FROM THE LIBRARY OF REV. LOUIS FITZGERALD BENSON. D. D. BEQUEATHED BY HIM TO THE LIBRARY OF PRINCETON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY W »o ._ GENERAL HISTORY CHRISTIAN RELIGION AND CHURCH: FROM THE GERMAN OF DR. AUGUSTUS NEANDER. TRANSLATED FROM THE LAST EDITION. BT ^ JOSEPH TORREY, PBOFESSOB OF HOBAL AND INTELLECTUAL PHILOSOPHT IK THE UNIVEBSITT OF VEBMOIIT. " I am come to send fire on the earth."— Words of our Lord. And the fire ahall try every man's work, of what eort it is." " But other foundation can no man btf that is laid, wluch is Christ Jesus."— St. Paul. VOLUME FIFTH: COMPRISING THE SIXTH VOLUME OF THE ORIGINAL. (elbventh part of the whole work I. PUBUSHED FROM THE POSTHUMOUS PAPEKd BY K. F. TH. SCHNEIDER. THIRTEENTH AMERICAN EDITION, RBYISED. CORRECTED. AND ENLARGBD BOSTON: HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY. SDlje KiijcrsiDc press;, CambriDge, ^EY. WOMAS GLAYTON. btered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by CROCKER & BREWSTER, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. KIVERSIDE, (.AAoRtDGE. FRniTED BY H. O. HOUGHTON AND COMPUTT. EDITOR'S PREFACE. On me, after the death ol my much loved teacher and pater- nal friend, was devolved the task of preparing for the press the last greater work of the lamented Neander, the sixth volume of his church history. Having discharged this no less honorable than arduous duty, I now think it due to the respected reader that I should give some brief account of the method according to which I have proceeded. In the abstract, two possible ways indeed presented them- selves in which this volnme might be prepared for the public eye : either to follow out the subject, in accordance with the plan and preparatory labors of Neander, down to the point of time he originally proposed to himself — the commencement of the Reformation — or to publish it in the fragmentary shape in which it w^as left. Pious regard to the style of a work peculiarly original in its kind, and the design of Neander, expressed shortly before his death, of publishing a part of the materials hei*e pre- sented as the first division of the sixth volume, equally forbade the former of these methods. And yet in adopting the latter plan, liberty was still left to the editor of executing his task in very different ways. He might, perhaps, consider himself justified, in the case of fragments of this sort, in giving them a finer pol- ish by applying the last finishing hand. But the undersigned has felt bound to abstain even from this. It has been his en- deavor to present the work of Neander with the least possible curtailment, and with the least possible additions of his own ; and it has been his wish rather to be found too faithfully exact, or if you please slavish, than arbitrary, in the labors he has be- stowed. Nevertheless, in hundreds of places he has altered the iv EDITOR S PREFACE. text, and in a stil] greater number of instances corrected the- notes. But in so doing he has only taken the same liberty which the lamented author, while living, had already allowed him to use in the publication of his more recent works, the new edi- tions of St. Bernard, of Chrysostom, and of Tertullian ; with this difference, indeed, that with regard to these latter, he could in all difficult cases refer to the author himself, while in the pres- ent case, he had to decide according to his own best judgment. Unhappily the editor, who by long exercise had become tolera- bly familiar with Neander's method of composing, did not have it in his power to lend the beloved man of God a helping hand, except in a small portion of this work ; and various circum- stances, such as a growing infirmity of sight, and occasional sudden interruptions closely connected with this calamity, the il- legibility of his excerpts made in earlier years, want of practice in hi« last assistants, and various other causes, conspired togeth- er to render his labors more difficult, nay, if possible, distaste- ful to the restlessly active investigator. Once and again he had even entertained the thought of bringing his work to a close in the form of a brief compendium; but strong attachment to the labor of his life, ever breaking forth afresh, and the hope that he might perhaps yet recover the use of his eye-sight, constantly brought him back again to the extremely painful and yet dearly beloved continuation of the task he had begun. How natural, that the manuscripts he left behind him should also, in various ways, bear upon them the marks of their origin. The editor, therefore, has not hesitated to correct all manifest errors of fact, so far as they came to his knowledge, whether arising from some misuijderstanding of the assistants, or, as the case often was, from the illegibility of Neander's excerpts, or from any other cause. Or ought he to have hesitated to do this when, for ex- ample, the Mss. p. 371, spoke of a Marshal of the empire by the name of Von Pappenheim, or when, p. 340, the Easter festival was said to fall on the 31st of May, or when the text read " T/iat one Cardinal. John would bring disgrace upon the pope and car- dinals;" or when, as was not seldom the case in the section concerning Matthias of Janow, the translation conveyed an al- most directly contrary meaning to the correct reading of the orig- inal ? On the other hand, in all cases where the matter was at all doubtful to me, I have allowed the text to be printed without alteration, or at most (compare, e. g., p. 317, and 344,) simjily intimated my doubts in the shape of notes. The style more* editor's preface. V over has been, in here and there an instance, slightly altered bj me, and repetitions of longer or shorter extent, such as were almost unavoidable in a work which sprang purely out of the recollection of Neander, expunged. Among the papers, further- more, were found a series of sheets which Neander had marked, partly with a conjectural indication of their being designed, on a final revision, for insertion in their appropriate places. These I have carefully inserted wherever it could be done, either at once, or only with some slight alteration of form, and have never laid them aside except in those cases where their insertion would have required an entire recasting of the text. But addi- tions and the completion of defective parts, in the strict and proper sense, I have never allowed myself to make, except on literary points, and that in perfect accordance with Neander'a wishes. Unhappily the more recent works on church history are often, in this respect, in the highest degree unreliable, as one au- thor is found to copy the false citations of another. Lewis's History of the Life and Sufferings of John Wicklif, for example, is a work which seems actually to have been in the hands of very few of our church historians. In proceeding to make a few brief remarks on single portions of the present volume, let me begin by observing that the first portion, which relates to the history of the papacy and of the church constitution down to the time of the council of Basle, as it was the earliest in the time of its composition, is manifestly also the most complete as to form. As regards the continuation of this section, Neander left behind only a series of preparatory papers, but no proper sketch of the whole, nor even elaboration of single passages. This latter labor had been bestowed indeed upon passages belonging to the second section, treating of the Reformation of England ; yet these single passages, attached for the most part to the unfinished exposition of Wicklifs doc- trines, were so unconnected, that the editor felt himself com- pelled, in following out his principle, to leave them aside. And he considered himself the more justified in so doing, because they contained little else than translations of single passages from the work of Vaughan. The third principal section, relating to the history of the Bohemian reformers, belongs among those parts which Neander constantly treated with especial predilec- tion. It will assuredly afford no small satisfaction to the admi- rers of the great departed, to find that it was at least permitted him to bring to its close the history of John Huss ; and if ^his, vi editor's preface. too, is here presented to us, as the well informed reader will be at no loss to discern that it is, only in its first rough sketch, yet this very circumstance enables us to see more profoundly into the intellectual power and vigor of the departed historian, which was preserved unimpaired to the end. We can only wish that the new light thrown by Neander on the great Bohemian re- formers might serve as a stimulus to some competent hand soon to furnish us with an edition of the hitherto unpublished writings of Militz, of Conrad of Waldhausen, and particularly of the pioneer work of Matthias of Janow! Also a new edi- tion of the works of John Huss, or at least the preparation of a chronologically arranged edition of his letters, belongs among the piis desideriis in the department of church history. Many of the preliminary labors to such a performance are to be found in the excellent work of Palacky. Neander has repeatedly al- luded to the incorrectness and inexactitude of the Nurenberg edition of 1558, and the passages adduced by him might easily be multiplied to tenfold the number. Such a monument is due from us Protestants to the memory of .John Huss, of whom our Luther, in his lectures on Isaiah, so strikingly remarks : " Existi- mo Johannem Huss suo sanguine peperisse Evangelion, quod nunc habemus." A man of learning so enthusiastic in his ad- miration of Huss as M. Ferdinand B. Mikowec,who has already favored us with a new corrected translation of the letters that had been already published by Luther, would be just the person to engage in such an undertaking. The Bohemian work con- taining the letters of Huss should be published in Bohemian, with a German or Latin translation on the opposite columns. Such an enterprise .would certainly be crowned with success. Finally, on the section relating to the German Friends of God, Neander was still occupied during the last days of his life; in truth, the habitual occupation of his mind with the work of his life intermingled among the pleasing fancies that floated be- fore the mind of this departing friend of God. Gladly v^ould I, in compliance with the urgent wishes of Ne- ander's admirers, have hurried to a speedier conclusion the pub- lication of the present volume; but this could not be done in connection with my professional duties. Besides, there were other hindrances. The library of Neander, unhappily, did not stand at my command. Several works and editions which Ne- ander had cited, such as Lewis's History of Wicklif, and the first edition of Vaughan's work, were not to be found, even in the EDITOR S PREFA.'E. vij Royal Library in this place, and they could not otherwise be obtained than by ordering them from England. I may doubt less rely, therefore, on the kind indulgence of my readers. But I confidently hope, too, and this would be my best reward, that faithfulness to my never to be forgotten master, and to his woi k, will not be found wanting. K. F. TH. SCHNEIDER. Berlin, Oct. 31st, 1851. !:M THOMAS GUnON. TABLE OF CONTENTS. VOLUME FIFTH. SIXTH PERIOD OF THE HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIA2I CHURCH. FROM BONIFACE Vm. TO THE BEGINNING OF THE REFORMATION. SECTION FIRST. HISTORY OP THE PAPACY AND OF THE CHURCH CON8ITUTION DOWN TO THE BEGINNING OF THE COUNCIL OF BASLE. P. 1 — 133. Character of this period as a period of transition, particularly evinced in the history of the papacy 1 Boniface VIIL His plots against his predecessor Coelestin. Abuse of the papal plenitude of power. Bestowment of indulgences on occasion of the Jubilee, A. D. 1300 3 His hatred against the Ghibellines. Bull against the Colonnas. Their appeal to a general council as a sign of the time. Their subjugation and subsequent flight to France 5 Boniface VIIL and Philip the Fair. The bull Clericis laicos of the year 1296. The counter declaration of the king, evincing a more free- minded spirit 6 More violent outbreak of the quarrel, baiset de Pamiers, papal legate. His dismission and arrest. Boniface's dictatorial letter. Laconic reply of the king. Free opinion set forth by the king's advocate, Peter de Bosco. The longer letter of the pope, dated 5th of December, 1301. The bull Unam sanctam. The protests of the French barons and bish- ops. Unsatisfactory justification of^ the pope by the cardinals. Journeys to Rome forbidden. Bull of excommunication on the 13th of April, 1303. Assembling of the French estates. Their charges against Boniface and appeal to a general council. Bull of the 15th of August, 1303. Cap- ture of the pope at Anagni by William of Nogaret. His firmness in mis- fortune ; his liberation ; his death 18 Controversial tract by jEgidius of Rome. Contrast drawn between the actual papacy and its idea. The secular power subject to the spiritual only in purely spiritual matters. The pope head of the church only in a certain sense. Against the sophistical proposition that man's original state is restored in the unity of the papacy. Against the arbitrary absol- ving of subjects from their oath of allegiance. The papal plenitudo po- testatis a limited one. More correct view of the historical facts relating to these matters 15 Treatise by John of Paris on royal and papal authority. Secular lordship ^ TABLE OF CONTENTS. not in contradiction with the vocation of the pope, nor vet derived from it. The priest in spiritual things greater than the prince, in secular things the converse. Against arbitrary administration of church proper- ty by the pope. The secular power of princes not derived from the pope. Defence of the independent authority of bishops and priests- Ecclesiastical jurisdiction extends solely to spiritual matters. Sovereign princes to be corrected only in an indirect manner. Rights of the em- peror with regard to incorrigible popes. Against the gift of Constan- tine. On the possible deposition or abdication of the pope 19 Benedict XL Makes advances towards France. His speedy death 19 Quarrel between the Italian and the French party in the choice of a new pope. Crafty advice of the French cardinal Du Prat. Bertrand d'Agoust as Clement V. Transfer of the papal residence to Avig- non m 1309 20 The consequences of this transfer. The popes become tools In the hands of the French kings. Increased corruption of the papal court. In- creased usurpations of the hierarchy. Reaction called forth thereby. The more liberal theological tendency of the Paris university. Opposi- tion between the French and the Italian cardinals 23 Dependence of Clement V. upon Philip. Process against Boniface before the pa[)al consistory. His vindication at the council of Vienne and the alteration of his bulls. Abolishment of the order of the Knights Templar 23 John XXII. Ban and interdict against Louis the Bavarian. Appeal of the latter to a general council. Violent contests in Germany. Expedi- tion of Louis to Italy, A. D. 1327. The more rigid and the more lax Franciscans. Michael of Chesena and William Occam 25 Marsilius of Padua. His Defensor Pacis, a foretoken of the protestant spirit. Christ alone the rock and the head of the church. The sacred Scriptures the highe.st source of knowledge of the faith. More sharply drawn distinction oi" the ideas of church and state. Supreme authority of general councils Purely spiritual authority of the church. The clergy in the c£it,e of actions civilly jjunishable subjected to the laws of the state. God alone can forgive sin. The absolving of subjects from their oath of allegiance heretical ; the crusade proclaimed against the emperor abominable ; indulgences promised to such as engaged in it fraudulent. Recognizes the want of foundation to the hierarchical sys- tem. Originally one priestly office. Peter had no preeminence of rank, and perhaps was never in Rome. The primacy of the pope grew up gradually out of circumstances. Necessity of calling in the assistance of laymen at general councils. Eye-witness of the corruption proceeding from the Roman chancery. His book an important sign of the time ... 39 Louis in Rome. Accusation and deposition of John XXH. and election of Nicholas V. Triumph of John. Fruitless attempts at reconciliation on the part of the emperor. Theological dispute concerning the intuition of God humiliating to the pope. His shameful dependance on the kings of France 38 William Occam : against the papal plenitudo potestatis in temporaUbus. To set the priestly authority above that of kings a return to the Old Testar ment. John XXII. a heretic. His exposition of the words of Augus- tine : Ego vero ecclesiae caet. Arguments to prove that all doctrines must have their foundation in the sacred scriptures 40 Benedict XII, a man with the severity of a reformer. Opposite reports (Bibamus papaliter) 41 TABLE OF CONTENTS. XJ Clement VI. Reduction of the Jubilee to fifty years by the constitution Unigenitus of the year 13 19. Renewed, but still fruitless negotiations of the emperor Louis. Disorders in church and state (Friends of God) John of Winterthur traces all corruption to the gift of Constantine as the cause. His complaints 48 Emperor Charles IV. Maintenance of the ban pronounced on Louis and his adherents, and reactions thereby called forth against the Roman yoke. Starting up again of the story about the return of Frederic- II. Quiet reign of .Innocent VL Petrarch's invitation to Urban V. lo retu.'n back to Rome. Attempted return to Rome in 136 7. Back to Avignon in 1370. Retiirn to Rome of Gregory XL with a part of the cardinals in 1376 . 44 Gregory XL His bull suspending the form hitherto observed in the elec- tion of pope ... 45 Origin of the forty years' schism in the church: (difficulty of arriving at a knowledge of the real course of events.) Movements of the Romans. The two parties among the French cardinals. Election of Urban VI. Circular-letter of the cardinals. Secret letter to France. Impolitic conduct of Urban. Protest of the cardinals at Anagni. Election of Clement VII. at Fondi 47 Import of the schism in the church : evidence of the corruption of the car- dinals and of the church. Increase of simony and of the matter of in- dulgences. Belief in the necessity of one visible head of the chuivh un- dermined. Longing after a regeneration of the church. More liberal and at the same time conservative tendency in France. More radical reformatory tendencies in England and Boliemia 4g Clement at Avignon. King Charles V. declares in his favor. Urbanists, Clementists, and Neutrals. Henry of Hessia, head of the latter at Paris. His prediction. Eflbrts of the University of Paris to eifect a removal of the schism by means of a general council . . 49 Heury of Langenstein's ConsiHum pacis of the year 1381 : the schism con- sidered as an admonition of God. Refutation of doubts against tlie pro- priety of convoking a general council. Which could be convol- ed. t«o, by the collective body of the cardinals. The papacy only caput secun- darium of the church. Corruption since the gift of Constantine. Sinu-le propositions of reform . . 50 Passionate character of Urban VI. His quarrel with the king of Najiles. Arrest of suspected cardinals 51 Boniface IX : his cupidity. New reduction of the Jubilee (already re- duced by Urban). His itinerant sellers of indulgences. The .\nnates. The Bonifacian Plantation 52 Great efforts made by the University of Paris. Clement's skilful negotiator Peter de Luna 53 Formal opinion drawn up by the Paris University, A. D. 1394, comjjosed by Nicholas of Clemangis: Via cessionis, compromissl, concilii f/e/ieia/is. On the form, the right, and the necessity of the convocation of a ireiieral council. Emphatic call upon the king to bring about the restoration of peace to the church. Complaints about ecclesiastical abuses. Defence of the University against the reproach of arrogance 55 A.nswer of the king. Bold letter of the University to the pope 56 Displeasure of the pope with the University. Second letter by the latter. Death of Clement VII. Attempt to prevent the election of a new pope. Hurried election of Benedict XHI. Ignores the obligation he had agreed to, previous to his election 56 XU TABLE OF CONTENTS. Clemangls' work de ruina ecclesiae ; The schism a consequence of the cot- ruption in the church, and a means to bring her to the consciousness of the same. The corruption in the several orders of the church. A cure possible only by the hand of God GC Clemangis' work de studio theologico. Neglect of the office of preaching the chief cause of the corruption of the church. Theology an affair of the heart, not of the understanding, and the sacred scriptures the ulti- mate appeal in matters of religion •>'- Bold letter of the Paris University addressed to the newly elected pope Benedict XIII, and evasive reply of the latter ') > The three principal church parties. The advocates of the medieral ecclesias- tical law (Toulouse). The reckless advocates of the new ecclesiastical law. The moderate advocates of the new system (as Gerson, D'Ailly). *J I The particular position of Nicholas of Clemangis. Opposition to tlie pas- sionate advocates of the new ecclesiastical freedom. Opposes the subtraction of obedience to Benedict. Personal inclination to the latter. His letter to Benedict of the year 1394 (arbitrary alteration of it). Be- comes the pope's secretary. His description of the court of Avignon. Benedict's regard of him. Description of the corruption of the church (in his letters). Even the fides informis was wanting. Egotism nour- ished the schism. The renunciation of Benedict only did injury. Ne- gotiations ought to be conducted in a mild spirit 70 Partial return of the French church to obedience to Benedict in the year 1 104 .• ■ ^^ Innocent VII. dies 1406. Election of the octogenary Gregory XII. His zeal at the beginning for the restoration of peace to the church. En- trance upon negotiations with Benedict. Change of disposition produced in Greofory by his nephews Incursion of Ladislaus of Naples into Rome. Benedict's seeming readiness. Gregory's subterfuges to avoid the common abdication at Savona. Gregory in Lucca. The bold sermon of a Carmelite. Benedict in Porto Venere. Deceptions practised on both sides. Gregory's letters missive for a general council (Aquileia). Exasperation of his cardinals and their flight to Pisa. Haughtiness of Benedict. Complete subtraction of obedience on the part of the French church. Benedict's flight to Arragon. Letters missive for a general council to meet at Pisa in the year 1409 issued by the cardinals of both parties ' ' Gerson s principles of reform. Restoration of the church theocracy to its foundation as it was before the middle ages. (The essential unity of the church reposing solely upon union with Christ. At the same time how- ever thehierai-chy with the pope at the head a thing necessary for all times. Limitation of the pope's authority by a general council, the con- vocation of which was not necessarily dependant on the pope alone). Without reformation, no possibility of removing the schism, this there- fore a main business of the council (recpiires more careful church-visitar tions, and a limit to excomnuuiicatiuns). His treatise de unitate ecclesiae addressed to the council of Pisa Defence of the authority of the council ao^ainst the objections drawn from the letter of the positive law 83 The council of Pisa. Proceeds consistently according to these principles. Introductory discourse by cardinal Peter Philargi. Deposition of both the popes in the loth session. Fruitless protests of the emperor Rupert and of the envoys of Benedict. Engagements entered into by the car- dinals previous to the election of a pope. Choice of Alexander V". Ger- son's discourse preached before him. Confii-mation of the resolutions of TABLE OF CONTENTS. xiu the council by the pope. The reform put oflf to a new general council after three years 88 Clemangis on the failure of the council of Pisa 89 Cardinal Balthazar Cossa. His course of life. As legate at Bologna. His influence at the council of Pisa. His management of Alexander V. Mounts the papal chair after his death, under the title of John XXHI. His crafty polity. Elevation of D'Ailly to the post of Cardinal. The owl council at Rome in the year 1412 91 Gerson's sermo coram rege soon after Alexander's election, (his hopes of a union with the Greeks) 93 D'Ailly's tract de difficultate reformationis in concilio universali 94 Gerson's work concerning the right union and reformation of the church by a general council. Everything else should yield to the best good of the church. On the possibility of deposing a pope. Approbation of inunoral means. Invitation to the subtraction of obedience from popes, since it ia not on the pope men believe. The emperor must convoke the council. The pitiable results of the council of Pisa ought not to dishearten. The pope not authorized to alter the decrees of a council. The Bonifacian Plantation should be utterly eradicated. Description of the corruption of the Roman chancery. The end of the council was in the first place union under one head, in the next place union in the customs and laws of the primitive church. Even John XXHI. must, if required, abdicate. It would be best to elect no one of the three popes and no cardinal to the papacy 100 Quarrel between Ladislaus of Naples and John. Conference of the latter with the emperor Sigismund. Agreement of the pope to call a general council. Place of its assembling. The pope repents of the agreement he had entered into. Letters missive for the council of Constance to be assembled for the restoration of church unity and for reform in head and members in November of the year 1414, issued by the pope and the emperor 101 THE COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. Preparation for the transactions of the council by D'Ailly's monita de ne- cessitate reformationis ecclesiae in capite et in membrs 102 John goes, not without anxiety, to Constance. Compact entered into with Duke Frederic of Austria. Arrives on the 28th of October 103 Resolutions of the council with regard to the voting by nations. Concern- ing the right to vote of university teachers, of the inferior clergy and of princes and their envoys. On the question whether the council was to be considered an independent continuation of the council of Pisa 104 Presentation of charges against the pope in February 1415. His readiness at the beginning to abdicate in consequence of these charges. His later subterfuges and intrigues. His flight on the 20th oi" INIarch 106 The pope's letters from SchaS"hausen. Threatening schism in the council. Holding together of the free-minded members. Gerson's discourse on the 23d of March concerning the authority of the council. Opposition of the majority of cardinals. Proclamation of the principles of Gcrson in the name of the council on the 30th of March (omissions by cardinal Zabarella). Proposal to exclude the cardinals in the transactions rclafc- inijf to reform. Discourse of the Benedictine Gentianus against the pope and the cardinals Ill b / XIV TABLE OF CONTENTS. Citation of the pope on the 2d of May. John a prisonsr in Ratolfszell. His deposition on the 29th of May. Acquiescence in the same on hia part. His removal to Gottleben 113 Negotiations with Gregory and Benedict. By Gregory's compliance and in spite of Benedict's obstinacy, the council succeeds in restoring unity to the church. The two next problems for the council : reformation and the election of a pope 112 Appointment of a collegium reformatiorium already in August, 1415. Cor- ruption of morals at Constance. Discourse of the Franciscan Bernard Baptise 114 Nicholas of Clemangis on the council. His complaints of egotism, ambition, party-zeal, want of true penitence at the council. His later letter to the council. His warning against a premature election of a pope, proceed- ing in part from his attachment to Benedict 118 Controversy on the question which should take precedence, the reformation or the election of a pope. Efforts of the emperor Sigismund for the former in alliance with the Germans and the English. Discourses of Stephen of Prague and of the arch-bishop of Genoa. Fierce resistance of the cardinals. Complaints against the Germans. Death of the arch- bishop Hallam of Salisbury, Protest of the German nation on the 14th of September, 1417. They finally yield 124 Resolution of the council respecting the frequent appointment of general councils. Peace restored by the mediation of the bishop of Winchester. Controversies about the form of the papal election. Choice of Martin V. 126 Complaints of the French deputies before the emperor on the procrastina- tion of reform ; and his answer. Plan of the reformation drawn up by the Germans, also respecting the possibility of deposing a pope and on the limitation of indulgences. Plan of reform drawn up by the pope with reference to the above. Concordats of the pope with the several nations 127 Last session of the council on the 22d of April, 1518. Difficulties between the Poles and the Lithuanians. Their appeal fuom the pope to the next general council. Constitution of Martin V. in contradiction with the principles proclaimed at Constance. Gerson's Tractatus quomodo et an liceat in causis fidei a summo pontifice appellare 128 Council of Pavia in 1423. Transfer of the same to Siena. Letters missive for the next general council to meet in Basle in the year 1431. Ap- pointment of Cesarini as legate. Death of Martin V. Eugene IV. his successor. Disinclination of Cesarini to act as legate to this council. His journey to Bohemia. His journey through Germany to Basle. ... 129 Designed transfer of the council to Bologna. Cesarini's opposition to the design of Eugene. Hints at the disgrace that threatened the papal see in consequence of such a measure, and refutation of the reasons assigned by the pope for the transfer 133 SECTION SECOND. RELATING TO THE HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. P. 134-412. I. The Reformatory movements in England. P. 134-173. Way prepared for greater freedom in the development of religious convic- tions by the usurpations of the hierarchy since the time of Innocent ill. by TABLE OF CONTEXTS. XV Robert Grosshead, Roger Bacon, by the quarrel with the mendicant monks, by Richard of Armagh. The English j^arliament under Edward ni 135 John Wicklif. Born 1324. Studied at Oxford. Zeal for science and religion. The speculative element in him. His realism. His work " on the last times of the church." 1363 appointed a tutor in Canter- bury Hall by Islep. 1366 deposed by Simon Langham. WickliPs ap- peal to Rome. His approval of the measure forbidding to pay Peter's pence to the pope. The chancery decides against him. Appointed chaplain to the king. Connected with the duke of Lancaster. 1372 made Doctor of Theology. Wicklif as king's envoy to Bruses. Finds the pajiacy not founded in divine right. 137 Wicklifs principles of reform : his opposition to the woi'ldliness of the cler- gy, and what he required of them. His exposition of the Ten Com- mandments 1^:^ Wicklif as an opponent of the mendicant monks 141 Wicklif as teacher of Theology and Philosophy at Oxford, and at the same time parish priest at Lutterworth from the year 13 75. The prom- inence he gave to preaching. His idea of itinerant preachers 143 Society of " poor priests," afterwards called Lollards. Perhaps too literal imitation of the apostolic church. Yet at all times a seminary for do- mestic missions. Wicklif s work : Why poor priests have no benefices ? 145 Wicklifs enemies, particularly among the mendicant monks. Their com- plaint of the year 1376, on the ground of nineteen propositions taken from his lectures 146 The three condemnatory bulls of Gregory XL of the year 1377. Unfav- orable reception they met with in England 147 Wicklif protected by the civil power. The first court for the trial of Wick- lif held by archbishop Sudbury at Lambeth : its dissolution. Second court in the year 1378. Wicklifs declaration 148 WickHfs severe illness in the year 1379 : visit paid to him by the mendi- cant monks 149 Wicklifs translation of the Bible In the year 1380 (John of Trevisa). Knighton's opinion of it. Wicklifs defence of it. The New Testament Intelligible to all 151 His twelve arguments against the doctrine of transubstantiatlon of the year 1381 152 Wicklifs doctrine of the Lord's supper : attacks the accidentia sine subject© on rational and e.xegetlcal grounds. Contends against every mode of a bodily presence of Christ, even against the Impanatio of John of Paris. Yet bread and wine not barely representative but efficacious signs. Dis- tinction of a threefold mode of being of the body of Christ. Want of uniformity in his mode of expressing himself on this subject (explanation of the words of institution). His zeal against the doctrine of the acci- dentlbus sine subjecto. His opinion respecting the adoration of the host 157 Condemnation of the twelve arguments by the University of Oxford. Wicklifs appeal to the king 157 Political movements, and their relation to Wicklif. Insurrection of the peasantry headed by John Balle 160 Wickhf s quite too political memorial to parliament. Courtney created arch- bishop of Canterbury. Wicklifs more \iolent attacks against the men- dicant monks In the year 1382. Admonition of the Duke of Lancaster. Courtney's earthquake-council. His ordinance directed against the Wicklifite doctrines the king's warrant against the propagators of XVI TABLE OF CONTENTS. the same. Wicklif's confession of faith respecting the Lord's supper and his tract in defence of himself against the earthquake council 163 Wicklif, from the year 1382 in retirement at Lutterworth. His judgment respecting the schism which had broken out in the meanwhile. New at- tacks upon the popes occasioned by the bulls of crusade and indulgence issued by Urban VL His bold reply to his citation to Rome. His death on the 31st of December, 1384 165 Wicklif 's doctrines : connection of his fhilosopliy and theology. Nominal- ism something heretical. Against considering philosophical and theolog- ical truths as opposed to one another. Harmony of thought and being. Everything possible, actual. His view of Almighty power 167 His doctrine of predestination. Rejection of the meritum de congruo. On the rtiusality of evil. Sin as well as its punishment recjuisite in order to the beauty of the universe. Rejection of the idle questions of scholasti- cism about empty possibilities 168 His genuinely protestant principle of sole reference to Christ. Hence his opposition to the worship of saints 169 Wicklif opposed to the multiplication of sacraments. Confirmation a blas- phemy against God. Bisliop and presbyter the same in the time of St. Paul. Against the secular goods of the church. Church confession not unconditionally necessary, only inward penitence. Contends against the doctrine of the Thesaurus meritorum supererogationis 171 On the degeneracy of the church in the second century. Necessity of abol- ishing the monastic orders. His remarkable prediction of Luther's re- formation. His old scholastic view of the doctrine of justification com- bined with his reduction of everything to grace. His more spiritual conception of the church. Contends against the necessity of a visible head of the church, — as also, of manifold gradations among the clergy. 173 2. Movements of Reform in Bohemia. P. 173-380. A. The Forerunners of John IIuss. V. 173-235. Militz of Kremsia. Archdeacon at Prague and secretary of Charles IV. His pious zeal tinctured with asceticism. 13G3 assistant of the parish priest at Bisehofteinitz • • 1 76 His active labors as a preacher at Prague, at first with little success ; at a later period, crowned with the hajipiest results. His influence on per- sons of the female sex. Transformation of " Little Venice." ... 177 His design of becoming a monk. Temporary suspension of preaching. His work on Antichrist • 180 His journey to Rome in the year 1367. His notification posted up at St. Peter's Church. His arrest. Composition of his tract on Antichrist. His liberation and return to Prague 181 Renewed activity at Prague. Education of young men. His beneficence. His meekness 182 Complaint lodged against Militz by the Magister Klonkot. The bulls of Gregory XI. Mihtz dies at Avignon in 1374 183 Conrad of Waldhausen, an Austrian. Augustinian and priest at Vienna from 1345. The jubilee of Clement VI. His journey to Rome. 1360 parish priest at Leitmeritz. Then preacher at Prague. His sermons against antichristian corruption . . 1 81 His influence upon the Jews. Contends against the mendicant monks. At- tacks their simony and mock-holiness. The degeneracy of monachism TABLE OF CONTENTS. XVU (Christ never begged). Quackery -with pretended relics. Accusations brought against Conrad by the mendicants and his defence of himself. Complaint lodged against Conrad in the year 1364 and his tract in de- fence of himself 191 Declines a call to Vienna. Dies at Prague, 1369 193 Matthias of Janoio. His relation to Huss. Magister Parisiensis. Disciple of Militz. His journeys. His conversion. In 1381 master of the cathe- dral at Prague. Dies 1394 194 Janow's Work, De regulis Veteris et Novi Testamenti. The exegetical matter in it of little importance. Contains contemplations on the history of his time, and intimations with regard to the future. Made up of single essays. Chronological characteristics. Occasion upon which it was written. Complaints of the worldhness of the clergy. Defence against the objection that the vileness of the clergy and monks w^s exposed to the people by works in the vernacular tongue. Antichrist has long since made his appearance. His definition of Antichrist (type of the secular- ized hierarchy.) On the false miracles of Antichrist. Progress of Christ's and Antichrist's kingdom, side by side. On the sending forth of the angels, i e. the true heralds of the faith, for the sifting of the nations. Argues against the expectation that Ellas would reappear in person. . . 202 Attacks the corruptions of the church in detail. Incipient germs of reform in his work. Opposed to the rending asunder of the orderiy-tllsposed union of parts in the church. The haughty self-exaltation of the pope, the bishops, the priests. Traces the disobedience of the people towards their clergy to the licentiousness and carnal sense of the latter. His view of the nature of church government lying at the ground of these remarks 204 Against overloading the church with human ordinances and the multiplica- tion of ecclesiastical laws. On burdening the conscience by the same. On the contempt thence resulting for these laws and at the same time for the divine commands. Men led away from Christ by these ordinan- ces. The law is not for a righteous man. Defends himself against the reproach of despising all human laws. Predicts the cessation of ordi- nances. Christ the sole rule for all things. His remarkable exposition of the apostolical ordinances of the assembly at Jerusalem. Necessity of bringing back the church to the simple apostolical laws. Monastic orders might be dispensed with 210 Foundation of the true unity of the church in the immediate reference of the rehgious consciousness to Christ. The unity thence proceeding as op- posed to the differences between nations, growing out of sin. What con- stitutes the worship of God in Christian times. Against the Phariseeism and self-righteousness of his time. The idea of the church as the com- munity of the elect. Gives prominence to the universal priesthood of the faithful. Vigorously disputes the supposed opposition betwen spirit- uals and seculars (on the right relation of priests and laymen. How far the predicate " holy" belongs to all Christians. On the degrees of holiness. On the pride of the clergy and monks.) Contends against the distinction made between the concilia and the praecepta 21) The question respecting the frequent and daily conmiunlon of the laity. Janow's zeal for this, and by Impliciitlon for the Lord's Supper under both the forms. Janow's special essay on this subject ; on the motives and arguments of the opponents of daily communion. On the pious tendencies of the female sex. The spiritual participation of Christ being daily permitted, so also should the bodily be granted. None but openly b* XVIU TA^LB OF CONTENTS. known sinners should be debarred from the communion. Comparison of the communication of Christ in the holy supper with the milk fur- nished to the child. The laity often more worthy of the communion than the clergy. He who considers himself unworthy of the communion is really worthy, and vice versa. The holy supper the highest act of worship. On the slavish fear felt by nominal Christians with regard to the communion. His complaints respecting the neglect of the holy sup- per. Against the perverted application of the 1st Corinth. 