophets have, at the same time, sketched His kingdom, in its outlinés and constitution, in its development, aims and fortunes, with such clearness, that a complete picture of the structure actually erected by Christ may be easily gleaned from their descriptions. S. Augustine, when defending the Catholic Church against the sects, expresses the opinion that the prophets have spoken in even clearer terms of the Church than of Christ. For, as a rule, he says, they seem to shroud Christ in a veil of mystery, but preach the Church quite plainly.! In saying this S. Augustine had chiefly in view that mark of the Church which is most easily recognized, namely, its universa‘ity or catholicity; but elsewhere he dwells also on other marks as foretold by the prophets of old. That the prophets generally expected a Kingdom of God to spring up in Messianic times is as clear as noonday. The older prophets, do not, indeed, employ the phrase, “ Kingdom of God,” but they frequently depict the glory of the Messianic ‘age: justice, holiness, peace and grace are to be poured 1 Exnarr. in Ps. 30. Ser. ii. n. 8. See Catech. Council of Trent, i. to. r Selbst, Die Kirche Jesu Christi &., Mainz, 1883. THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 41 abroad on all peoples ; the sun of truth is to shine on the heathen, and men are to be united with God in Immanuel. ‘‘ How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him ‘that bringeth good tidings, and that preacheth peace ; ‘‘ of him that sheweth forth good, that preacheth salvation, ‘‘ that saith to Sion: Thy God shall reign.”’ (Isaias Li. 7). We can almost fancy these words to have been uttered by the Apostle of the Gentiles, who, writing to the Romans, says: ‘‘ For the kingdom of God is not meat and drink : ‘‘ but justice and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.’’ (Rom. XIv. 17). Oftener, however, they borrow the colouring of their prophecies from the typical kingdom of David and Solomon. ‘‘A king shall reign, and shall be wise; and ‘shall execute judgment and justice on the earth . . . and ‘‘ this is the name that they shall call him: The Lord, our ‘just oné.”’ (Jerem. Xxv1. 5, 6). The higher character of this kingdom is already seen in such passages as the preceding, but in others it stands out with still greater clearness. In these latter, too, Jerusalem and Sion figure as the centre of God’s old kingdom ; but these outward phrases have become, almost imperceptibly, luminous with spiritual meaning, betokening a Messianic kingdom in which, besides a remnant from Judaism, men from all nations shall ‘call upon God’s name, and find peace and happiness in God. Here, again, the phraseology and imagery, in which the Messianic blessings are depicted, are, as it were, echoes from that Paradise in which man and beast dwelt in untroubled and unclouded harmony with na- ture and with one another. But this only shows that a Messianic kingdom was to come, which would restore the kingdom that God had set up in the beginning. The vivid and concrete style of the prophets made it nec- essary for them to lay the scene of the kingdom of God in the land of Palestine. The promised land, Israel’s inheritance, was to the Israelitea symbol and at the same time a pattern 42 THE KINGDOM OF GOD. of his home in heaven, of his eternal inheritance. An Israelite’s highest happiness was to dwell in peace and contentment in the promised land, flowing with milk and honey. How then, could the prophets have painted the future Messianic kingdom in brighter colours.? Just here and there they hint that the kinedom of God is not of this world, but only the later propbets put this thought prominently forward.2 Sophonias, (about 620) however, seen.c to be an exception. In him this feature is represented as essentia: to the new kingdom. Of Israel’s glorious victories over their enemies he either makes no mention or ascribe; them to God. He makes no allusion to the Messias’ royal character. In his eyes the new Israel is poor and needy, without riches, external splendour, or prestige. Its power is spiritual and ideal in its nature. The chastisements impending over Juda are for its inward purification. And thus people from the ends of the earth shall be brought to the knowledge of God. In the Jerusalem of untroubled peace none but the humble and simple shall dwell. Jeremias, too, saw in vision the fall of Jerusalem and the misfortunes of its people. Faithless Juda is rejected, and its sanctuary destroyed. And God will set other shepherds over His people, after His own heart, and will reveal Himself anew in Jerusalem. 2. Heretofore, then, we have not met the name “ kingdom of God” or “kingdom of Heaven,” which Daniel was the first to use. One after another he saw powerful kingdoms crumble to nieces, after doing their part towards preparing the way for the new kingdom. Daniel is in an especial and peculiar manner the prophet who beheld in the kingdom of God a spiritual, world subduing force. After explaining what were the four kingdoms that Nabuchodonosor had seen in vision, he this proceeds: ‘‘In the days of those kingdoms, the God of “heaven will set up a kingdom that shall never be destroyed, “and His kingdom shall not be delivered up to another people: “Cand it shall break in pieces and consume all those kingdoms @ Zachar. ix. 9. See Isaias liii, THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 43 “and itself shall stand for ever.” (Daniel 11. 44). “The “saints of the most high God shall take the kingdom: and “they shall possess the kingdom for ever and ever.” (vil. 18). “And the kingdom, and power, and the greatness of the ‘kingdom, under the whole heaven, may be given to the “people of the saints of the Most High: whose kingdom is “an everlasting kingdom, and all kings shall serve Him and “shall obey Him.” (vu. 27). The foundation of this new and eternal kingdom was laid by the Son of Man, whom Daniel beheld in the vision of the night coming with the clouds of heaven. ‘And he came even to the ancient of days: and ‘they presented him before Him. And He gave him power, “and glory, and a kingdom: and all peoples, tribes, and “tongues shall serve him. His power is an everlasting power “that shall not be taken away : and his kingdom, that shall not “be destroyed.” (vil. 13, 14). In these words Daniel has given expression to two characteristics of this kingdom: it will be set up mot by an earthly potentate, but by a Son of Man sent by God, and as a Givine kingdom it will extend to all peoples and times. 3. How deeply the idea of a new kingdom had sunk into the minds of the Jews we know from the Gospels. The Son of Man is “the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God “shall give unto him the throne of David, His father ; and He “shall reign in the house of Jacob for ever, and of His “kingdom there shall be no end.” (Luke 1. 32, 33). “He “shall save his people from their sins.” (Matth. 1.21). The Magnificat and Benedictus give an instructive ins ght into the hopes and aspirations of pious Israelites. The Jews generally were looking forward to the Messianic kingdom.? That the kingdom should come was their staple prayer Was it not then in accordance with the whole spirit of prophecy, that John the Baptist proclaimed the kingdom of God to be at hand, and that our Lord began His public ministry with the g Luke ii. 25; xvii 203 xxii. 18; xxiii. 51. Mark xv.43. II Tim. iv. 8. 44 THE KINGDOM OF GOD. same watchword? The very fact that the phtase “kingdom of heaven” is peculiar to S. Matthew’s Gospel, and is almost uniformly used except where a special and more personal sivnifica'ion is intended,’ indicates, its connection with ancient prophecy. John ut. 5, however, would seem to be an excep- tion. The Sinaitic codex, along with different Fathers, reads “kingdom of heaven,” instead of “kingdom of God.” But this reading has been rightly abandoned as a mere correction from S. Matthew. The expression “kingdom of heaven” occurs, indeed, pretty frequently in the language of the Jewish schools, but it corresponds neither in usage nor in meaning to S. Matthew’s. For there is no proof that their phrase “ king- dom of heaven” (malkuth haschamajim) was in use anterior to Christ. In the later rabbinical usage, which is maintained in the Talmud and Jewish liturgy up to the present day, the expression refers to the Jewish theocracy, not to the Messianic kingdom. ‘The only passage in the Targum that will bear the meaning is that on Mickzas iv. 7: * And the kingdom of “heaven shall be revealed on Mount Sion, now and for ever.” But even here it is only equivalent to the rabbinical phrase, “kingdom of God.”* Possibly the rabbis were induced to put the word heaven in place of the sacred name Jahve, which they shrunk from uttering. The reason why one and the same expression is used in a different sense by S. Matthew and 5. John on the one side, and by the Talmudists and Targumists on the other, is not far to seek. Both parties took their stand on the common ground of ancient prophecy. On this they ever kept their eyes steadily fixed. Now Jesus Christ had fulfilled the prophecy in a spiritual sense; whence the rabbis, breathing hostility to Christianity, were naturally driven to contend that the expres- sion had reference to the Jewish theocracy and not to the Messianic kingdom, From the moment, however, that Jesus styled Himself the Son of Man, all doubt as to the identity of 4 xii. 285 xix. 245 xxi. 31, 43 See. vi. 10. s Targ. ad Is. 49, 9; 53, 10. THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 45 the kingdom of heaven with Daniel’s kingdom was re- moved. It wasclear that Jesus the Son of Man came down from heaven, established the everlasting kingdom foretold by Daniel, and showered down heaven!s blessings on man- kind. That there is a twofold kingdom of heaven, one in the next world and one on earth, is sufficiently indicated by S. Matthew as often as the Heavenly Father, the Father in heaven, is mentioned.® The latter phrase occurs nowhere else, except in Mark x1. 25, where it is naturally in place, and is parallel to Matth. vi. rq. 4. Was not S. Matthew, it may be asked, induced by his antagonism to the Roman Empire to lay greater stress on the distinction between the two kingdoms? In the then existing anti-Roman feeling this would be intelligible ; but then S. Matthew is hardly more decisive in his opposition to the Roman Empire than to the Jewish nation. That op- position, again, was not less pronounced in the rabbis, and yet it had no such effect upon them. They never relaxed in their pretensions, or modified their political views and ideals. Instead of hastening the coming of the kingdom promised by the prophets, by bearing wrongs patiently and with resignation to God’s will, they wished to establish it by force ; and they pictured the Messianic era as a day of wrath, in which they were to be the instruments of God’s vengeance on the heathen. Even John the Baptist had not at first fully outgrown this peculiar Jewish conception. He, too, conceived the beginnings of the Messianic king- dom differently from what they were. His thoughts cen- tred on the Messianic judgment, when one mightier than himself, with the power of a Messias8-King, would thor- oughly cleanse his floor, and separate the wheat from the Ghai, (iit. 12). It is open to question whether the Jews drew a distinction 6 M. vi. 9; vii. rr, 213 x, 32: xii. 50; xvi. 17; xviii, 10, 1g. See Schanz, Comment. in Marc. p. 346. * This inference would not seem to be altogether necessary. From the fact that he delivered his message in the language of the prophets, it does not necessarily follow that his own spiritual and supernatural knowledge did not reach beyond at; Dr; 46 THE KINGDOM OF GOD. between the kingdom of heaven in this world and that in the next. When, therefore, S. Matthew draws the distinction, he is acting independently of political motives. In the majority of passages in his gospel, the kingdom of heaven is represented as a kingdom that came down from heaven to earth. Other passages that speak of it as a kingdom on earth, do not deny its heavenly origin. For not only is the Father in heaven, who rules all, and to whom all things tend, its author and centre, but its gifts and good things are gifts from the Father of lights. And if Jahve, who pitched His tents among His people, was the King of Israel under the old covenant, so God’s nearness in the New Testament through the Incarnation is a link joining earth and heaven far more closely, and transforming God’s kingdom on earth into a kingdom of heaven, The kingdom of heaven mentioned in the gospel was founded when God became man and poured forth a heavenly life of grace and sanctity on earth, in order to convert this vale of tears into a Paradise, and to win back the kingdom of the prince of this world to its Lord and Maker. The kingdom will be completed, when Christ shall come again in glory and majesty (Parousia), to judge the living and the dead. It is, indeed, a spiritual kingdom; but this by no means implies either that salvation is accomplished exclusively in heaven, or that this spiritual conception of it 1s the growth of a later (apocalyptic) age, after Israel had aban- doned all hope of seeing an earthly fulfilment of tne Theocracy, If, as some critics contend, the gospel of S. Matthew consists of two distinst parts, the Zeg/a and the narratives, the phrase “kingdom of heaven” at all events must be assigned to the more ancient. It is the dominant note of the whole gospel, that was re-echoed in after ages, Justin, the Apostolic Consti- tutions, and Ephrem use the expression, no doubt under the influence of tha gospel of S. Maithew, which, whatever its purpose, whether anti-Jewish or not, is at any rate most prophetical in character. s. The later evangelists, though, in all probability, they THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 47 were acquainted with the first gospel, eschewed the phrase. And, indeed, to the Gentile Christian reader it was less intelligible and more easily misunderstood than the parallel phrase “kingdom of God.” This latter is more easily grasped, whether by it we understand the community of those who pray that God’s kingdom may come, and that His will may be done on earth as it is in heaven, or whether we think of it as a kingdom that has its seat in God. For our present purpose the distinction is of no consequence, except in so far as it marks a step in advance, and denotes a further development of the ideas underlying the term. Anyhow the disappearance of the term was not due to a desire, on the part of the evangelists, to efface all memory of the Messianic kingdom which the Son of David had founded. For the very fact that they introduce Christ’s forerunner shows that they had in mind and wished to recall the long stages of preparation through which the Old Testament had passed. Ilence we are not surprised to find that Mark has recorded that the phrase “kingdom of David” was coniained in the joyful shout raised by the multitude on the occasion of Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem (XI. ro). This is the oniy instance in which it occurs in the New Testament. It is a phrase similar to “Son of David” which is frequently found in S. Matthew. 6. For a more detailed description of the kingdom of heaven in the New Testament, we naturally turn to the first Gospel. That the Messias is to be its king we gather from the Baptist. And when he baptizes unto the remission of sins, and requires the people to bring forth fruits of penance by confessing their sins, he plainly teaches that man’s inward conversion and regeneration is the goal at which the new kingdom aims. Jesus also demands repentance, as a necessary preparation for the new kingdom. We read that He went about all Galilee preaching the Gospel of the kingdom. (Matth. Iv. 23). What this really meant is shown from the: Sermon on the Mount, wherein, so to speak, Christ unfolded His 48 THE KINGDOM OF GOD. programme, The beatitudes are not, indeed, concerned with this life alone; but how could they have formed such a magnificent introduction to, the Sermon on the Mount, if they had been merely a picture of the kingdom of the blessed? How could they have formed the basis of our Lord’s demand for the fulfilment of the law? ' Though we may not attach any special force to the argument that they are spoken throughout in the present tense, seeing that they are general sentences,—still their very aim and purpose is to point to a kingdom that our Saviour was to found in Opposition to the worldly and external ideas of the Jews. By promising the kingdom of heaven both at the beginning and the end, He sufficiently indicates that all other bless ngs have reference primarily to it; in a word, that they are spiritual blessings. 7. Accordingly we find that the qualifications for citizenship in the kingdom of heaven are spiritual, and that spiritual blessings are the rewards it holds out. These blessings, in their totality, constitute the kingdom of God. The poor in spirit and the persecuted possess the kingdom. Could the contrast to this world’s goods be more sharply defined? Comfort to the sorrowful, possession of the land to the weak, feeding the hungry, and giving drink to the thirsty, mercy obtained by shewing mercy, the sight of God to the clean of heart, the gift of sonship to the peacemakers ;—all this points to a spiritual citizenship which bases happiness on contentment, mutual charity and resignation to God. Of a truth man’s infirmity cannot fully rise to this ideal, and therefore he directs his gaze to a better future for its attainment. The Church does the same, by applying the eight beatitudes to the feast of All Saints, in order to honour the blessed in heaven, and to encourage those who are still struggling on earth. But this very fact, while shewing that we are to look for the eternal and imperishable reward only in heaven, also implies that the kingdom of heaven on earth is the battlefield on which we are to win an immortal crown. THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 49 Christ Himself declares that the old kingdom was broken up and the new begun with the advent of the Baptisi. ‘‘ From the * days of John the Baptist until now, the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent bear it away.” (Matth. x1. 12.) When Jesus had pointed out to a Scribe the first and greatest commandment of love, He received for answer: “Weil, *“ master, thou hast said in truth, that there is one God, and “there is no other besides Him. And that He should be loved “with the whole heart, and with the whole understanding, and “with the whole soul, and with the whole strength; and to “love one’s neighbour as himself, is a greater thing than all “‘holocausts and sacrifices. And Jesus secing that he had “answered wisely, suid to him: Thou art not far from the “kingdom of God.” (Mark xt. 32 seq.) When Jesus sent forth the seventy-two disciples, He said to them: “ Heal ‘the sick that are therein, and say to them: The kingdom of “God is come niga unto you.” (Luke x. g 11.) In reply to the Pharisees who ascvibed his power to cast out devils to a compact with Beelzebub, Jesus said: ‘ But if I by the Spirit of be cast out devils, then is the kingdom of God come upon you.’ Nas h. xit, 28). “And when He was asked by the “Pharisees: When the kinsdom of God should come? He, eae ering them said: The kingdom cf God cometh not with “observation, Neither shall they say: Behold here, or behold “there; for, lo, the kingdom of God is within you.” (Luke xvu. zo 21). Joseph of Arimathza, a senator, a good and just man, who had not consented to their counsel and doings, “himself waited for the kingdom of God.” (Luke xxiit. 56-1). 8. Jesus assigns duties to the cilicens of the kingdom of heaven in the present life. They must be faithiul stewards and hum ile believers. ‘Therefore is the kingdom of heaven “likened to a king who would take an accsunt of his servants.” (Matth. xvi. 23); “to a master of a i2mily, who went out early “in the morning to hire labourers into his vineyard.” (xx. ae toa “king who made a marriage for his son” oa AY “to ten 5° THE KINGDOM OF GOD. “virgins, who taking their lamps, went out to meet the bridc- ‘groom and the bride.” (xxv. 1). He requires His disciples, if they would enter into the kingdom of heaven, to become as little children. ‘‘ Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as “this little child, he is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.” (xvi. 1 seq.). ‘Seek ye therefore first the kingdom of God ‘and His justice; and all these things shall be added unto you.” (v1. 33). As Jesus began the Sermon on the Mount with the beatitudes, so He finished by promising a kingdom in the life beyond: ‘‘ Not every one that saith to me, Lord, Lord, sha!l “enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doth the will ‘*‘of my Father whois in heaven, he shall enter into the kingdom “ of heaven.” (vil. 21). Many Fathers refer the petition in the Our Father to the future kingdom: Jesus bids the high priests and scribes to look to His second coming (see also Matth. xxv1. 29). Then shall His disciples see the kingdom of God, and the peoples shall sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.?7 Only when this goal is reached, will the kingdom of heaven on earth cease. The work of redemption finishes with the next age of the world, and all things shall again be subjected to the Father. 9g. ‘*‘ Afterwards,” writes S. Paul, ‘the end, when He shal! ‘have delivered up the kingdom to God and the I’ather, when “He shall have abolished all principality, and authority, and “power. For He must reign, until He hath put all His enemies “under His feet. And the enemy, Death, shall be destroyed *Jast.” (I Cor. 24-26). In these words the Apostle points out the zegative duty that devolves on the kingdom of God, namely, the destruction of the kingdom of Satan, sin and death. Its positive function consists in healing the wounds made by sin, and in promoting man’s spiritual and temporal well-being. Now both these functions have to be exercised in and upon human society, and must, therefore, consist in Luke ix. 27; xiii. 28; xiv. 15; xxii. 18; Matth. viii. 11; xviii. 3, 25 5 xix. 233 Mark ix. 47, John iii, 5 THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 5I external as well as internal action; in a word, the kingdom of _God must be visible. Men must know where it is and which it is. This double aspect of the kingdom of God is well brought out by the words and example of our Lord Himself. As a clear proof to men that the kingdom of God had come, He appeals to His power of working miracles and casting out devils. (Luke x1. 14-20). His authority and office and work were thus plain and unmistakable. On the other hand, He says that His kingdom is not of this world (Luke xviu. 36), that is, He spurns the means which the mighty ones of the earth employ to establish and extend their power. His kingdom comes not with observation, that is, with external pomp and splendour; its voice is not heard in the street. (Matth. xu. 18. 19). In other words the kingdom of God will be like Christ Himself; its strength divine and invisible, its main purpose and means spiritual, but itself, like the God-Man, must take its place and position amidst a world of sense. Hence He gave to His disciples, besides the grace of internal conversion, power to heal and to cast out devils, as He Himself had done; reminding them, however, that this was but a means, not the end of the kingdom of heaven. “And the seventy-two returned with joy, saying: Lord, the ‘devils also are subject to us in thy name. And he said to “them: I saw Satan as lightning falling from heaven . “But yet rejoice not in this that spirits are subject unto “you: but rejoice in this that your names are written in “heaven.” (Luke x. 17-20). 