11 : 23. Against the notion that orce partaking of the connnunion is sufficient. His view of the mutual relation of baptism and the Lord's supper. The Lord's supper is food for weak men and not reserved for the angels. Against the mock-penance preparatory to communing once at the Easter festival. His answer to the objection drawn from the example of the ancient hermits. Against the necessity of a distinct and special prepara- tion for the communion. Defends those laymen who longed after the daily communion against the charge of presumption. Mode in which the Lord's supper was observed in the time of the aposth^s and one thousand years after them. Against the objection that the spiritual communion i sufficient. Against the objection that the Lord's supper would become au every day affair by two frequent enjoyment of it. The spiritual enjoy- ment a sufficient substitute for the bodily, only in case the longing aftet the latter is disappointed without any fault of the Christian. The vindica- tion of the right of laymen to partake under both forms everywhere pre- supposed 2y The schism in the church traced to the self-seeking spirit of the cardinals The church in its essence exalted above this schism. The unity of the church to be restored only by subduing the self-seeking spirit. Party- spirit in the church a fore-token of the last times. Still, Janow considers the right to be chiefly on the side of Urban VI 2S? Opposition between the party in favor of and the part}' opposed to reform Synod of Prague of the year 1389. Pretended recantation of Janow a^ this synod. His later attack upon it, particularly in reference to the wor- ship of images and the forbidding of daily connnunion 23o B. John Huss, the Bohemian Reformer. P. 235—371. John Huss. Born in Husinetz on the 6th of July, 1369. Of poor pa- rents. Studies at Prague. His teacher Stanislaus of Znaim. In 1369, Magister. Influence of Militz and Janow upon his character. In 1401, preacher to Bethlehem chapel. (Spirit of the foundation-charter of this chapel.) His activity as a preacher and curer of souls. Character of the archbishop Zbynek of Prague. The high estimation in which he held Huss at the beginning. Places him on the committee of examina- tion into the subject of the miraculous blood at Wilsnack. Tract of Huss, De omni sanguine Christi glorificato 239 Inward opposition between Huss and Zbynek. Reformatory tendency of Huss pointing back rather to Janow than to Wicklif His connection with WickUfitism of importance simply on account of the consequences at first outwardly resulting from it 241 Connection between Oxford and Prague. Wicklifs influence, especially in a philosophical respect. Early acquaintance of Huss with Wicklirs writings. His religious and philosophical interest in them. Wicklif's at- tack upon the doctrine of transubstantiation without influence upon Huss. (Argument against the opposite view of Palacky.) The inter- TABLE OF CONTENTS. Xi:j polated Oxford documents in testimony of Wicklif's orthodoxy. [The Antithesis Christi et Antichristi.] The opposition between Realism and Nominalism as a matter of national interest between Bohemians and Ger- mans. Merits of Huss in promoting the culture of the Bohemian lan- guage. The Bohemian theological party : Peter of Znaim, Stanislaus of Znaim, (early judgment of the latter respecting Wicklif and his doctrine of transubstantiation.) Paletz and Huss 24S Influence of Jerome of Prague. [Jerome confounded with Nicholas of Faulfisch.] On the Wicklifite movements in Prague. His zeal for sci- ence. [Thomas of Stitny-] Relations of Huss with Jerome. Enthu- siasm of the latter for the writings of Wicklif 246 Convocation of the University on the 28th of May, 1403. Dispute on the forty-five Wicklifite propositions. Condemnation of these propositions by the preponderating votes of the Germans. Slight influence exerted by this condemnation. Bull of Innocent VH, A.D. 1405, and synodal ordinance of Zbynec, A D. 1406 against the Wicklifite doctrines. Law of the latter to secure the niainteiiance of the doctrine uf transubstantiation. Assem- bling of the Buheniiun members of the University in the year 1408, and their merely conditional condemnation of the forty-five propositions. Lectures on Wicklif's Dialogus, Trialogus and De Eucharistia for- bidden 248 Good understanding preserved thus far between Zbynek and Huss. The latter's diocesan discourse in the year 1407. Examination before the archbishop's court of several clergymen accused of Wicklifidsm, particu- larly Nicholas of Weleno\vitz. Huss interposes in their behalf and ad- dresses a letter full of reproaches to the archbishop. Stephen of Dola's Antiwikleffus of the year 1408, evidencing the high state of excitement between the Wicklifite and the hierarchical party 252 Milder procedure of Zbynek. His declaration at the diocesan synod at Prague, in July,1408 that Bohemia was free from Wicklifite heresy. . . . 252 Royal decree respecting the relation of votes of the different nations at the Prague University. Emigration of the Germans from Prague in Sep- tember, 1408 258 Important influence of this emigration on the progress of the struggle for reform : appearance of the hitherto concealed differences among the Bo- hemians. Spreading abroad of injurious reports concerning the heresies of the party of Huss. Injury to the city of Prague. Huss and Jerome considered as the authors of the expulsion of the Germans . . . 255 King Wenceslaus goes over from the party of Gregory XII, to that of the council of Pisa. Opposition of the clergy. The clergy attacked by the king. Huss in favor of the council of Pisa. His sermons against the corruption of the clergy. Reproaches cast upon him for this reason and his defence of himself 258 Complaints of the clergy of Prague, against Huss, before the archbishop, in the year 1409. The Magister Mauritius commissioned to inquire into them. Complaints of Huss against Zbynek and citation of the latter to Rome 255 Zbynek espouses the cause of Alexander V. Alexander's bull of Decem- ber, 1409 against the Wicklifite heresies and preaching in private chapels. Publication of the same in Man/h, 1410. Wenceslaus's anger excited against Zbynek. Appeal of Huss ad Papum melius informandum. Zbynek Jorbids preaching in private chapels, and resistance of Huss. Demands the delivering up of Wicklif s tvritings, which are burned. Vio- lent commotions occasioned thereby in Prague. New appeal of Huss to XX TABLE OF CONTENTS. John XXIII. Writings of Huss in justification of his disobedience to Zbynek, and in defence of several doctrines of Wicklif (De Trinitate, De decimis. Defensio articulorum quorundam Joannis Wicleff 261 Huss prepared to suffer martyrdom, and his foreboding of it. 268 Misapprehended doctrine of Huss respecting property 270 His tract De corpore Christi : gives prominence to the practical religious element, holds fast the doctrine of transubstantiation, but disapproves the too crass mode of expressing it 271 Citation of Huss to Bologna by Cardinal Colonna. Interposition of Wen- ceslaus with the Pope in behalf of Huss. Huss excommunicated. Trans- fer of the process to Cardinal Zabarella. Still later to Cardinal Brancas. Prague put under interdict. Wenzel's zeal for Huss and against the clergy. Zbynek makes advances towards a compromise 273 Appointment of a commission for setding terms of peace in July, 1411. Conditions of agreement proposed. Confession of faith set forth by Huss in September, 1411. Necessary failure of this merely outward compact. 274 Zbynek's letter of exculpation addressed to the king. His flight and his death 276 The new archbishop Albic. Bull of crusade and indulgence issued by John XXHI. against Ladislaus of Naples. Huss consulted with regard to it, and his declaration. Indignation at the beginning professed against the bull by Paletz. Change of opinion by him and Stanislaus of Znaim. Proposal of Paletz in the name of the theological faculty 278 Separation of Huss from Paletz. Disputation of Huss on the matter of indulgences, 7th of June, 1411, and his Quaestio de indulgentiis thence originating. (The three motives which induced him to write this tract. Return to the authority of the sacred Scriptures. Disapprobation of the bull as not proceeding from love. On the import and extent of priestly absolution. That it is not permitted to the pope and clergy to contend for secular things. Even the laity ought not to comply with the requisitions of the bull. Against the plenitude of power claimed by the pope to bestow indulgences. On the hurtful influence of the latter. On the supreme authority of Scripture.) Fiery discourse of Jerome on the occasion of this disputation. Burning of the papal buU. Dissatisfaction of Huss with the passionate heat of individuals among his adherents . . 287 Royal edict against all public resistance to the papal bulls. Persevering activity of Huss and increasing number of his adherents 288 Sentence passed on the three artisans at Prague. Interposition of Huss in their behalf, and the promise given him. Their execution. Solemn con- veyance of the dead bodies to Bethlehem chapel. Part taken by Huss in these transactions 29U Paletz at the head of the eight doctors. Formal condemnation of the foi-ty- five propositions by these persons, with the addition of six other proposi- tions. Succeed in procuring a royal command forbidding the preaching of these doctrines. Reproof of the faculty by the king. Their justiflca- tion of themselves. Readiness of Huss to answer before the king's privy council on condition that each party should agree, in case of conviction, to suffer the penalty of the stake. This proposal declined by the faculty. Futile admonition of the privy-oouncil 291 Michael de Causis at Rome. Transfer of the cause of Huss to Cardinal Peter de St. Angelo. Ban and interdict imposed on Huss under the most fearful formulas. Huss to be deUvered up, and Bethlehem chapel to be destroyed root and branch. Unsuccessful measures of violence resorted to by the opponents of Huss at the consecration-festival of TABLE OF CONTENTS. XXJ the chur(,'h of Prague. Jesenic's demonstration of the illegality of the pope's proceedings. Huss appeals to Christ. Dangerous disturbances at Prague in consequence of the interdict. Huss leaves Prague. Albic's resignation of his office at the close of 1412. Conrad of Vechta his successor 295 Resolution by the college of the elders of the country to hold a country- synod (at B()hmisch-Brod) before Christmas of 1412. Proi)ositions pre- sented by the two parties, and their entire opposition in principle. Sy- nod at Prague on the 6th of Feb'y, 1413, resulting in nothing. (Huss re- presented by Jensenic. Declaration of .Jacobellus of Mies.) Royal peace-commission. Defeat of the hierarchical party. The king once more favors the party of Huss 297 Huss at Kozi-hradek. Composes his work De ecclesia : contrast drawn be- twixt the clerus Christi and the clerus Antichristi. Reasons for his non- appearance at Rome. Proof of the unchristian character of the inter- dict. His moi'e spiritual conception of the church. The church, the universitas praedestinatorum. Distinction of the church rere, et nuncu- pative. Uncertainty respecting predestination. On the dispersion of the church throughout all the world, in opposition to Paletz. Christ alone the all-sufficient head of the church. On the dignity of the pope and cardinals. Papacy first began to exist after the time of Constantine. Against the holding of worldly property by the church. Rejects uncon- ditional obedience to the pope and prelates with regard to matters indif- ferent. On the Christian people who were beginni^ig to be enlightened. Huss pained in contemplating the secularization of the church. Traces the schism to this as the cause. Adopts the theory of different TQnnoig ■Jiai^tiug. Reverts to the authority of scripture. Erudition of Huss. The four principles of reformation of the later Hussite party expressed in this work 307 Similar opinions contained in his book against Stanislaus of Znaim and in his letters to Prachatic : against the misconstruction of his lan- guage as tending to a revolutionary spirit. Against the necessity of a visible head of the church. On the tendency of the externalization of the church to proiuote heresies. Against confounding theology and phi- losophy. On the continuous agency of the Holy Spirit in the church as the sole tiling necessary. His firm detennination to keep steadfast by the truth. On the comparatively small importance of being called a heretic 81P Letters written by Huss from his place of exile, particularly to Prachatic : his consolation in trouble. His exhortation to steadfastness. His pain and scruples of conscience at being separated from his church. His let- ters to the same. His confident expectation that the truth would triumph. On the fruitless assaults of Antichrist. Warning against fickle-minded- ness. Sympathy with the cause of Huss also in other cities of Bohemia. His letter of exhortation to the parish-priest at Prachatic 316 His frequent secret visits to Prague. Transfer of his residence to Cracowec. 31€ Time draws near for holding the council of Constance. Huss invited to at- tend with the assurance of a safe conduct from the emperor. [Refuta- tion of the sophistical interpretations of the letter of safe conduct.] Huss resides at Prague in the August of 1414. Examined before the pope's inquisitor, and the latter's testimonial of this examination. Huss wntes a letter of thanks to the emperor Sigismund. Warned by his friends not to put confidence in the emperor's promises. Farewell letter of Huss to his community. Leaves Prague on the 11th of October under the e» Xxii TABLE OF CONTENTS. cort of the knights Chlum and Wenzel of Duba, of Mladenowic and John Cardinalis of Reinstein i52C Journey of Huss through Germany. His favorable reception. The Par- ish priest of Pernau. Conversation at Nurenberg. The doctor of BI- brach. Transcript of the ten commandments 321 Arrives at Constance on the 3d of November. The first four weeks. Agi- tations excited by Michael de Causis, Paletz, and Wenzel Tiem. Hate- ful proposition of Michael. Suspension of the interdict. Attempt to separate the cause of Huss from all public transactions. Huss demands an open trial before the council 323 Huss proceeds to prepare himself to appear before the council. De fidei suae elucidatione, (the agreement of his views with the faith of the church. Defends himself against the charge of contending against saint- worship), De pace (peace with God the foundation of peace with one's neighbor.) De sufficientia legis Christi ad regendam ecclesiam. (Protest against the charge of obstinacy. On the validity even of human laws, and particularly of the jus canonicum) 326 Occasion of the seizure and imprisonment of Huss on the 28th of Novem- ber, 1414. [On the report that Huss attempted flight.] Chlum's repeated protest against this procedure. Reproaches uttered by him before the pope, and the latter's exculpation of himself. Huss committed to prison in the cells of a Dominican convent on the 6th of December 328 Chlum's declaration In the name of the emperor on the 24th of December. Sigismund's behavior in this matter. Deputation of the council on the 1st of January, 1415, protesting against his interference in matters re- lating to faith. Sigismund's later vindication of himself to the Bohemian estates 330 Committee appointed to examine Huss, 1st December, 1414. He is not al- lowed to have an attorney. Sickness of Huss. Kind treatment expe- rienced from his keepers. His letters intercepted. Paletz's conduct towards the prisoner. Temper exhibited by Huss while in prison. His dream about the pictures of Christ in Bethlehem chapel. Huss declines a private arrangement of his case, and demands to be heard publicly be- fore the council. Hopes at the beginning to be aided by the emperor. His anxious regard for his friends. His minor doctrinal and ethical tracts composed In prison. (On the citations contained In them. His views respecting the law of the Sabbath. Spiritual conception of bless- edness. The four principal mysteries of Christian faith. Express con- fession of the doctrine of transubstantiatlon. His view of John vl 337 Jacobellus of Prague comes out against the withdrawal of the cup. Fable about the Waldenslan Peter of Dresden.) Huss consulted with regard to this matter. His frank declaration 339 Flight of John XXHI, and view taken of it by Huss. Embarrassments thence arising. Huss conveyed to Gottleben. His situation worse than before, and he falls sick again. His fortitude in suffering. Appointment of a new committee of Investigation on the 6th of April, 1415. Stronger complaints against Huss. Interposition of the Bohemian Knights in be- half of Huss, united with indirect coni])laints against bishop John of Leitomysl. The latter's defence of himself. Promise given of transfer- ring Huss to another prison In Constance, and of a jniblic hearing on the 5th of June. Little confidence placed by Huss in these promises 343 Huss conveyed to the Franciscan convent, in Constance, at the beginning of June. His first hearing on the 5th of June. Inteqwsition of the emperor to prevent his condemnation Instanter on the ground of extracts TABLE OF CONTENTS. XXIU made from his -wriiings. His writmgs laid before the o.iuncil. Session broken up on account of the wild outcries against him. Courage ex- hibited by Huss in his trial of the 6th of June. Second hearinrj on the 7th of June, in presence of the emperor. Accused of denying the doctrine of transubstantiation. His defence of himself especially against d'Ailly and Zabarella. Accused of holding Wicklifite doctrines. Of promoting insurrection among the people. Of creating a schism be- twixt the spiritual and the secular power. Political suspicions excited against Huss by D'Ailly. Clilum puts in a word in his defence. Inv-ita- tion to Huss by D'Ailly and the emperor that he should submit to the sentence of the council. Huss defends himself against the charge of ob- stinacy. His letters concerning this hearing. He demands a hearing in which he can answer freely 349 Third hearing on the 8(h of June. A series of articles of complaint laid be- fore the council, taken mostly from his work De ecclesia. The fifth ai-ticle, relating to his doctrine of predestination. The twelfth article, relating to the derivation of the papal dignity. The twenty-second article, relating to inlentio. The article that a person In the condition of mortal sin could not be pope, king, etc. (Impression made on the emperor.) D'Ailly's political suspicions. Disputation with Paletz.) On the fortr- five propositions of Wicklif The article on the necessity of a visible head of the church. Gerson's" articles against Huss. [Whence the pecu- liar indignation of Huss towards Gerson ?] D'Ailly's exhortation ad- vising him to submit to the opinion of the council. Readiness of Huss to allow himself to be taught. The emperor admonishes him to abjure. Za- berella's promise of a mild form of abjuration. The emperor's repeated admonition that he should submit to the council. Fanatical opinions ex- pressed by some of the prelates. Wonderful presence of mind and power- of faith exhibited by Huss in this trial. Shameless asseverations of Pa- letz and Michael de Causis. Party prejudice of D'Ailly In favor of Pa- letz. Chlum's cordial hand pressure 356 Proposition of the emperor to the council at\er this hearing. Eventual resolution of the council in case that Huss should recant 357 Expectation of Huss to suffer martyrdom. His letter to Bohemia on the loth of June. New hopes spring up In the mind of Huss. His Intense longing after a hearing where he might be allowed to express himself freely. His warning against putting confidence in princes 360 Remarkable Interviews of Huss with an unknown individual proposing terms of recantation. Who and what he was. [Earlier erroneous opinions on this point.] The form of recantation proposed by this unknown person. Huss replies with thanks, declining the proposal. Persevering pains of the unknown to convince Huss, and his answers to the latter's reasons. Huss again declines 362 Various attempts made to Induce Huss to recant. Visit made to him by Paletz ' 363 Impression produced on Huss by the Imprisonment and deposition of John XXni : sentiments uttered by hini on this subject. His resolution not to allow himself to be frightened by the council. His prophetic dreams. Huss a genuine Christian martyr: his noble letter of the 23d of June. His confession of himself His grief at the divisions among the Bo- hemian people. His apology to Paletz S6(i Hfillcate concern shown by Huss for his surviving friends. His joy at the determination expressed by Chlum and Wenzel of Duba to retire from the world. His letters of exhortation addressed to Chrlstann of Pracha- XXIV TABLE OF COXTENTS. tic. His last salutations and commissions to the people of Prague on the fourth of July . . 367 Official deputation of the council on the 1st of July. Deputation on the part of tlie emperor. Chlum's address. Moving reply of Hiiss. The bitter words of a bishop 368 Degradation of Huss, and his ex'cution on the 6th of July. Introductory discourse. Huss attempts to answer for himself. Receives strength in prayer. Puts on the priestly vestments. Once more challenged to re- cant. Deprived one by one of the vestments. Mocked and cursed. Delivered up for execution to Louis of Bavaria. His address to passers by. His prayer on the place of execution. Impression made by it on the laity who were present. Takes leave of his keepers. Final chal- lenge to recant by the marshal of the empire. His fiery death. The scattering of his aslies 371 Jerome of Prague. His residence in Bohemia and Moravia, at Paris, and at Heidelberg. Examination of him at Paris. His arrest by the official at Vienna and his escape by flight. His letter addressed to the official written from Wiekow. His vindication of himself at Constance. His residence at Ofen in the year 1410. His arrest and liberation. His residence in Poland and Lithuania, particularly in Cracow. At Con- stance accused of being inclined to favor the (4reek church. His vindi- cation of himself in this regard. His secret visit to Constance on the 4th of April, 1415. His letter from Uberlingen. Notice posted up liy him at Constance. Sets out to return to Bohemia. Arrested near Hirschau. Brought before the council on the "iSd of ]\Iay. 1415. His harsh impris- onment. Letter interposing in his behalf drawn up by the Bohemian knights on the 2d of September. Jerome's public recantation on the 23d of September. His continued imprisonment. Appointment of a new commission 377 His two hearings, on the 23d and 26th of May, 1416. His eloquence and presence of mind. He takes back his former recantation. Allowed a respite of forty days. Description by Poggio of the impression pro- duced by Jerome's speech 379 Sentence passed and executed on Jerome on the 30th of May. His con- stancy as a martyr. Description of his martyrdom by Poggio 380 • 3. The Friends of God in Germany. P. 380— 412. On the friends of God in general. Religious commotions in Germany ever since the end of the 13th century, called forth especially by spiritual and bodily distress. Profound feeling characteristic of the German people. Connected mystical societies, particularly in south-west Ger- many. The name Friends of God. Their relation to the scholastic theology. The spiritual leaders of the laity from the number of the Friends of God compared with the common ecclesiastics. Letter of the Friends of God in Strassburg to the collective body of the clergy by occasion of the pope's interdict. The Friends of God hold fast to the standing ecclesiastical order. Conscientiously fulfilled all the appointed exercises of religion, at the same time that they warned men against the externalization of religion and all imagined meritoriousness of good works ..... 386 Various kinds of hostility to the Friends of God. Their spiritual leaders. Complete submission to them. Rulmann Merswin. His course of life- TABLE OF CONTENTS. XXV His book on the nine rocks. His unchurchly tenets. . . 889 Nicholas of Basle. Tauler's Friend of God. A Waldensian, and at the same time a mystic. His influential and prudent activity. Spread of German writings among the laity. His return to Holy Scripture and to the Holy Spirit. His defence of the Apostle Paul against the reproach of vain glory. He is burnt at Vienne 39S Contemporaneous wildly extravagant, pantheistic mysticism. Strong contrast betwixt the theistic and pantheistic Friends of God. At the same time many points of transition between the two. Master Echart, provincial of the Dominican order for feaxony. His pantheistic utter- ances on the being of God. The Logos. True righteousness, etc. Condemnation of twenty-six propositions of Echart. His submission. Bull of John XXn, in the year 1329, against the holding forth of such doctrines before the laity 396 The pantheistic, quietistic notions and the mistaken strivings after freedom attacked by Ruysbroch and Tauler. John Ruysbroch of Brussels. His contest with a wife belonging to the sect of the Free Spirit Coun- sellor to many 401 His writings an evidence of his practical activity. His eflTorts against the spread of infidelity. Only a seeming inclination of isolated expressions in his writings to pantheism. He holds fast to God revealed in Christ. Contends as well against the one-sided, contemplative bent as against the externalization of the church-tendency. Gives prominence to the will as a lever to the higher life. Opposed to excessive indulgence of the feelings. Mental trials as an exercise of self-denial 407 John Tauler. Born in Strassburg, 1290. In 1308, a Dominican. Studies at Paris. Labors on the Rhine. Dies in 1361 407 Contends against the inclination to run into externals. Against the reliance on saints or angels. Exercise in external things a preparatory school to spiritual experience. On the uniting of practical with contemplative habits. Warns against an excessive indulgence of mere feelings and against excessive self-reflection ;-on the right method of using and over- coming temptations 411 Henry Suso of Suabia. Dominican. Born in 1300, died 1365. His writings. Christ the way to God. The practical following of the exam- ple of Christ better than excitements of feeling. Patience in suffering better than miracles 412 The processions of the self-castigators or Flagellants. Their origin in Italy by occasion of the contests between the Guelphs and Ghibellines. Spread of the same into Germany during the desolations of the black plague. Inhibition of the same by Clement VI. Heretical tendency attaching itself to them. The Crucifrates 412 General Index 413 Citations from Scripture, 425 CHURCH HISTORY SIXTH PERIOD. FROM BONIFACE VIII. TO THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE REFORMATION IN 1517. SECTION FIRST. HISTORY OF THE PAPACY, AND OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE CHURCH. The period of Church History which we now propose to consider is one where an old creation of Christianity, showing signs of decay and an ever increasing tendency to corruption, is passing over to the new one which was destined to succeed it. The peculiarity of such a period of transition, conducting from the dissolution of an old, to the dawning life of a new world, is, that on the one hand, we see all the corruptions that had so long been preparing finally reach their highest point, and on the other, occasioned and urged forward by those very corruptions, the reaction of new tendencies of the Christian spirit, betokening new and better times. The stirrings of a new spirit, man- ifesting itself with fresh and ever increasing vigor in its struggles with the old, and the multiform combinations in which new and old appear commingled, form the significant feature of this period. Such periods of transition are of peculiar interest, because we see in them the first unfolding of those germs in which the future lies hidden. These re- marks apply in a particular manner to that ])ortion of the history of the papacy which we propose, first of all, to consider. The power of the papacy, having its seat in the affections of men, and resting on theiv most profound convictions, could not be overthrown by any force coming from Avithout. Every struggle, as we have seen, in which it was aimed to effect this overthrow, resulted eventually in a failure, so long as this power in the mind of the nations was a necessary one in the historical progress of the church. But this power must prepare the way for its own destruction by its increasing Avorldliness, and dese- cration to subserve selfish ends ; and thus were called forth' in ever increasing force, the reactions of the Christian spirit struggling for freedom, and attempts at reform constantly growing more violent. Such VOL. V. 1 2 BONIFACE VIII. a state of things we shall see developing itself more and more distinctly from the time of Boniface VIII. and onward. This pope, a man without any pretensions to spiritual character, or even moral worth, carried papal absolutism to the highest pitch it ever reached ; and he was forced to see himself reduced to the most severe humiliations'; nor can we fail to recognize the guiding hand of a higher wisdom, when we observe how the humiliations to which he was reduced contributed, by the consequences that followed, to bring on that whole train of suc- ceeding contests which made the existing church-system of the medi- eval theocracy totter to its foundation. We shall here be able to trace the connection of one link with another in the chain of these great events, down to the time of the general councils. Cardinal Benedict Cajetan, a man supremely governed by consider- ations of worldly interest, after having, by crafty management, pro- cured the abdication of his predecessor Celestin, Avhose temper presented the strongest contrast to his own, succeeded next, by the same arts, in reaching the consummation of all his wishes and designs, the papal chair ; and his whole administration was of a piece with such a beginning. His suspicions compelled him to keep his prede- cessor closely confined ; for he was afraid that Celestin might be per- suaded to reassert his claims to the papal dignity ; and was certain that if he did so, he would be backed up by a party of malcontents who had always denied the lawfulness of his abdication, since they maintained that he who held the highest station on earth, the pope, could never, either by his own act or that of others, be discharged from the responsibility which God had laid on him. Constant additions would naturally be made to this party, in consequence of the manner in which Boniface administered the papacy, and they would welcome any opportunity of securing for themselves such a rallying point. The anxiety of Boniface was assuredly, therefore, not without foundation. Celestin, however, bore his confinement and the dishonorable treatment to which he was subjected, with calm resignation : and in this confine- ment he met his end in a manner Avorthy of his pious life. A report, which, if not true, shows at least in what light Boniface was regarded by his contemporaries, charges him with the crime of taking off Celes- tin by poison. Boniface manifested from the beginning, that the motives by which he was supremely governed were ambition, avarice and revenge. Con- scientious scruples never deterred him from resorting to any means whereby something more could be added to his treasures. ^ The pope's ' A contemporary, John Villanl, the it was allowable to do anything to ad- Florentine historian, says of him that he vance the interests of the church. The knew how to maintain and promote the same writer remarks that he was a man interests of the church. (Seppe bene man- of lofty spirit, (molto magnanimo,) and tenere e avanzare Ic ragioni dcUa chiesa.) understood well how to play the lord (e But what interests? He explains by say- signorile, lib. 8, cap. 6) ; and he says that ing the pope accumulated a vast amount he was much given to worldly pomp, which of money for the purpose of aggrandizing became his high station (vago fu molto the church, and ennobling his family, hav- della pomparaondana secondo suo stato— ing no scruples about the means (non fit- lib. 8, cap. 64; cfr. Muratori script, rer ceudo conscienza di guadagno), for he said, italic, torn. XIII.) PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. 3 plenitude of power, the Interest of the church, must serve to palHate the worst oppressions. He sowed the seeds of a great deal of corrup- tion, too, in the next succeeding times, by elevating, without the least regard to the good of the church, his own kinsmen to the rank of cardinals, or to the higher spiritual dignities. One bad means to which he resorted to replenish his treasury, was taking advantage of the great festival connected with the ushering in of the fourteenth century : whether the fact was, that the pope's cupidity merely avail- ed itself of an occurrence which would have taken place without his seeking, or whether the whole thing was purely a contrivance of his own. As the beginning of the new century drew near, a report was circulated through Rome, that all persons visiting the church of St. Peter in that city on the first day of January, should obtain an ex- traordinary indulgence. Moved by this report, multitudes flocked to the church towards evening, filling it to overflowing, so that it was nearly impossible to press through the crowd to the altar. This move- ment on the part of the people was regarded as something divine ; or, if it took place naturally, still inasmuch as it had occurred, it was de- termined to make the best of it. The stories of a man over a hundred years old, who related what had been done at the beginning of the pre- ceding century, added to the impression. Thereupon the pope put forth a bull, granting the fullest indulgence to all Romans who for thirty days, and to all strangers who for fifteen days, in this year, reckoning from the Easter festival, should devoutly visit the churches of St. Peter and of St. Paul in Rome ; on the condition, however, carefully specified, that they truly repented and confessed their sins.^ The ex- pression used in the bull was, " the fullest forgiveness of sins," a promise which, thus vaguely expressed, was directly calculated to in- spire many with a greater feeling of security in sin, as well as to encourage the abuse of indulgences. Attracted by this bull, vast multitudes of men and women, of all ages, from districts far and near, flocked together in Rome. In addition to the rest, the exhibition of the pretended handkerchief of St. Veronica was employed as a pow- erful means of excitement. Two hundred thousand pilgrims a day are said to have assembled together in Rome — a source of great gain to the church, as well as of wealth to the Romans. The unspiritual temper of this pope showed itself in the implacable hatred with which he persecuted his enemies. Thus he could not fail to place himself in the most unfavorable light to his contemporaries ; while by other acts into which he allowed his passions to hurry him, he contributed to provoke the storms by which his reign was disturb- ed. When a cardinal, he was zealously devoted to the Ghibelline party ; but no sooner had he become pope, than he turned into a fierce partisan of the Guelphs : and the wrath which he harbored against the former party exceeded all bounds. The following instance may be cited in illustration of his passionate spirit, which could pro- ' The words of the bull ; Non solum rum concedimus veniam peccatorum. pleuam et largiorem, imo plenissimam suo- 4 BONIFACE VIII. AND THE COLONNAS. fanelj dreak forth on the most sacred occasions. We are told that on one occasion when sprinkhng ashes, according to the usage on Ash- VVednesdaj, over the head of an archbishop of Genoa, belonging to the Ghibellines, instead of reciting the words of the Psalm : " Me- mento quia cinis es et in cinerem reverteris," he travestied them, and said : " Quia Ghibellinus es, cum Ghibellinis in cinerem reverteris." Of a pope who could descend to such trifling, it is not difficult to account for the report which got abroad, and which Avas afterwards used against him, that his professions of reverence for the things of faith were wholly without sincerity. At the head of his enemies stood the widely-branched and powerful family of the Colonnas, to which two cardinals belonged. These had opposed Boniface's election, and he therefore hated them. He gladly seized upon an opportunity that soon offered itself, to strike a blow at the whole family. A knight connected with it had attacked and plundered a convoy of the papal treasure on its way to Rome. He took this occasion to put forth, in the year 1297, against the entire family, a terrible bull, recounting all their sins, from distant genera- tions to the present, deposing them from all their spiritual and secular offices, and pronouncing them under the ban. Their castles in Rome were demolished ; their estates confiscated. This step was attended with very important consequences. The two cardinals of the family, who did not recognize the validity of the act by which they were deposed, published a protest * against Boniface and his proceedings. In this they endeavored to prove that he was not to be considered as the lawful pope ; for the pope, being a vicar of Christ, could not be deprived of his office by any one but God. Celestin was still, there- fore, the only lawful pope, whose place could not rightly be filled by the substitution of another individual. But even supposing an abdica- tion of this sort, made by a pope, were ever valid ; it was not so in the case of Celestin, because it had been brought about by cunning and fraudulent management on the part of Boniface.