10. The name Jesus brought terror to the devils, but happiness and salvation to the disciples. The confession of this name became the password and external mark of recognition of the citizens of the kingdom of God. Had not our Lord declared those blessed who were reviled and hated and persecuted for His name’s sake? “For so they persecuted “the prophets that were before you.” (Matth. v. 12). Has He not promised: ‘‘ Whosoever shall eonfess me before men, 52 THE KINGDOM OF GOD. “‘T will also confess him before my Father who is in heaven; “but whosoever shall deny me before men, I will also deny ‘him before my Father who is in heaven”? (Matth. x. 32-33). This confession, however, is not a mere lip-service—a saying, Lord, Lord; but as the citizens of a worldly kingdom must execute the behests of an earthly monarch, so Chnist’s disciples must do the will of the Father who is in heaven. God’s kingdom has also its laws and ordinances which derive their importance from the sovereign authority that gave them. As the soldier in the army swears fealty to his sovereign, and wears the badge of his commander, so the soldier of Christ must wear the sign of Christ upon himself, and be loyal and true to Him as his King and sovereign Lord. Both conditions are necessary. To become a member of the kingdom of God an external and an internal qualification are required. This is implied in the words of our Lord to Nicodemus (John u11. 3, 5): “Amen, amen, I say to thee, except a man be born again, “he cannot see the kingdom of God. . . . unless a man ‘be born ascin of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter “into the kingdom of God.” Whether we here refer the word “kingdom of God” chiefly to the kingdom on earth, or to that bey nd this life, this much is clear: that baptism is put forth not merely as an external condit'on or empty sign, but as an internal, regular, and essential institution of that kingdom, whereby the inward man is renewed. The same appears, more clearly still, from the charge of our Lo:d to the Apostles: ‘“‘Go ye, therefore, and teach all nations: baptizing them... J ‘teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have com- “manded you.” (Matth. xxvi1. 18-20). Baptism, as involving the observance of God’s commandments, is the badge of membership of the kingdom of heaven. “In the Old Law circumcision, which Jahve enjoined on Abraham as a sign of the Covenant, wes a type of Baptism. The uncircumcised were exterminated. In the New Law circumcision of heart has, indeed, supplanted circumcision of THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 53 the flesh, and yet, since man is a compound of matter and spirit, spiritual regeneration must be linked to a visible sign. The God-man, who conversed with men in a visible form, required an outward token of union with the spiritual kingdom of God. This significance of baptism, as indicating member- ship of God’s kingdom, is clearly seen from S. John’s preparatory baptism, which for saintly Israelites was “fin very deed a circumcision of the heart of the nation.” Josephus relates that John bade the Jews to practise virtue, to comport themselves with justice towards one another, and with piety towards God, and to use baptism as a means of union for the purpose of the new Covenant.’ Of course the baptism of Jesus is not a mere means of outward union, nor a mere symbol of inward renewal, as were circumcision and John’s baptism. ‘These could not effect the remission of sins, that they symbolized and fore- shadowed. That was to be the work of Christian baptisi., Still Christian baptism itself is also a symbol, a sign of the Triune God, who has marked off the citizens of the kingdom of God from the children of this world. Baptism, moreover, being destined for all peoples and nations, is a more universal sign than circumcision. 11. There is yet another sign of membership to be men- tioned. Jesus, marvelling over the centurion’s faith, uttere? these memorable words: ‘‘ Many shall come from the east and “the west, and shall sit down with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob “in the kingdom of heaven.” We have already interpreted this phrase, in the preceding pages, of the future kingdom. But the very fact that these werds were levelled at the Jews, justifies us in explaining this fellowship in the kingdom of heaven with the just of the Old Law, as typical of those who are truly God’s table-companions in the Messianic kingdom on eartn. The partaking in a common table is yet another visible sign that they belong to the kingdom, and participate in its goods and blessings. Verily Jesus has promised to give His 8 Axntig. xviii. 5, & 54 THE KINGDOM OF GOD. disciples His flesh to eat and His blood to drink, that they may have eternal life. (John vi. 56 seq.). Andon the night before His passion He promulgated to His disciples the New Covenant. He assured them that by eating this bread and drinking this chalice they would live in Him, and through Hra in the Father; and by bidding them to do this in memory of Him, He instituted a love-feast by which all the faithful were to be united in the closest bonds with one another, and with their Redeemer. The purifying waters of baptism and the bread of life are the two great signs set up by Christ Himself, to show that the kingdom of (od first established in Paradise is again restored. 12. But Jesus clearly forsaw the dangers looming in the future, and threatening the kingdom of God that He had restored. He knew that the wily serpent that first caused dis- sension and created a breach between God and man, would not lose all its venomous power, even after He had crushed its head. He could not therefore take better precautions to guard the new community from hurt, than by unfolding its future fortunes, and laying bare the wicked artifices of its foe. God’s kingdom, though not of the world, is in the world, and is not unswayed by its strifes and struggles. And therefore Jesus revealed the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven to the disciples, but to the multitude He spoke in parables. The sower went forth to sow the seed of the word. Some seed fell by the wayside, and some sprang up indeed, but never reached maturity. The word never profits even the greater ' number of those who receive it unto salvation. In time of affliction and persecution many fall away, while the cares and riches and pleasures of this life choke the word in others. This distinction between the good and bad members of God’s kingdom is still more marked in the parable of the cockle among the wheat. ‘The kingdom of heaven is likened to a man that “sowed good seed in his field. But while the men were asleep, | ‘‘his enemy came and oversowed cockle among the wheat.” . THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 55 (Matth. xu. 24. 25). And the master would not allow his servants to gather up the cockle, lest perhaps they should root up the wheat together with it, but he bade them suffer it to grow till the harvest-time. Again, ‘‘the kingdom of heaven 1s “like to a net cast into the sea, and gathering together all kinds “ of fishes.” (Matth. x1. 47). “The net of this kingdom holds fishes, both good and bad, but when it is drawn ashore the bad are thrown away. ‘So shall it be at the end of the world. “The angels shall go forth, and shall separate the wicked from “among the just, and shai] cast them into the furnace of fire.” (49. 50). But till then the wicked in the kingdom of heaven will be side by side with the just, the cockle will be suffered to grow up with the wheat, and the foolish virgins wiil sit with the wise. After this explicit declaration, who will be scandalized because Christ’s kingdom on earth is not composed exclusively of the just? Who, on that account, can refuse to acknowledge as the kingdom established by Christ the visible society which shows forbearance even to the erring in order to win them back again? Did not Jesus come to seek that which was lost? Did He not go in search of the lost sheep of the House of Israel? Did He not eat and drink with publicans and sinners? One of the twelve was the traitor; and yet Jesus, knowing this, suffered him to stay with Him. - He wills not the death of a sinner, but rather that he be converted and live. ‘To the barren fig-tree He allowed one, two, and three years grace to see whetler or no it would bear fruit. (Luke x1u. 6). 13. The progress of Christ’s kingdom is similar to its commencement. It has the power to draw men both inwardly. and outwardly within the magnetic circle of its influence and action. To console His little flock, Christ often foretold in parables that it would grow both outwardly and inwardly. “The kingdom of heaven is like to leaven, which a woman “took and hid in three measures of meai, until the whole was leavened.” (Matth. xi. 33). To this inward trans 55 THE KINGDOM OF GOD. formation, effected by the leaven of Christian doctrine and grace, there is a corresponding outward expression. ‘The mightier a force is, the more irresistible is the influence it exerts on all things with which it comes in contact. How beautifully this external growth is mirrored forth in the parable of the mustard seed! ‘‘The kingdom of heaven is “like to a grain of mustard seed, which a man took and “sowed in his field, which indeed is the least of all seeds. “But when it is grown up it is greater than all herbs, and “becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come, and “dwell in the branches thereof.” (Matth. x11. 31. 32). So unpretentious, so insignificant was the kingdom founded by Jesus that the Scribes, when it was already in their midst, still asked when it was coming! But it will grow great, and be visibie from afar as a sign among the nations, so that men will come from the ends of the earth, seeking shelter under its branches. “And I, if I be lifted up from the “earth will draw all things to myself.” (John xi. 32). 14. So mighty, indeed, is its force that men will give their most costly possessions in exchange for the kingdom of heaven. ‘The kingdom of heaven is like to a treasure hidden “in a field, which a man having found hideth, and for joy “thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath and buyeth that “field. Again, the kingdom of heaven is like to a merchant “seexing good pearls, who when he had found one pearl “of great price, went his way, and sold all that he ha, ‘and bought it.” (Matth. x11. 44-46). Such is the kingdom of God, which men are bidden to seek in the first place ; these are its treasures which neither rust nor moth can consume. How admirably this clear, simple, figurative language blends the inner and outer characteristics, the visible and the invisible properties of the kingdom of heaven! How full of vitality is the heavenly kingdom trom its insignificant beginning among the disciples, to its establishment among all peoples! The interior and the outer rim do not, indeed, THE KINGDOM OF GOD. 87 always correspond; but this outcome of human frailty and sinfulness is tolerated, because man’s wickedness will never be able to overthrow God’s saving power ‘The fruits which the good seed lavishly brings forth, and the influence of grace and salutary doctrine tend to hasten the steps of th lagging members, and to teach them to prize the costly pearl hidden in the field. 15. The Apostles, following their divine Master's instruc. tions, zealously pushed forward the work that He had Uegun and endowed with vital force. They went forth and preached the kingdom of God. ‘But when they had believed Philip “preaching of the kingdom of God, in the name of Jesus “Christ, they were baptized, both men and women.” (Acts vill. 12). S. Paul preached the kingdcm of God at Ephesus (xix. 8), and took leave of the bishops at Ephesus in these words: ‘‘And now behold I know that all you, among whom “J have gone preaching the kingdom of God, shall see “my face no more.” (XX. 25). Even when imprisoned at Rome, be was “preaching the kingdom of God, and teaching “the things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ with all “confidence, without prohibition.” (xxvii. 