^ They appealed to a general council, to be convened for the purpose of settlmg this dispute, which so nearly concerned the well-being of the whole church. Thus we see, first called forth by the Avicked acts of this pope, an appeal to the higher tribunal of a general council, assembled to pass judgment on the pope ; — an appeal, which, for the present indeed, met with no response, — but is still worthy of notice, as the first impulse towards calling into action a power in the church, which afterwards obtained an ascendency so great, and so dangerous to papal absolutism. At this time, the regularity of Boniface's election was defended against the objections of the Colonnas, by other persons in the service of the Roman court. Controversy with the pen was followed up by a bloody contest between the two parties. The pope ' Printed in the Appendix to Raynal- menta et tales et talia intervenisse multi- di Annales, yeai* 1297, No. 34. pliciter asseruntur, quod esto, quod posset * The noticeable words are: quod in fieri renuntiatio, do quo merito dubitiitur renuntiatione ipsius multaefraudes et doli, ipsam vitiarent et redderent illegitinuua couditiones el intendimeuta et machina- inefficacem et nuUam. PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. 5 used his spiritual power to gratify his personal animosities. He pro- claimed a crusade against the Colonnas ; and to take part in a war of revenge was made a condition of the pardon of sins. The Colonnas were compelled to yield to superior force. In the year 1298, they threw themselves at the pope's feet. He promised them forgiveness, and bestowed upon them absolution. But they found afterwards that they had been deceived by him. They again rebelled ; and the pope renewed his sentence of excommunication. To secure safety to their persons, they fled from Italy. Several of their number betook them- Belves to France, where the pride of the pope soon gave them ample opportunity for revenge.^ In King Philip the Fair of France, the pope found an antagonist quite his equal in avarice and ambition, and in that unflinching jiolicy which never blushed at a crime, though in pursuit of opposite inter- ests. When this king demanded that the spiritual order should in common with all other classes, contribute money towards defraying the expenses of his wars, Boniface, who looked upon this as an en- croachment on the liberties of the church, was induced, in the year 1296, to put forth a bull, known from its commencing words by the title, "■ Clericis laicos," and aimed against King Phihp, though his name is not mentioned. In this bull, all princes and nobles were pronounced under ban, who demanded tribute, under any form, from the church and the clergy ; and all who paid such tribute were in- volved in the same condemnation and penalty. Against this bull the king put forth a declaration, remarkable as containing the evidence of a more liberal spirit, in opposition to the Medieval Theocracy, a spirit which had never, indeed, ceased to propagate itself in opposition to papal absolutism in France, and which was constantly emerging to the light whenever a favorable occasion presented itself; but the language we now hear employed partakes of a bold freedom, such as had not been heard for a long time. The church, it was said, does not consist of the clergy alone, but also of laymen. Tlie liberty which Christ achieved for the faithful, freedom from the doniiniou of sin and of Satan, and from the yoke of the law, belongs not to tlie clergy alone, but also to the laity. Has Christ died and risen again solely for the clergy ? God forbid. Is there such respect for persons with God, as that the clergy alone are to obtain grace in this life and glory in the life to come ? No. To all alike who by faith and love bring forth the fruits of goodness has he promised the reward of eternal felicity ; and the clergy, there- fore, have no title to appropriate exclusively to themselves the ecclesi- astical freedom that belongs to all, understanding thereby the freedom obtained for us by the grace of Christ. But from this universal free- dom, are to be distinguished the special liberties which by the ordi- nances of the popes, the favor, or at least the sufferance of princes, have been bestowed on the ministers of public worship. Yet, by these liberties, kings ought not "to be hindered in the government and defence of their realms ; even as Christ said to the priests of the tem- ple, that they should render to God the things that are God's, and to 'Jaesar the things that are Caesar's. Have not those persons rendered 1 t?ee Villani 8, 2S. 6 BONIFACE VIII. AND PHILrt> THE FAIR. in a perverted sense to God, who have sought to alter and distort the old and natural law according to their own caprice ? What reason- able man must not be filled with astonishment at hearing that the vicar of Christ forbids the emperor to institute tribute ; and with the threat of excommunication fulminates an order, that the clergy should not rally in support of the king, of the realm, nay, in defence of them- selves against unjust attacks, according to their ability ? Next, allusion is made to the worldly lives of the clergy ; and it is objected to the pope, that he connived at this evil, while he prohibited ecclesi- astics from fulfilling their duties to the civil powers. To squander away money, it is said, on theatrical exhibitions and worldly pleasures at the expense of the poor ; to make extravagant expenditures for dress, for horses, for feasts and entertainments, — all this is permitted them, as an example for corrupt imitation. But it was alike con- trary to nature and to reason, to divine law and to human, to be lavish in granting that which is not permitted, and eager to hinder that which is not only permitted, but even necessary. The king avowed his respect for the church and its ministers ; but at the same time declared, that he did not fear the unreasonable and unrighteous threats of men. This first quarrel was, it is true, soon afterwards hushed up, when the king accepted the mediation of the pope in settling his political strifes. In no long time, however, it broke out again with an increase of violence. Boniface complained of the manifold oppressions suffered by the church in France ; and in the year 1301 set forth his griev- ances through a legate, who had already on a previous occasion made himself odious to the French government, and who by his character and his principles which he avowed without reserve, was the very man to bring about a rupture which could not be healed. This was the bishop kSaiset de Pamiers. He told the king, that although the seat of his bishopric came under French jurisdiction, yet, as a bishop he was not the king's subject, but amenable, in secular things as well as eccle- siastical, to the pope. He threatened the king with the ban, and his whole realm with the interdict. Unanswered and with contempt, the bishop was sent out of the kingdom. Soon, however, he ventured to appear again in his diocese. The consequence of his rebellious con- duct was his arrest. It so happened, that the irascible pope, perhaps in the first outburst of wrath, sent a letter to the king, composed with dictatorial brevity, and commencing thus : " Thou art to know, that in things spiritual and temporal, thou art subject to us." - He told him, that the power of bestowing royal benefices depended solely on the pope ; and he ended with these words : "• Those who think otherwise, we hold to be heretics." This curt letter, instead of the usual apos tohc salutation, bore for a superscription : " Deum time et mandatu ejus observa." The style of this epistle might indeed suggest doubts with regard to its authenticity ; but then again how much con- fidence is there to be placed in the passionate temper of a pope, wh^ ' Scire te voluiuus, quod iu spiritualibus et temporalibus nobis subes. PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. 7 set no limits to liis arbitrary "will, and was not always mindful of de- cency. If it was attempted afterwards to deny the official character of such a document, still it does not follow, that such a letter was not actually sent by the pope. There seems to have been no doubt on the subject in the very time of these events.' To this letter the king returned as laconic an answer ; with the ad- dress, " Philip, by the grace of God king of the French, to Boniface, who claims to be the Pope ; little greeting, or rather none at all. 2 " The letter began thus : " Let thy most consummate folly know, that in temporal things, we are subject to no man." ^ What Boniface had affirmed, was here as stoutly denied ; and then to the card which Bo- niface had added, was thrown down another, quite its match. " Those who think otherwise we hold to be foolish or mad."^ Already were the boldest voices heard remonstrating against papal usurpations. In an opinion written upon this letter of the pope, in which it was designed to prove that the pope had, by making such as sertions, fallen into a heresy, the king's advocate, Peter de Bosco, ex pressed himself as follows : The popes before the gift of Constantino, had lived in a condition of the greatest poverty. This gift was, at the beginning, not legally binding ; and it might be revoked were it not for the many years that have since elapsed. But the most righteous punishment which a man can suffer is to ruin himself by his own ac- tions ; as Christ intimated when he said to Peter — " They who take the sword shall perish by the sword ; " and perhaps it would be of ad- vantage to the popes to become as poor as they once were, that they might be as holy. It would be better for them to enter the kingdom of heaven with the poor, than by pride, luxury and rapine, to join company with those who show by the fruits of their daily living, that they do not belong to the kingdom of heaven. If the pope be a ser- vant of God, as he calls himself a servant of the servants of God, he should shun the mortal sins, robbery, luxury and pride ; for Christ came not to destroy the law but to fulfil. ^ The same day on which that shorter letter is said to have been des- patched, on the 5th of December, 1801, the pope sent a very long letter to the king.* In this he set forth in detail all the complaints against him and his government. He exhorts him to reform, threat- ening him, if he does not, with the worst ; a step which he should take only with the greatest reluctance. Next he informs the king, that he ' The language employed in vindication Boniface VIII. et Philippe le Bel, roi de of the pope to be found "among the trans- France. Paris 165.5, p. 75. actions of the papal consistory in the year - Bonifacio sc gerenti pro summo pon- 1302 testifies in favor of the statement in tifice salutem modicam sen nullam. the text. The document, after distinguish- ^ Sciat Tua maxima fatuitas, in tempo- ing this letter from the longer one hereaf- ralibus nos alicui non subesse. ter to be mentioned, goes on to observe : * Secus autcm crcdentes fatuos et de- Dicitur quod una alia litcra fuit missa mentcs putamus. Domino regi, nescio unde veiierit ilia lit- * In the above cited collection, p. 46. era, sed scio quod per fratres sacri collegii •* Complete in the above cited collection non fuit missa, et excuso Dominum of documents, p. 48 : and witli tlie omis- nostrum, quia credo finniter, quod illam sion of the passages expunged bv ordei literara non misit, nee ab eo emanavit. of Clement V, in Raynaldi 1301, No. 28. — Histoire du difterend d'entre le pape 8 BOXIFACE VIII. AND PHILIP THE FAIR. intended to cite the most eminent men of the French church to Rome, to appear there by the first of November of the following year, for the purpose of advising with them as to the best method of removing the grievances above referred to, and of improving the admmistration of the realm. The king might either appear personally at Rome, or he might send agents invested with full powers ; but at all events, he him- self -would not be induced, even should the king omit to do this, to alter his own conduct on that account. " But thou wilt observe " — says he — " what the Lord our God speaks forth in us." Thus the pope set himself up as judge not only in ecclesiastical affairs, but also over the king's government ; for he would have him- self regarded, little as it suited with his character and his habits of life, a sort of theocratic umpire over all the affairs of the world : and so he says, following in this the example of other popes, that God had set him above kings and kingdoms, to pull down and build up. He warns the king against allowing himself to be persuaded by any one, that he had no superiors, that he was not subject to the head of the whole hierarchy ; for whoever thought so was a fool ; and whoever ob- stinately maintained it, showed that he was an infidel. i The validity of such a bull, the king could not, of course, acknow- ledge without denying the sovereignty of his government, and making himself wholly dependant on the hierarchy. The bull was publicly burnt, and that it had been so disposed of, was everywhere announced b}' public proclamation. The disputed principles according to Avhich Boniface here acted, were also theoretically expounded by him, in a bull, constituting an epoch in church history, which from its commencing words is called " Unam Sanctam;"and the papal absolutism therein asserted w^as thus erected into a necessary article of faith. To be sure, this bull contains nothing more ^ than the logically consequent development of the principles on which the entire churchly theocratic system had rested since the time of Gregory VII., that Christ had committed to Peter tw^o swords, — symbols of the spiritual, and of the secular authority. Both swords were dependant therefore on the church. The one was to be drawn hy the church, the other for the church ; the one by the hand of the priest, the other by the hands of kings and soldiers, but at the priests' behest. The secular power must needs, therefore, be subject to the spiritual ; in correspondence to that law of divine order in the world, by which the lower is connected with that which is high- est through various intermediate gradations ; in proof of which the pope appeals to Dionysius the Areopagite. Whenever, therefore, the earthly [jower deviates from right, it must be corrected by the spiritual. Whenever an inferior spiritual power violates its duty, it can be cor- rected only hysisuperior, but the supreme authority can be correct- ed only by God. To supply a ground for this position, the woi'ds of Paul must be perverted ; " He that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he himself is judged of no man."' The assertion that there are twc ' In the above cited (.■oUettiou, p. 48. '* Vid.Raynaldi 1302. No. 13. PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION". 9 powers subsisting independently of each other, is declared to be Ma* nicheism.i That all men must obej^ the pope, is set forth as an article of faith necessary to salvation.'^ This bull was considered in France an encroachment on the king'a authority ; a contrivance to make that authority dependant on the pope. The most emphatic protests were issued against it. The grievances which the church had to suffer from the capricious exercise of papal authority were thereby brought into discussion. In the letter which the nobles of the realm and the bishops sent to the cardinals, com- plaints were made of the pope's bad government of the church, of the arbitrary methods of procedure in the distribution of benefices, where- by the churches were prostrated. It was said that foreigners, that boys, obtained the high offices of the church ; that as such persons lived at a distance from the communities over which they were placed, and could not administer the office in person, the church service fell into neglect ; the wishes of those who had founded the churches, were disregarded ; the prelates were hindered from bestowing the benefices on well-informed clergymen of good standing.3 The Cardinals endea- vored to defend the pope against these complaints. Injustice enough, there doubtless may have been on both sides ; and the two parties may have had sufficient ground for mutual crimination. The pope could appeal to the fact, that a bishop also had instated two boys, his nephews. He had never heard, he says, when vindicating himself before the consistory of cardinals, that the king or a prelate had in- stated, as it behooved them to do, a master in theology ; but he had heard of their instating their nephews, or other unqualified persons. From the reproach also of having encroached upon the royal author- ity and its independent prerogatives, Rome endeavored to clear herself. This conclusion could only have been arrived at, by a falsification or false interpretation of the pope's letter. " For forty years," says Boniface, " I have studied the law ; and well know that two powers are ordained of God. Who then ought to believe, or can believe me guilty of such folly ? "4 And so too affirmed the cardinals. Never had the pope written to the king, that the latter had received from him the secular power, and that therein the king was subject to the pope.^ But how is this to be reconciled with the principles expressed in the bull Unam Sanctam ? To understand this we need only to see clearly into certain distinctions of the papal law. It was verj^ true that the spiritual and secular powers should subsist, each distinct and separate from the other ; and yet, from the moral oversight of the pope nothing should be withdrawn; to his moral tribunal every thing ' Nisi duo sicut Manichacusfingat prin- * See the letter of the harons in the tipia, quod falsuin ct haereticum esse ju- above cited Collection, p. 61 ; the letter of dicanius ; and against this Dualism, the the French church assembly to the pope, beautiful reason that Moses did not say p 69. In principiis, but In principiocoelumDeus * Quis ergo debet credere vel potest, t-reavit <;t terram. quod tanta fatuitas tantainsipientia sit veJ '^ Porro subesse Eomano pontifici omnihu- fuerit in capite nostro ? maiiaj creaturae declaramus, dicimus et dif- ^ In the above cited Collection, p. 63. 4niinus oninino esse de necessitate salutis. 10 BONIFACE VIII. AND PHILIP THE FAIR. must be amenable. And thus, what was conceded to the seculai power with one hand is taken back by the other. By virtue of hia moral tribunal the pope could still make every other power, which he acknowledged to be, in a certain respect, an independent one, depend- ant on himself. Thus, while he acknowledged this sort of relative in- dependence, he might at the same time declare, that the king could no more than any other believer, deny, that he was still subject to the pope in respect of sins.' And accordingly, in that very consistory which was held for the purpose of vindicating the pope, the cardinal- bishop of Porto aiBrmed, " There is a ruler, a chief at the head of the church, whose commands all must obey." This ruler was lord over all, spiritual things and secular. It was a thing not to be doubted by any man, that in reference to sins, the pope had judicial authority over all things temporal. As God had created two luminaries, one to rule the day, the other the night, so had he conferred on the pope spiritual jurisdiction in the highest sense ; on the emperor and princes, jurisdiction in temporal things ; which is always to be understood however, in its connection with the distinction above alluded to ; the distinction between right and pj^actice, as it is here called. It is as- serted, that as certainly as Christ is to be judge over quick and dead, just so certainly this prerogative must also belong to his vicar, the pope. This was a part of the idea of the community of saints. Al- though the secular power, therefore, is not the pope's, as to practice, for Christ commanded Peter to return his sword into its sheath, still it should remain dependant on him,, as to right.^ According to these principles Boniface acted, when he told the king, that if he did not reform, if he refused to let his prelates come to Rome, the pope would depose him, as his predecessors had already deposed three French kings. His arrogant language was, " The king who has done wickedness we will depose as if he was a boy." 3 What means the pope resorted to for extending his dominion over all, we may gather from a boast of his, that he knew all the secrets of the French king- dom. It is true, the king had straitly charged the French prelates not to leave the kingdom. The goods of those who obeyed the pope's cita- tion were sequestrated ; still Boniface required it of them that they should not be hindered by any fear of man from doing their duty. And on the 13th of April, 1303, he issued a bull, pronouncing the king under ban, because he had hindered the prelates from coming to the council at Rome, and oppressed in various w^ys those who did at- tend it, on their return home. When it had come to this, the king iu the same year convoked an assembly of the estates, for the purjwse of consulting with them as to what was to be done to counteract the plots of the pope, and secure against them the safety of the realm. On this occasion charges were brought against the pope in order to furnish ground for a protest against the legality of his government. ' Non potest negare rex, seu quicunque '■' L. e. p- 7(5. alter tidelis, quin sit nobis subjectus ra- •* Nos depoiieremus regem sicuti uiiuia tioiie peecati. garcionem. BONIFACE Vlir, AND PHILIP THE FAIR. 11 These charges did not relate to simony alone, and to profane and worldly pursuits, but also to unnatural licentiousness, and to the gross- est infidelity. It was said, for example, that Boniface denied the im- mortality of the soul, and often, before those with whom he was inti- mate, uttered such language as this : " You fools sillily believe a foolish thing ! Who ever came back from the other world, to tell us anything about it ? Happy they who know how to enjoy life ; and pit- iable creatures are those who lose the present life in hopes of gaining a future one, like the dog that stands over a pool of water with a bit of meat in his mouth, and seeing the reflected image of it, lets go the substance to chase after the shadow."^ He would often quote, it was said, the words of Solomon, " All is vanity ! All will ever continue to be as it has been." If we could credit these accusations, we should have to set down Boniface as the most abominable of hypo- crites ; one who, believing nothing, used spiritual things merely as a means to promote his selfish ends ; a man without any religion what- ever, who, finding papal absolutism ready prepared for his purpose, wielded it for the gratification of his unhallowed passions ; and hence was never restrained by any religious or moral scruples from abusing that power. It would be a remarkable sign of the times, if it were possible to find in his case an infidelity expressed with so much con Bciousness, — an infidelity using superstition merely as a means and a pretext. As to what is said against the moral character of this pope, we certainly have no reason to question the truth of the testimony on that point ; and in a man of so reckless a spirit, in a man so ready to use spiritual weapons to secure his own ends, the transition, it must be allowed, was a very easy one from superstition to absolute infidelity. But the accusations against the pope in relation to the matter of re- ligion, proceeding from his most violent enemies, are not sustained by sufficient evidence. From the contradiction, which was so apparent, between the life and conduct of Boniface and his spiritual vocation and religious professions, men might easily be led to conclude that the pope did not himself put faith in anything he said and did with a view to promote his own designs. Still, however, it is a remarkable sign, that such rumors should get into circulation respecting the reli- gious opinion of a jjope, however incredible many of the things may seem to be, of which this pope_ is accused. With regard to his moral character, the voice of his times is one and the same ; not so with re- gard to the matter of religion. Even those who speak most unfavor- ably of Boniface take no part in accusing him on this point. The fa- mous poet Dante, who certainly stood far enough removed from the papal party, also portrays Bonifiice as an altogether worldly minded man, one ^ho profaned holy things. Yet he does not place him among the unbelievers, the deniers of immortality, in hell ; as he does Frederic II., towards whom he must in other respects have been more favorably inclined, by virtue of his party interest, as a Ghibelline. This surely may be regarded as of some weight in estimating the M'-xlibihty of those charges against the religious views of Boniface. • L. c. p. 328. 12 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. These charges having been formally set forth, it was now proposed that appeal should be made to a general council, before which they could be duly investigated. The proposition was adopted. The assembly appealed to a general council, and to a future lawful pope. Many spiritual and secular bodies united in this appeal, with the pro- viso that the pope should be allowed an opportunity of defending him- self against such charges. Thus, for the second time, we are presented with the case of an appeal to a general council for the purpose of passing judgment on a pope. The pope, of course, pronounced all these transactions disorderly, and unlawful. In opposition to these resolutions and appeals he put foi'th a bull, on the loth of August, 1303. In this, he did not enter minutely into any refutation of the charges brought against his re- ligious views, but simply says: " Where before had it ever been heard, that he was infected with heresies ? Of what individual of his whole family, or of his province of Campania, could this be said ? Whence then this so sudden change, that he who, but a short time ago, had been regarded by the king as lawful pope, should at once be accused as a heretic ? No other reason could be assigned but this, that the pope had considered it his duty to call the king to account for wrongs he had done. A precedent then, was now to be given, that whenever the successor of Peter should propose to correct a prince or powerful noble, he might be accused as a heretic, or a transgressor ; and so reforma- tion would be eluded, and the highest authority completely prostrated. " Far be it from me," he said, " without whom no council can be con- voked, to permit any such precedent to be given." The pope pro- nounces every appeal from him to be null and void. He affirms that none superior or equal to him exists among mortals, to whom an appeal could be made ; that without him, no council could be convoked ; and he reserves it to himself to choose the fit time and place for proceed- ing against the king and his adherents and punishing such guilty ex- cesses, unless they should previously reform, and give due satisfaction, — " so that their blood," says the pope, " may not be required at our hands." The pope, with his cardinals, had retired to his native city Anagni ; and already, on the 8th of September, 1303, had drawn up a new bull of excommunication against Philip, discharging all his subjects from their oath of allegiance and forbidding them any longer to obey him, when, before he could deal the blow, he fell himself a victim to the vengeance of his fiercest enemy. William of Nogaret, the French keeper of the seals, having been commissiomed by the king to announce those resolutions to the cardinals and the pope, and to see them carried into execution, pushed forward, at the head of a troop of armed men, got together with the assistance of several of the ban- ished Colonnas, and entered at early dawn into Anagni. The cry was raised, " Death to Pope Boniface ! long live the king of France ! " The people took sides with the soldiers. The cardinals fled. The pope, forsaken by all, was surrendered as a victim into the hands of his enemies. He showed himself to be firm and courageous in misfor- AEGIDIUS OF ROMB. 13 tune ; and we see plainly how much he might have accomplished, had his bold, energetic will been inspired by a single spark of religious or moral feehng. " Since " said he " I am a prisoner by betrayal, like Christ, it becomes me to die at least like a pope." On the papal throne, clad with all the papal insignia, he awaited his enemies. Nogaret took possession of the pope's person, and of his whole retinue. He descended to low abuse, and indulged himself in scandalous jokes on his prisoner. Boniface, who thought he had good cause to look out for poison, found himself reduced to the most deplorable condition. But three days had scarcely elapsed before a change took place in the fickle populace. They were seized with pity towards the forsaken Boniface, and indignation against those who had reduced him to this state. The multitude ran together, shouting, " Long hve Boni- face ! death to his betrayers ! " Thus the French were driven from the city, and Boniface, set at liberty, was enabled to return to Rome. But he did not escape the fate which he had drawn down on his own head. Mortified ambition and pride, as it would seem, threw him into a mental distemper, which terminated in insanity. He never got up from it, and died in this state on the 12th of-October, 1303. On this unhappy end of Boniface, the Florentine historian, Villani,' judging according to the prevailing opinion of his age, makes the following com- ment : " We ought not to be surprised at the judgments of God in first punishing, after this manner, Pope Boniface, a man more worldly than became his station, and one who did much that was displeasing to God, — and then punishing him also who was employed as the instru- ment of the pope's punishment; not so much on account of his treat- ment of Boniface personally, as on account of his trespass against the Divine Majesty, of which the pope is the representative on earth." This issue, in which a defence so conducted of papal absolutism pushed to the farthest extreme resulted, was important not only in it- self, but also on account of the grave consequences to which it imme- diately led ; the contest between the papal-court system of the Middle Ages and a more liberal tendency which gathered strength and bold- ness every day. As the first representatives of the latter appear, amidst these controversies, two distinguished writers, — the Augustinian Aegidias of Home, afterwards archbishop of Bourges, and the Parisian Theologian John of Paris, a Dominican, of whom we have already spoken in the section relating to the doctrine of the Lord's Supper, in the preceding period. The former composed, in the usual scholastic form, a controversial tract, in opposition to the pope's absolute authority, as asserted by Boniface in the above-men- tioned shorter bull, — another evidence of the authenticity of that bull which ought not to be overlooked.'^ From the fact, that the pope was the vicar of Christ, it had been attempted to prove his universal authority ; but in this tract the idea of such a vicarship was used for a directly contrary purpose. We ' Lib. 8. 63. In Goldasti monarchia sacri imperii, torn ^ Quaestio disputata in utramque par- II. tein pro et contra potificiam potestatem. VOL. V. 2 14 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTIOX. here see the Avay already preparing for a tendency, which from this time forward appeared under various forms, and preceded the Refor- mation, — the tendency which aimed to set forth prominently the con- trast between the pope as he was, and that which he ourrht to be as vicar of Christ. Although, — it is said, — Christ might have been Lord over all, yet he did not use this power. In fact, he declined the royal authority whenever it was offered to him, John vi. When the multi- tude would have made him king, be escaped from their hands, thereby teaching his followers to shun an insatiable covetousness, and restless ambition. Thus he spiritually gave example to his representatives on earth, that they should not cov6t imperial or royal honors, still less take upon themselves any such dignity. It was also to be reckoned as a part of the same lesson, that he refused to interfere in settling disputes about inheritance, Luke xii. " The Son of God ever disdained acting as a judge over temporal possessions, though ordained of God to be the judge of quick and dead." Neither should his representa- tives, therefore, intermeddle with matters of temporal jurisdiction. Christ permitted neither Peter nor the other apostles to exercise secu- lar dominion ; on the contrary, he constantly enjoined on them hu- mility, and instead of secular power, recommended to them great poverty. They were to have neither gold nor silver. Aegidius ap- peals to the words of Peter in the Acts, " Silver and gold have I none." The apostles were to be spiritually minded ; to withdraw themselves from earthly things, as far as human frailty permitted ; to be absorbed in things spiritual and eternal ; to watch over the welfare of souls. For Christ knew that temporal things ruffle the temper, distract the spirit, and sink it wholly in the world. As to the question regarding the relation of the two powers to each other, Aegidius distinguishes the different classes of affairs. In mat- ters purely spiritual, such as questions of matrimony, the secular power was undoubtedly subordinate to the spiritual. But with matters purely secular, such as feudal and criminal causes, the case stood otherwise. These things God had committed especially and directly to secular rulers ; and with such, neither the popes nor any other prelates of the most ancient church had ever intermeddled. The defenders of papal absolutism maintained, that the church, being one body, can have but one head ; that a body with two heads would be a monster. To this he replied : Properly speaking, the church has assuredly but one head, which is Christ ; and from him are derived the two powers, spiritual and temporal ; yet, in a certain re- spect, the pope may be called head of the church, inasmuch as he is the first among the servants of the church — the one on whom the whole spiritual order depends. This conception of the papal power, as referring solely to that which is necessary or profitable to salvation, to ends purely spiritual, is ever kept distinctly in view by this writer. The sophistical defenders of papal absolutism were disposed to find in the comprehension of all things in one unity under the pope as head over all, a restoration of tliat original state, in which Adam was the universal head. To this Aegidius answered : that the comparison did JOHN OF PARIS. 'lo not apply ; for in man's original condition, there could not have been states ; and then again, all must have been spiritually-minded. There may have been, indeed, a certain rule of subordination, as there are different grades among the angels ; yet no such relation of rulers and subjects, as belongs to the idea of a state. It had been a governing principle ever since the time of Gregory VII., that the pope could absolve subjects from their oath of alle- giance ; and from this it was inferred that his authority must extend also to temporal things. But Aegidius would concede the principle thus assumed, only under certain limitations. " The pope," says he, " can absolve subjects from their oath of allegiance, or rather declare that they are so absolved." By this latter clause, he doubtless meant to have it understood, that the pope cannot here express an arbitrary judgment, but only testify to a fact, or state that it had its real ground in the very nature of law itself. But this could be done only in those cases in which he was warranted also to take steps against a ruler ; as in cases of heresy, of schism, or of obstinate rebellion against the Roman church. The "plenitude of power" ascribed to the pope, a prerogative which the popes so often appealed to, as one which enabled them to carry through all their measures, Aegidius would allow to be valid only under certain limitations. It was valid only in reference to the souls of men ; only in reference to the binding and loosing, and only on the presupposition that the pope's decision was not an erroneous one. He could not bestow renewing grace on souls ; he could neither save nor condemn them ; he could not forgive sins, except so far as he was the instrument of a higher power. Even in spiritual things, no such un conditional fulness of power was to be attributed to him ; but only a fulness of power as compared with that of subordinate church author- ities. It was an argument, indeed, often used, that as the spiritual is so far exalted above the temporal, therefore he who has supreme pow- er over the spiritual must a fortiori exercise that power over the temporal. Aegidius exposes the sophistry of this argument, by re- marking that this mode of reasoning a majori ad minus was valid only as applied to matters the same in kind, and not to those differing in kind ; else we might argue that he who can beget a man, can much more beget a fly : he who is a curer of souls, can much more cure the body. Moreover, to the historical facts, which the defenders of an vuilim- ited papacy construed so as to accord with their own interests, this writer assigned their legitimate place ; as, for example, to the depos- ition of Childeric III. by Pope Zacharias. " It is nowhere read," says Aegidius, " that the pope deposed him, but only that he advised io that step. It was by the estates of the realm that Childeric was deposed, and Pepin proclaimed in his place ; but they could have done the same thing without the pope's advice." The second of the above mentioned individuals, John of Paris, in his treatise of Royal and Papal authority,' speaks of two errors, which ' De potestate regia et papali, in tlie above cited Collection of Goldast. torn. II. 16 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. he represents as running into opposite extremes ; the opinion of the Waldenses, that the pope and prelates ought not to exercise secular dominion of any kind ; and the opinion of those who considered Christ's kingdom an earthly one. Of these latter, he points to Herod I. as the representative ; for Avhen he heard that Messiah the King was born, he could conceive of nothing but an earthly king. " Just so," he says, " in modern times, many in trying to avoid the error of the Waldenses, fall into the opposite extreme of considering the pope to be vicar of Christ in having dominion over the earthly goods of princes, and of ascribing to him such a jurisdiction." This doctrine, lie thinks, would lead to the error of Vigilantius ; for it would follow from it, that renunciation of earthly power and earthly rule contra- dicted the vocation of the pope as vicar of Christ : whence, again, it would follow, that such renunciation was no part of evangelical perfec- tion. This opinion seems to him to savor somewhat of the pride of the Pharisees, Avho taught that if the people paid tythes and offerings to God, they were under no obligation to pay tribute to Caesar. He describes it as dangerous, because it removes the right of property "which they previously possessed from such as are converted to Chris- tianity, and transfers it to the pope. It would reflect discredit on the Christian faith, which would thus seem to stand in conflict with social order ; and it was to be feared that when traffic thus found entrance into the house of God, Christ would lay hold of the scourge to purify the temple. The truth, however, was represented as lying in the middle between these two errors. It was this, that secular rule and worldly possessions were in no wise inconsistent with the calling of the pope or the prelates ; but still they were in no respect necessarily im- plied in that vocation ; but were only permissible, and might be used, when bestowed either by the devotion of Christians or from any other quarter. In separating the two powers, the author makes use of that distinc- tion between the natural and supernatural destination of man, of which we spoke in giving the history of scholastic theology in the preceding period.! Answering to the one, is the realization of the end which the State proposes, by means of the natural virtues ; for this object civil government is instituted. Answering to the other, is the destination to life eternal ; and for this the spiritual power has been established. Both powers are derived immediately from the supreme, divine power. And he, like Aegidius, refutes the argument, that because one is a superior, the other an inferior province, the latter must therefore be subject to the former. The priest, in spiritual things, was greater than the prince ; but in temporal things, the prince was greater than the priest ; though absolutely considered, the priest was the greater of the Uwo. It is maintained that the pope has no power of control even over the goods of the church. These were bestowed by certain individ- uals, who gave them to the church in behalf of the ecclesiastical com- monwealth, for the furtherance of its ends ; to this commonwealth alone 1 See vol. iv. p. 487. JOHN OF PARIS. 17 they belonged. The administration of this trust devdved solely on the prelates, and the pope had the general direction of this administration. Hence he concludes that the pope could in no wise dispose of the goods of the church at will, so that whatever he should ordain about them must be obligatory ; but the power conferred on him related simply to the wants or to the a^lvantage of the universal church. As a monastery could deprive its abbot, a particular church its bishop, if it was proved that the former squandered the goods of the monastery, the latter the property of the church, so too the pope, if found guilty of any such unfaithful administration, and if after being admonished he did not reform, might be deposed : whereupon he adds, " But, according to the opinion of others, this could onli/he done, perhaps, by a general coun- cil." John of Paris cites a doctrine held forth by the advocates of papal absolutism, that even though one rightfully opposed the arbitrary will of the pope in the administration of church property, still the lat- ter might remove him from his office. He says, on the other hand, " They lift their mouths against heaven, and do foul wrong to the pope, who thus make his will a disorderly, arbitrary will, when it is to be presumed that the will of so great a father can never be so in conflict with justice, as that he should, without good and sufficient reasons, take away his own from any one ; for God never takes from any one that which he has given him, except for his own fault. As the govern- ment of Christ is not a worldly one, so he maintained the vicarship of the pope could not relate to the things of the world. Christ rules in the faithful, only through that which is highest in them, through the spirit which has submitted to the obedience of faith. His kingdom is a spiritual one, having its foundation in the hearts of men, not in their possessions. We have seen, that by the advocates of papal absolutism, a distinc- tion Avas made between the secular power in itself, and in its exercise ; so that the former was held to proceed immediately from the pope, but the latter to depend wholly upon the sovereigns, to have been conferred by God on them alone. This distinction John of Paris declares to be absurd and inconsistent. It would follow from it, says he, that the princes were also called upon to judge how the pope exercised his power, and that they might deprive him of it ; Avhich, however, is de- nied by these men when they assert that the pope can be judged by no )oan. And how is the pope to receive from princes what does not belong to him by the ordinance of God ? and how is he to give them what he himself receives from them ? The princes, according to this loctrine, would be servants of the pope, as the pope is the servant of Jod, which contradicts what is said in Rom. xiii, about magistrates being ordained of God. Moreover, the power of rulers was, as a matter of fact, both in itself and in its exercise, prior in tiiije to the power of the pope. He also stood up in defence of the independent power of the bish- ops and priests, and denied that' this was derived from God only through the mediation of the pope, maintaining, that it springs direcdy from God, through the choice or concurrence of the communities. Foi 9* 18 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. it was not Peter, whose successsor is the pope, that sent forth the other apostles, whose successors are the bishops ; or who sent forth the seventy disciples, whose successors are the parish i riests ; but Christ himself did this directly. It was not Pater who detained the apostles in order to impart to them the Holy Ghost ; it was no!; he who gave them power to forgive sins ; but Christ. Nor did Paul say, that he received from Peter his apostolical office ; but he said that it came to him directly from Christ or from God ; that throe years had elapsed after he received his commission to preach the gospel, before he had an interview with Peter. He maintains again, that ecclesiastical jurisdiction has reference solely to things spiritual. The most extreme penalty which the pope could threaten was excommunication ; all else was but a consequence accidentally connected with that penalty. Thus he could only ope- rate indirectly, so that a prince on whom he pronounced sentence of excommunication for some oflfence coming under his jurisdiction, might be deposed, in case he threatened to put under ban all who should obey him as sovereign, and thus brought about his removal by means of the people. But similar to this, was the relation of rulers also to the pope, considered with reference to the particular provinces of their power. If the pope gave scandal to the church, and showed himself incorrigible, it was in the power of secular rulers to bring about his abdication or his deposition by means of their influence on him or on his cardinals. And if the pope would not yield, the empe- ror might so manage as to compel him to yield. He might command the people, under severe penalties, to refuse obedience to him as pope. Thus both pope and emperor could proceed one against the other ; for both had a general jurisdiction, the emperor in temporal, the pope in spiritual things. At the same time he expressly declares, that all he had said respecting this power of the pope over princes could relate only to such things as came under spiritual jurisdiction ; such as mat- ters relatinti to the marriage-covenant, and matters of faith. But when a king violated his obligations, as a ruler, it was not in the pope s power to correct this evil directly. All that he could do was to apply to the estates of the realm ; but if these could not or dared not correct their sovereign, they were authorized to invoke the assistance of the church. So on the other hand, if the pope transgressed in temporal things, the investigation of which belonged to the civil jurisdiction, the emperor had a right first to correct him by admonition, and then to punish him, by virtue of his authority as a minister of God to execute wrath on evil-doers : Rom. xiii. But if the pope did wrong in spirit- ual things, if he committed simony, encroached on the rights of the church, taught false doctrines, he ought first to be set right by the car- dinals, standing, as they did, at the head of the clerus. But if he proved incorrigible, and they had not the power to rid the church of the scandal, they were bound to invoke the assistance of the secular arm, and the emperor might employ against the pope the powers which God had put into his hands. He refers, for an example, to the deposi- tion of Pope John XII by the emperor Otho I. When the de- oOHN OF PARIS. BENEDICT XI. 19 fenders of papal absolutism took the passage in the first epistle to the Corinthians, and perverted it to their purpose, " He that is spiritual judge th all things, but he himself is judged of no man," he replied : " The passage has no such application, for the apostle is only speaking of persons spiritually minded ; but the possessor of the spiritual power is not always such a person. Furthermore, he asserts that the unity of the church, as one spiritual body, is not founded on Peter or on Linus, but on Christ, who alone is in the proper and highest sense the head of the church : from whom are derived the two powers, in a certain series of gradations ; yet the pope might, in reference to the outward service of the church, be called head of the church ; inasmuch as he is the first among her servants, the one on whom, as the first vicar of Christ in spiritual things, the whole regular series of church ministers depends. He disputes the binding force of the pretended gift of Con- stantine to Pope Silvester. He declares this gift a preposterous one ; and cites a legend, frequently alluded to by the opponents of the pa- pacy, that at the time of this gift the voice of an angel was heard saying, To-day a vial of poison has been poured upon the church. John of Paris finally enters into a particular investigation of the question whether the pope can be deposed, or can abdicate. What conclusions he must have arrived at on this point, may be gathered from the preceding remarks. He distinctly affirmed, that as the pa- pacy existed only for the benefit of the church, the pope ought to lay down his office whenever it obstructed this end, the highest end of christian love. Such were the most noticeable of the immediate consequences result- ing from the high pretensions set up for the papal power by Boniface Vill. We see expressed here for the first time, in opposition to the arbitrary will of the pope, principles, by the operation of- which, in the midst of the events with which this century closed, a new shap- ing could not fail to be given to the laws and constitutions of the church. The successor of Boniface, a very different man from himself, was Benedict XI., a Dominican, who, up to this time, had lived strictly according to the rule of his order. As a pope, too, he showed a be- coming zeal for the welfare of the church, and sought to correct the evils occasioned by the arbitrary will of his predecessor. He did eve- rything he could honorably do, to restore a good understanding with the French government. But it was only for the short period of eight months that he was permitted to rule. He died in 1304 ; and a re- port prevailed that he was poisoned by the cardinals ; ^ a noticeable sign of the times, when reports like these — a similar one prevailed about the death of Celestin V. — were so repeatedly noised abroad. A great fermentation would necessarily ensue at the election of a new pope. It was known that the exasperated king of France still cherished sentiments of revenge against Boniface VIII., and was determined to have him convicted and condemned, as a heretic, ' See Villain, lib. 8, cap. 80. 20 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. even after his death. The party of Boniface had to strain ever_y nerve to vindicate his honor. Thus the election of a pope was retard- ed by the contest between an Itahan party, devoted to the interests of Boniface, and a French party. Nine months had this schism last- ed, when the cunning and sagacious cardinal da Prato (du Prat), who led the French party, proposed a plan by which they might come to- gether and unite in a choice. The other party, the Italians, should nominate three candidates from their own number, and out of these one should be chosen by the French within forty days. The Italian party doubtless thought themselves secure of the victory ; for they selected three men, who had been elevated to the rank of cardinals by Boniface VIII., to whom they were thoroughly devoted, and at the same time, fiercely inimical to the king of France. But the car- dinal du Prat outwitted them. He knew his men. He knew how to find among the selected three, one who was ready to pay any price that might be asked for the gratification of his ambition. This was Bertrand d'Agoust, bishop of Bordeaux, who was reckoned among the most zealous adherents of Boniface, and the most violent enemies of king Philip. With the latter he had had a personal quarrel. The cardinal du Prat reported to the king of France, as speedily as possi- ble, all that had transpired, and explained to him how it now stood in his own power to create, the pope. He might offer the papal dignity to the archbishop of Bordeaux on whatever terms he thought proper. The king sought an interview with the much surprised bishop. He showed him what he could do. He offered him the papal dignity on condition of his compliance with six conditions. Among them were the follow- ing : That he should reconcile the king and his friends to the church ; pardon everything that had taken place ; give up to him for five years the tenths in his whole kingdom to defray the expenses of war ; restore to the Colonnas their cardinal dignities ; moreover, that he should pro- mote several of the king's friends to the same rank, and institute an investigation into the heresies of Boniface. There was still a sixth condition which, for the present, was to be kept a profound secret. Perilous as several of these conditions must have been to the papal and christian conscience of the pope, yet he was ready to sell his soul for the papal dignity, and he accepted them all. This was done in the year 1305. He called himself pope Clement V. To the great vexation of the Italian cardinals he did not come to Rome, but re- mained at home in France, and had the ceremony of his coronation performed in Lyons. The way in which he administered the papal government corresponded entirely to the way in which he had obtain- ed it. What the Italians had predicted, when the pope, in despite of every invitation, refused to leave France, actually took place. Rome did not very soon again become the seat of the papacy. From the year 1309 and onward this seat was transferred to Avignon ; and here begins a new important epoch in the history of the papacy, the seventy years residence of the popes in Avignon. Let us in the first place take a general view of the consequences of these exceedingly intiuen- tial events. ELECTION OF CLEMENT V. 21 As the independence of the seat of the papal government m the ancient capital of the world had largely contributed towards promoting the triumph of the papacy ; so the dependence, into which the popes fell when removed at a distance from the ancient seat of their spiritual sovereignty, led to consequences of an opposite kind. With Clement V. began this disgraceful servility of popes dependant on the interests of France ; a situation for which Clement had prepared the way by the manner in which he obtained the papal dignity. The popes at Avignon were often little better than tools of the French kings, who used their spiritual power to promote the ends of French policy. They served those kings in matters which stood in most direct contra- diction to their spiritual vocation. They could not fail to make them- selves odious and contemptible by the manner in which they acted in these relations. The papal court at Avignon became the scat of a still greater corruption than had disgraced the papal court in Rome. The popes at Avignon took the liberty to elevate to the highest spirit- ual dignities, to the rank of cardinals, persons the least fitted, by age, by character, or by education, for such stations, — the most worthless of men, either their own nephews, or persons recommended to them by the French court ; and these Avignonese cardinals were in the habit of abandoning themselves to every species of luxury and debauchery. The extortions which, to the ruin of the church, were practised by the Roman court, rose to a continually higher pitch and extended over a greater compass, from the time of Clement V., who already provoked thereby many complaints in France. The example of a wasteful ex- penditure of church property, of simony and cupidity, here given by the popes, found ready imitation in otlier churches, and the corrup- tion of the church in all parts grew more atrocious every day. The popes at Avignon .would abate nothing from the old system of the papal hierarchy, but rather pushed its pretensions to still greater lengths. But the want which they betrayed of spiritual dignity, the bad use they made of their power, the merely secular interest by which they were so manifestly governed, stood in direct contradiction with the tone in which they spoke. The quarrels in which they involved themselves by their exercise of the papal power, brought it about, that all the wickedness which reigned in the papal court at Avignon, and which spread from that spot into the rest of the church, became matter of common conversation. These quarrels served to call forth many more of those voices of freedom, such as had first been heard during the contests with Boniface VIII. ; and still bolder opinions were expressed. A powerful reaction gradually forced a way for it- self against the papal monarchy. Add to this, that the freer church- ly spirit, which from the earliest times we perceive in the Gallic church, and which was never in want for means of expressing itself, obtained at this particular crisis a mighty organ in the university of Pans. At this university, which in the period before us formed so Important a corporation, there was gradually developing itself an inde- pendent and liberal theological tendency. }jy the men of this univer- sity, the conduct of the pojjes and their relations at Avignon were ij2 PAPACY AND CHURCH COXSTITUTIOIsr. keenly watched. The popes found severe judges m them. While the French cardinals could not tear themselves away from their plea- sures at Avignon, and from the territory of France, nothing was more hateful to the Italian cardinals than what appeared to their eyes, a most lamentable exile of the Roman court. Nothing appeared to them a greater scandal, than that dependance on French interests. This opposition between the two parties prepared the way for a schism, which was soon to break out, and which drew after it the most impor- tant consequences. , Clement had soon to experience some of the deplorable effects resulting from the relation, in which he had voluntarily placed himself to King Philip. After the death of the emperor Albert I., in the year 1308, King Philip conceived the plan of elevating his brother, Prince Charles de Valois, to the imperial throne ; and the pope was to serve as the instrument for carrying it into execution. This, it was said, was the condition that had been kept so profound a secret. The king intended to take the pope by surprise, to come upon him sud denly, with a numerous train of armed followers. But the plan was divulged to the pope. As the Italian historian in this period, Villani, expresses himself ; — "It pleased God, so to order it, that the Roman church should not thus be wholly subjected to the court of France ; " ' for, had this project been carried out, the servitude of the pope would have been doubled. Now, as the pope had not courage enough to take an open stand against the king, he resorted, by the advice of the crafty du Prat, to trick and decejition, for the purpose of defeating the king's object. While he ostensibK granted the king's request, he secretly invited the German princes to hasten the emperor's election^ and gave his vote for Count Henry of Luxemburg. The latter, Henry VII., was elected emperor; and Philip saw his favorite plan defeated. He now pressed the more ui gently to have the process begun against Boniface. The weak pope was obliged to permit that, in the year 1310, the matter should be brouiiht before the papal consistory. By the enemies of Boniface the most atrocious things were charged against him. This, under the existing circumstances, could not fail to give great scandal to many. From several quarters, particularly from Ar ragon and Spain, complaints were uttered against so scandalous a spectacle ; and the pope was called upon to put a stop to it. Under the pretext that a general council was to be convoked at Vienne, and that there these affairs could be transacted with far greater publicity and solemnity, he induced King Phihp, finally, to consent that the affair should be put off to the above-mentioned council. At this coun- cil in Vienne, which met in the year loll, the memory of Boniface was at length solemnly vindicated. But the pope, moreover, put forth a declaration, placing the king in security agahist all the consequeucea which might ilow from his acts against Boniface, and from the bulls put forth by Boniface all those clauses were expunged or altered which were hostile to French interests. ' Come piacqiie a. Dio, per non volere toposta alia casa di Fi-aucia. Villaui, lib. che la Chicsa di lloiua fosse al tutto sot- 8, c. 101, fol. IST- POPES AT AVIGNON (jOHN XII.) 23 At the council of Vienne was terminated also another affair in which Clement had, in the most shameful manner, submitted to be used as a tool of the French king. The order of the Knights Templar had, by the power and wealth of their establishments, excited the jealousy of many. Various rumors were afloat respecting this order, — rumors which are the less to be trusted, because we find in times the most widely remote from each other similar reports concerning societies veil- ed from the popular ej^e, and which in some way or other have incurred the popular odium ^ — whispers of unnatural abominations, supposed to be practised in their secret conclaves. Persons of that order guilty of criminal offences, had, while in prison, preferred charges against it, with a view to procure their own release. King Philip the Fair would, no doubt, be glad to believe anything which would put it in his power to lay hold of the property of the order. In the year 1307, he caused all the Knights Templar in France to be arrested. The trials were con- ducted in the most arbitrary manner. At first, the pope complained that the king should bring before a civil tribunal a suit against a spiritual or- der, accusations relating to heresy and infidelity. He entered a protest against the procedure of the king ; but had not courage to follow up the step he had taken. At length, in the year 1308, he joined the king in carrying on a common process. There has been much dispute respecting this affair. But even though individuals of the order may have been guilty of various excesses, may by reason of their residence in the East have fallen into infidelity, yet no sufficient reason appears to have existed for condemning the order at large. Expressions, for the most part extorted by the rack, and which were often taken back in the extremity of death, ought not, surely, to pass for good evidence. Indeed, when justice is so arbitrarily administered, what evidence of guilt can be deemed satisfactory ? Now, when many of the Knights Templar had already fallen victims to mere tyrannical will, Clement, at a council in the year 1311, declared the order abolished. Clement died in 1314, leaving behind him a bad reputation, not merely among the Italians, who could not pardon in him the transportation of the papal court to Avignon, but also among the French. The judgment passed upon him we may doubtless regard as an unanimous one.^ The Italian historian, Villani, says of him, that he was very greedy of money, given to simony, and to luxury. Respecting his morals, unfa- vorable rumors were afloat. All benefices were said to be disposed of for money.* When, owing to the division among the cax'dinals, the papal chair had remained vacant during a period of two years, the French party once more triump'hed, and John XXII. , another Frenchman, succeeded in mounting the papal throne. Like his predecessor, this pope was bent on indemnifying himself for his dependance on France, by main- taining the papal absolutism in relation to Germany. On the occasion of a contest for the election of an emperor — betw^ea the Archduke ' Compare the two accounts of his life Avign. torn. I, and what Vilhmi says, wliich JJaluz has published in the vit. pap. * Villani. lib. 9. c 58. 24 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. Frederic of Austria on the one side, and Duke Louis of Bavaria or. the other — the pope Avas desirous of securing the decision to himself. He wanted that everything should depend on his vote. He would not pardon it in Duke Louis (Louis IV.) that he should be so confident of his power as to act as emperor without waiting for the pope's de- termination : that he should form an alliance with the pope's enemies, the Ghibellines in Italy. Negotiations were of no avail. The matter proceeded onward till it came to a war of ever increasing animosity between the pope and the emperor. The former pronounced the emperor under ban, in denunciations growing continually more violent and laid all those portions of Germany where he was recognized as emperor, under the interdict. The emperor appealed from the pope to a general council, before which he might be allowed to prove the justice of his cause to holy church and the apostoUcal see. Fierce struggles in Germany followed as the consequence ; and amid these contests many freer voices caused themselves to be heard. By some, the interdict was observed ; by others, not. In many districts, eccle- siastics, who were for observing the interdict, were banished.^ The empei'or, in the year 1327, followed the invitation of his friends in Italy and Rome, the Ghibellines, who invited him into that country. This expedition of the emperor was attended with consequences of great moment to the general progress of religion. Pope John had provoked dissatisfaction in many, and these took the side of the em peror. Under his protection, free-minded men could express them selves in a way which elsewhere would not have been suffered to go unpunished. Various matters of dispute were here brought together, and placed in connection with the contest which was now waging be- tween the papacy and the empire, the church and the secular power, the spiritual and the secular interest. We have, in the preceding period, spoken of the controversies between the more rigid and the laxer party of the Franciscans. We saw how the more rigid Franciscans, in their contests with the popes, had been led into a course of reaction against the secularization of the church. Pope John XXII., who, with his obstinate temper, was bent on deciding all uncertain matters, had stirr- ed up these controversies anew, by taking part against the more rigid Franciscans. He refused to recognize a distinction set forth by some, that while Christ and the apostles made use of earthly goods, they did not in any proper sense own anything — the distinction between a bare usufruct, and an earthly possession in the strict and proper sense. The more rigid Franciscans rebelled against his decisions, and even had the boldness to accuse him of heresy. There were among them at ' See the Chronicle of tlie Franciscan mutually accusetl each other of heresy on John of Winterthur : Et interim clerus account of their different modes of pro gravitur fuit anj^ariatus et compulsus ad cedure : Illae mutuo se sinistra judicabani divina resumenda, et plures annuerunt, mutuo sibi non communicabant, sed fre- non verentes latam sentuntiam, iiec ultio- quenter se exclude bant, unaqufeque suo nem divinam. Multi etiam erant inoliedi- sensu secundum verbum apostoli quasi ili- entes, et ob hoc de locis suis expulsi, et sic cam abundabat. Tle^aur. hist. heU it. Ti tandem facta fuit lamentabilis ditformitas yuri, 1735, p. 29. ecclesiarum. And of the churches that JOHN XXII. " DEFNESOR PACIS." 25 that time men of courage and sagacity, such as Michael of Chesena, general of the order, who was deposed by the pope ; William Occam of England, distinguished among the philosophers and theologians of his time. AH these embraced the party of the em]:)eror. Occam said to him : " Defend me with the sword, and I will defend you with the pen." The inquiries respecting evangelical perfection, respecting the following after Christ, the different modes of the possession of proper- ty, were easily connected with the inquiries respecting the relation of spiritual things to secular in general. Especially worthy of notice ia a work which was called forth by these disputes, the title of which in- dicates its contents — Defensor Pads. Its object was to show that, inasmuch as church and state had their natural limits severally as- signed to them, the peace between the two should thereby be defin- itively settled. Its author was the emperor's physician and theologian, Marsilius of Padua, earlier rector of the University of Paris. It is true, John of Janduno, in Champagne, a Franciscan, is also mentioned as co-author of this book ; and doubtless he may have had some share in its composition ; but, at all events, the work itself indicates plainly enough that it is the product of one mind, and of an individual who speaks of what he had seen and heard himself. It is in truth a work that made an epoch. Not merely the excesses of the later papacy are attacked in it, but the very foundations of the hitherto existing fabric of the church are assailed. A new position is here taken — an entirely new method and way of looking at Christian truth. The whole Old Testament theocratical element is discarded. This important appearance, the fore-token of a new, protestant spirit, such as we could hardly expect to meet with in the times we are speaking of, deserves, therefore, to be somewhat more minutely considered by us- The rock on which the Church reposes he holds to be Christ alone, its author and founder.' The words of Christ, " Upon this rock I will build my church," he refers to Christ himself. In reply to those who supposed, that the church destitute of a visible head would be in want of something essential to its organization, just as if it were a body without a head, he says : " Christ ever continues to be the head of the church ; all apostles and ministers of the church are but his mem- bers;" and he appeals in proof to Ephesians iv. And accordingly Christ himself plainly said, that he would be with her to the end of the world .2 The highest 30urce of knowledge of the doctrines of faith was, in his view, the holy Scriptures. 3 ""By the apostles" says he, " as organs immediately actuated and guided by divine power, the ' Qui caput est et petra, super quam si earn absque capite in sui absentia reli- f'undata est ecclesia catholica. He refers quisset, possumus dieere, quod Christua for proof to the fourth chapter of the Epis- semper caput remansit ecclesiae, oinnes- tle to the Ephesians, and 1 Cor. x. See que apostoli et ecclesiastici ministri mem p. 246, cap. 17, in Gokhisti monarchia llo- bra. L. 1. p. 301. man. imp. Francofurt. 1668, torn. II. * A sacro canone tanquam a fonte veri- '' Et cum inducebatur, ecclesiam ace- tatis quaesitce facientes exordium caet phahim esse, uctpie fuisse ordiuatam a L. 1. pag. 232. Chrisio secundum optimam dispositiouem, VOL. V. 3 26 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. precepts and counsels guiding to eternal salvation have been commit- ted to writing, that in the absence of Christ and the apostles we might know what they are." ' The author takes his point of departure from a more sharply defined distinction of the ideas of church and state. The idea of the state he takes from an Ante-Christian point of view, inasmuch as he adopts the Politics of Aristotle, the standard authority at that time for the determination of such ideas. The state is a Bociety of men having reference to the eartldy life and its interests; 2 the church, a society having reference to the eternal hfe ; where we find expressed the relation of the natural to the supernatural, answer- ing to a distinction already noticed between the dona naturalia and super-addlta. The state became necessary in order to counteract sin. Had man continued loyal to the divine will, no such institution would have been required.^ He finds the difference between the Old and the New Testament dispensation to consist in this, that under the for- mer, civil laws as well as religious were made known and sanctioned by divine authority. But Christ had kept all these matters in abey- ance. He had left them to be settled by human laws, which all the faithful should obey. He refers for proof to the words of Christ, " Give to Caesar the things that are Caesar's," and to Romans xiii.'* To the assertion that the gospel would be an imperfect dispensation if civil relations could not also be ordered and settled by means of it ; he replies, the two provinces ought clearly to be distinguished. The evangehcal law is sufficient for its specific end, which is to order the actions of men in this present life so as to secure the life eternal. It was not given for the end of determining law in reference to the rela- tions of this earthly life. It was for no such end that Christ came into the world. Hence the necessity of distinguishing different rules of human conduct by their relation to different ends. One is a divine rule which gives no instruction whatever about conducting suits in civil law, and actions for recovery ; nor yet, does it forbid this. And for this reason the gospel gives no particular precepts with regard to such matters. This belongs to the province of human law. He refers for illustration to the conduct of Christ in declining to act as an arbitra- tor in the dispute concerning an inheritance.^ If any were disposed ' Per ipsorum dictaminaeonscripta sunt talium specialiter continentem, et in hoc velut per organa quaedam ad hoc mota proportionaliter se habentem humanae legi et directa immediate divina virtnte, per quantum ad aliquara sui partem. Verum quam siquidem legem, praicepta et consilia hujusmodi praecepta in evangelica lege salutis teternae in ipsius Christi atque apo- non tradidit Christus, sed tradita vel tra- stolorum absentia, comprehendere valere- denda supposuit in humanis legibus mus L. 1. p. 168. quas observariet principantibus secundum ^ Vivere et bene vivere mundanura, ac eas omnem animam humanam obedire quae propter ipsum necessaria sunt. L. 1. praecepit, in his saltem, quae non adver- \). 158. sarentur legi salutis. P. 215. •* In reference to man's primitive state : * Quod per legem evangelicam suffi- in quo siquidem permansisset, nee sibi aut cienter dirigimur in agendis aut declinan- Buae posteritati necessaria fuisset officio- dis in vita praesenti, pro statu tamen ven- rum civiliuni institutio vel distinctio. P. turi saeculi seu aeternae salutis conse- 161. quendae, aut supplicii declinandi propter ■^ Mosi legem Deus tradidit observando- quae lata est, non quidem pro contentiosis rum in statu vitae praesentis, ad conten- actibus hominum civiliter reducendis ad tioues hominum dirimendas, praecepta aequalitatem aut commensurationera de " DEFENSOR PACIS. " 27 to call the evangelical law an imperfect one, because no rules were to be drawn from it for the regulation of these matters, they might, with equal propriety, call it imperfect, because the principles of the healing art, the doctrines of mathematics, or the rules of navigation were not to be derived from it.^ We have already remarked that Marsilius looked upon the Holy Scriptures as constituting alone the ultimate source of all our know- ledge of the Christian faith ; to them alone as contradistinguished from all human writings, he ascribes infallibility .^ Yet it was h\i opinion that the holy Scriptures would have been given in vain, nay would have proved an injury to mankind, if the doctrines necessary to salvation could not be derived from them with certainty. Hence it followed that Christ would clearly reveal these doctrines to the major- ity of the faithful, when they searched after the true sense of the holy Scriptures and invoked his assistance ; so that the doctrine drawn from the holy Scriptures by the majority of believers in all times, ought to be the rule for all. And hence he concluded that the hio;hest respect was due to the decisions of general councils.^ For proof of this he appealed to Christ's promise, that he would be with his church to the end of the world, and to the fact that the first apostolic assem- bly, Acts XV, ascribed their decisions to the illumination of the Holy Ghost. But he dissented from the well-known maxim of St. Augus- tine, Ego vero evangelic non crederem, nisi me catholicae ecclesiae commoveret auctoritas ; since by this expression the authority of the sacred Scriptures seemed to be ultimately based on human authority. But his interpretation of these words evidences the freer christian striving of his mind, although the position reached by the theological culture of that period did not permit him as yet to arrive at clearer and more comprehensive views on this subject. These words were represented as simply having reference either to the fact, that it is by the testimony of the church we come to know that these Scriptures are apostolical, or also, and at the same time, to the fact, that we adopt the doctrines therein contained as the doctrines of salvation first of all upon the testimony of the collective body of believers. The former view, however, he thought to be the one which accorded best with St. Paul's teachings in the epistle to the Galatians ; for the words of Christ were not true on the ground that the church gave witness to bitain pro statu seu sufficicntia vitae prae- canonicae appellantur. F. 254, c. 19. seiitis, CO quod Cliristus in mundum non ^ Quoniam frustra dedisset Cliristus le- venit ad liujusmodi regulandos pro vita gem salutis aeternae, si ejus verum intel- praesenti, scd futura tautununodo. Et ieetum, et queni credere fidclibus est neces- propterea diversa est tcmporalium et hu- sarium ad salutem, non aperirct eisdcm manorum actuum regula, diversiaiode di- hunc quaerentibus. et pro ipso invocanti- rigens ad iios tines. P. 216. bus simul, sed circa ipsuni tidelium plural- ' Si ex lioc diceretur iniperlocta, aequo itatcni errare sincrct. Quiniino talis lex convenieuter imperfecta dici posset, quo- non solum ad salutem forct inutilis, sed in uiam per ipsam medicare corporales aegri- hominum aeternam perniciem tradita vi- tudines, aut mensurare magnitudiues, vol deretur. Et ideo i)ie tenendum, determi- oceanum navigare nescimus. L. c. nationes conciliorum generalium in sensi- •^ Quud nuliam scripturam irrevocabili- bus scripturae dubiis a spiritu saucto suae ter vcram cro.lere vel fateri tenemur de veritatis originem sumcre. Cap. 19, fol flt'ce.o'-itatc salutis aeternae, nisi eas, quae 254. '28 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. them, but the testimony of the church was true, because it harmonized with the words of Christ ; for the apostle Paul says, not even an angel from heaven could preach any other gospel ; so that although the entire church should preach another gospel, it could not be a true one.' He objected to the arbitrary extension of the predicate spiritual to everything that appertained to, or proceeded from the clergy. What- ever served for the maintenance of the clergy was not on that account, according to Holy Scripture, to be called spiritual, since it related simply to the earthly life ; but it should be called secular. In truth, many things were done by the clergy, which could not, with any propriety, be called spiritual.