31). Again, he confirmed the disciples, and exhorted them to continue in the faith, and taught them that through many tribulations we must enter into the kingdom of heaven.” (Acts X1v. 22). In the Apostolic Epistles the phrase “kingdom of God” holds a less conspicuous place. And yet the several elements of the idea may be discerned. First and foremost they point to heaven as our inheritance in the next world, to our Lord’s promise, to the reward that awaits those who fight the good fight on this earthly pilgrimage. S. Paul is overflowing with joy over the hope that is soon to be realized,—the near approach of the Parousia. He, too, had to defend it. against the thrusts of heretics and schismatics. We must not, he says, take the text apart from the context. If two of you, it ic said, shall consent upon earth; Christ, therefore, puts unity in the first place. But how can the man who is at variance with. the whole Church and the brotherhood, be in agreement with any one? How can two or three be gathered together 7 the. name of Jesus who are known to be divided from Christ and His Gospel ? ft This, then, is the passage to which Gallicans old and new never weary of appealing. So, in like manner, Protestant. controversialists boast that this passage enshrines the “great: “promise, which, in the teeth of all hierarchical pretensions, “declares that when two or three are gathered together in “ Christs? name there is He in the midst of them.” According to it, they say, the Church or ‘“‘congregation” was to be founded by the missionary labours of the Apostles, but it was to govern. itself by virtue of Christ who abides in spirit in the midst of sg. De Unit Eccl, c. 12. ® The connection between verse 19 and the preceding verses might, perhaps, be stated in a more simple and natural way, thus: in verse 17 it is said that if the offender will not hear the Church, let him be to thee as the heathen and the publican. This is, of course, a terrible punishment. Why? because whatever you bind on earth is also bound 7” heaven (v. 18), and whatever you ask as members of one brother- nood, will be granted ; consequently separation from the brotherhood means that prayer is sterile, the fountain of grace dried up (v. 19). This passage, therefore, as the author argues, implies all along that the Church is a living organism, of which the Apostles are an essential part; and they certainly were endowed with Hierarchical power. (Tr.) ¢ It is clear that the argument of S. Cyprian, to have any force at all, must needs exclude certain favourite maxims of later days such as: that there can be faith and revealed truth independently of an external, visible and living organisation ; that it can be found in more than one organisation; that the community (Chuich is to be recognized and judged by the faith and not vice-versa; that the one living community cin lose the true faith. Such maxims never occured to S. Cyprian, and, excepting the last, probably never entered the mind of his opponents, The fallibility of the Church is, of course. a necessary postulate of separation. (Tr.) THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. 7t His children. But in this place there is no question whatever of the Apostles founding the Church in their capacity of missionaries. Is it not clearly a question of discipline, of the unity and authority of the Church? ‘The other passage speaks of the foundation of the Church, but not of a ‘‘congregation ;” and every attempt to interpret it in this manner is foredoomed to failure. We are, therefore, fully entitled to put: the same meaning on the same word in both passages, sinc2 both speak of the same authority. Nor, again, can it be objected that this authority is cancelled by the promise that follows (v. 19); for then its being put forward with such emphasis in verses 37-18 would be utterly incomprehensible. 3. ‘The other evangelists do not use the word ‘ Church,” although Mark and Luke record Peter’s confession (vil 27; Ix. 18). ,External circumstances supply the reason why. It was not till late, we observe, and then only before His disciples, that Jesus spoke of the Church He was to found as the new theocracy, lest, had it been prematurely divulged, it might confirm the Jews in their false Messianic hopes. And still greater caution was required in the evangelists who wrote for Gentile Christians. In their accounts of the kingdom of God, they avoided, as we have seen, Matthew’s somewhat Jewish phrase ‘kingdom of heaven.” That such was their aim and object is clear from S. John, who not only lays special stress throughout his Gospel on the spiritual character of the kingdom of Jesus, but he has retained the very words in which Jesus, when before Pilate, declared it to be such. (vir. 36). - But when we come more closely to examine the passages in which the last three Gospe!s speak of the kingdom of God, whether in its spiritual or in its outward aspect, it is easy to see that they apply. to the Church as an external organized society of believers who are in quest of eternal life. This is but natural. For the idea of the Church sets out, indeed, 6. Hase, Polemzk p. 38. Beyschlag, Riehms Bibl. Worterbuch i. 71. On Gerson, Pierre d’Ailly and others see Schwane, ili. 556, 561, 569 seq. i THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. from external union, such as was manifested in the Old Testament by sacrifice and prayer, legislation and priesthood, but it does not stop there, because the end of this union is essentially spiritual, namely, the realization of the kingdom of God on earth by uniting the society to God by charity, and the faithful with one another in faith, sacrifice and prayer. The distinction between the kingdom of God and the Church does not, as Ritschl will have it, consist in this that the former is internal, the latter external, one appertaining to the domain of morality, the other to that of worship; for such a distinction between outward and inward is unknown to the New Testament.? On the contrary, whatever is said in the Gospels of the kingdom of God, must also be true of the Church. 4. Moreover theve are several incidents recorded in S. John’s Gospel which have ¢:ways been applied by the allegorical school to the foundation of the Church, and for this reason cannot be passed over in silence. In the first place John alone gives the triple inscription on the Cross (x1x 20), for Luke xxut. 38 [Vulg.] is a gloss on the text. John undoubtedly meant to convey the tdea that Divine Providence had, by this telling circumstance, given expression to the universality of the Church and of the work of redemption. For, Hebrew, as S. Augustine remarks, was the language of the Jews who gloried in the Law; Greek was the language of those who boasted of worldly wisdom, and Lati:n of the Romans, who were masters of the wor'd. The three forces were to be pressed into the service of the Christian Church. From Judaism there came forth Christ and His foundation, the Church. The. universal language of the Greeks made it possible to preach the Gospel everywhere, and the Roman empire supplied the external basis for the universal Christian Church. It was from ‘the cross that these future events cast their shadow. And so we may say with Rupert of Deutz that the inscription was dictated by the Holy Ghost in one sense and written by Pilate g. See Késtlin, Studien und Kritiken, 1883, p. 25. THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE, 73 in another. Who would have thought at that moment that the work of the Crucified was to destroy the Jews, and to subdue the Greco-Roman empire with its much vaunted philosophy and its overwhelming power? John, again, is the only one to record that the garment of Christ was without seam, woven from the top throughout. (xix. 23). The soldiers who kept watch, whose perquisites the garments of the crucified were, spoke thus among themselves : “Let us not cut it, but let us cast lots for it whose it shall be.” In this S. John sees the fulfilment of that word in scripture: “They have: parted my garments among them, and upon my vesture they have cast lots.” (Ps. xx1. [xxu.] 19). The explanation of the Fathers and Theologians, though allegorical, is very telling.S ‘They see in the seamless garment of Christ a figure of the Church’s unity. To preserve this intact has ever been the most sacred duty of the faithful and of the bishops. “We will not cut it,’ was the reminder the Fathers gave to heretics, warning them not to mangle the mother who had nurtured them. Another incident related by John about the Mother of Jesus as she stood at the foot of the Cross also admits of application to the Church. “When Jesus therefore had seen His mother ‘and the disciple standing, whom He loved, He saith to His “mother: Woman, behold thy son. After that He saith to the “disciple: Behold thy mother.” (x1x. 26), And the Lvangelist adds: ‘‘ And from that hour the disciple took her to his own.” By the last words the Evangelist clearly indicated what was the immediate purpose of our Lord’s words. How then, it will be asked, can the text be applied to the Church ? The application has to be sought not so much in the relation of Mary to John as mother and son, as in the relation in which she stood to Christ, the Redeemer ; a relation which impaited to her position the character of universality. §, Ambrose,? however, the only 8 Cyprian, De Un.c.7. Jerome, £4. 1g ad Dam. Augustine, Sev. 265, 7. Gregory the Great, £4, vit. g. Felix 1H. Ep. /. 3 {ad Jen.) See also Schwane, IT. 833. g See Schanz, Commnentar 2u Johannes, p. 558. Scheeben, Dogmatik 11. 605. 74 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. one among the Fathers who dilates upon this passage, was stopped short of this application by Ps. Lxxxvu. 5. That Mary, the mother of Christ, standing by the Cross, had a share in the work of redemption, is a doctrine that has been held since the days of Irenzeus. But it was not till later that Theologians began to see it expressed in these words of Christ given by S. John. After scanning the words more closely they argued, and rightly so, that the fact of John taking Mary unto his own, and providing for her temporal needs, will indeed explain the words: ‘‘Son, behold thy mother,” but not the words: ‘Woman, behold thy son.” The latter words, there- fore, show that by son was meant the church of all the redeemed which was placed under her maternal protection. Finally, the story of the piercing of the side of Jesus also belongs to this group. In order to make sure that death had ensued, one of the soldiers pierced the side of the Crucified with a spear, and immediately there came out blood and water. (x1xX. 34). John specially strengthens the force of his testimony as an eyewitness, because he knew that the fact he had men- tioned was the fulfilment of a prophecy. [Zach. xu. 10]. But, in searching for the deeper reason and meaning of this incident, the Fathers generally hold that it signified the foundation of the Church 3 and they go on to compare it with the creation of Eve from the side of the sleeping Adam, and the opening of the door in the ark through which the animals came forth. The Christian, they say, lives by water and blood: by the one he is born a.ain, by the other nourished. They are the gates of life. Hence the side of Christ was opened, to Jet water and blood, that is, the Sacraments of the Church, flow forth, whereby she becomes the fertile mother of many children. ‘Thus as the mother of the living was formed from the rib of the sleeping Adam, so from the side of the Crucified, the second Adam, has issued the Church from which streams of life and grace are ever flowing to those who are spiritually united to Christ,!0 19 See S. Thomas, ili. q. 64, a Ge THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. 75 So far we have been dealing with the notion of the Church according to the Gospels. 5. By turning to the Acts of the Apostles we shall be enavled to attain a still clearer and further notion of the Church. For it is here that we get a real insight ito the formation and growth of the new community, the nature and development of her constitution as well as her marvellous spiritual energy and power. The dedication, so to speak, of the Church took place on the day of Pentecost. The Holy Ghost descended upon the house in which all the disciples were assembled, and rested on each one. The noise from heaven as of a mighty wind, and the fiery tongues, suggest a parallel with the thunder and lightning when God gave the Law on Mount Sinai. But there is a difference. For, the Spirit speaking in the Apostles is the Spirit promised for the new kingdom by the prophets, setting His seal to the new cevenant: a covenant not of the letter but of the Spirit. Though the name Church be wanting, the thing itself stands clearly before our eyes. Those means of salvation at once external signs of the visible community, and inner medicine for the soul—which Jesus had appointed, were now applied aud took their full effect The words of the sacred text give a glowing description of what was taking place; those who received the word were baptized, and there were “added in that “day about three thousand souls. And they were persevering “in the doctrine of the Apostles, and in the commnnication ot “the breaking of bread, and in prayers.” (Acts 11. 41. 42).* * This sketch of the new community is evidently taken at the moment when it was assembled for divine worship. It purports to place before us the new Kakal {taking the word in its narrower application], and its new divine service consisting in three main portions, namely: (1) the doctrine of the Apostles [Sermon]; (2) the communication of the breaking of the bread (Eucharistic sacrifice and sacrament]; (3) prayers [psalms, hymns, spiritual canticles, Col. m1. 16; suppli- cations, prayers, intercessions and thanksgivings, 1. Tim. u. 1}. But at the same time the words of the text go far beyond that immediate scope. ‘They also give, as the author argues, an insight into the organic character of the new community. Faith received at the hands of divine messengers [evidently asummary faith], and baptism dispensed by the same, are conditions of admission; Perseverance in the doctrine [continuous teaching] of the Apostles is an obligation resulting from the admissioa. The Eucharist and common liturgica! prayer 76 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE, 6. Henceforward the word ‘‘Church” is more frequently met with, and is applied both to the Christian community asa whole (universal church), and to each particular community. In other words, the name is given to the whole community, and to each of its parts. After recounting the punishment inflicted on Ananias and Saphira, the sacred writer continues: ‘ And “there came great fear upon the whole Churca, and upon all that heard these things.” (Acts v. 11). The persecution of the faithful is called a ‘persecution against the Church.” (vl. 1). ‘Saul made havoc of the Church, entering in from house “to house, and dragging away men and women committed “them to prison.” (vul. 3). “The church that was at “Jerusalem . . . sent Barnabas as far as Antioch.” (x1. 22). “Herod the king stretched forth his hands to ‘afflict some of the Church.” (xi. 1). “ Peter therefore was “kept in prizen. But preyer was made without ceasing by the Church unto God for him.” (xu. §). Saul and Barnabas tarried in the Church at Antioch a whole year, and taught a great multitude. (x1. 26). \Vhen they returned from their missionary tour they assembled the Church, and related what great things God had done with them. (xIv. 27). They were sent as ambassadors of the Church to Jerusalem (xv. 2. 3), and when they were come, “they were received by the Church and “by the Apostles and ancients.” (xv. 4). The decree of the is the visible sign and seal of their internal unity with one another and with God. ‘These, then, are the organic bonds thet linked them to the Apostolic body, which was already in. existence as a fu and perfect church. Hence the very expressive words of the text: They were added [afposite, mporerivnray | they were taken up into the previously existing living organism, they were absorbed and assimilated to it. Their accession increased the size and bulk of the Church, but made no change in her form and constutution. The process by which those men were made Christians was an organic process, a parental action; they were children, not merely pupils. (I Cor. 1v. 15; Phil. 10), It is of the utmost importance, from an apologetic point of view, to insist on this fundamental fact, which must needs become a law for all times. ‘lhe manner and method of making Christiaus being omce organic, must ever remain so, or to use the language of German Theologians: the formal principle (Das Formal- Princip) by which men become believers and members of Christ's Church, can never change}; it must be the same to-day as it was when the first vicar ef Crist began to set the first living stones upon himself as the firm and unsbaken reuk, when the first chief shepherd opened the door of the fold to his sheep. Tr. > ae oa THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCKIPTURE,. 77 Apostolic Council is descriled as a decree of the “ Apostles “and ancients with the whole Church.” (xv. 22; xvi. 4). Paul visited the churches in Syria and Cilicia. (xv. 41 3 XVIIL 22). In one place, however [x1x. 32. 41], the word is used of an ordinary assembly of people. From this it is easy to see how the idea of the Church, formed after the analogy and on the model of the Old Testa- ment, was first realized in one individual, then in two, and three, and so forth. It thus was at first an individual concept ; but, as time went or and communities arose in various towns, it became a general or universal* concept. Not indeed as if the Church as a whole meant no more than a conglomerate of particular churches, each one complete in itself and independent of others, though resembling them; on the contrary, they are all sprung from one stock, daughters of the same mother, boughs from the sa‘me trunk. The Church is a divine institution which finds its #xpression in all those who believe [or, in the words of the Acts, who are added to the existing circle]. But the circle of the faithful is, at first, small, and only gradually does it enlarge itself by admitting new peoples and new places. As long as there were faithful only in Jerusalem, they constituted the whole church. They are called by various names, the faithful, the disciples, the multitude of the believers, * According to the strict rules of logic, and, indeed, according to the explanation which the author himself immediately gives, the term Church, as used in the Acts, is in no way a general or universal term. For it is essential to a universal term, that it should apply to a number of individuals in exactly the same sense and meaning, [wnivoce pluribus competit) so that each individuai realizes the same full meaning of the word. Now this is precisely what the author tries to exclude by his argument and rightly so, because tle term Church, taken frem the O. T., means the new Kahal, the new divine commonwealth. But, frum the very nature of things, if it be a divine organization, it is, and must ever remain one individual being or object [es tndsviduum], no matter how many peoples and places it may embrace. It was the Reformers of the XVI century who made the word Church an universal term. In order to retain the ancient creed **] believe in one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church,” they were obliged to stare the theory of an invisible church, which is realised in the many and various individual and mutually opposed communions. This theory has taken such root in the Protestant mind, that it has become the source of interminable confusion in our own days, the word Church being now the veritable Babel of the X1X century; every one using it, but no one daring to define it. Yet the matter if viewed historically, is perfectly simple and quite in harmony with the rules 78 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. the disciples of the Lord, the brethren, the Apostles and ancients and brethren. These taken together were the Church of Christ, the Christian Kahal or community. But, before long, new portions were added, and formed, after the manner of Jerusalem, into local communities, and these, too, were called not indeed the Church simply, but with a limitation, the Church at Antioch, Iconium, Ephesus, and so forth. Thus the word came to be used of the new community as a whole and of each of its parts. So, for instance, whi e in Acts 1x. 1 the Christians are called the ‘disciples of the Lord,’ and in 1x. 26 simply ‘the disciples’? (whom Saul after his conversion essayed to join in Jerusalem), and in 1x, 30 ‘the brethren,’ in 1x. 31 for the first time the word Church is used of all the existing communities [particular churches]: “Now “the Church had peace throughout all Judeea and Galilee ‘‘and Samaria, and was edified, walking in the fear of the ‘Lord, and was filled with the consolation of the Holy beaitosty ‘a(x 3 1), In the sane chapter the faithful are also designated ‘ Saints,’ This phrase, too, like ‘disciples’ and ‘brethren,’ was borrowed from Jewish usage. Just as the name ‘Saints’ was assigned to the Jews in the Old Testament because, being God’s chosen people and separated from the heathen, they enjoyed God’s protection and led lives pleasing in his sight (Daniel vil. 18, 22), so Christians applied the expression to themselves, because God had chosen them from out of the world (John xvi. 14. 16), of human language. The word Church in itself is a collective term, like family, army, state, and means a divinely organized commonwealth. The object then to which it is applied, is one individual organisin such as that which existed in Jerusalem on the day of Pentecost; and to this organism it will ever apply, no matter Low large or small it may be. It can only grow and increase in one way. Like a state, which is also a moral organism, it grows by drawing new | places aid new nations within its ow1 organic lite. These become part and parcel of the state, and, by a well-known metaphor (Jars pro toto), they may share in the name of the stute So for instanc2, if the Commonwealth of Cromwell were first established in London and then gradually spread to the Provinces, people would be quite justified in calling the new municipal government of the various towns the Commonwealth. It is precisely in the same sense that Scripture speaks of the church at Antioch, Ephesus, and elsewhere. Any other acceptation of the word Church, whatever else it may be, is not historical. Tr. THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. 79 in order that, filled with the Holy Ghost, they might merit eternal life by leading holy lives. But as the Jews, God’s people and family, or in the language of Scripture, the Son of God, formed a divine commonwealth or Theocracy, so also. Christians, the new Israel, formed a new community, the Church. 7- But the Asts of the Apostles discloses a still deeper view int. the nature of the Church. Besides recording the prominent position held by the Apostles in all the Churches, it gives us a glimpse into the way in which S. Paul, by God’s command, organized the Gentile Christian Churches. It relates how he sent from Miletus to Ephesus and summoned the “ancients of the Church” (xx. 17), and how in a stirring farewell address he admonished them in these words: ‘Take ‘heed to yourselves and to the whole flock, wherein the Holy “Ghost hath placed you bishops to rule ¢he Church of God, “which He hath purchased with His own bloood.” (xx. 28). Although these were only the ancients set over the Church of Ephesus, still all portions of the Church of God, and conse- quently.the whole Church, were included in the same categ.ry. The several Churches together form the Church of Christ, that was purchased by the plood of Jesus and is guided by the Holy Spirit. But the Holy Spirit works organically, that is, through the bishops and ancients of the several Churches, and they must render an account to God of the manner in which they have discharged their duties as pastors and teachers. Bishops and those committed to their charge stand in the same relation to one another as the Apostles and the faithful ; they form one Church, the teaching and the listening Church [Zeclesia docens et discens}. Even through the complaints lodged by the Jews against the ‘‘sects” of Christians there runs the conviction that they are viewing it as a compact and united society, that was threatening the very existence of the Synagogue. ‘Thus runs their complaint to the governor against Paul: ‘‘ We have found this to be a pestilent man, and raising 80 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. sedition among all the Jews throughout the world, and author “of the sedition of the sect of the Nazarenes, who also hath “gone about to profane the temple.” (xxIv. 25. 