^ As might easily be inferred from the exposition we have just given of his ideas of the church and the state, he ascribed to the church a purely spiritual authority only ; and de- nied that she possessed any authority whatever of a secular character, or which had reference to things secular. He disclaimed for her the possession of any species of coercive authority. According to the doctrine of the New Testament, (2 Timothy, ii,) bishops should rather hold themselves aloof from all secular affairs. All believers without ■distinction should own subjection to the civil magistrate, and obey him in all things not standing in conflict with eternal salvation. With what sort of conscience, then, could a priest, of whatever rank or station, presume to absolve subjects from their oath of allegiance binding them to the government that is over them ? To do this he pronounces a heresy .2 The principles of ecclesiastical law that had prevailed down to this time respecting the method to be pursued with heretics, should, ac- cording to the ideas set forth in this work, be altered throughout. To the church should belong no sort of coercive or primitive power. This should belong exclusively to the state, and be applied exclusively to things commanded or forbidden by the laws of the state ; as, in fact, immoralities could not be punished by the state, as such, but only so far as they were a violation of the laws of the state. Many things contrary to the laws of God, must needs be tolerated by the state.4 Civil and divme punishments belong to entirely different provinces. It might happen, that one who ought to be punished according to the laws of the state, would not be found punishable before the divine tribunal.^ What is a heresy, and what is not a heresy, are questions ' Non enim dicta Christi vera sunt cau- talia et in legem divinam, ut fornicationis, saliter, eo quod eisdem testificetur ecclesia quae permittit etiam scienter legislator catholica, sed testimonium ecclesiae causal- humanus, nee coactiva potentia prohibet, iter verura est propter veritatem dictorum nee prohibere potest aut debet episcopua Christi. F. 255. vcl sacerdos. L. c. f. 218. * Non omncs eorum actus spirituales * Peccans in legem humanam peccato sunt, ncc dici del)ent, quinimo ipsorum aliquo, punietur in alio saccule non in sunt multi civiles actus contentiosi et car- quantum peccans in legem humanam : aales sen tcmporales. Fol. 192 multa enim sunt humana lege prohibitii, ^ Fol. 203. quae sunt divina lege permissa, ut si non " Non proptcrea, quod in legem divinam restitucrit quis mutuum statuto tempora tantummodo pcccat quis, a principante propter impotentiam, casu fortuito, obli- punitur. Sunt enim multa ]ieccata mor- vione, aegritudine vel alio quodam impe- " DEFENSOR PACIS." 29 for the priest to decide. He may correct the person found guilty, warn him, and threaten him with eternal punishment : but no other penalties come within his power ; just as in all other departments of knowledge, — in the art of healing, in trade, he who understands may decide as to what is right and wrong in his science, but not with the sanction of a penalty. Heresy, however, may be punished by the state ; yet only so far as it is in violation of the laws of the state ; the state having the power to ordain, that no heretic, no unbeliever shall dwell within its domain. But, if this be permitted to a heretic by the laws of the state, as it has been permitted even among Christian na- tions, no one has a right to punish him.i Just as a man may trans- gress the rules of some science or trade, and yet will not be punished, on that account, except so far as he transgresses the laws of the state. A man may drink, make shoes, practise the art of healing, as he pleases, or as he can ; but he is never punished for this, unless by so doing he transgresses the laws of the state. 2 Having drawn this strict line of demarcation between the provinces of the state and of the church, the author pronounces that ecclesiastics committing actions punishable according to the civil laws become sub- ject to the coercive power of the state. Inasmuch — says he — as those who are designated by the common name of clergy, may some- times, by omission or commission, be guilty of sin, and some — would to God they did not sometimes constitute the majority^ — are actual- ly so guilty to the injury and wrong of others ; it follows, that they also fall under the jurisdiction of those judges who have coercive author- ity, power to punish the transgressors of human laws ; and he cites in proof, Romans xiii.'* In contending against the exemption of the clergy from civil jurisdiction, he says, " nothing spiritual belongs to the crimes of ecclesiastics ; they are fleshly actions, and the more flesh- ly, in the same proportion as it is more diflicult and shameful for a priest to sin, since by sinning he gives occasion for sin, and makes it easy to those whom he is bound to restrain from it." ^ dimento, non punietur ex hoc in alio sae- ^ Causa ejus generalis est, quoniara ne- culo per judicem coactivum secundum le- mo quautumcunque peccans contra disci- gem divinam, qui tamen per judicem co- plinas speculativas aut operativas quas- activum secundum legem humanam juste cumque punitur vcl arcetur in hoc saeculo punitur. Ibid. praecise in quantum hujusmodi, scd in ' Quodsi humana lege prohibitum fuerit, quantum peccat contra praeceptuni huma- haereticum aut aliter intideleni in regione nae legis. Sed enim incbriari aut calceos manere, qui talis in ipsa rcpertus fuerit, facere vel vendere cujuscunque modi, tanquani legis humanae transgressor poena prout possit aut velil ^uilibet, medicari et vel suppliciohuic transgi-essionieadeni lege docere ac similia reliqua otKciorum opera statutis in hoc saeculo debet arccri. Si exercere pro libito si prohibitum non esset vero iiaereticum aut aliter intidelem com- humano lege, nequaquam arcerctur ebrio- morari tidelibus eadem provincia non fue- sus aut aliter perverse agens in operibus fit prohibitum humana lege, quemadmo- reliquis. Ibid. dum haereticis ac semini Judaeorum jam ' Et agant ipsorura aliqui, utinam non humanis legibus permissum exstitit, etiara plurimi quandoque de facto, temporibus Christianorum populorum, * Fol. 211. principnm atque pontihcuni, dico cuipiara * Eo etiam carnaliorcs attjue tcniporali- non licere haereticum aut aliter intidelem ores judicandae magis, cpianto secundum quemquam judicare vel arcere poena vel ipsa presbyter aut episcopus gravius et tur- «;upplicio reali aut personali pro statu vi- pins peccat, his, quos a talibus revocare *.ae praesentis. Fol. 217. debet, delinquendi praebens occasionem et 3* 30 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. So, again, he distinguishes between what God does by himself, and that which he does through the instrumentahty of the priest. Adopt- ing the view held by Peter Lombard, he asserts, that it is God alone who bestows forgiveness of sins where its conditions are present in true penitence, and God alone who can purify the soul from the stama of sin. He distinguishes from this the declaration of the priest, which lias reference to a man's relation to the outward church. To the priest also it belongs to change a greater punishment which is really due into some minor one voluntarily undertaken.' Accordingly he declares strongly against the power arrogated by the pope of absolving men from their obligation to observe the laws of God, with allusion to the pope's conduct towards the emperor Louis. He accuses the pope of heresy in his proceedings towards that emperor.^ The pope, says he, excites his own subjects to rebel against that catholic prince by certain devilish Avritings and discourses, which he calls, however, apostolical, pronouncing them absolved from the oath of allegiance, by which, in good truth, they were and stili are bound to that prince. Such absolutions he proclaims through certain ministers of his wicked- ness, who are hoping to be promoted by that bishop to ecclesiastical offices and benefices. It is plain that this is not an apostohcal, but a devilish transaction ; for it thus comes about, that this bishop and his companions in wickedness, blinded by avarice, pride and ambition, and full of all malice, as any one may perceive, so lead all that follow them, as that they fall into mortal sin.^ They are betrayed by this most holy father and his servants, hurried into treason, robbery, mur- der aod every species of crime ; and unless they die in penitence, and find mercy with God on account of their gross ignorance, must be ])lunged into everlasting destruction. For to every creature endowed with reason it must be certain, that neither the Roman bishop nor any other priest has power to absolve any man whatever from such, or from any other lawful oath, without reasonable cause. He pronounces it an abominable transaction, that the pope, through certain false breth- ren who were agape for church dignities, should direct the preaching of a crusade against the subjects of the emperor, as a thing well pleasing to God.'* He pronounces the forgiveness of sins promised by the pope^ (indulgences) a delusive thing ; for, according to the Catho- facilitatem sui exeraplo perverse. Fol. et per quosdam et falsos fratres sitientes 242. ecclesiasticas dignitates tanquam Deo sit ' Fol. 206 sq. aceeptum, queinadiiiodum in transmarinis ■•^ Fol. 28.3: Novum genus exercet ne- partibus expugnare paganos, pracdicarifu- quitiae, quod nianifeste videtur haereticam cit ubique. Fol. 285. sapere labem. ^ Promised even to those who were unable "■ Fol. 284 : Secundum hoc et ex hoc from bodily weakness to take part them- episcopus iste cum omnibus sibi complici- selves in the expedition, but yet aided it bus ordinatoribus, consensoribus et execu- by their pecuniary contributions ; as the toribus sermone, seriptura vel opere cocci words stand : non poteutibus propter cor- existentes cu])iditate, avaritia, superbia poris debilitatem id scelus explere, si ad cum ambitione summaque, ut omnibus proprios ipsorum sumtus id per alios us- constat, iuiquitate rcpleti, ducatuni prae- que in idem tempus procuravcrint perpc bent sibi credentibus et assequentibus ad trari, aut summam illam ad hoc sutiicicn casum et praecipitationem in tbveam mor- tem exhibuerint nefariiu exactoribus suis talium peccatorum. Ibid. •* Kt quod liorret auditus, id praedicat, " DEFEXSOR PACrS." CI lie faith, it could be doubtful to no one, that to those who took part in such a war, this ridiculous and groundless absolution, could be of no use, but must rather prove an injury.' Yet, for the gratification of his ungodly desires, he so deceives the simple, — granting them in words, what lies beyond his power, thus betraying souls to everlasting perdition. The author of this work perceived already the baseless, unsubstan- tial character of the whole hierarchical system ; and with a boldness and freedom from all bias, truly worthy of admiration, showed his ability to distinguish the original truth from later impositions. He dis- covered already, that originally there was but one priestly office, and no distinction of the office of bishops from that of presbyters.^ " How is it," says he, " that some unscrupulous flatterers dare affirm that every bishop has received from Christ a plenitude of power even over his own clergy, to -say nothing of the laity ; while neither Peter nor any other apostle ever presumed, by word or deed, to arrogate to themselves any such authority ? They who affirm this, should be laughed at. They should not be believed ; still less should they be feared ; for the Holy Scriptures, in their literal and manifest sense, tell us quite the contrary. "3 So, too, he utterly denies the precedence of rank ascribed to Peter over the rest of the apostles ; and he under- stands very well how to prove, from the New Testament, the ground- lessness of this assumption.4 But even supposing that a certain authority may have been conceded to Peter by the other apostles, yet it would by no means follow from it, he remarks, that this authority was transmitted to the Roman church ; for there is no reason why the same thing might not be said, just as well, of the church at Jerusalem or at Antioch, or of any other church. It was true of the Apostles, generally, that to no one of them was a distinct and separate church assigned ; but they were commissioned to preach the Gospel to all people.^ It could not be proved from the law of God, nor by any Scripture which it is necessary to salvation to believe, that it was ever determined by Christ, or by an apostle, or by the collective body of tlie apostles, that a bishop of some one particular province, should be called particularly the successor of Peter or of any other apostle, or chat he should be accounted more than the others, however unequal the apostles may have been among themselves ; but lie rather was, in a certain sense, successor of Peter and of the i-est of the apostles, ' Hanc derisibilem et inanera absolu- quam episcopum habere a Christo jik-ni- tiouein nihil proticere, sed nocere. Fol. tiidinem potestatis, etiam in ciericos, iic- 286. duin in laicos, cum beatus Petrus aut alter ' We have an illustration of his free apostolus nunquam talcm sibi potestateni spirit of inquiry in his method of proving adscribere pracsumscrit opere vel sermo- tais from Acts xx. Fol. 239 : Ecce quod in ne ? Hoc enim asserentes deridendi sunt, ccclesia unius municipii plures aliocutus nihil credendi minusqnc timendi, cum est apostolus tanquam episcopus, quod non scripturae oppositum claraent in literali et fuit nisi propter sacerdotum pluralitatem, manifesto sensu ipsarum. qui omnes episcbpi dicebantiu-, propter •* I'ol. 241, et sq. 'ioc, quod superintendentes esse debebant ' Quia nullus apostolorum lege divina j)opuio. determinatus fuit omniuo ad populum all •* Fol. 243 : Cur ergo et unde assumunt quera vel locum. Fol. 244. adulatores sacrilegi quidam dicere, quera- 32 PAPACY AND CHUflCH CONSTITUTION. who came nearest to them in copying their lives and their holy man- ners ;' according to the saying of Christ, that they were his mother, his brothers and his sisters, who did the will of his Father in heaven: Matthew xii. The bishop of Rome ought rather to be called successor of the Apostle Paul Avho for two years preached the Gospel at Rome, than the successor of Peter. It could not even be shown from the New Testament, that Peter had ever been at Rome.^ The free, in- quiring spirit, and the sharp discernment of this man, are evidenced in the skill with which he shows up the idle character of those tales, so long time believed, about the labors of Peter in Rome, and his there meeting with Paul. It must certainly be regarded, he says, as very singular and surprising that Luke, the author of the Acts of the Apostles, and Paul, should no where make mention of Peter. How can this fact be reconciled with the statement, that Peter had labored in Rome before Paul, when it appears from the last chapter of the Acts, that to the Jews in Rome the Christians were a wholly unknown sect ? How can this supposition be reconciled w'ith the fact that, ■when Paul reproached the Jews for their unbelief, he did not appeal to the earher preaching of Peter ; that Paul, during his two years' residence in Rome, should never come in contact with Peter ; or that the history of the apostles should have taken no notice of the fact ? 3 He asserts the original equality of all bishops, and their independence of each other, and traces the origin of a certain primacy of the Ro- man church to the times of the emperor Constantino.'* Though he did not look upon the primacy of the Roman church as anything origi- nally inherent in that church, yet he supposes that such a primacy sprang gradually, of its own accord, out of existing relations. The high consideration in -NVhich the great capital of the world universally stood, and the eminently flourishing condition of the sciences at that centre of learning, were the occasions that led men to seek counsel and advice especially from that church, and to look to that quarter for their clergy. As an example, he compares the relation of the Univer- sity of Orleans to that of Paris. He himself had been witness how the University of Paris had been consulted for advice by the former.^ ' Sed ille vel illi magis sunt aliquo mo- ibidem fuisse et praedicasse, quomodo non do beati Petri et reliquorum apostolorum dixissct aut ipsura hujus testem induxisset successores, qui vitae et ipsorum Sanctis negotii, qui resurrectionis Christi testis ex- nioribus amplius conformantur. Fol. 245. stiterat. Quis opinabitur, quod biennio ^ Dico per seripturum sacram convinci existens ibidem Paulus nunquam conyer- non posse, ipsum fuisse Romanum episco- sationem. eoUationem aut contubernium pum, et quod amplius est, ipsum unquam habuerit cum b. Petro ■? Et si habuisset, Eomae fuisse. rd. 245. quod de ipso nuUam penitus mentionem ^ Admirandissimum dico, quod b. Lucas, fecessit, qui actuum scripsit historiam '? qui actus apostolorum scripsit, et Paulus ■• Qui quandam praeeminentiam et po- . apostolus de beato Petro nuUam prorsus testatem tribuit episcopis et ecclesiae Ro \mentionem fecerunt. Then, after a quota- manorum super caeteras mundi ecclesias Hion from Acts 28: 19 — 23: Dicat ergo mi- seu presl)ytcros omnes. Fol. 243. hi veritatis inquisitor, non quaerens con- * Sic et qui librum hunc in lucem de- /endere solum, si probabile sit alicui, bea duxit, studiosorum universitatem Aure- tum Petrum Romam praevenisse Paulum lianis degentem vidit, audivit et scivit pet et nihil nuntiasse de Christi fide, quam Ju- suos nuntios et epistolas requirentem et daci loquentes ad Paulum sectam voca- supplicantem Pariensi universitati tan ^lant < Amplius Paulus in reprehendendo quam famosiori et veneratiori caet. Fol ipsos de incredulitate, si novisset Cepham 252. " DEFENSOR PACIS." 6d He held to a certain priority of one church, which, however, was not connected with any right of jurisdiction over the others ; and to this priority, not indeed as anything necessary, or founded on divine right, but yet as a thing salutary and conducive to the preservation of church unity.i Did any one ask, to what bishop should such a place of emi- nence be conceded ? It ought, in good truth, to be said, to the one who excelled all the others in life and doctrine ; and the chief stress here was to be laid on the life. Did any one ask, to what ecclesias- tical diocese should such a distinction be conceded ? that one should be designated, in which were to be found a clerical body most distinguish- ed for life and doctrine. Yet, provided only the other requisites were present, it was very proper that such consideration might still continue to be conceded, according to ancient custom, to the church of Rome. But Marsilius takes strong ground against the authority -ascribed to the pope and the cardinals to decide anything about matters of faith. '• How, in case," says he, " that a heretic should be elevated to the papal dignity ; or that one after having attained to that dignity should from ignorance or from wickedness fall into some heresy ; ought the heretical decisions of such a pope to pass for valid ?" He adduces, for example, the decision contrary to the gospel given by Pope John XXII, on the matter of evangelical poverty ; a decision which he put forth to the end that he might not appear to have fallen from Christian perfection, and that he might assert his secular dominion.^ He appeals again to the bull Unam sanctam issued by pope Boniface VIII, which he calls a thing false to the very core.^ The supreme authority to determine in all disputed matters pertain- ing to faith he ascribes to a general council, assembled with the consent and participation of all the faithful ; and to such a council he thinks the guidance of the Holy Spirit may have been promised.4 He considered it desirable, especially in the then existing condition of the clei'gy, that laymen should also be aUowed a seat in the councils. " In the present corrupt state of the church," says he, " the great majority of the priests and bishops are but little, and if we may speak freely, quite insufficiently experienced in the sacred Scriptures ; because they hanker after the benefices, to which ambitious, covetous aspirants, skilled in canonical law, attain, by services rendered, by petition, by money or the aid of the secular power.^ I call God and the multi- tude of believers to witness," says he, " that I have seen and heard ' Quainvis non sit lege divina praccep- alissimam orauiuin excogitabilium falso- tura, quoniam et sine hoc Hdei unitas, licet rum. Ibid, non sic faciliter salvaretur, expedire dico ■* Fol. 253. ad hanc uuitatem facilius et decentius ob- * Nunc vero propter ecclesiastici regi- servandara. Fol. 265. minis corruptionem plurima pars sacerdo- ^ Ne summam Christi paupertatem et turn et cpiscoporum in sacra scriptura pe- perfectionis statumdeserere videretur, cum riti sunt parum, et si dieere liceat insuffi- iioc volens temporalia etiam iramobilia in cienter, eo quod temporalia beneficiorum, suo venditandi retinere dominio et secula- quae assequuntur olliciosis ambitiosi, cupi riter priacipari. Fol. 257. di et causidici quidam, obtinere volant el -' Nunc autem earn ab initio nunc et obtinent obsequio, inece vel pretio vel sa& semper constat esse falsam, erroneam culari potentia. Fol. 258. cunctisque civiliter viventibus praejudici- 34 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. of very many priests and abbots and some prelates, incapable even of preaching a sermon according to the rules of grammar." He men- tions it as a fact, that he had known a young man not twenty ^-ears old, absolutely ignorant of the doctrines of religion, to whom the office of a bishop, in a respectable and populous city, had been granted, though he had not as yet passed through the inferior grades of cleri- cal consecration. And this thing, the pope, who as vicar of Chris:, pretended to possess the " plenitude of power" in the distribution of benefices, had often done, with a view to secure the favor of the pow- erful. Now for what purpose should a parcel of such bishops and priests assemble together ? How should such persons be able to dis- tinguish between the true and the false sense of the Scriptures ? Owing, then, to the deficiencies of such persons, it was necessary to call in the assistance of discreet laymen, sufficiently versed in the sacred Scriptures, men distinguished also by their lives and manners above such bishops and priests.' He describes in general the great mischief that grew out of the arbitrary power conceded to the popes in making appointments to ecclesiastical offices. Supposing the Roman bishop to be a proud man, sunk also in other vices, a man disposed to ex- ercise secular powers,such as several had been known to be in modern times ; a person of this character, to gratify his insatiable avarice, or his other passions, to gain the favor of the powerful, would put up ecclesiastical offices for sale ; and, to please the same class, would con- fer such offices on their relatives and friends. And that this not only might be done, but had actually long been done and was still done, was a fact testified by an experience not hidden from any of the faith- ful. 2 He speaks as an eye witness himself of the corruption of the Roman court. " They," says he, " who have trod the threshhold of the Roman court, or to speak more strictly according to truth, that house of traffic, that abominable den of robbers, will have seen, and they who have not themselves visited it, will have heard from the reports of numerous credible eye witnesses, that it is the resort of all the vicious crew who push a trade with spiritual as they would with secular things.^ For what else do you find there, but a confluence from all quarters of those who exercise the trade of simony ? What else than the bustling of attorneys, the intrigues of caballers, and persecutions of righteous men ? There the just cause of the innocent runs an awful hazard of being defeated ; or if they cannot redeem it with money, of being so long retarded, that, exhausted, wearied out by countless vexations, they are finally compelled to abandon their just and pitiable cause ; for these human laws are loud and noisy, while divine doctrines are silent, or let themselves be heard but seldom. There it is deliberated how the countries of Christian men may be forcibly wrested from the hands of those to whom the guardianship of ' Fol. 258. aut qui ab hac abstinuerunt, numerosae * Fol. 2G2. tide dignorum multitudiuis relatione dis- •* Cement se ipsis limpide, qui Romanae cent, earn paene sceleratoruin omnium et curiae, imo verius cum veritate dicara, do- uegotiatorum tam spiritualium quam tern- mus negotiationis, et ea quae latronura poralium receptaculum esse factam. Fol. horribilioris speluncae limina visitarant, 274. " DEFENSOR PACIS." 35 them has been lawfully committed. There no pains are taken, no counsels held to win souls to Ch-rist ; there no order, but only everlast- ing confusion dwells. I who have been there and have seen it i fan- cied to myself that I beheld the frightful image which Nebuchadnezzar saw in his dream (Daniel ii.) ; for what else is this great image than the condition of the Roman court, which once was fearful to the per- verse and wicked, but is now, to all Avho study it near at hand, awful to contemplate ? 2 The upper part of the image, to which the eyes and the affections of the mind are attracted, gold and silver ; the belly and hips, the bustle of worldly strife and the trade of simony ; not to mention the thunder of the ban against the faithful of Christ, who, in secular things, refuse to submit to the pope and his church, and refuse, though rightly, to commit temporal things to him. What are the thighs of brass but the sumptuous apparatus for all pleasures and all vanities, which even to laymen, seem indecent, but which those persons who ought to- present to all others an example of purity and honor, parade forth to the senses of men ? ^ He complains that the popes supposed people of the lowest order, altogether without experience, wealth or secular dominion, capable, if they attained suddenly and at once to so great Avealth and power, of holding rule over princes and na- tions.^ He points at the popes as the destroyers of the church. " The modern popes," says he, " do not defend the Catholic faith and the multitude of believers, who are in the true sense the bride of Christ, but prostrate them to the ground : they do not preserve her beauty, which consists in unity, but they disgrace it, by sowing tares and contentions : they sever her members, and separate them one from another ; and allowing no place to the poverty and humility that tru- ly belong to the following after Christ, but rather banishing it from their presence, they prove themselves to be not servants, but enemies of the bridegroom." 5 The author of this remarkable book must assuredly have atoned with his life for such freedom of thought, if the contest between the pope and the emperor had not secured his safety in spite of the sen- tence of condemnation passed upon him by the former. It is true, the principles expressed in his book met as yet with no response ; but it was still an important sign of the times, that such principles were expressed. ' Qui vidi et affui. Fol. 274. discreti nuper ditati, fidelibus omnibus im- ^ Quid nempe aliud ingens haec statua, portabiles fiunt. Fol. 279. quam status personarum curiae Romanae ^ Sic igitur propter temporalia conten- seu summi pontiticis, qui olim perversiS dendo noii vere def'enditur sponsa Christi. hominum terribilis, nunc vero cunctis stu- Earn etenim, quae vere Cliristi sponsa est, diosis horribilis est aspectu. lb. eatholicam tidem et fidelium multitudi- ' Voluptatum, luxus et vanitatum quasi nem, non defendunt moderni Romanorum omnium, etiam laicis indecentium, appa- pontilices, sed ofiendunt, illiusque pulchri- ratus poniposus, quem sensibus hominum tudinem, unitatera videlicet, non servant, imprimunt. qui caeteris esse debent casti- sed foedant, dum zizanias et schismata tatis et honestatis exemplum. Fol. 274. seminando, ipsius membra lacerant et ab * Eorum plurimi ex humili plebe tra- invicem separant, Christi quoque veras rentes natalia, dum ad statum pontifica- comites, paupertatem et humilitatem, dura lem sumuntur, praesidatum saeculi nesci- non admittunt, sed excludunt peuitus, se entes, quemadmodum neque divitias, in- sponsi ministros non ostendunt, sed potiua inimicos. Fol. 281. 36 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. As the pope did not comply with the invitation from Rome to return back to that place, the GhibelUne party triumphed there, and the em- peror was received with acclamation. In connection with the party opposed to the pope, the rigid Franciscans in particular, he repeated the old trick which had been tried against the popes, bj earlier empe- rors, but which never was found to produce the shghtest moral effect. He caused a solemn assembly to be held in the year 1328, on the place in front of St. Peter's church. Here John XXII. was accused of being a heretic. The erroneous doctrines charged against him were the assertion that Christ with his disciples held property in com- mon, when in truth he ever loved poverty ; that the pope was for ar- rogating to himself secular rule, contrary to Christ's words, '* Give to Caesar the things that are Caesar's," and " My kingdom is not of this world." Sentence of deposition was pronounced against him. A contemporary' who entertained a sufficiently bad opinion of this pope, describes the impression produced by this step, and probably accord- ing to the truth, when he says, " The wise men in Rome were much disturbed at this sentence, and the rest of the simple people did not greatly exult over it." 3 Next, to win the favor of the Romans, a law was enacted,3 that every pope should reside in Rome, and not leave the city, except during three months in the year ; and not re- main out of it more than two days, and for that time only with the permission of the Roman people. If, on absenting himself from Rome, he did not, when invited by the Roman people to return, com- ply, he should, after the invitation had been thrice repeated, be de- posed. After this preparatory step, the emperor 4 caused a second great assembly to be held on Ascension Day, the 12th of May, 1-328, in the place before St. Peter's church. Louis appeared in all his im- perial insignia, surrounded by nobles and a vast multitude of men and women filled the space around him. Then Pietro Corvai'o, a Franciscan, who by his strict life had won the reverence of the people, was borne in procession under a baldochin. The emperor rose from his seat. A bishop stepped forward and delivered a scurrilous dis- course, applying the words in Acts 12 : 8, to the emperor Louis, com- paring Louis with the angel, and pope John with Herod. Next, a bishop selected for the purpose thrice put the question to the assembled people whether they would have Peter of Corvaro for pope. Prompt- ed by fear, they said yes ; though they would have preferred a Ro- man. Corvaro was now regarded as lawful pope, and called himself, as such, Nicholas V. This certainly was a hasty and ill-judged trans- ' The Florentine Giovanni Villani, in disciples, Your treasure is in heaven, an.l his History of Florence. This writer, 1. 11, Lay not up for yourselves treasures on c. 20, speaks of his extortions and his ava- earth. Ma non si ricordava il buono hu- rice, says tliat he used a great deal of omo del vangelo di Christo, dicendo a suoi money, partly to carry on his war with the discipoli, etc. emperor in Lombardy, partly to maintain "•' Delia detta sentenziai savi huominidi his nephew, or rather son, in state and Roma molto si turbarono, e I'altro semplice splendor, — mantenere grande il suo ni- popolo ne fece grande festa. L. 10. c. 68 note, overo figliuolo, — who was legate at ^ L. c. c. 70. Lombardy, The good man did not call to * L. c. c. 71. mind that Christ iu the gospel says to his JOHN' XXII. 37 action, by which the emperor could only injure his own cause. i He was in no condition to follow up the step he had taken. He waa obhged to flee from Italy ; and Nicholas was finally compelled to beg absolution of Pope John at Avignon, and to submit to his authority. Louis saw that his power was on the wane. The papal ban had made an impression on the secular and spiritual estates ; and his own unfa- vorable relations induced the emperor, who longed for quiet, to seek reconcihation with the pope ; but the latter repelled all his advances, and required unconditional submission. Already was Louis prei)ared to purchase quiet at any price for himself and for Germany ; but the estates of the empire were unwilling to expose the empire to such hu- miliation, and took sides with the emperor against the pope. The lat- ter had by his arbitrary proceedings in appointments to church offices, aroused the displeasure of many. The archbishop of Trier, indignant at a process lost at the Roman court in Avignon, had appealed to a general council. In addition to this Pope John had stirred up a theo- logical controversy, by which he lost much of his authority, and ex- posed himself to severe humiliation. He had expressed an opinion, contrary to the common persuasion, and hardly to be reconciled with the prevailing mode of regarding the condition of the saints, namely that the pious were not to attain to the intuition of God, until after the final judgment. Two preachers of the Franciscan order were said to have embraced this doctrine at the University of Paris. It became the occasion of disputes and violent commotions in that Uni- versity. The king interfered. He convoked, on the fourth Sunday of Advent, 1333, an assembly of prelates and theologians at the castle of Vincennes, and laid before this council two questions ; whether the holy souls in heaven would be enabled to behold God's essence before the resurrection and before the general judgment ; and whether the same intuition of the divine essence which they now enjoyed would be renewed at the day of judgment, or a different one would follow.^ The king himself explained, for the purpose of quieting all appre- hension, that he was far from wishing to detract in any way whatever from the honor of the pope. To save the honor and respect due to the pope in this investigation it was remarked, that the supreme pon- tifi" had thrown out all that he had said on this matter, not as his own opinion, but as something problematical.^ As the result of these deli- berations it was estabUshed, that the souls which, on departing this life, were in such a condition as not to need purgation, and those which had already passed through the fires of purgatory, were raised to the immediate intuition of the divine' essence ; this was one and the same thing with the eternal life itself, and at the resurrection therefore, ' Villani describes the had impression mai non li furono fedeli come prima. Ibid, whicli was made thereliy on the minds of ^ Buhiei hist. Univ. Paris, tum. iv, f. 237. the Komans. La buona gente di Koma ^ The Parisians say, in excuse of thera- molto si turbo, parendo loro, che facesse selves : Quod niultorum tide dignorum re- contro a fede e santa Chiesa, e sapemo noi latione audivimus, i[ui>d quidquid in hac di vero dalla sua gente medesima, che materia sanctitas sua dixit, non asserendo ijuelli, cii'erano savi, parve loro ch'egli non seu opinando protalerit, sed sohimmodo •.iccbse bene, e raoiti per la detta cagione recitando. VOL. V. 4 38 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. nothing different would follow. What the theological faculty here pronounced orally, they were afterwards required by the king to state in writing. He transmitted this letter to the pope, admonishing him to recant, and threatening him, as it is reported, in case of refu- sal, with the fago-ot.' John thus became still more dependant on the king ; to whom henceforth, as Villani relates, he no longer dared re- fuse anything. Shortly before his death, in the year 1334, he put forth a bull, in which he declared, that purified departed souls found themselves in heaven or in paradise. In all he had said or written to the contrary, he had only intended to present the matter as a fair subject for disputation. AH that he had said and written should be considered valid only so far as it harmonized with the catholic faith, the church and the Holy Scriptures. He submitted everything to the better judgment of the church and of his successors. We thus ob- serve from the reign of Boniface VIII. and onwards to this point of time, a series of new and freer investigations called forth by the des- potism of the popes. After Marsilius of Padua, deserves to be espe- cially noticed here William Occam, who by the invitation of the em- peror wrote upon the points in dispute .2 In perfect agreement with his whole sceptical method, he is cautious indeed about expressing any decided opinion, and takes a safe position for himself by simply stating the arguments first on the one side and then on the other.3 But at the same time, he leaves us at no loss to understand for which opinion he is both able and willing to adduce the strongest arguments. Against the opinion that the pope possesses the "plenitude of power" tain in spiritualibas quam in temporaUbus, it is established that in such case the gospel in its relation to the law of Moses would not be a law of liberty, but the law of an intolerable servitude ; a servi- tude still more grievous than under the earlier dispensation. For, ac- cording to this view, all would be servants of the pope, so that he might, at pleasure, appoint kings and dispose of their realms ; so that he might even impose rites and ceremonies upon the church like those in the Old Testament; a position which to many appeared heretical. When the Jews accused Christ of calling himself king, Pilate declared, that he found no fault in him, since he well understood that Christ did not ' According to the statement of D'Aillv, riculosum sensum trahere molirentur, tah at the Council of Paris, in the year 1406. mode in eo conabor procedere, ut ex mo- Du Boulay, 1. c. s. 238. do loquendi non quis dicit, sed quid dici- 2 As he says himself, in the Octo Ques- tur coacti attendere, mei ob odium, nisi ip- tiones, near to the end, Goldasti mon. sos malitia vexaverit, inauditam nequa- tom. ii,fol. 391: Ilium autem dominum mi- quam nequiter lanient veritatem : perso- hi quam plurimum venerandum, qui hoc nam enim biviam recitabo et saepius opin- opus componere suis precibus me induxit, iones contrarias pertractabo, non f?olum Togo et obsecro, ut mihi indulgeat, si prae- eas, quibus adversor, sed etiam quibus scriptas quaestiones ad intentionem suam mente adhaereo, hoc tamen nuUatenus sim minime prosecutus, quare eas discuti- exprimendo, interdum scienter pro eis ten- endas voluit et mihi tradidit et porrexit. tative sive sophistice allegando in persona '■' As he says himself, in the beginning, confirmatium aliorum, ut pro utraque par- f. 314 : Quia sequens opusculum, ut desid- te allegationil)US intellectis veritatis since- ero, ad manus forte perveniet aemulorum, rus amator purae orationis verum a false qui odio stimulante etiam quae ipsis vera habcat discernendi occasionera. videntur (si dicerem) damnare, vel ad pe- WILLIAM OCCAM. St mean to call himself a king in temporal things, but in quite another sense, not seeming to him to stand in any contradiction with the authority of Csesar. It was only his fear of the threat of the Jews, to accuse him before Caesar, that induced him, against his better convictions, to con- sent to pass sentence upon Christ. Hence many wonder, how it should be that a man of the world, like the heathen Pilate, should gather this from Christ's words, whilst many christians who would be regarded even as teachers of the law, do not understand it. There seems to be no other reason for it, but that they are blinded by wrong incli- nations. With regard to the power to bind and to loose bestowed on Peter, the opinion of certain persons is cited, who held that this relates only to sins ; and even in this relation, only to the power of bestowing the sacrament of penance ; not that he was to have power to expunge guilt, or impart grace, for this lies within the power of God alone ; but only to declare men discharged in the view of the church, and to impose on them some act of satisfaction in this world ; not to exercise any coercive jurisdiction. It is clearly seen and affirmed, that al- though under the Old Testament economy the priestly power was placed above the royal, yet this was not the case under the New Tes- tament ; because under this, a spiritual authority only is bestowed on the clergy.' We perceive already, in this distinguishing of the differ- ence between Old and New Testament points of view, the preparatory step to a position which would involve the overthrow of the churchly theocratical system of the middle ages. Could we, it is said, be justi- fied in applying all the Old Testament relations to the New Testament evolution, we should in that case be led to the heretical doctrine of the permanent validity of the Mosaic law."^ All that the pope holds in possession beyond what is necessary for his temporal support, all that belongs to the worldly pomp and magnificence with which he is at pre- sent environed,^ he either obtained from the liberality of emperors, kings and other believers, or has tyranically arrogated to himself in a way contrary to God's will, to reason and to good manners. In rela- tion, therefore, to that which he lawfully possessed, he was not sud- cessor of Peter, but of Constautiue and other emperors, of kings and other beUevers, who bestowed these things on the pope ; but in no such way as conferred on him an unlimited right of property in all this ; for he was obligated, on peril of his salvation, to administer all that had been bestowed over and above what was necessary for his own support, according to the will and purpose of the donors. And if he administered it otherwise, he was guilty of a breach of trust, Fol. 327 : Esto, quod in veteri lege rcticalis est, quia sequitui- ex ipsa, quod pondficalis auctoritas praelata fuisset eti- circuracisionein, discretionem ciboium et am in temporalibus diguitati regali, non alia caerimonalia et judicialia veteris le- tameu esset praeferenda in nova lege : gis deberet etiara imitari. Ibid, quia auctoritas pontiticalis in nova lege ^ Omnia, quae ultra ilia, quae sibi neces- spiritualior est et magis a terrenis negotiis saria sunt, possidet, sc. civitates, castra, elongata, quam fuerit auctoritas pontitica- amplas possessioneset superabundantes, et lis in veteri lege, quemadmodum lex nova jurisdictionem temporalem (piamcunque, magis est spiritualis, quaui lex vetus. sicut et oranem gloriain mundanam, qua " Kespoudctur, quod ista allegatio hae- papa nunc rutilat. 40 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. and was bound to make restitution.' The sentences passed by the pope on the emperor Louis were represented as null and void, because the pope was to be regarded as a heretic ; and here it is remarked, " When the power or will of the pope becomes matter of debate, christians in these days take no trouble to ascertain for themselves what Christ taught, or what the Apostles or the fathers have thought on this subject, though it be ever so plain and manifest. But what- ever may happen to please the pope, that they adopt, prompted by fear, or favor, or fleshly desires ; and try to wrest those passages of Scripture which assert the contrary into some agreement with the fables which they have dreamed.^ They transfer to the pope the honor which is due to God alone ; and, in contradiction with the Apostle Paul, make christian faith to consist in the wisdom, or rather in the will of the pope, not in that which holy Scripture teacheth."^ Then it was shown that the excuses commonly offered with a view to exculpate the pope from the charge of heresy were of no force. The pope was said to have held forth dogmas, declared to be heretical, only historically or in the way of disputation. On the contrary, it was maintained, that were the matter rightly inquired into, it might be clearly estabhshed, that he had beyond all doubt set these things forth as positive assertions. Neither could he be exculpated on the ground that he had at the end of his life recanted whatever he had wrongly asserted ; for this recantation was a conditional one, such as any heretic, however obstinate, might ofi'er. And even supposing this might suffice to excuse him, then he should still be regarded as having been a heretic in the time preceding this recantation.^ The maxiui of Augustine, " Ego vero evangelio non crederem, nisi me catholicae ecclesiae commoveret auctoritas," is in his Dialogue,^ thus explained: By the ecclesia we are here to understand the collective multitude of all the faithful from the times of the prophets and apostles down to the present ; to which collective body belongs also the founder of the gospel dispensation ; and the whole is greater than the part.^ In the second book, the proofs are arrayed in defence of the position that no doctrine incapable of being proved from holy Scripture, was to be acknowledged as catholic and necessary to salvation ; neither the church nor the pope could make new articles of faith. The pope who came after John XXII., Benedict XII., is said to have been a quite different man from his predecessor. He was decidedly opposed to nepotism. His relatives could get nothing from him. He ' Fol. 385. ^ Fidem Christiaiiam contra apostolum ^ Ubi de potestate vel etiam de volun- in sapieiitia vel potius voliuitatc papae, tate papae tit sernio, nou curant Ciiristiaui noii vuluiitate sci'ipturae pouentes. Ibid, scire liis diebiis. quid Christus docuit, nee ■• Fol. 390. ((uod apostoli seiisenint et sancti patres, ^ Between Scholar and Teacher, quanivis ratione uianifesta hoc doeeretur ; ^ Non (piia de evangelio sit aliqualiter sed quod placet papae, timore vel amore dubitanduni, sed quia totum majus est sua aut cupiditate carnis amplectuntur, et ad parte. Ecclesia ergo, quae majoris aucto- fabulas, quas somniaverunt, scrijjturas et ritatis est, quain evangelista, est ilia eccle- prophetias student trahere repugnantes, et sia, cujus auctor evangelii pars esse agno- sic ad Pai)ain transfcrre videntur honoriti- seitur. Lib. 1, c. 4, (ioldast. 1. I, fol. 402 eentiam creatoris. Fol. 3'JU. BENEDICT XII. 41 took great pains to fill the vacant sees with pious and able men ; he preferred rather to let vacancies remain for a long time unoccupied, than to fill them with worthless incumbents. He was a rigid censor of the degenerate clergy and monks : he sought in particular to reforn: the monastic orders. But there are also other reports about him, differ- ing widely from all this. He is described as a harsh, covetous man. given to immoderate drinking, the author of the saying : Bibamus pa- paliter. Yet it may be questioned, whether the severity of this pope as a reformer so detrimental to the interests of many may not have been the occasion of reports so injurious to his reputation.^ The emperor Louis offered his hand again to this pope, for peace ; and the latter would gladly have accepted it ; but he found it impossible to break loose from his dependance on the French interest. Benedict again was succeeded, in the year 1343, by a man of quite opposite character ; a Frenchman, of an altogether worldly tem- per, devoid of all interest in religion, having a bad reputation as to his morals, more devoted to worldly politics than to the affairs of religion, and in his politics wholly dependant on the French court. This was Clement VI.^ To the Romans he gave an indemnification for what they had lost by the long absence of the popes, by reducing to fifty years the centennial jubilee which had proved a source of so much profit to them under Boniface VIII. This was done by the famous constitution Unigenitus, which he published in the year 1349.3 The pope assigned as a reason for it the sacredness of the number fifty according to the Old Testament, a number according to which also followed the outpouring of the Holy Ghost. The doctrine of indul- gence was here expounded conformably to the determinations already given to it, that Christ had gained for his church a treasure, and had committed it to her keeping, and more particularly to the successors of the Apostle Peter, to whom he had entrusted the guidance of the church. To this had been added the merits of Mary and of all the elect. There was no fear that such a treasure could ever be diminished ; be- cause the merits of Christ were infinite, and because the greater the number who should be incited by the appropriation of this treasure to strive after righteousness, the more would be added to it. The empe- ror Louis renewed his negotiations with this pope, and he was ready ' Thus John of Winterth.ur puts both nales fore deceptores sui credebat. Ordi- together, fol. 39, describing hiin as a re- nes mendicantium supra modum exosos former of monachism and pota'or vini habebat. — liuic maxime insitum cordi fuit, permaximus. The same thing appears in clericos et religiosorum ordinum professo- tlie 8 vita in Baluz pap. Aven. t. I, Paris, res et status reformare et, ut dicatur verius, 1693, f. 240, where we plainly see that it intirmare. The same writer also cites the was just thi^ severity of the pope as a re- by-word which proceeded from him. former which provoked .and occasioned the '^ In the Chronicle of Albert of Stras- accusations laid against him. The censures burg, it is said of him : Hie ab antecesso- are such as might possibly have been called ris sui moribus multum distans, mulierum, forth by qualities which really deserved honornm et potentiae cujiidus, curiam de praise. Hie papa avarus, durus et tenax, simonia ditfamans, ipse Francus France in conferendis gratiis remissus, tardus et ferventer adhaesit. Urstis. German, his- negligens in providendo statum ecelesia- toric. post Henric. IV. pars alt. Francof rum supra modum fuit, et in excusatione 1585, fol. 133. duritiae suae paucos ad haec dignos et suf- ■' i'rinted in Raynaldi, Annales, at the hcientes dicebat. Omnes dominos cardi- vcar 1349. § 11. 4* 42 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. to do anything that might be required of him to purchase peace. But the pope who cared nothing for the distracted condition of the German people, who looked at nothing but his own worldly interests, to which everything else was sacrificed, contrived purposely to have the matter put off without coming to any agreement ; for the imperial dignity was to be transferred to another person, related to the royal family of France, and educated to principles of dependance on the papacy. This was Prince Charles of Bohemia, afterwards the emperor Charles IV. In Germany, the pope's measures called forth violent reactions in favor of freedom, movements of the city communities devoted to the emperor, who were unwilling to have an emperor imposed upon them by the arbitrary will of the pope — against those ecclesiastics and monks, who strictly observed the papal interdict. Thus, for example, the clergy of Constance were twice banished, because they refused to hold divine service, ^ Many monks in diiferent districts of Germany were for the same reason driven away, and the people shouted after them as they left, that it would be a long time before they came back again. When four years afterwards they showed an inclination to obey the emperor, and to recommence the public worship of God, they etill were not permitted to return. The distractions which grew out of these divisions, added to the de- vastations occasioned by that desolating scourge, the black plague, had a great influence upon the religious tone of feeling. The more se- riously disposed were recalled from the conflict of the passions and the schisms of the world without, were led to enter into the depths of their own being, to collect their thoughts to God and before Him — the inward self-collection of mysticism among a class of monks and laymen who united to form pious communities, calling themselves Friends of God in South Germany, the countries on the Rhine, France, Suabia and Alsace. John of Winterthur laments that the emperor and pope should sacrifice the general weal to their private passions and personal interests ;3 that they should have God and the welfare of the church and state so little before their eyes, and seek only their own. He ascribes all this to the secularization of the church ; and taking up the ancient legend already alluded to, he says : On the be- stowment of that gift of the emperor Constantine to the Roman bishop Silvester, rightly was the voice heard from heaven, saying. To-day a cup of poison is poured upon the church. In the events of the time he beholds the most striking evidence of the truth of these words. The confounding together of things spiritual and secu- lar, the love of earthly things reigning supreme in the church, ap- pear to him the true source of all the then existing schisms and wars.3 What the apostle Paul said of the perils of the last times, seems to him to be already passing into fulfilment. ' John of Winterthur, at the year 1343, tam ociilis mentis quam earnis, inio expe- t 60. riniur malis quoticUanis graviter et impor- - Fol. 69. tabiliter, jacturam et dispendia bonorum, ^ After the citation of those words : corporuin, aniniarum et rerum propter hoc C^uod hodierna die luce clarius cernimus sustinendo. Proprie venenum ecclesiae in- CLEMENT VI. 43 The emperor ordered fasts and penitential processions, in which he zealously took part himself to implore the Almighty, that by the outpour- ing of his Holy Spirit, he would bring peace to the church. But the pope, having once made uphis mind, that another man should be emperor, prescribed to Louis conditions so severe, that the princes would not consent to an humiliation of the emperor, so derogatory to the honor of the empire. The quarrels about the observance of the interdict still went on in Germany, as well as the schism that grew out of it. Many ecclesiastics who were sincerely desirous of holding divine wor- ship again in places that had been laid under the interdict took ad- vantage of the pope's avarice, and purchased absolution at the price of a florin.' John of Winterthur complains bitterly of the corruption of the church in relating this: " what a deplorable and abominable schism and disgrace has fallen upon the church in these times ! The words of the gospel — Freely ye have received, and freely give, seem to have been spoken in vain." This state of things lasted until the emperor's death in the year 1347. It was now required that homage should be paid throughout Ger- many to Charles IV. as the emperor acknowledged by the pope. Yet the manner in which it was attempted to carry this out provoked vio- lent opposition of various kinds. The German spirit revolted more and more against the Roman yoke. A more general consciousness was awakened of the corruption of the church, and longing for its puri- fication. The hard conditions which the pope saw fit to require in bestowing absolution on those who had been placed under the ban on account of their connection with the emperor Louis, contributed still more to excite the minds of numbers who still cherished an affection- ate remembrance of the unfortunate emperor, and who were disgusted with the yoke of Roman bondage. Men were required to swear, that they would renounce their old errors, consider the emperor Louis as excommunicated, never attribute to an emperor the power of deposing the pope, never acknowledge any man to be emperor, save the one nominated or confirmed by the pope. These demands were in several districts violently resisted, and called forth the most decided reactions of a spirit in favor of freedom. In many places, in Basle for example, it was found necessary to yield to the fierce clamors of the people, and to suspend the interdict without farther ado. Here, too, the clergy had an opportunity presented to them for gratifying their avarice. The consecration of burial places, supposed to have been profaned, might now be converted into a means of gain. From forty to sixty florins were demanded as the price for this service. The conscious- ness of the corruption of the church now generally awakened, and the temper of the people who earnestly longed for its regeneration, ex- pressed themselves in a legend which started up afresh and spread fusum a voce raemorata dicitur, quia ilia regnis et terrenis bonis seu possessioniiiiis liberaiis datio Constantinifoines et occasio, temporalibus capiendis exstitit. quamquam bono zelo fecerit, schisraatis ' John of Winterthur, at the year 1345, praelibati, contentionum, praeliorum, ho- fol. 78 : Ilujusmodi autem absolutio pro mocidiorum, scandalorum innumerabilium uno tioreno facillime obtinebatur. a capitibus «acerdotum promotorum, pro 44 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. far and wide, importing that the emperor Frederic II. was soon to arise from the dead to execute with his mighty arm a sentence of re- tributive justice on the corrupt clergy, and to restore the church in renovated splendor. John of Winterthnr, who relates the story, com- pares this expectation with that of the Jews who were looking for the Messiah to restore their place and nation. The ten years' reign of Innocent VI. extending to 1362, passed away in tranquillity. He again was favorably distinguished among the popes of Avignon, for the disposition he manifested to promote the welfare of the church, and to frown on growing abuses. He died in the year 1362, and was succeeded by Urban V. Urban received more and more press- ing invitations to come up to the help of the deeply depressed Roman church in Italy. Petrarch, who had always borne emphatic testi- mony against the corruption of the papal court at Avignon, addressed to this pope' a letter, invalidating all the scruples against the re-con- veyance of the papacy to Rome, and calling upon him in the strong- est language, to return to the ancient seat of the pontiffs. He tried to convince the cardinals, men devoted to their pleasures, that in Italy too, a land so highly blessed by nature, nothing would be found wanting ; and that they who felt it impossible to give up the wines of South- ern France, needed not after all, to be much afraid of the exchange. He asked the cardinals, whether they had rather be buried in Avignon among the worst sinners in the world, than in Rome, among saints and martyrs. At length, in the year 1367, Urban made an attempt to return ; and he was received in Rome with great demonstrations of joy. But the French cardinals soon pined again after the old seat of their pleasures, and Urban was prevailed upon to yield to their wishes. He repaired once more, in 1370, to Avignon, where he died on the very year of his return. His successor was cardinal Roger, a celebrated Jurist and Canonist, called Grvegory XL Before he became pope, he had expressed himself strongly in favor of transporting the papal court back to Rome. Both Catharine of Siena, then held in high veneration as a saint, and Bri- gitta of Sweden, called upon him in the most urgent manner to accom- plish this object. A bishop, whom he reprimanded for living away from his see, retorted upon him, by asking why he did not do better then him- self. In the year 1376, he returned back with a part of the car- dinals to Rome. He shortly after died in the year 1378. We might predict beforehand that the death of this pope would be followed by the most violent commotions. The Roman people, noto- rious for their turbulent spirit, were thoroughly determined that ano- ther Frenchman should not be pope, that no one should be chosen but an Italian, and an Italian of whom it might reasonably be expected that he would take up his residence in Rome. Among the cardinals themselves, too, a great schism could not fail to arise between those of Italian and those of French descent. The latter longed to get back to Avignon, or if they were still there, were not inclined to leave France, and it was not to be expected that they would consent to choose an Italian. But neither could the Italian cardinals be easily ' Epp. senil. 1. 7, 1. Oper. ed. Basil, p. 811. ELECTION OF URBAN VI. 45 induced to consent to the choice of a Frenchman. As it was not difficult to foresee the disturbances which would be likely to inter- rupt the election of a new pope, Gregory XI. had, previous to his death, issued a bull suspending the ordinances then in force relating to the form of the papal election, and decreeing that the cardinals should be at liberty, in case of need, to meet for this election in some place without the walls of Rome, and to proceed directly with- out waiting for their absent colleagues, to the choice of a pope, and that he who had the majority of votes should immediately enter upon his office. But it was not so easy to carry this bull into effect. For wliat could induce the turbulent Roman people to permit the cardinals to leave Rome for the express purpose of proceeding to the election in another place less exposed to the influences Avhich the Romans would be very glad to exercise. As it regards the events that followed, to determine the course which they actually took, belongs among the most difficult problems of historical criticism. The reports bear on their very face the stamp of opposite party-interests ; on the one side an interest to magnify the dangers which the cardinals imagined they had reason to apprehend from the menacing posture of the Roman people, with a view to represent the election that had taken place under such influences as forced, and therefore null and void ; on the other side, an interest to keep out of sight everything that implied constraint, with a view to establish the validity of the election as one altogether regular. We have good cause, no doubt, to look upon both these classes of reports as lia- ble, for different reasons, to suspicion, and to be on our guard against exaggerations on one side as well as on the other. By abstracting a little from both sides, we shall be most likely to succeed in mak- ing some approximation towards the truth. It may readily be con- ceived that the uneasy Romans would not be disposed to remain quiet, and patiently await the issue of the election ; that desperately opposed as they were to the choice of a Frenchman, they would do all they could by playing upon the fears of the cardinals, to prevent them from making such a choice ; nor would it probably have required a very great effort, to produce the necessary degree of terror in the enervated and effeminate body of men of whom we are speaking, to excite in them that fear of death, which in the customary phraseology of those times was called a Metus qui cadit etiam in constantem viru/n. But from this it does not follow, that the pope's election was a forced one, a sham election, even though it may have been true that the car- dinals under different influences, would have made a different choice. We should endeavor to present distinctly before us the relations then existing among the cardinals in order to understand the reasons which really led to the choice that was made. There were twenty-three car- dinals, of whom seventeen were French. Six of these had remained behind in Avignon. Now the clamor of the Romans, demanding that a Roman, or at least an Italian should be pope,^ produced, doubtless. ' Romano lo volemo o almanco Italia- party, Boulay hist, univers. Paris t. IV. io, according to tlie report of the French f. 470. 48 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. a* not unimportant impression on the French cardinals constituting ths majority. But in addition to this, a coalition party had been form- ed ; a circumstance which, as often happens, brought about a result that under other circumstances was not to be expected ; but a result too, which, for the very reason that it had proceeded from nothing but such a coalition, might easily excite discontent. Among the French themselves, there were two parties, one which was determined to have a pope from the province of Limoisin, another which protested against such a choice. Now the latter, merely from opposition to the former, might prefer to go with the Italians in electing an Italian pope. The individual on whom they united was a man to whom no great impor- tance was attached by any body ; a man who until this time had been known only for his rigid ascetic bent, who had occupied himself with nothing but the administration of his episcopal office — a man from whom no party felt that it had anything to fear. This was archbishop Prignano of Bari, a Neapolitan, Avho took the name of Urban VI. The cardinals, in their circular letters, announced this choice as an un- doubtedly regular one ; and they gave notice of it to their absent col- leagues at Avignon. But no great stress, we must allow, is to be laid on the declarations of a college composed of so many heartless and utterly corrupt men. While they thus expressed themselves pub- hcly, one of the French cardinals wrote secretly to the French king that no declaration which they might make, whilst they remained in Rome, was to be relied upon ; for they were governed by the fear of the Roman people.^ Yet Urban VI. would probably, by a wise and prudent course of conduct, have been able to secure peace and unani- mity. But he ruined everything, by the haughty bearing which he assumed, and by his indiscreet and passionate behavior. The cardi- nals found him to be an entirely diiferent man from what they had expected. They were the more exasperated against him on this ac- count ; and many, who for other reasons had been unwilling to recog- nize an Italian, now only looked about for an opportunity to get rid of him. The disaffected complained of the hot season of the year, as a pretext for leaving Rome. They betook themselves to Anag- ni. There, before the archbishop of Aries, chamberlain of the Ro- man church, they solemnly protested against the validity of Urban' s election. They declared it to have been made under constraint. In a circular letter they declared it to have been their expectation that Urban himself, knowing the invalidity of his election, would never think of call- ing himself pope. They declared him, therefore, to be a disturber of the peace of the church, a perjured man, a destroyer of Christendom ; and they forbade obedience to him as pope, under penalty of the ban. Next, they repaired to a place of security, to Fondi, for the purpose of proceeding to a new election, when three Italians joined themselves to the French cardinals. At this election they assuredly did not di- rect their attention to any of the qualifications, spiritual or clerical, ' Thus relates the then Vice-Chancellor de Hessia, in his Dialogue de Schisniate, of the Universitv of Paris, Master Henry, as Boulay reports in his hist. Univers. Pii- •){ Langenstein in Hessia, called Henricus ris, t. IV. f. 463. BEGINNINGS OF THE SCHISM IN THE CHURCHES. 47 requisite for such an office; but thej looked about onlv for a man ^'.■bo could best serve their purposes, and made choice of one whose chief title to importance was his relationship to princely families, and the large stretch of his conscience. ^ This was the Cardinal bish- op Robert of Cambraj, who named himself pope Clement YII. This was the beginning of the forty years' schism in the Western church, one of the most important of the links in the chain of events which contributed to the overthrow of the papal absolutism of the mid- dle age, and to prepare for the great reaction of the christian mind which took place in the sixteenth century. We have, indeed, seen already in earlier times schisms occasioned by the election of a pope ; these, however, were of no long duration ; nor did they lead to any such deeply cut division in the church. The way in which this schism arose is evidence in itself of the great corruption of the cardinals ; and as the corruption of a part is ever closely connected with some defect of the whole, and presents a good reason for inferring a com- mon guilt ; wso it was in the present case with regard to the gene- ral condition of the church. If, already, during the residence of the popes at Avignon, the abuses in the church had spread so widely, and risen to so enormous a pitch, yet all became still worse during this schism and by means of it. As the dominion of each of the two popes was circumscribed in its province, and as each must main- tain his state in contending with the other, so they were forced to resort to still greater extortions than had ever been practised, to the com- plete prostration of the church. Simony, and the mischief of in- dulgences, arbitrary will in selecting candidates for ecclesiastical offices, got more and more the upper hand. But it seems to have been necessary that the corruption of the church should reach its highest point, in order to make every one sensible of it, and to awaken a more general attention to the causes of so great an evil. An examination free from all bias would undoubtedly have led to the conclusion that Urban's election was regularly conducted ; and in the reasons brought forward to prove the contrary it is impossible not to see a great deal that is sophistical. But as national party interest soon mixed itself in with this inquiry, while Urban VI. did everything on his part, to excite the prejudices of men against him, so there might be much sharp fighting on both sides, with the weapons of that sort of polemical warfare which is waged in behalf of opposite incli- nations ; and as important men were to be seen on both sides, it would be found so much the more difficult for those who were governed only by the authority of names, to decide Avho was true pope. And when men hud continued for a lonu; time to be in doubt as to who was the true pope, the faith in the necessity of one visible head would necessarily become unsettled. It was impossible to put an end to the mischievous schism so long as the traditional forms and principles of ecclesiastical laws were tenaciously adhered to. It was necessary to recognize a triounal still higher even than the pope, in order at length to bring the ' L u j:;ic coiiscieutiiie, as Theodoric of Rome, calls it, in his work de scliisraate Nifin, then the popes chamberlain in lib. 1, cap. 10. 48 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. contests between the conflicting parties to a decision. Accordingly it was necessary to i.urn away from papal absolutism to the principles of the ancient and freer ecclesiastical law. But it was necessary also that it should be clearly understood, that the schism was not the only, nor yet the principal evil of the church. It was necessary in fine to recognize in all this only a symptom of a still more deeply lying cor- ruption. It was necessary to come to this, to be conscious that the schism itself was an admonition from God calling upon men to examine into the causes of the corruption of the church, and to begin to prepare the way for its regeneration. The question was, whether by the united eflforts of the most important forces so deep-rooted an evil of the church could be healed, or whether all these efforts would prove fruitless, and thus serve only to fix deeper the conviction that the church needed a far different and more radical cure. Under these more favorable circumstances, it became possible for that party so long suppressed, which in contending for the liberties of the na- tional churches, and the independence of the episcopal system, had first stood forth to oppose the growth and formation of papal absolut- ism, once more to stand up in the struggle with that absolutism which now formed the nucleus for all the corruptions of the church. This freer tendency had its seat more particularly in France, and in this country it had continued to maintain the struggle for the longest time. It was from this country more particularly, therefore, that a reaction of this sort against the mediaeval papacy now proceeded again. The theologians of the University of Paris, a body of men whose voice had the most important influence in all atiairs of general moment, were the most prominent representatives and organs of the same. Whilst, however, this party confined itself simply to the reform of the church constitution, holding fast to the foundation of the churchly theocrat- ical system, and seeking only to clear away from it the rubbish of later additions, another was gradually developing itself, inclined to a more thorough and radical species of reform, hostile to this conserva- tive element, a party which attacked the reigning system at its very foundation, demanding a regeneration of the church on the basis of the original christian principles, foretokening the renovated and chris- tian spn-it, which afterwards broke triumphantly forth in the German Reformation. Of this the great movements began in England and Bohemia ; Wicklif and Huss were the representatives of it ; and had it not been for that schism within the church, that enfeeblementof the pa- pal power brought about by its partition, neither could these movements have arisen, and developed themselves to the extent which they did.i The new pope Clement repaired once more to Avignon, and sought to gain over to his side the voice of France. Not till after a careful examination of the claims of the two popes before an assembly of the Gallic church held at Vincennes, did king Charles, with the whole church, declare in favor of Clement. The University of Paris was in- ' Henry of Hessia in his epistola pacis ; cos et fortitude militum apud Germanos Siu orbein divisum, ut sapientia fulgeat Boulaeus IV. f. 576. apud Gallicos, aurum abundet apud Itali- SCHISM OF THE CHURCH (UNIVERSITY OF PARIS.) 49 dined at first to acknowledge neither of the two individuals who had been elected, but declaring itself neutral to propose a general council which should investigate the whole affair and bring it to a decision. It was predicted that unless this were done, the seeds of schism would every day become more widely disseminated. It is true, the University yielded on the whole to the decisions of the council of Vincennes, and to the invitation of the king, who was desirous of having the concurrence of the university in those decisions ; yet a minority still held fast to their previous opinions. The whole church was divided into three parties, the Urbanists, Clementines, and neutrals or indifferents. At Paris, Henry of Hessia stood at the head of the latter party. He composed, under the title of Epistola pacis, a work in the form of a dialogue, between an Urbanist and Clementist, each of whom presents the arguments of his own party. After having placed the arguments of these parties one against the other, he sums up with the following declaration : " There is no other means of restoring on a solid basis the peace of the church but the meeting of all the pre- lates in a general council. Without this, the minds of men, even though one of the two popes should obtain the ascendancy, could not be set at rest for any great length of time. The same doubts would arise again about the succession of one or the other of them.i In the year 1381, the assembled heads of the University of Paris came to the resolution that it was best to insist upon the calling of a general council for the purpose of healing the schism, and that they would use their utmost endeavors to prevail upon the princes and prelates to resort to this method.2 The first to hft up his voice for the calling of a general council, as the only sure means of restoring peace to the church, was the above-mentioned Henry of Langenstein in Hes- sia, professor of theology at Paris, in his " Counsel of Peace," a work composed by him in the year 1381. ^ He looks upon the evils that had sprung out of this schism as an admonition from God, designed to bring men to a consciousness of the corruption of the church, and to lead them to seek earnestly after the necessary reform.* He thus addresses the princes and prelates ; "Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, repent and do works meet for repentance for the evils and sins which have been the cause of this schism." He notices the objections, which, on the po- sition held by the advocates of the old papal absolutism, were raised against the assembling of a general council, and endeavors to invalidate them, first by assuming the position itself from which these objections proceeded, as his point of departure, and then by opposing to it a higher christian position. We see in France the same principles employed in reference to civil and to ecclesiastical law. As the civilians proceeded ' Extract from tlie work in Bulaeus. ^ Consilium pacis. The end f. 578 : Absque cujas conventu * C. 3. Hanc tribulationera a Deo r.on credo vix unquam posse ad plenum corda gratis pernMssam, sed in necessariam op- quietari omnium. portunamque ecclesiae reformationem &q» ^ This, Henry of Hessia cites in his Con- liter convertendam. silium pacis c. 13, in Hermann Von der Hardt Cone. Const, t. II, f. 33. VOL. V. 5 50 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. on the assumption, that the weal of the state at large was the highest law, to which the kingly powder itself must be subservient, and attri- buted to the collective body the right to revolt against and depose a ruler who, by the abuse of his power, should act contrary to the well-being of the whole, so the opponents of papal absolutism as- cribed the same power to the church at large in relation to bad popes."