26). 8. §S. Paul’s writings are of special interest in this question. It was not he, as we have seen, who first originated the idea or term Church. He found it in existence. Speaking of his antecedent career, he says, with a deep feeling of sorrow, that he persecuted the Church of God beyond measure. (I Cor. xv. 9; Gal. 1. 13). But as if to atone for his sin, he seems not only to have laboured more than the others for the Church, but also to have made her the subject of his special study. He has, so to speak, applied to her the electric search-light of his wonderfully clear and keen vision, setting forth the glories of her beauty and strength, unlocking the riches of truth and grace that are contained in her name, In order that we may clearly apprehend his statements, it will be well to consider in advance certain phrases that occur in his Catholic epistles. It will be seen that he touches on most of the elements, whether internal or external, spiritual or material, that go to make up the idea of the Church. We are, of course, quite aware that S. Paul’s words on the Church, apply directly to the particular church to which an epistle is addressed. Natuzally it is the Church, as embodying a particular community in each place, that comes chiefly into prominence. But even so, it is most important to know in what light he regards it and how he speaks of it. Now he views the particular Church not merely as a gathering of the faithful in one place, but as part of a drotherhvod, a community of Saints, of men sanctified and called by Christ Jesus [vocati electi, sanctificati, fratres|. Thus in the first Epistle to the Corinthians he says: ‘‘To the Church of God that is at “Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, called “to be Saints, with all that invoke the name of our Lord Jesus ‘Christ in every place of theirs and ours.” Again, in the address of the second Epistle he says: ‘‘to the Church of God, THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. St “that is at Corinth, zt all the Satnts that are in Achaia,” In the Epistle to the Galatians he thus begins: “Paul, an “Apostle . . . and all the brethren who are with me, to “the chuiches of Galatia.” Or again, leaving out the word Church, as in the [pistle to the Romans and Ephesians, he addresses “‘all that are at Rome the beloved of God, called to “be Saints,” or, as in the’ Epistle to the Philippians, “all “the Saints in Christ Jesus, who are at Philippi, with the *‘bishops and deacons.” In the body of the Epistles the term Church frequently occurs with reference to a particular Church." Again, a particular Church is sometimes named after the house in which the community met.’ That the faithful met in one and the same place is implied in I Cor. xiv. 23 (x1x. 35). Nevertheless, in the eyes of S. Paul, each and all these particular churches are God’s possession!® like the old theocracy. They are but the cne Church that is to be in every place, of which the Apostles are the shepherds and teachers.!* He who persecutes any one of these, persecutes the Church of God, which is the pillar and the ground of stuth, and God’s true dwelling-place among men. We cannot do better than conclude this paragraph with the words of a modern writer: ‘‘ Here we find, in the first place, the idea “or principle of tradition. Next, side by side with the ordinary ** Pauline teaching (II ‘Tim. 4. 19) that the Church is a society “of the elect, we see the visible Church as a community of “‘so0d and bad (v. 20). Again we see the Church as a “teaching authority, as an intermediary organ between Christ mde each believer 9... . “Hinally, .wechave: the jecc/esta eqisroziis-set- forth as an. article of faith, ~. «.°..: Whats “this but Cathvlicism in a nutshell?” gre Romans. Xxvie-4. 5° 71 Cor.iv. 17: 3¢vr-045/Col. rv. 163) [Cor vite 175 11_Cer ULDMAT Gale T Obes XTn 2Gly Cran 1.22. 12 Romans xvi. 5; I Cor. xvi. 193 Col. Iv. 15; Philemon 2. z3 I Cor. xi. 22: See Numbers xvi. 33. XX. 4, meee C ota) X11. 26 5. Esphes, 3. )22 3. Ill. 103 \V.. 2a.seq. 27. 29: 325 Philip. 111., 6° Colt: 18. 124: 82 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. 9. It ts a little surprising that the writers of the Catholi¢ Epistles have used the word but seldom (James v. 143 III John 1x. 10). _ Their dedications, when there are such, are more general, as is probably also the case in the second and third Epistles of S. John. “The lady Elect,” in the second Epistle, is interpreted by S. Jerome to mean the Church Elect. “The Church that is in Babylon, elected “together with you” (I Peter v. 13) can only be the community with which Peter was staying. The word “Church” is added in the Peschittho, Vulgate, and Sinaitic Codex. As to the expression synagogue, used by S. James (11. 2), in the sense of assembly or place of assembly, it is a disputed point among commentators whether it belongs to an earlier or later period. That the Epistle itself belongs to a later period admits of no doubt, for it is clearly based upon the Epistle to the Romans. As, moreover, the ‘‘twelve tribes which are scattered abroad,” to which the Epistle is addressed, cannot mean the old Israel; so the expression ‘‘synagogue” only proves that it was intended for Jewish Christians; and this proof is clenched ty its connection with S. Matthew’s Gospel. In Hebr. x. 2s the word éricuvaywyy, collectio, assembly, also occurs; but it is used in contrast to the Jewish synagogue, and denotes the assembly of believers. (II Thess. 11.1). Epiphanius twits the Ebionites with calling their assembly a synagogue instead of a church.!®6 Theophilus treasures the “synagogues, which are called ‘“‘holy churches” as God’s bountiful gift to sinful man.!? In sharp antithesis to this is the Jewish “synagogue of Satan,” mentioned by the writer of the Apocalypse, who wrote seven letters to the churches of Asia, to the “ Angel of the Church,” announcing the revelation that God had made to him in secret. For the rest, James himself gives the best explanation when he exhorts the faithful to call in the priests of the church to pray over the sick and anoint them with oil. 16 Haer. xxx. 18, Pseudo-Ignat. ad Polyc. iv. a 17 Ad Autol. ii. 14. THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. 83 io. In the foregoing pages we have briefly surveyed the usage to which the word church is subjected in the writings of the New Testament. We now proceed to set forth the more minute explanations supplied by the same writings, especially by the Pauline Epistles, concerning the nature and character of the Christian Church. And in the first place, that the Church was a positive institution, founded by Christ, and by Him alone, is sufficiently indicated in the words: Church of God, of the Lord. For it is self-evident to all Christians that Christ alone is the corner-stone and foundation of the Church. He is the object as well as the cause of faith. He is the source of all grace and justification. The Apostles are but the dispensers of his mysteries, the organs whereby both faith and grace are imparted to mankind. This fundamental truth is written in lines of light in the New Testament. In the first part of the first Epistle to the Corinthians, S. Paul is at great pains to make it clear to the faithful at Corinth that they must call themselves no more after him than after Cephas or Apollo, for he preached Christ crucified, and ther were baptized in Christ, not in Paul or Cephas. These are but God’s ministers. It is God who gives the increase in the souls of the faithful, who are in reality God’s husbandry, God’s building. The minister ‘s not the master. Other foundation no man can lay, but that which is laid, which is Christ Jesus. S Paul employs two metaphors which depict with beauty and force ihe nature and character of the Christian Church. The first is an edsfice, the second an organic body. But he originated neither. Both were already suggested by the Gospels. S. John’s Gospel forestalled the organism, and our Lord’s words recorded in S. Matthew foreshadowed the building. The two together, like soul and body, combine in a most striking manner the Outward and inward, the visible and the invisible elements, of the one living Church. 11, Matthew relates that Jesus promised to build His Church on the rock, Peter, and to give to him, as the steward 84 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. of His household, the keys. In the same Gospel Jesus reminds His adversaries of the passage in the Psalm (cxvill. 29. 30): “The stone which the builders rejected, the same is become the “head of the corner. By the Lord this hath been done and it “is wonderful in our eyes.” (XxXI. 42). Therefore the king- dom of heaven shall be taken from the Jews and given to others. Now, what is this kingdom of heaven but the “ House of God,” which the Jews built in the Old Testament, and Christ renewed? For Christ is the high-priest over the - house of God; faithful to Him that made Him, as was also Moses in all His house.!® Christ as the Son of God is set over His house, which house are we. (Hebr. 11. 6) David, when he was hungry, entered into the house of God, the Tabernacle. God styles the Temple as His house,?® as He called Israel His people, His Son. God pitched his tent among the Israelites ; other people were strangers, banished from their father’s house. But now the wall of separation has been broken down, and all men, Jews and heathens alike, are fellow-citizens of one king- dom, forming one household, one compact living temple. Irom these foreshadowings in the Old Testament, and from our Lords’ words chronicled by S. Matthew, S. Paul has drawn ‘out in detail a sketch of the building of the Church. He, himsel', according to the grace given him, as a wise architect, laid the foundation stone Christ Jesus, and erected a building of gold and silver and precious stones. (I Cor. Ill. ro seq.) Hence Christians are God’s building. “You are no more “strangers and foreigners, but you are fellow-citizens with the ‘saints, and the domestics of God, built upon the foundation of “the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the ‘chief corner-stone ; in Whom all the building being framed “together, groweth up into a holy temple in the Lord.” (Eph, II. 19-22). One and all are the temple of the all-holy God, 18. Hebr. x. 21; ili. 2. See Deuter. xxvi. 15. Bar. ii. 16. 19,) Math. x1.4." Mc. ii, 26, (Ls vb 4. ao, Ps. lvi. 7. Jer. vii. 11. See M. xxi.13. Mc. xi.17. L. xix. 46. I. ii. 16 seq THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. 85 “Know you not that you are the temple of God, and that the ‘Spirit of God dwelleth in you? But if any man violate the “temple of God, him shall God destroy. For the temple of Be coduspholys which you are;” | (1; Cor. 4. 16-17). SWhat “agreement hath the temple of God with idols? For you are “the temple of the living God, as God saith: I will dwell in “them and walk among them, and I will be their God, and they ‘shall be my people.” (II Cor. vi. 16). And the apostle writes to his beloved disciple Timothy that he may know how he ought to behave himself in the house of God, which is the Church of the living God, the pillar and ground of truth (I Tim. m1. 15). ‘‘ For the time is that judgment should begin meatethe*house ‘of¢God?*s1(1° Pet. tv. Any). ; And here we may appropriately insert the majestic language in which S. Peter, following up the Old Testament ideas of the House of God, its priesthood and sacrifices, its priestly families and priestly people, describes the dignity and the blessings of the new spiritual temple built on Christ, the corner-stone. “Unto whom coming, as to a living stone, rejected indeed by “men, but chosen and made honourable by God. Be ye also as “living stones built up, a spiritual house, a holy priesthood, to * offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. “Wherefore it is said in the Scripture: Behold I lay in Siona “‘ chief corner-stone, elect, precious. And he that shall believe “in Fim shall not be confounded. To you therefore that believe ‘is honour ; but to them that believe not, the stone which the “builders rejected, the same is become the head of the corner, “and a stone of stumbling and a rock of scandal. . . . “ But you are a chosen generation, a kingly priesthood, a holy “nation, a purchased people.” (I Pet. um. 4-9). This is not the place to descant on the universal priesthood. Suffice it to point out that the faithful, resting on Christ the corner-stone, form that chosen community which was once “ Jahve’s pos- session,” a living building which has derived from its corner- stone the irresistible might and strength of heavenly light and 86 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. virtue. As long as the faithful are built up in this house, they serve in the language of S. Paul, “‘unto the edify’ng of the Church,” (I Cor. xiv. 12), to the building up of the body of Giitist, -*CL Cot, X11. “12 seq). 12. This brings us to the second metaphor. The essential characteristic of an organism, as opposed to a machine, is that it has life. The living stones, built up unto the house of God, perform their work and function each in his own place, but . only in conjunction with one another and with the corner-stone. Nevertheless the edifice only brings home to us the external aspect of the visible community, while the other metaphor serves admirably to bring out the internal living connection of all parts with one another and with Christ, for the Church is not only a living body, but is also the body of Christ. This internal connection has already been pointed out in another metaphor, namely the parable of the vine. The Spirit of Christ is, as it were, the soul of the Church, infusing new lie into all the members. To illustrate the mutual interaction in the Church, to show unity and diversity, grace and liberty working in mysterious harmony in the several members and in the Church at large, S. Paul employs the simile of the Body and the Head. Menenius Agrippa, as we know, told the fable of the belly and the members in order to make it clear that the several members of the body are mutually dependent and indis- pensable one to the other, and thus to deter the Plebs from compassing their destruction, by persisting in their foolhardy secession. The illustration used by the Apostle is similar indeed but much more noble as the head is above the belly, or the spirit above matter. The purpose, tco, which the Apostle had in view, is the noblest and highest possible. He wishes to show that one and the same divine Spirit controls the manifold workings of grace in the Church. “ For as the body ts one, ‘and hath many members, and all the members of the body, whereas they are many, yet are one body so also is Christ. For THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIFTURE. 87 “in one spirit were we all baptized into one body, whether Jews “or Gentiles, whether bond or free, and in one spirit we have “all been made to drink. For the body also is not one “member, but many . . . . Now you are the body of “Christ, and members of member. And God indeed hath “set some in the Church, first apostles, secondly prophets, “thirdly doctors. . . . Are all apostles? are all prophets? “are all doctors.?’”*! Christ “is the head of the body, the ‘Church, who is the beginning, the first-born from the dead ; “that in all things He may hold the primacy (Coloss. 1. 18; “t11.15). The Father hath made Him head over all the “Church, which is His body, and the fulness of Him who “is filled all in all.” (Ephes. 1v. 22 seq.) And the goal is the perfect man (Ephes. tv. 13), in whom the members, who have been made partakers of the fulness of Christ have grown up. Just as the body, which at first is small and weak, has within it the disposition to grow into a fully developed man, so the Church, at first a tiny organism, has received from her head the power to develop as long as the kingdom of God shal! last and, like individual Christians, to reach that mature age in which Christ, who fills all in all, dispenses all the treasures of His grace. Of a truth there is one spirit at work in the members, in each Church, and in the whole Church! Could the union of the God-man with the faithful the faithful and with His Church be depicted in more glowing colours ? 13. In order to set in a still cleaver light the intimate union that subsists between Christ and His Church, S. Paul, adds another metaphor, closely akin to the former, namely, the matrimonial union. Here, again, he was but taking pattern by the Old Testament and the Gospel. Who, in reading the Old Testament, and more especially the prophets, has not been siruck by the frequency with which a simile is borrowed from marriage—and adultery? The union between az 1 Cor. xii, 12-31. Rom. xii. 5. Gal. iii, 38 838 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. Jahve and His people bears the character of an espousal or marriage. Jahve is a jealous God, wreaking vengeance for His people’s infidelity. The Canticle of Canticles describes with varied Oriental colouring, the relations between bride and bridegroom. ‘True, the New Testament contains no allusion to this, but Christian Theology has, from early times, explained it allegorically of Christ’s intimate relations with faithful souls, with the Church, and with Mary. ‘This was all the more natural, as the New Testament actually describes - our Lord as the bridegroom. ‘“ He that hath the bride is the “bridegroom ; but the friend of the bridegroom who sta: deth “and heareth him, rejoiceth with joy because of the bride- “groom’s voice. This my Jy is therefore fulfilled.” (John I. 29). ‘To the Pharisees who complained that His disciples did not fast Jesus replied: ‘‘Can the children of the bride- “groom mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them? “But the days will come when the bridegroom shall be taken “away from them, and then they shall fast.” (Matth. 1x. 15). Jesus is the bridegroom \«ho comes in the middie of che night and takes the wise virgins to the marriage (XXV. Io.) The writer of the Apocalypse, filled as he was with the spirit of both the Old and the New Testament, vbeheld in ecstatic vision this heavenly marriage, “ Alleluia! for the Lord our “ God, the Almighty hath reigned. Let us be glad and rejoice, “and give glory to Him; for the marriage of the Lamb is come, “and his wife hath prepared herself. And it is cranted to “her that she should clothe herself with fine linen glittering ‘Cand white. . For the fine linen are the justifications of saints.” (xix. 6-8.) John saw the new Jerusalem coming down out of heaven from God, prepa ed as a bride adorned for-her bride- groom, and he heard a great voice saying : ‘Behold the tarer- “nacle of God with men, and He will dwell with them. And “they shall be His peopie, and God Himself with them shall “ be their God.” (xxi. 2, 3.) And one of the seven angels said a2 Is. liv. 6. Ixii. 5. Os. ii. 1 seq. especially verses 19-20 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. 89 to him: ‘Come, and I will show thee the bride, the wife of ‘the Lamb. And he took me up in spirit to a great and high “mountain; and he showed me the holy city, the new “Jerusalem coming down out of heaven from God, having “the glory of God.”(xx1. 9-11). Here, indeed, he has more in view the end of the Church ; still it is that same bride whom Jesus chose when He began His pubhe ministry,—the Church of the New covenant, gathered together from the scattered Jewish remnant, and decked out among the heathen with truth and holiness. By thus dwelling on Go!l’s covenant with man, S Paul hoped to bring home to the faithful the exalted dignity and con- sequent duties of Christian marriage as well as the dignity and duties of the Church to her bridegroon. “The husband is the “head of the wife, as Christ is the head of the Church. He is “the saviour of His body. Therefore as the Church is subject “to Christ, so also let the wives be to their husbands in all “things. Husbands, love your wives, as Christ also loved the “Church, and delivered Himself up for it, that He might “sanctify it, cleansing it by the laver of water in the word of ‘life. ‘That He might present it to Himself a glorious Church “not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing, but that it should “be holy and without blemish. So also ought men to love their wives'as their own'bodies. ~; . . Forno man ever *‘hated his own flesh, but nourisheth it and cherisheth it, as “also Christ doth the Church, because we are members of His “body, of His flesh, and of His bones. For this cause shall a man “leave his father and mother and shall cleave to his wife, and “they shall be two in one flesh. This is a great sacrament ; “but I speak in Christ and in tne Church.” (Ephes. v. 23-31). Howsoever we explain the “ Sacrament” (HvTTHpLov) it is clear from the Greek text that the union of man and wife, as established by God in Paradise, is taken as the model of Christs’ inward living union with His bride, the Church. It was the Creator’s design from the beginning to make that union go THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. the foundation of the union between God and man, that is, of the Church. (I Cor. 11. 6. seq.) And this union was realized first in the Incarnation itself, and next in the Church. For by uniting Himself to the Church, by adorning her as [lis own body, by cleansing and sanctifying her, the God-man continues in a mysterious manner the work of the. Incarnation,—the union of God with man. As the nature which He assumed, was in some sense not an individual, but rather the entire and common haman nature, (“ Compendium totius human generis’) so also has He united the body of the Church in an especial manner to Himself. How magnificently the Apostle conceived this significance of the Incarnation for all time and all places is seen in the introduction to the Epistle to the Ephesians: “As He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, “that we should be holy ana unspotted in His sight in charity. “Who had predestinated us unto the adoption of children “through Jesus Christ unto Himself, according to the purpose “of His will.” (1. 4-5). ‘According to His good pleasure “which He hath proposed in Him, in the dispensation of the “ful yess of times, to re-establish all things in Christ that are in ‘heaven and on earth, in Him.” (1. 9-10). 14. The Church, then, according to the Apostle, is the continuation of the Incarnation, and the medium by which redemption is brought home to mankind. Or is this grand idea, this deep conception of the Church as the intermediary of mankind in the work of redemption, perchance, a later idea of the Apostle, or maybe of a writer, whose mind was already warped by later developments in the Catholic Church? Such; indeed, is the opinion of some critics; but in proof they offer naught but their own subjective ideas of the apostolic and post-apostolic age. The letters written by S. Paul during his imprisonment, are, it is true, written in a calmer vein, in a more general and reflective mood. Yet they are but the natural outcome of the teaching that was contained in tne earlier Epistles, and was instinct with life, There are no ideas or oidinan- THE CHURCH ACCORDING Ta SCRIPTURE. QI ces absolutely new in his later writings, none that may not be found in germ in the earlier Epistles. This is particularly the case with his doctrine concerning the Church. God had chosen and ealled him, that he might acquire from amidst the corrupt heathen world a bride pure and spotless, and worthy of the divine Eridegroom. ‘For I am jealous of you “with the jealousy of God. For I have espoused you to “one husband that I may present you as a chaste virgin to “Christ.” (II Cor. x1. 