^ And this power was to be exercised precisely by a gene- ral council, which represented the whole church. Such a council, which might be convoked even by the collective body of cardinals, must derive its authority directly from Christ himself, the eternal and immutable Head of the church, and pass its resolutions in his name. Christ, the author regards as the supreme, the only unconditionally ne- cessary Head of the church, standing with it in indissoluble union ; the head from which the church, his mystical body, derives incessantly the movement and spirit of life. Hence she cannot err, nor as a whole be stained with any mortal sin. To the complete organism of the church, should also belong, it is true, the papacy, as a caput seciui- dariiun. Yet in case of a vacancy in the, papal chair, or of doubt as to what person was true pope, the absence of that " secondary head " must admit of being supplied by Christ as the Head inseparable from the church. To the gift of Constantino the author traces, in great part, the corruption of the church ; though he acknowledges that it may have been a necessary or salutary thing for the church at a certain stage of its progress. For by means of it she became over- laden with honor, power and wealth ; and hence it came about that so many, without distinction, foolish and wise, boys and old men, bad and good, by right and by wrong, eagerly sought after the fat benefices of the church. He suggests many single projects of reform, which should be discussed by the general council. Among these belongs the renewal of the provincial synods, to be biennially convened : the doing away with the superfluous pomp of the prelates and cardinals, which was so great, as to lead them sometimes to forget they were men ; some provision against the bad management of patronage and appointments to eccle- siastical offices. He felt it necessary to complain that many but mod- erately educated persons held five, six or eight benefices, though not worthy of holding even one. " See to it," says he, " whether horses, hounds, falcons and the superfluous domestics of the clergy may not at the present time, far more than the christian poor, be eating up the heritage of the church." Urban VI. was, at the beginning, the pope recognized in the major- ity of the kingdoms. The places of those cardinals who had aban- doned him, he supplied by new appointments. But he ruined his cause by his own passionate wilfulness and extreme imprudence. He had brought it about, that Duke Charles of Durazzo should be made king of Naples. But after this he fell into a quarrel with that prince, because he refused to comply with the pope's wishes in promoting one ' Henry's own words: Ac si in nullo tare, sen principi volenti rempublicam et casu liceret populo vel alicui sine auctori- civium universitatem destruere, ad cujuj tate principis contra statutacomnuinia pro conservationem est coustitutus, tamquaijj defensione sui et paternarura legum mili- hosti non regi resistere. C. 15 f. 42. SCHISM OF THE CHURCH (BONIFACE IX.) 51 of his worthless nephews. He himself with the cardinals repaired to Naples, for the purpose bf working upon that prince by his personal in- fluence. In this, however, he did not succeed, but was drawn into a quarrel with Charles which daily grew more bitter. He was closely besieged in a castle ; and here all he could do was to go through the idle farce of stepping twice every day to a window, and pronouncing the ban on the whole army. At length he was set free by a Genoese fleet and transported to Genoa. Several cardinals, who had grown tired of the worthless conduct of their pope, and of the humiliations which he thus drew down upon himself, consulted with one another as to the best method of placing the pope under surveillance, and so cir- cumscribing his power as to keep him from such indiscreet steps. Urban having been informed of this, caused the suspected cardinals to be arrested. His vengeance knew no bounds. He employed the rack to lay bare the whole conspiracy. Thus he made himself more hate- ful every day, and promoted the cause of his opponent. Urban, who died in the year 1389, was succeeded by Boniface IX., a man desti- tute of every moral quality, as well as the knowledge requisite for an ecclesiastical office. His ruling passion was the love of money. All means were right to him which could minister to this passion. The well-being of the church went with him for nothing. As Theodoric of Niem reports, he was ignorant of all business in the Roman chan- cery, and hence approved of everything that happened to be laid be- fore him.> " In secular things — says the same writer — he was not a little fortunate ; but weak in spiritual things. "^ When mass was celebrated before him in the midst of many assembled prelates, this or that secretary would ever and anon be coming to him, to make some report about pecuniary matters, which to him were the most moment- ous of all. 3 His accession to office happened at a time which might bring large accessions of gain to one who did nothing but make traffic of spiritual things to the ruin of the church. Pope Clement VI. had, as we have i-emarked, already reduced the time of the jubilee to fifty years. It was probably the hope of gain that induced Urban VI. to shorten the time to thirty-three years. He died on the very year Avhen this pe- riod returned, and left the fruits to his successor. An innumerable multitude from Germany, Hungary, Poland, Bohemia, England, and other kingdoms where Urban was acknowledged, came together in Rome, and large oblations were presented in the churches. Some portion was used for the reconstruction of ruined church edifices. But the major part came into the hands of Boniface and many others. Not contented with this, Boniface sent"* letters of indulgence and ' L. 2 de schismate c. 6 : Ignoravit gra- fere vernalis fixcta fiiit in curia tempore suo. vitatem pontiticalis officii, et adeo suppli- ^ L. 2 c. 13 : In temporalihus non inedi- ^ationessibi propositas indiscrete signavit, ocriter tbrtunatus, sed in spiritualil)us de- ac si nunquam fuisset in Eomana curia bilis. eonstitutus, nee quae petebantur in ipsis •* L. c. c. 11. • intelle.xit, et propositiones factas coram eo * Theodoric of Niem says of him, in per advocates in ejus consistorio toto tcm- this connection : Erat enim insatiabilis vo pore sui pontiticatus non intelligens ad pe- rago et in avaritia uuUus ei simili;. Lib. J jta nimis confuse respondit, uude inscitia c. 68. 52 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. preachers of indulgence into all countries. These agents sold the indul- gence to all who gave the same sum as by computation the journey to Rome would have cost them. Thus the sellers of indulgences were enabled to bring back from many countries more than a hundred thou- sand florins ; and inasmuch as they bargained oif their indulgences, which to the people appeared the same as forgiveness of sins, without requiring penitence, they laid the foundation of immense mischief.' For money one might obtain from them, by virtue of the power to bind and loose, which they claimed for themselves, all sorts of dispen- sation. Enriched, they returned back in great state to Rome. Many of them, Boniface caused to be arrested, on the charge of embezzle- ment. Theodoric of Niem remarks, that several of these people came to a bad end, either falling victims to the fury of the people, or com- mitting suicide. " It was befitting — says he — that they who so de- ceived the christian people, when they were only serving their own cupidity, should perish :niserably.2 Simony and extortion from the churches reached, under this pope, their highest pitch." In the first seven years 3 he was still somewhat restrained by respect to the bet- ter disposed among the cardinals, and pursued the traffic more clan- destinely. No sooner, however, had these better persons died than he cast off all further shame. With a view to cover Simony under some show of law, he made it a rule, that none should obtain the more important ecclesiastical offices, without first advancing a sum of money, which, by the estimate of the Roman chancery, should equal the income of the first year, the so called annates. But now the same amount was required even for the expectancy ; and thus many paid the money, who never came into actual possession of the office. All sorts of usury became common to meet the expenses of such a purchase. Many vagabond monks roved idly about Rome, seeking }iromotion, which by bad arts might easily be obtained at that time at the Roman court. The most worthless of men could get promoted to the highest posts. The Bonifacian plantation, as it was called, a phrase to denote the most corrupt members of the clergy, became a by-word in every man's mouth. JNIeantime the university of Paris did not cease to carry on its Avork according to the principles, which, in this affair, they had ex- pressed from the beginning ; and they lent all their energies to bring about the restoration of peace to the church, and the reformation of its abuses. They kept an incessant and attentive watch over the conduct of the two popes. But the political relations of the kingdom were unfavorable to them — the regency during the minority of King Charles VI. of France, and afterwards his mental derangement. Cle- ment found in Cardinal Peter de Luna of Arragon, a very skilful and able negotiator, by Avhose means he endeavored to form a party among the French princes, and without sticking at bribery, to set influences at work against the university. Finally, the latter contrived in spite ' Theodoi-ic of Niern Ibid : Quia om- num populum deceperint, eorum avaritiae nia pecoata etiam sine poenitenria ipsis consulentes male perderentiir. contitentibus relaxaverunt. ^ 2, 7. * Justum erat, ut hi, qui taliter Christia- SCHISM OF THE CHURCH. 53 jf all difBculties to carry out their object ; and in the year 1894 obtained Hcense to set forth pubHclj before the king their opinion respecting the most appropriate method of restoring tranquillity to the church. From their own number was chosen a distinguished man, to draw up the judgment, Nicholas of Clemangis, so named from his native place, Clamanges in Champagne, belonging to the diocese of Chalons sur Marne. He was educated at the Paris university, be- came a member of the collegium of Navarre, was master of the liberal arts, then Baccalaureus of Theology, and a disciple of the Chancellor Gerson. He was even more distinguished than that great man for enlarged views and classical culture. In his theological tendency he was not cramped and confined within the common limits of the univer- sity of Paris, as we shall hereafter perceive. In the judgment drawn up by his pen and which he presented to the king at the head of a deputation from the university, Ave recognize his own spirit and style. There were three methods, among which the university left freedom for choice ; that both popes should, for the good of the church, re- sign ; that they should submit their respective claims to the investi- gation of chosen and approved men ; or the meeting of a general coun- cil." This council should, according to the then current legal form, con- sist of prelates exclusively ; or else inasmuch as these, to their shame and reproach, were for the most part ignorant,^ and several of them too partial 3 to one or the other side, there must be joined with the prelates, in equal number, masters and doctors of theology and of law from the universities ; or, if these were not enough, delegatea should be added from the cathedral churches, the chapters, and the monastic orders. Next, the right to the meeting of a general council is defended against the arguments alleged to the contrary by the advocates of the old church doctrine. Although this method had been objected to as an unsuitable one, by some flatterers and pro- moters of this monstrous schism, from its beginning down to the present time, rather to nourish the disorder than to act according to the judg- ment of truth ; yet whoever would examine into the matter without prejudice, must see that this method was by no means so objection- able. There was, indeed, so much the more need of a general coun- cil, at a time when discipline, manners, and good order had, by the operation of this mischief-bringing schism, sunk to the lowest ebb, and so many abuses had crept abroad, that if the church were not soon helped, she must be plunged in irremediable ruin. " Too late — he exclaims, addressing the popes, — will you repent not having looked about after any remedies. If now, when it stands in your power, you do not see the near-impending dangers, who do you suppose will still be willing to endure such goveraiaent of the church? Who to bear these extortions and wrongs of the church — who, these cheap ' The via cessionis, compromissi aut * Quia plures eomin proh pudor ! hodie coucilii generalis, Tlie judgment in Bulae. satis illitcnui sunt. Pa;,'. 6'M. L 1. Pag. 6S7 sq. ^ Pluresque ad alteiutrani partem inor dinate atiecti 5* 54 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. promotions of all the worthless and the most ignorant to all the hiuhesJ dignities ? You deceive yourselves, assuredly you deceive yourselves, if you suppose that this will long be tolerated in you. If men will not Bee it, or seeing it, will be silent, the very stones shall cry out against you." To the (juestion, whence comes the authority of a council, he an- swers, — " The consent and agreement of all the faithful will confer it, Christ in the gospel confers it, when he says, " Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am in the midst of them." After a full explanation of the above-mentioned three methods for the restoration of unity, it is declared : Whichever of the two popes refuses to adopt one of these three methods, or to propose some other, is to be regarded as an obstinate schismatic, and therefore a heretic. He is no shepherd of the church, but a tyrant, and must no longer be obeyed. The king is most earnestly called upon to do all in his power for the restoration of peace to the church ; to make all secular affairs give way to this. To this end, the evils that had resulted from the schism are minutely portrayed. In connection with this, to be sure, we find it erroneously assumed, — for it is an error according to the history as we have presented it — that the church down to the time of this schism had been in a flourishing condition. But this statement is somewhat modified ; for the existing evils are not imputed directly and solely to the schism itself, but in part also to the preceding state of things ; so that a time of corruption may accordingly be marked which existed previous to the schism.^ Worthless and wicked men had been promoted to the government of the church, and were still pro- moted to the same ; men to whom nothing was sacred ; by whose dis- graceful acts and in ministration to whose pleasures, the churches were drained, the monasteries plundered. The priests were seen begging, or they were employed on the most menial and degrading services. The church utensils of gold and silver were in many places sold to eke out those extortions. How many churches had been brought to ruin ! He complains of the simony which had occasioned the worst appointments to spiritual offices. It was not the learned Avho received promotion ; but the more learned men were, the more were they detested, because by such simony was more boldly castigat- ed than by others. As the most wicked abuse of all, to describe whicli language scarcely strong enough could be found, he signalizes the abuse in the administration of the sacraments, especially of ordina- tion and of penance. 2 Nothing was to be said about the curtailment of the liberties of the church, and the loss of its goods, for they were only temporals ; although, in these times, temporals were regarded as of the greater importance. ^ ' Quid ante hoc schisma schismatisque omnium injustas coUationes et praecipue praeambula ccclesia tioreutius ? I'ag. 693. ordinurn ac poenitentiae turpi detestabili - Et quod iniquissimura est, nee satis que quaestu vcndit. Pag. 694. exaggerari verbis potest, haec est, quae ■* Quamquam majora isti haec tempora lamuatissinia corruptela saeramentorura liajudicant. OPINION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PARIS ON THE SCHISM. 55 The university next defended itself against the reproach that it chose to inveigh against the pope, (for whose honor the university should be more zealous than all others), from its ambition to govern all things, especially in the church, according to its will. The}' who cast upon the university this reproach — it was said — were endeavor- ing to maintain the schism in the church, for their own emolument ; for, in any well-ordered condition of the church, they would find it impossible to secure so many and fat benefices.^ They say, it is true, they do not want to govern the church ; they prefer to let them- selves be governed ; but they do want on the other hand to prac- tise extortions, to destroy and rend the -churches. And because, constrained by our own conscience and the truth, we cannot remain silent at this, because we are neither willing nor able to bear it with equanimity, it is for this reason that they, in so great danger of the church, have fabricated such charges against us. Does it become us to keep silence, where the very stones ought to cry out ? When the university presented this writing, they received at first an evasive answer. But when they pressed for a more decided de- claration, they received for answer. It was the king's pleasure that they should neither treat nor consider this matter any farther, that they should not receive nor open any letters relating to it, until they had first been shown to the king. Upon this the university carried into effect the resolution previously passed, that sermons and lectures should be suspended by all their members until satisfaction was given to their demands.^ Next, the university addressed to the pope a very frank and bold letter, in which they strongly protested against the intriguing conduct of the Cardinal Peter de Luna, without men- tioning his name, aiid urgently besought him to do all in his power to put a speedy end to the schism ; so that this schism — which God avert — might not become an everlasting one, for the thing had al- ready come to that pass, that men were heard openly to say, it made no sort of difference how many popes there were. There might be not two or three only, but even twelve. Each realm might have its own ecclesiastical superior ; and each of these might be independent of the others.-^ It is clear from this, how the being accustomed to have no general- ly acknowledged pope had already had the effect of leading men to tliink, that perhaps one universal visible head of the church was a thing not necessary. The pope, it is said, manifested great indigna- tion in reading this letter — calling it, as was reported to the univer- sity, a malignant and venomous letter.'* The university thereupon issued a second letter to the pope, vindicating itself from this re- proach, and showing that they had acted out of pure zeal for the ' Magnas qui])pe dignitatcs et erassa quot Papae sint, et non sohimmodo duo beneticia in hac turbata ecclesia assequun- aut tres, sed decern aut duodecim, imo et tur, qiias integra ac unita se nunquam adi- singulis regnis singulos praetici posse, nul- Disci posse et nierito contiderent. Pag. 695. la sibi invicem potestatis aut jurisdietionis * Bulacus. 1. c. pag. 696. auctoritate praelatos. L. 1. pag. 700. ^ Ut plerumque passim et publice non * Malae sunt et venenosae. L. 1. pag vereantur dicere, Nihil omnino curandum, 701. 56 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. welfare of the church, still expressing themselves, however, with great freedom. But Clement was already dead. Now, if it had been pos- sible at this juncture to prevent a new papal election on this side, the removal of the schism would thereby have been greatly facilitated. The university of Paris endeavored to bring this about by letters and delegates sent to the king, and directly afterwards to the college of cardinals : but they could effect nothing. The cardinals at Avignon only made more haste to complete their election, so as to frustrate this design. They thought themselves bound to maintain their rights against the other party. Yet before proceeding to the election, they pledged themselves' to use every effort to bring about the restoration of peace to the church, and agreed that whichever one of them should be chosen pope, he would not hesitate, if it should be necessary to effect that end, to resign his dignity. The already named Cardinal Peter de Luna of Aragon, a man far superior to his predecessors, at least in clerical dignity, plausible manners, and the art of managing men, was chosen pope. He called himself Benedict XIII. He had been, earlier, professor of the canon law at Montpellier, and had en- joyed a good reputation.2 Gregory XI. made him cardinal .3 He had, thus far, as Theodoric of Niem says, manifested great zeal for the restoration of the unity of the church. When employed by Pope Clevuent on embassies, he had found fault, because the pope did no- thino; for the restoration of concord to the church. But his adminis- tration of the papacy did not answer the expectations which his pre- vious conduct may have inspired. He utterly ignored the pledge, which he had given before he assumed the papal dignity. He did not recognize the form of that oath, when sent to him, as genuine, and asserted that a pope could not be bound.'' In the year 1401,5 Nicholas of Clemangis composed his remarkable book on the corruptions of the Church, in which he sets forth these corruptions, affecting all portions of the church, in the darkest col- ors, and yet most assuredly in accordance with the truth. He too, not only considers the schism as a consequence of the corruptions in the church, but also as a means designed to bring men to the con- sciousness of them. "Who does not know — says he — that this frightful pest of schism was first introduced into the church by the ' The form is to be foiuu) in Biilae. 1. c. copiam, quam confictara esse constanter f. 730. asseriinus, tibi remittimus. It bids the ^ Theodoric of Niem writes coneeniing cardinals pag. 731, ne in dicta schedula him, from an acquaintance with liim thir- vos siihscribatis, nee etiam consentiatis ty-six years before at Montpellier : Homo aliqualiter aliis, quae non licent seu non ingeniosus et ad inveniendum res novas decent, seu ex quibus occasio forte ]iosset valdc subtilis. Cf 1. 2, c. 33. deprehendi, (juod contra reverentiam, ol)e- •* Theodoric of Niem says of him : Qui dientiam aut honorem nobis et ecclesiae tunc satis diligcbatur a multis, eo quod Ilomanae per vos debitas, seu laudal)iles peritus et virtuosus existerct, a pluribus mores inter nos et vos, praedecessores hiudabatur. nostros et vestros observari consuetos ali- ■* Du IJoulay, p. 729, cites the letter of qua tierent. the pope 10 the king of France: Respon- ^ As he himself says in the book de nii- detnus, quod ijui til)i vel aliis ista scripse- na ecclesiae c. 16, — H. v. d. Hardt tom. I, runt, vel quomodolibet retulerunt, minus pars III. pag. 18, when the division had veriJice id egerunt, et propterea dictam already lasted nearly twenty-three years. CLEMANGIS DE RUINA ECCLESI^. 57 wickedness of the cardinals, that by them it has been promoted, pro- pagated, and enabled to strike its roots so deep."^ " If — says he — all kingdoms however mighty, great and exalted, have been prostrated to the dust by injustice and pride, how knowest thou — so he addresses the church — when thou hast cast far from thee the firm rock of hu- mility thou wast founded on, and which feared no storm of invasion, and hast lifted thy horn on high, that such a fabric of pride, erected by thyself, will not be overthrown ? Already has thy pride, which could not sustain itself, begun slowly and gradually to fall, and on this account its fall was not perceived by the majority. But now thou art wholly plunged in the gulf, and especially since the breaking out of this abominable schism. Most surely has the divine anger permit- ted this to come upon thee as a check to thy intolerable wickedness, that thy domination so displeasing to God, so odious to the nations, may, by being divided within itself, come to nought." Not that the true faith would run any hazard in this conflict of contending churches in the world ; this being founded upon the firm rock would remain unshaken ; but it was otherwise with all that temporal power, glory and pleasure wherewith the church Avas overladen even to loath- ing and the forgetfulness of herself.^ As the cessation of the syna- gogue followed close upon the destruction of Jerusalem, so the fall of Rome as seat and head of the church, seemed to indicate that the de- struction of the church herself and her dominion might be near at hand. For how could she long subsist, who, deprived of her original seat and head, was obliged to roam about fugitive and inconstant, and like a stranger in the world wander from one place to another. She must have foreseen her impending fall, since the time that, detest- ed for her fornication, she fled from Rome to Avignon ; where in pro- portion to her greater freedom, she more openly and shamelessly ex- posed to view the ways of her simony and profanation, bringing foreign and perverted manners, the source of infinite mischief, into France. Where good manners and severe discipline once reigned, immoderate luxury had, by her means, now begun to spread. Holding up the synagogue as an antetype of the church, he l^ds the latter take warn- ing by the fate of the former. Then he addresses the church : "Awake, for once, from thy long sleep, wretched sister of the syna- gogue ! Awake, I say, at last, for once : and set a Hmit to thy intox- ication, which it might take thee long enough, so to speak, to sleep out ! If one spark of a sound understanding still remains in thee, search diligently into the writings of the prophets, and know from them, that the liour of thy shame is no longer at a distance, but close by. Thou wilt see what an end awaits thee ; and how evil and dangerous it is for thee to lie long in this filth.' '^ He describes^ into what ignominious dependance on the French court Clement VII. had cast himself; how he was compelled to sacrifice the good of the church to the interests jf the French princes. He speaks of the scandalous bargaining away I C. 16. et oblivionem sui ipsa ecclesia obruta est. * Loquor de temporali potentatu, de Cap. 42. gloria et deliciis, quibus usque ad nauseam ^ Cap. 41. * Cap. 42. 58 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. of benefices. "What poorer creature — says he — was there than our Clement as long as he lived, who had so debased himself to the condition of a servant of servants to the princes of France, that such threats and scornful language were daily heaped upon him by the peo- ple of the court, as ought not to be borne by the most miserable slave ! He gave way to their rage, he gave way to the time, he gave way to clamorous demands. He used falsehoods, disguises ; gave splendid promises ; put off with fair hopes from one day to another. To some he gave benefices, others he held at bay with words. All who by the art of flattery or of playing the buffoon, had made themselves agree- able to the court, he took every pains to please, and to secure their favor by benefices, in order that by the good offices of such he might make sure of the favor of their master." On the handsome and well- dressed young men, in whose companionship he most deUghted, he had bestowed nearly all the vacant bishoprics and other most honor- able posts. The more easily to secure and preserve the goodwill of the princes, he had himself 'and without soHcitation sent them presents, allowed them to practise any extortions they chose on the clergy, nay even invited them to do so at their pleasure. In this most deplor- able servitude, which could not be called a government of the church, he had spent more than fifteen years, inflicting an injury on the church, surpassing all belief. He goes through the several orders and offices of the church for the purpose of pointing out the corruption in them all. He describes ' the worldly pride and state of the cardinals, who when they had been raised from the lowest rank and from the humblest offices to that highest dignity, as for example, from the condition of grave-diggers, wholly forgot what they once were, and looked down upon all the other spiritual offices of the church with disdain. He reproached them with their luxurious habits of living ; 3 accused them of grasping at all the benefices, of practising simony. He speaks 3 of the bad appointments to benefices proceeding from the Roman court, which had usurped everything to itself. Not from studious pursuits and the school alone, but from the plough, and from menial employments, individuals were here and there called to the guidance of parishes and to the other be- nefices ; men who understood little more of Latin than they did of the Arabic language ; nay, men who could not even read, and shame to say, hardly knew the alphabet. But may they not perhaps have made amends for this ignorance by the excellence of their manners ? Not in the least. Brought up without learning in idleness, they busied themselves only with looking out for their pleasures, feasting and sport- ing. Hence in all places, so many bad, wretched, ignorant priests, whose scandalous lives made them both offensive and sources of corruption to the communities. Hence the expressions of contempt for priests on the lips of all the people. While it was formerly the case, that with people of the world the priesthood stood in the ' Cap. 13. ' Cap. 7. ^ Immcnsa et inexcusabilis vorago coa- '^upiseeutiae. CLEJIANGIS DE RUINA ECCLESIuE. 59 highest honor, and notliing was considered more worthy of respect than this order, now nothing was considered more deservin"- of con- tempt. H(2 complaiQS ' that the study of the scriptures, and every man who engaged in that study, were ridiculed ; and especially — which was most to he wondered at — by the bishops, who looked upon their own decrees as of vastly more importance than the divine precepts. That glorious office of preaching, the fairest of all offices, and which once belonged solely to the pastors, had sunk among them to so low esteem, that there was nothing they held to be more worthless, or less becoming their dignity. He points out ^ the mendicants as being almost the only persons that occupied themselves with the study of the scriptures, that supplied the office of preaching, who alone, as they affirmed, administered the functions of all the church offices which were neglected by all others, alone represented that which by the vices, the ignorance and remissness of all the rest had fallen into desuetude. But next he attacks these also, representing them as the genuine successors of the Pharisees described in the gospels, who, under their show of holiness, concealed all manner of wickedness. They were ravening wolves in sheep's clothing, who put an for out- side show, severity of life, chastity, humility, holy simplicity, but in secret abandoned themselves to the choicest pleasures, to a dainty variety of luxurious enjoyments. He acknowledges 3 that in the midst of the great mass of the bad members of the church there was doubtless also a good seed ; since Christ had promised of the church at large, that her faith should not become utterly extinct ; but in the midst of so many that were bad, the small number of the good vanished to a point. The proportion was scarcely one to a thousand. And whenever an individual in a community distinguished himself by his pious living, he was made a butt of ridicule for the rest, was pointed out as a proud man, a singular fellow, an insane person or a hypocrite ; hence num- bers from whom some good might come, had they been associated with the good, were in the society of the bad swept along into wickedness. Clemangis saw more profoundly than others into the corruptions of the church, and its causes ; and hence he placed but httle confidence in the means employed for its removal. He was penetrated with a tho- rough conviction that the thing needed here was a deep-going process of purification, to be accomplished only by the wisdom and almighty power of God ; and he saw that the evils which men vainly sought to heal by lighter remedies, must in spite of all human exjjedients contin- ually go on increasing to their fullest measure before that help could come from God. "■ Because — says he'' — the church, though torn and rent by so many calamities, refused to humble herself, she justly there- fore must first be humbled by Him, who humbles whatever exalteth itself, and exalts the lowly, to the end that she may return back to the state of grace from which she has fallen. She must first bo still more afflicted, still more smitten ; not till then can she be healed." "For — says he — as regards the restoration of the church, rent asunder by this unhappy schism, it is vain to hope that any tiling of ' Cap. 19. '^ Cap. 33. » Cap. 39, 40. ■» Cap. 43 60 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. this sort will be brought about by us. This can never be accomplish- ed by man's work, never by any human art whatsoever. This thing requires of a certainty another hand. And if ever a union of the church shall take place, the physician that effects it must be He who gave the wound ; for the wound is so grave and incurable as to be in- capable of healing by any other pains. A great deal has been done on this subject, a great deal written ; a great deal said ; many embas- sies have been undertaken on account of it. But the more we have met and deliberated and proposed, the more complicated and obscure the matter has grown ; for God mocks our pains, because we fancy ourselves able by our own prudence and skill, without his help, to ac- complish what is his work alone. Add to this, that we are unworthy of receiving peace from him and of having peace ; for God the Lord has said, " There is no peace to the wicked." He - looks forward in expectation of a persecution of the church, sent as a divine judgment, and growing out of the schism. By this persecution coming from the secular powiT, the church would be deprived of the rights and posses- sions not her own which she had brought within her grasp, and re duced back to poverty. " This persecution — says he — will come upon us sooner perhaps than many are aware. We might see the foundation already laid for it in various w^ays, were we not so Winded ; and any man possessed of his senses, may certainly see how this per- secution threatens to break out more and more every day." Scan- ning with a prophetic eye the remote future as if it were near at hand, Clemangis predicts such a process of purification and such a revolution of the church, as subsequently proceeded from the Reformation. " What methods — he concludes — still remain in thy hands, Christ, if thou wilt purify thy church from such dross as that into which its gold and silver have been converted? what other method, than that thou wilt finally purge away from the refining even this dross itself, which can by no refining fire be again transmuted into gold and silver, and prepare in it a new metal of untarnished purity ? " In order clearly to understand how this distinguished man judges concerning the corruption of the church of his time, and concerning the means requisite for its cure, we should compare with this book a treatise which he addressed to a friend of his, who was candidate for a theological degree, and proposed to hold lectures on the Sentences at some university. This was his treatise on the Study of Theology.^ He represents the chief end of theological study to be education for the office of preaching. In the neglect of this, he finds the principal cause of the corruption of the church. In the exercise of this office, we ought chiefly to imitate Christ ; for his whole activity had consisted in teaching. "For sometimes — says he — Christ taught his disci- ples, sometimes the multitude, sometimes the Pharisees ; occasionally he taught in the synagogue, often in the temple, sometimes on the land, sometimes on the water, sometimes on mountains, sometimes on the plains ; oftentimes he taught many together ; then again, individuals. • De studio theologico in d'Achery's Spicilegium, vol. I, p. 473 sq. CLEMANGIS DE STUDIO THEOLOGICO. 61 Who should not say, then, that the best method is the one which Christ, the perfect pattern of all that is good, practised unceasingly while liv- ing in the flesh ? But what is meant by being a teacher ? What else than this ; with the right art, with experience, and zeal for the cui-eof souls, to teach others ? For it is not the square cap, not the highei pulpit that makes the doctor." To the theologian or to the preachei — says he — for I look upon both as one and the same — it belongs, in particular, to live uprightly according to the will of God, that in the practice of his commandments, and in all life and conversation, he may furnish a pattern to all." He accordingly regards the practical element as the end and aim of theological study, and disputes a theo- logian of some eminence, who had asserted that to teach and dispute at the University, was something of higher note than to preach. " Since — says he — the end of theological study is to instruct in the right manner one's self and others in that which pertains to eternal life, so we may see which we should consider as most profitable and salutary, whether actively to discharge the predicatorial office in zeal for the salvation of souls, or after one has obtained the academical de- gree, to remain always at the University, teaching and disputing. What purpose — says he — is all this to serve ? Certainly this pur- pose ; to form others that they may be capable of leading the rest to salvation. Now if the means must correspond to the end, is it not better, by one's own preaching to lead others to salvation, than to edu- cate such as are destined thus to operate on others, but will perhaps never do so ?i Who must not see — he says — that it is better to ban- ish errors out of the hearts of men, than out of books ? In many things, the people at the present time stand at a very great distance in their Avays of thinking from that which the true faith requires. They use magical arts ; they are closely wrapt in various superstitions ; they seek advice from fortune-tellers ; they are in error as to the majority of the articles of faith. If there is much acute disputation against all this in the schools, of what avail is it to those, who, remote from such places, hear nothing of all this, those whom no theologians ever come to instruct ? Is not the physician who, after having learn- ed the art, visits and heals the sick, more useful than he who never exercises the art, but only disputes in the schools ?" ^ The cause, however, of the neglect of preaching, and the cause of the bad preaching in his own time, he finds in the false treatment of theo- logy, as merely a matter of the understanding and not a matter of the heart ; in the dislike of the study of the bible, in the one-sided scholas- tic tendency, in the fact that such a theology was pursued as could neither fill the heart with zeal for the preacher's office, nor render one qualified for its performance. He says — '' We see most school-the- ologians at the present time attributing so little weight to proofs drawn from the scriptures, that they deride a proof grounded on such autho- rity, as indicating a sluggish intellect, or want of acuteness ; as if that were of more weight, which is excogitated by human invention, than ' Pag. 478. ' Pag. 479. VOL. V. 6 62 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. what God had revealed from heaven. After citing the words in 2 Tim, 3 : 16, he says " Of little profit to that end, are the things in which the majority exercise themselves at the present day ; things which may indeed in some way or other serve to sharpen the intellect, but can neither warm the heart, kindle emotion in the soul, nor supply it with any nourishment, but leave it cold, hard and withered."