2). By being united to the God-man, the faithful attain that noble end which the Creator proposed to the human race and for which the saints of the Old Testainent yearned. God became man, in order to give men a share in the divine nature, and thereby unite humanity to Himself as His bride, the Church. “ For all are yours, and “you are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s.” (Coren 22726) The work will be complete at the end of time, when Christ shall render all things to God. Then will the great marriage feast be solemnized, and the bride of Christ, like His own body, will enter into everlasting glory. For Christians “are “come to Mount Sion, and to the city of the living God, “the heavenly Jerusalem, and to the company of many “thousands of angels, and to the Church of the first-born, “who are written in the heavens, and to God the judge of “all, and to the spirits of the just made perfect, and to Jesus “the mediator of the New Testament, and to the sprinkling of blood which speaketh better than that of Abel.” (Heb. XVI. 22-24), 15. All these similitudes are something more than mere rhetorical figures of speech and poetical images, Underlying them is a reality,—a reality full of depth and beauty, because intimately bound up with the very basis and essence of Christianity. That basis is the Incarnation of the Son of God. Now to the ordinary believer there js nothing more real and historical than the fact that God’s own Son was truly born in time, that He preached and worked miracles in Palestine ; that g2 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. He died on the cross and rose again from the dead. In like manner, the ordinary believer is equally certain, that the Church which he had acquired as His bride at such a great cost, and left in His place, is a reality like Himself ; the real union of men called to participate in the divine nature. As His human nature is united to the divine in one person, so the Church is intimately penetrated, renewed and sanctified by the divine power of the bridegroom. The outward and the visible can no more be separated from the inward and the invisible than the body in the living organism can be separated from the soul, or Christ’s human nature from His divine. Therefore whatever the Apostle expressed in the various figures we have been considering, is but the bare truth. The Church is the copy of Christ Himself. It is not a mere heap of atoms blown together anyhow, it is an organic visible body, with members superior and inferior, moulded, shaped, and joined together by Christ, and it is living with life divine, having the same Spirit that Christ had. ‘Phus the two constituent elements of the Church, the external and internal, are inseparably united, depending and interacting on each other. 16. That such is the Church described in the New Testa- ment, is furthermore confirmed by a consideration of the religious life which the Acts and the Epistles represent the early Christians as leading. In the beginning the Apostles and the faithful in Jerusalem still continued to keep up their con- nection with the temple. They went up to the temple to pray ; they observed the ceremonial law and circumcision ; and kept the feasts with solemnity. It would seem that the respite our Lord had granted to Judaism had not as yet expired. The new Israel, being born and formed on the soil of the old, was connected with it by many ties,* and the time had not yet come ® It would appear, however, that even while they assembled in the temple, they formed a congregation of theirown. ‘‘ And they were a'l with one aceord in Solomon’s porch. Sut of the rest, no man durst yo/n himself unto them (koAA ao Cae auTois) y but the people magnified them.” Acts v. 13.—7r THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE, 03 for a final and complete severance. Stil] al] the preparations for a new life, and a n.w Christian worship were complete, All the faithful instinctively felt that they were citizens of a new kingdom. “They were persevering in the doctrine of the “Apostles, and in the communication of the breaking of bread “and in prayers.” (Acts 11. 42). The breaking of the bread and prayers imply that the Christians assembled at a definite place. Such a place was the upper room, the house in which they were all assembled (Acts 1. 135; H.L; 1Vv. 31); or again the house of Mary, the mother of John Mark, whither Peter turned his steps after his miraculous release from prison (Acts XU. 11). From S, Paul we learn (Gal. 11. 9) that when he came to Jerusalem those who seemed to be pillars (see I ‘Vim, Ill. 5), James, Cephas, and John, gave him and Barnabas the right hand of tellowship (xowwivas=communionis), ‘This is borne out by what is said in the Epistles of assemblies (churches) in private houses. The celebration of the sacred mysteries is assigned as the reason for assembling. (I Cor. x1. 18; xzv. 19, 34, 35). The same is clear from the remark : “ And con- “tinuing daily with one accerd in the temple, and breaking “bread from house to house, they took their meat with glad- “ness and simplicity of heart.” (Acts 11. 46). Clearly then the Christians formed a community of their own with their own form of worship. 17. The breaking of bread was not an ordinary meal, but the divine meal instituted by our Lord. This phrase occurs once in the Gospels, and recalls its connection with the institution of the Blessed Eucharist. The disciples at Emmaus recognized Jesus in the breaking of bread. It is a debatable point whether it refers here to an ordinary meal or to the Holy Eucharist; but in any case the phrase in the Acts cannot be construed of an ordinary meal. For, if it were, the conjunction o ‘he breaking of bread with the doctrine of the Apostles and Prayer would be meaningless. Again, on one occasion, when the brethren were assembled to break 94 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. bread, it is related that S. Paul gave a discourse. (Acts 3x27). And we learn from the first Epistle to the Corinthians that by this is meant the Eucharist. “The chalice of benediction “which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of ‘Christ? And the bread which we break, is it not the “partaking of the body of the Lord. For we, being many, “are one bread, one body, all that partake of one bread.” (inG@orn x. 16.217). In the following chapter the Apostle speaks of the Lord’s supper in such a way, that the idea of a Eucharistic sacrifice is forced upon the mind of the reader. He compares it with the sacrificial meals of the heathen, just as in the Epistle to the Hebrews, according to the majority of commentators, he contrasts it with the Jewish sacrifices: “We have an altar whereof they have no power to eat who ‘cerve the tabernacle,” and this shows that it was not an ordinary religious act, nor an ordinary meal flavoured with religious rites. It was a true sacrifice of thanksgiving according to the order of Melchisedech, a pure sacrifice, that 1s offered to God in all places. | Weizsiicker acknowledges this by saying that the Eucharistic celebration “became a real thank-offering, ‘a symbol and a proof of the fact that the kingdom of God “had come to them, and had begun to dominate and sway “their whole natural and social life.” Our Lord Himself imparted to the “ Lord’s supper” the character of outward and inward communion with Himself. In remembrance of the Jewish Paschal lamb, the proper sacrifice of the covenant, which, together with its sacrificial meal (communion), formed the basis of the sacrificial rites of the Old ‘Testament, He represented Himself as the New Paschal lamb, and His sacrifice as the foundation of all sacri- ficial worship, and as the communion of the new and everlasting Covenant. “As the Paschal meal was the feast of the deliver. “ance and a meal of life for the people—a meal wherein they “ showed forth their communion with God, so this transformed 23 Das Afostal. Zeitalter. Freiburg, 1887. p. 44 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE, 95 “Paschal meal became the sacrificial meal for the people of “the New Testament, in which the faithful, by eating our *“Lord’s body, participated in a substantial way in the great “sacrifice, received forgiveness of sins, were cleansed and “sanctified, were united as members to the body whose head “is Christ, and were enabled to offer themselves up in sacrifice “to their appeased God.”?# This eating in common the bread come down from heaven, besides strengthening the bonds of union among the faithful against the Synagogue, would also impart fresh life and vigour to their own spiritual union with one another and with their head. In this bloodless continuance of the sacrifice of the cross, and the participation in it by holy communion, the Incarnation ever endures, inasmuch as it unites mankind with God in the body of Christ. The holy Eucharist is the best proof that the Church really per- petuates the work of the God-man, and that her office is to incorporate all humanity in Christ’s body which is the Church. Thus, the religious life of the early Christians shows clearly that they formed an external community endowed with internal divine life. ‘They were a real living body, even the body of Christ. 18. In full and perfect harmony with the two-fold character of the Christian community, is, likewise, the promise and gift of the Holy Ghost. The disciples had been told, that when brought before tribunals they were not to take heed what they should say, for the Holy Spirit would teach them. This Paraclete, so ofien promised, came down visibly in a mighty sign on the Apostles and the faithful. And the first-fruits were the three thousand who were baptized. Again and again the faithful learnt by experience, in time of trials, or when interests affecting the whole community were at stake, that the Holy Spirit was abiding not merely within the Church, but that His presence would manifest itself exteruully and become a tower of 24 Dillinger, Christenthuim und Kirche in der Zeit der Grundlegung. Regensburg, 1860 p. 38, 96 THE CHURCH ACCORDING TO SCRIPTURE. strength and encouragement to them. “And when they had “prayed, the place was moved wherein they were assembled, “and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and they spoke “the word of God with confidence.” (Acts ly. 31). Ananias and Saphira lied to the Holy Ghost, and tempted the Spirit of the Lord. (v. 3-9). The deacons were men full of faith and the Holy Ghost. (vi. 5). Stephen was full of the Holy Ghost, and looking up steadfastly to heaven saw the glory of God. (vil. 55). The Apostles prayed for those whom Philip the Deacon had baptized, that they might receive the Holy Ghost. Then they laid their hands upon them, and they received the © Holy Ghost. And when Simon saw that by the imposition of the hands of the Apostles the Holy Ghost was given, he offered them money, saying: Give me also this power. (VIII 15-19). “While Peter was yet speaking these words ” in the house of Cornelius, “the Holy Ghost fell upon all them that heard the “word. And the faitiful of the Circumcision were astonished “for that the Holy Ghost was poured out upon the Gentiles “also, For they heard them speaking with tongues and mag- “ nifying God.” (x. 44-46). And if it be asked in what precise manner this communica- tion of the Spirit was connected with the ecclesiastical commun- ity (Church), the answer is supplied by what we read of the ordination in the Church of Antioch. ‘‘ There were in the ‘©Church which was at Antioch prophets and doctors,’ ssseune “as they were ministering to the Lord and fasting, the Holy “ Ghost said to them: Separate me Saul and Barnabas for the “work whereunto I have taken them. Then