^ Hence it is, that they are so indolent in discharging the preacher's office. They have never learned the science which ministers thereto. This is the true knowledge after which every theologian should strive, knowledge which not only informs the understanding, but at the same time takes hold on the affections. "2 He compares the theology of his time to the apples of Sodom, which, seen from without, appeared fair, but within were only dust and ashes. Accordingly such a theology could never still the cravings of the spirit, however acute and ingenious it might appear. He calls upon his friend, to study in particular the church fathers ; but to regard these as only the rivulets, leading back to the fountain-head of the Holy Scriptures themselves. He already lays down the principle, that in matters of religion, nothing should be as- serted which could not be proved out of the sacred scriptures, where, by rightly searching, one would find everything necessary to be known in order to salvation. 3 The predictions uttered by Clemangis, in his book De ruina eccle- siae, about the fruitless character of the means by which it was at- tempted to do away the schism, were more and more verified every day. The university of Paris issued a letter to Pope Benedict soon after his accession to office, calling upon him in the most pressing manner to set forward the cause of the union without any procrastina- tion. He ought not to delay even for a moment. If he waited but a day, another would soon be added, and so the whole thing would pass into forgetfulness. Flatterers would come : men who, under the guise of friendship, instilled the deadliest poison ; men, ambitious for dignities ; eager aspirants for promotions and benefices ; all the courtiers who did homage to the power of the moment : and if to such he opened his ears, they would be ever drawing him farther and farther from this matter. United with all this would be the sweet custom of honor, best fitted of all things to entice and deceive him, as it had done with many, especially in these times. He had the latest example of this in his predecessor, who had by it alone been led to adhere so obstinately to the opinion he had onee adopted. But if Benedict should advert to the fact, that all did not depend on him, that there was something incumbent also on the other pope, it was main- ' Ad quae ilia sunt parum utilia, in qui- at, sed infundat simul atque imbuat affec- bus hodie plurimi exercentur, quae licet turn. Ibid. intellectum uteumque acuant, nullo tamen ^ Quoniam in his quae divina sunt, nihil igne succendunt affectum, nullo motu ex- debemus temere detinire, nisi ex coelesti- citant, nullo alimento pascunt, sed frig- bus possit oraculis approbari : quae divini- idum, torpentem, aridum relinquunt. Pag. tus enuntiata de his, quae scitu de deosunt t76. necessaria, aut ad salutem opportuna, si ^ Ilia est vera scientia, quae theologura diligentur investigarentur, nos sufficienter decet, quamque omnis debet theologus ex- instruunt. Ibid, f etere, quae uon modo intellectum instru- THE THREE CHURCH PARTIES. 63 tained on the other hand, that without the least dovibt everythiui depended on his doing his own duty ; and the other might be left to do the same, or, if he did not do it, he must inevitably make the wickedness of his course evident to all. The pope returned to this letter of the university an answer couched in the most general terms, expressing his earnest desire of promoting the unity of the church, but at the same time excusing himself on the plea that all did not depend on him alone, and that he felt himself pledged to nothing. To explain the fact, how the popes could for so long a time disap- point the earnest desires of all the well-disposed for the restoration of church-unity, and for a renovation of the church, now so deeply de- pressed, and to understand rightly the fluctuating, uncertain character of the negotiations entered into with them, we should have distinctly before our minds the relation of the parties by which they were in fluenced. As usually happens in passing from an old state of things to a new, three parties had sprung up: one, which was utterly unable to rid itself of the principles of the medieval ecclesiastical law, and of papal absolutism, and which ever eyed with suspicion all attempts to set another authority as judge over the pope ; a second, which was disposed to carry out against the pope with reckless violence, and without sparing, the principles of the new ecclesiastical law now in the process of formation, according to which the popes should be sub- ject to the control of general councils, — a party inclined to radical revolution ; and the more prudent and moderate advocates of the new system, of the new liberty of the church, at whose head stood men like D'Ailly and Gerson. The French church itself, which labored most zealously for the removal of the schism, and the reform of the church, was divided into these three parties, and their own conten- tions with each other promoted the interests of Pope Benedict, who possessed far more self-reliance and craft than his predecessors, and the popes of the other party, and who seems to have understood how to exercise a certain power over the minds of others. Opposed to the free spirit of the university of Paris was the tendency and bent of the university at Toulouse, which was still fast entangled in the old sys- tem. But in the university of Paris itself, those two parties, — the party inclined to radical measures, and the more moderate one, could not come to any agreement. The one wanted from the first to put an end to the crafty intrigues of Benedict, and with the aid of the secular power to break up his rule. They would go the length of renouncing ecclesiastical obedience to him, thus compelHng him to resign. A welcome thing to them it would be if the French church should one (lay subsist without a pope and govern itself. It might doubtless be the case also that, with many, worldly interests mixed in. The more prudent party dreaded a movement which, once set agoing, might lead farther than was at first proposed. With the theological faculty the considerations of mildness and forbearance had the most weight ; but they easily yielded to the preponderance of the other faculties. Ger- son, by his character and his principles, was no less violent in hia apposition to all that appeared to him revolutionary in the evolution 64 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. of the church, than he was to all slavish dependance of the chuvcL upon the popes, and the mean course, which appeared to him the only right one between the two extremes, he was for thrusting upon all. It might appear surprising, that the already mentioned Nicholas of Clemangis, the organ through whom the Paris university expressed its earlier free-spoken declarations against the pope, who, for freedom of mind stood far above all the Parisian theologians, and had ventured to break through the common limits of the Parisian theology, should not in this case, however, be at all satisfied with the bolder party which stood forth against Pope Benedict. But for the very reason that he saw so deeply into the corruption of the church and its causes, he could not indulge the hopes by which others allowed themselves to be deceived. He was convinced from the beginning, that something else must be relied on than human wisdom ; that help was to be expected for the church from God alone. He feared that by all the attempts to cure, the evil might only be made worse. He was per- fectly satisfied with neither one of the parties. In those who stood forth with the most freedom and boldness, he missed a pure and single interest for the well-being of the church ; he believed that he saw selfish motives. He beheld little else but the contest of passions ; he did not find the wisdom and calm coUectedness that grew out of cool persuasion, by Avhich alone the rightful cause could be ascertained. The conduct of Benedict's enemies appeared to him indehcate, passion- ate and unforbearing. He failed of seeing in it the respect which was due to the head of the church. Although in his theological tendency he was otherwise more free than the rest of the Parisian thelogians, and not trammelled by the fetters of scholasticism, yet he could not so easily as many others set himself beyond all respect for the papal office. He feared an indevout tendency, striving to break loose from the head of the church. He saw arbitrary will and a Hcentious free- dom already spreading far and wide, in lieu of disciphne and good order. He feared that in place of dependance on the popes, in whom he would by no means approve of the abuse of power, would be sub- stituted a still more corrupting dependance on princes and courts. In view of such dangers as these which seemed to him to threaten the course of the party which proposed to break loose from Pope Bene- dict, he was from conviction an opponent of those violent steps against him. Add to this, that Clemangis could not in particular place the least confidence in those hopes which were built on the declaration of neutrality by France. He behoved that by this divisions only would arise in their own party, and that the opposite elements instead of being enfeebled would gain strength. Neither would the abdication of Pope Benedict be of any use unless the other pope should resolve to do likewise, or his party were disposed to force him to it. Thus he feared that by division among themselves and consequent weakness, the other party would only become more confirmed and more haughty, while no issue would be reached. These considerations made him from the beginning and ever after an opponent of the proposed renun- ciation of Pope Benedict, and he held his position to the last, when NICHOLAS OF CLEMAXGIS. 65 Jiis voice could no longer be heard against so many others, and what he would have prevented if he could, was still carried through. The consequences that ensued justified the views which had been express- ed by him. Add to this, that Benedict, personally, had made a favorable impression on him. He was inclined to excuse the steps he had taken ; he gave him credit for more interest in the welfare of the church than others did. He always carefully abstained from flatter- ing the pope ; he reminded him in the strongest language of his duty to the church. When the pope entered upon his office, Clemangis wrote him a letter upon that occasion, in 1394, explaining to him the point of view, such as we have already described it, under which he himself regarded the relations of the church at that time. " Far be from me " — he wrote — " any wish to flatter the pope, as from my early youth, this worst of pests, which commits such frightful ravages on all common interests.has ever been tome an abomination. Plenty of those will appear before you, who, unused to speak the truth, and inflamed by a blind desire of benefices, will endeavor to flatter your ears with deceitful words. Would to God there were even but a few still left, fair and friendly enough, to tell you the truth which engenders hatred, which is unwelcome to the multitude, though welcome, as I hope, to your heart. I confess, that at the present moment, so far as in me lies, I am of this number, and so shall remain, should I address you any other letter in the future. I come not to petition you for bene- fices, not to speak to you about any interests of my own, but of yours. And with good truth may I call that i/our interest, which is the inter- est of the whole church, the guidance and administration of which God has now set before you." After reminding the pope of the com- pass and extent of his duties growing out of this relation of his to the church, he adds : " It will, however, be required of you from the Lord, whose vicar you are, to give an account of so much the more, as you and your predecessors have taken on your shoulders of your own will additional burdens besides what were long ago imposed on you by the Lord and the church ; as you by setting aside the custom of election to the bishoprics and other church dignities, and by taking away from all patrons the right of collation, have made the distribu- tion of ecr'lpaiaetical offices, in all the grades, dependant on your will. Whether this was for your happiness, you must judge for yourself ; but whether it serve for the well being of the church, is a question the discussion of which would occupy too much space for a letter." From these words it is easy to see — what accords with other declara- tions of Clemangis — that he, like the other men of the Paris uni ver- ity who favored reform, considered some limitation of the papal power, which had brought everything within its vortex, — a limitation of this power in the guidance of the church, — as a thing calculated to promote the interest of the pope, by freeing him from responsibilities which he Avas in no condition to meet, as well as the good of the church itself. How important an object it seemed in his own mind, that the pope should be placed in contact with noble and free-hearted men, appears from the fact that he particularly recommended to him in this letter; 66 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. Pierre d'Ailly, then chancellor of the university of Paris. He de Bcribes him as a man greatly distinguished by his knowledge, hi, character, and his zeal for the unity of the church ; a man whose virtues had drawn upon him the hatred of many.^ We will here mention, by the way, an incident characteristic of Clemangis and his relations to Avignon. He had sent this letter to his friends at the court in Avignon, requesting them to place it in the hands of the pope ; but these friends had found it necessary to expunge many parts of it. The letter appeared to them too bold ; they interpreted it as a want of respect, that he should address the pope in the singular number ; the encomiums on Peter d'Ailly, whose free and noble spirit would not be likely to make him a favorite at the court of Avignon, they thought overdrawn, so they had taken the liberty to alter the letter according to their own will ; for example, to leave out the whole passage where Clemangis warns the pope against flattery, since even this seemed to them hardly consistent with the respect due to the pope. As a matter of course, the letter, as Clemangis complains, was robbed by these arbitrary omissions and alterations, of its true mean- ing. Now, had they presented the letter in this mutilated form, they might thus at least have shown their good intentions towards their friend ; but by putting, as they did, the mutilated letter into the pope's hands along with the original, they may only have intended by such a course to shield themselves from any charge of disrespect towards the pope in transmitting to him so bold a letter, or they may, as Clemangis suspected, have intended to make the writei- himself appear in an unfavorable light. At any rate they must have been much more intent on their own interest than on that of their friend. Clemangis bitterly blames this proceeding of his friends. " It is the pernicious distemper of these times, — he says — and particu- larly of the place you live in, Avignon, to suppose that truth cannot please unless it appears decked out in ornaments and concealed by flattery ; that if it be presented naked and with freedom, it must offend everybody and stir up against it anger or ridicule. No wonder then that you have contracted a taint from the customs of the place and the time." 2 At all events, that solicitude of theirs was unfounded ; and if they proposed to themselves any such object as those just men- tioned, they were disappointed. Benedict could not have been dis- pleased with Clemangis for speaking so freely. This honest freedom probably led him to entertain a still greater liking for the writer. Benedict succeeded in persuading Clemangis to enter into his own service, thereby gaining the double advantage of depriving the al- liance of the more liberal parties at Paris of the talents of so good a man, and of turning these talents to the benefit of his own cause. Through the mediation of the friends of Clemangis at Avignon, the latter was induced to accept the oflice of papal secretary. Doubtless the pope, who was observant of the change taking place in the culture of the times, wished to secure the better style of Cle- ' Ep. 2. Nic. de Clemangis opp. ed. * Ep. 3. pag. 12. Lydius, epp. pag. 6 — 10. NICHOLAS OF CLEMANGIS. 67 mangis, which corresponded to the more refined taste now beginnuig to prevail, for his correspondence and public declarations ; and the consi- deration which Clemangis offers as a reason why he could not be fitted for such an oJQfice, namely, that he could not alter his habit of writing into a common chancery style, may have been, in the view of the pope, an additional reason for wishing him to become his secretary. Hence, when Clemangis mentioned this difiiculty, the pope simply requested him to retain the style to which he was accustomed. Cle- mangis, by personal inclination, had no particular fondness for the curial service, or the life at court. He had already declined many offers of the same kind, which had been held out to him by princes. He could not but have many objections therefore to make, at first, to this new proposal ; — his habits of freedom, his disinclination to the court-hfe, his physical weakness, and incapacity to endure any great degree of labor. But the pope bade his friends reply that he should lose none of his freedom, but rather obtain more than have less than he enjoyed before ; that in the labors imposed on him due regard should ever be had to his ability and his inclination. So Clemangis deter- mined to accept the place, and his further acquaintance with the court at Avignon, instead of producing any change in his feelings towards Benedict, seems rather to have confirmed him in his first good opinion of the pope, and in the friendly regards which he had for him.^ He says of the court at Avignon : " While I would not say that it is free from all vices, I must still own that there was greater decency of behavior, more dignity and self-respect in outward man- ners, than I have ever witnessed in the courts of secular princes." Certainly, we must regard this as a singular statement, if we compare it with the picture which Petrarch in his letters has drawn of the court at Avignon ; yet from the language of Clemangis himself, it may be gathered that the court at Avignon was not of the character which might be expected from the attendants on a pope. He speaks only by way of comparison ; and thus much at least may be true, that Benedict was favorably distinguished in this respect from several of his predecessors, and endeavored to give a corresponding dignity of manners to his court.'-^ In the next place, it is clear, from what Cle- mangis himself says respecting his relations at Avignon, that the pope by the indulgence with which he treated him, took a strong hold ou his affections and bound him to gratitude. ^ No labor was imposed on him, until he was first consulted, whether it was agreeable to him ; and if he had scruples about engaging in a matter of business, because it stood in some collision with his French interests, regard was had to these scruples."* Thus, with Clemangis, his personal regard for Bene- ' Ep. 14, p. 57. the care with which he was treated during * Also Theodoric of Niem, papal cham- a sickness at Avignon, berhiin at the Roman court, says of Bene- '' In the 42d letter he cites a case, whera diet : Praeterea licet dictus Petrus de Lu- two cardinals had proposed to hiiu in tha na gravitatera pontificalis officii et quid name of the pope to draw up a writing in ageret ipso Bonifacio longe melius intelli- favor of a man who iiad been condemned ^eret. i)e schism. 2. c. 33. by the parliament of Paris. He had ur- ^ Epist. 14. He boasts particularly of gently entreated that he might be let otf 68 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. diet went with the opinion he had formed respecting the condition of the church, to determine his course of action under these circumstan ces. Let us listen to his own language. How profoundly he under- stood the corruption of the church in his times, we see from some remarks of his in a letter to a friend. He supposed that he witness- ed in his times a greater depravation of manners than had existed in any pagan period, and that this could not be so, if even but a dead ialth, Si fides inf or mis, st\\\ existed. "Not love alone'' — says he, " but the mere fides informis among us has become so withered, that the words of our Lord would fitly apply to our times : Shall I when I come, find faith on the earth ? " He thinks that vice could not so unblushingly stalk abroad, if the doctrines of an eternal life, of future happiness and misery, of a divine judgment, really found faith among men. " The articles of faith " — says he — " are accounted but fables." He thought too, that in this dead faith might already be discerned a turning over to conscious infidelity. ^ What he says of the general state of things in France, 2 that the depravation of morals in that country was the fountain of all other evils, and that reconciliation with God must prepare the way for the restoration of civil peace, all this is, without doubt, to be apphed also, as he means it, to the evils of the church of his time, and to the means for their cure. " What sort of good" — says he — " can we hope for, if we remain separat- ed from the true source of all good. Out of what inferior stream can a blessing flow to us, if we are cut off from the fountain-head of all blessing ? " Accordingly he declares that the great thing needed was reconciliation to God. And because this was the great need, everything else, which was undertaken with passionate party-zeal for the restoration of peace to the church, appeared to him vain. In a letter of later date addressed to Pope Benedict,^ he says : " Not without some peril to myself have I written a great deal to you and others about the adjustment of this hateful schism ; for I was careful to exhort all who engaged in this holy work, according to the measure of my knowledge, to see to it, that they set themselves about so great a matter, than which a greater has not been undertaken within the memory of man, in the right manner, with a pure heart, with disinter- ested zeal, with true charity, and Avith becoming modesty ; not with arrogant pride, not with an overhasty confidence in the truth of their own opinions, not with selfish longings after temporal honor, or tem- poral advantage, not with zeal merely to accomplish their own objects, not with hatred or ill-will towards any person whatever, not with suspicious jealousy, or persecution of those who think differently." He thought the contrary of all this, then, might be seen in the doings of the several parties of his time, as he himself says : " All this, or most of what has mingled in the proceedings in the course from this, because he could do nothing to pope's service. From that moment not » the prejudice of his king and country, word more was ever heard on the sujject Une of the cardinals consented, but the P. 130. other threatened him by saying, the ' Ep. 73, p. 210. pope would command it.' " Well," said ^ Ep. 77, p. 233. Clcmangis, •• I would prefer leaving the ^ Ep. 13, p. 51. NICHOLAS OF CLEMANGIS. GS which this affair has taken, disturbs it frightfully and ruins it alto- gether. By these means, the situation of things is not only rendered wholly unsuitable for the restoration of peace ; but comnaotions scill more violent, wounds stiU more severe, and the germs of new divisions are brought upon the church, which suffers grievously enough already from this wound ; and unless the grace of the heavenly bridegroom interfere, she must plunge into the gulf of destruction." With this agrees also what he wrote to the king of France, when the renuncia- tion of Pope Benedict had now lasted four yearsJ "You see what the refusal of obedience, sought after with so much eagerness, has availed. It was said, respect and obedience to the pope was the chief obstacle in the way of restoring unity to the church ; and if this were re- moved, peace would speedily ensue. This the whole body of the clergy asserted with the greatest vociferation. Behold, this obstacle has now been for four years removed, by subtraction of obedience to the pope ; and still we perceive no signs of church union. Nay, the hopes formerly cherished have either wholly vanished, or at least their fulfilment is put off to an incalculable distance. It was promised, as a thing which would most certainly take place, that as soon as men heard of the subtraction by this kingdom, other states would imme- diately follow her example." " When this most inauspicious subtrac- tion "2 — says he — " had been extorted from you by these intrigues, messengers were sent out in all directions, either those who had them- selves been concerned in bringing about the subtraction,3 or those whom they pleased to select for this purpose." Every thing was done to spread the report of this proceeding far and wide, and to stir up others to imitation." "Behold" — he then adds — "who fol- lows your example ? All hold back, and not without good reason, from subtracting obedience to him whom they reverenced as Christ's vicegerent upon earth." It appears to him a great inconsistency, to refuse the obedience due to him who has been recognized as the le- gitimate pope. He notices it, again, as a remarkable fact, that the other princes, instead of being induced to follow the example of France, had rather attached themselves with a more persevering de- votion to the acknowledged pope. He says, in particular of the other party : " They are excessively elated against us, ever since they heard that we are so divided amongst ourselves about our own pope ; and they are expecting no other result from these quarrels among ourselves, than that after we have deserted our pope, theirs will ob- tain the victory." He complains in this letter of the harsh treatment of the pope in keeping him closely shut up in his castle. He complains that nothing more was now done for the restoration of unity, but men were only on the anxious look out to defeat any attempt to effect a reconciliation with the pope ; that no one was allowed to visit him, without first undergoing a thorough search to see that he carried no letters. Now, since it was manifest that the renunciation of the pope did not in the least contribute to the restoration of peace to the ' Ep. 17. p. 63. ' Ipsimet subtractiouis artifices. " iufaustissima obedieutiae subtractio. 70 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. church, while they still persisted, however, in venting their rage on him, it might be seen, that under the pretext of seeking the peace of the church, their real object had been, from the beginning, enmity to the pope's person. He defended the pope's conduct, and main- tained that from the first he had declared himself ready to enter into conference with his antagonist, the first step necessary to any agree- ment ; and to adopt any other means, which could lead to the res- toration of church unity ; that he had in fact three years before de- clared himself willing to abdicate. i " Of what use was it," he said, " to think of forcing the pope to abdicate, when it meant nothing except as a free act." It was presupposed, therefore, that the pope should first be restored to liberty. He held that the most necessary thing, after restoring the pope to liberty, was the restoration of unity in their own party ; then they should endeavor to unite on some measures to be taken in common with the other party. It was not by strife, by revilings, and the turmoil of the passions, that a restoration of church unity in any form Avas to be expected ; but a negotiation for peace should be conducted in a peaceful and quiet way, and in a spirit of gentleness. All pains should be taken to pursue the object with a humble, sober distrust, each man of his own judgment, and not with proud contempt of what others might think on the subject. " For the Lord often reveals his mysteries and his counsels, among which seem to belong also the restoration of unity to his church, to babes and sucklings, while he hides them from the wise and prudent, that no flesh may glory in his presence." In his letter to Pope Benedict XIII., 2 where too he complains of the impure motives of men anxious only to have their own opinion prevail with regard to the best way of restoring the peace of the church, he expresses his surprise that learned theologians, men of the church, could consent to abandon everything to the arbitrary will of the secular power ; he foresees the mischievous consequences which must result from such a course. The experiences to which Clemangis adverts had influence also on others who had expected more than he had ever done from that renunciation of the pope ; and now, when Benedict, set at large from his closely invested castle by the aid of an Aragonese nobleman, re-opened on a more free footing the negotiations with France, it was more easy to come to an agreement ; and, in the year 1404, a partial return took place of the Gallic Church to the obedience of the pope, the latter having pledged himself to resign the papal dignity under the three following contingencies, that the other pope died, that he voluntarily resigned, or that he was deposed. When in the year 1406, pope Innocent VII. died at Rome, the car- dinals of that party were full of zeal to bring the church back to unity. Among the people there was but one wish, which could not longer be resisted. They were weary of the long-continued artful tricks, by which the popes of the two parties had contrived to keep up the schism. The question now arose among the cardinals whether they ' Page 65. * Epist. 13, p. 51. GREGORY XII. 71 ought not to abstain from a new election, and unite Avith the other party at Avignon, for the purpose of choosing a pope who should be universally acknowledged, inasmuch as Benedict had been compelled to agree that in case of the death of his antagonist in Rome, he also would immediately abdicate. Thus an end would be put to the schism at once. It could not but be very evident to all, that it was only by declining to investigate the claims of the two parties, that any union was possible. Thus wrote the well-known Leonardo Bruno of Arezzo, (Are tin) famous as one of the restorers of ancient literature, and at this time secretary to the papal court at Rome, in a report which he drew up relating to the events at that time in Rome. " We can ex- pect no end to the division, as long as men are disposed to quarrel about their rights, especially as this matter has no judge but God him- self "^ Among the cardinals there was much contention on the point; and they would have resolved to abstain from the new election, had they not been afraid that they should give up something to the claims of the other party, or had they not felt a certain mistrust, not alto- gether unfounded, in the sincerity of Pope Benedict. Accordingly the resolution prevailed that they should proceed to a new election, but that each of the cardinals should bind himself by oath, in a more sol- emn manner than before, that in case of his election to the papal dig- nity, he would employ it singly for the purpose of healing the schism ; that he would use every effort to effect a union for the promotion of this object with the other pope, and abdicate as soon as the latter would do likewise. Each cardinal pledged himself moreover that in case he should be elected pope, he would undertake to do no- thing except what was required for that end, would nominate no new cardinals except when this was necessary in order that the number of the cardinals belonging to this party might be equal to that of the other Since the cardinals then regarded the present election as only a provisional one, only a means to prepare the way for electing a pope who should be recognized as such by all, and for the utter extirpation of the schism, they directed their attention in choosing a candidate, not so much to any question about his other gifts and qualifications, as to the point of gaining in him a man free from ambition and the love of power, and full of zeal for the welfare and concord of the church. Grreat zeal for these objects had been manifested thus far by Cardinal An- gelo Corario of Venice, a man celebrated for his habits of austere devo- tion ; and as he was eighty years old, it was the less to be expected that standing on the verge of the grave he would sacrifice the good of the church to the gratification of his ambition for a few brief moments. He called himself Gregory XII. After his accession to office he re- peated the same assurances, which he had already expressed as a car- dinal. What expectations were formed of him, may be seen from the following words of Are tin written about this time, who describes him as a man of antique severity and holiness. " He talks of the unity of ' Neque eniin fiiieni ullum invctcrati ea causa judicem hullum hiiheret. Leon. Bchisnuitis sperare licebat, si de jure dis- Bmni Aretini epp. 1, 2, 3. Hamb. 1724. ceptaretur ; praesertiin cum praeter deum 8vo. 72 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. the church — says Aretin — after this style; that if there were no other way, he would go on foot, staff in hand, to bring it about. We must look to his actions ; and certainly there is good hope, on ac- count of the singular integrity of the man. More than this, we find on the question of union, such an agreement of feeling among all, and the expectations of all so intensely raised, that if he were disposed to delay, they would in no wise permit it."^ It is plain from these words of Aretin, that however strong the reasons might seem to be for trust- ing Gregory, still the disappointments which had been so often expe- rienced created a feeling of uncertainty. According to another eye-witness, the pontifical chamberlain, Theo- doric of Niem, a German, the pope professed to his confidential friends, that it should be no fault of his, if the union were not brought about, in some place or other, even though it should be far from Rome. If he could not have galleys, he was ready to set sail in a small skiff ; or if the way were better by land, and he had no carriage and horses, he would not be kept back by that, but plod his way on foot, staff in hand.2 When Gregory held the first assembly of his cardinals, he still expressed openly the same zeal for the restoration of peace to the church. Some months after, on being requested to bestow certain benefices, he declined, observing that he had not been chosen pope for that, but simply to put an end to the schism ; and so great was the longing after this, that the people of the Roman court, whose interests were touched by such a repulsive answer, still rejoiced at it, because they regarded it as a sure pledge that the pope was in earnest about that which was so often on his lips.^ In making known his resolution by embassies to all the princes, he entered with great zeal into negoti ations also with Pope Benedict, who was bound )iy his solemn promise ; and still had to fear a powerful party of free-spirited men in France, particularly at the university of Paris. The envoys of Gregory con- ferred with Benedict at Marseilles, where they mutually agreed that the city of Savona was the most eligible place, on account of its situation, foi a meeting and conference between the two popes ; and that they should both repair thither on Michaelmas or all Saints' day, 1407, for the purpose of abdicating in common. At Paris the delegates of Gregory, on returning with this agreement, were received with great demonstra- tions of joy. It seemed now that the long-desired end of the schisii could not be far off. Gregory was extolled as an angel of peace. Only Benedict could not be trusted. When the contract, overladen with provisos, and drawn up by Benedict, was placed before Gregory, ^ith a smile on his lips, he expressed surprise that so many stipula- tions had been thought necessary, of which not one was needed here, since everything was so honorably meant.'* Perhaps Gregory, at the beginning, was really of the temper which he expressed ; but of a truth that temper was soon changed, and what may at first have been 60 honorably meant, was afterwards but the language of disguise and • Il.id. p. 41. • L.3, c. 12 fin. '' Theodorici a Niem de schismate, 1. 3, " L. 3, c. 13. ".6. GKEGORY XII. 7Ji hypocrisy. Gregory's numerous relations came togethei in Rome ; and there they endeavored to turn his papal dignity to their own pri- vate advantage. They worked upon Gregory, till they made him alter his mind, and consent to sacrifice the good of the church to the interests of the nephews whom he ought to provide for. Already in April, 1407, Aretin wrote : " Some friends and kinsmen of the pope, who flocked around him upon his coming to the throne, have begotten in many the suspicion, that they are endeavoring to bend his hitherto upright will." J In addition to this came the political movements of king Ladislaus of Naples, who, in opposition to French interests, was endeavoring to obtain for himself the crown of Sicily, against the pre tensions of Prince Louis of Angers, and wished to secure Gregoi'y as an ally, having reason to fear a pope favorable to the interests of France. He must do everything, therefore, to prevent Gregory from resigning his post. In June, the pope appeared before the cardinals and other dignitaries, and openly avowed his purpose, hitherto only to be conjectured from occasional signs : for, although he had agreed with his rival, that they should both join in a common abdication at Savona, yet he was now only looking round for some way of escape. He declared that he had no means for making the journey by land, and that he could not venture to go by sea on board the ships of the Genoese, on account of the hostiUties between the Genoese and the Venetians ; that he must by all means have Venetian galleys, but he could not obtain them to proceed so far as that port. The cardinals being very much dissatisfied with the pope, and • proceeding to urge upon him the fulfilment of his agreement, he caused his difficulties to be laid before twenty-four eminent jurists, in the expectation that his known wishes would determine them to pronounce him free from the obligation. But he found himself mistaken. Still he could not even then be induced to alter his intentions. He pretended that those jurists had been influenced by their regard for the cardinals, to decide contrary to the truth. 2 Dui-ing these transactions, an event took place, which seemed calcu- lated to dehver the pope from his embarrassment, and furnish him with a good reason for not keeping his word. King Ladislaus of Naples, in combination with the Colonna party in Rome, accompanied by the mal- contents from the city, was approaching with a hostile force. Aretin says, that the pope declared at first that all reports about this had been got up by malicious persons ; but the opponents of the pope per- ceived when the truth turned out to be like the report, that what he had said was a mere pretence, and accused him of a secret under- standing with that ally. The unexpected attack made by these troops at midnight, excited in Rome the utmost alarm and confusion. The pope took refuge in the castle of St. Angelo. The stratagem, how- ever, was defeated. The Romans succeeded in expelling the enemy from the city. After this incident, Aretin wrote : " Many believe that this thing was purposely arranged by the pope, in order that the ' Aretini epp. 1. 2, 6. ' Theod. a Niein, 1. 3, c. 1 7 VOL. V. 7 74 PAPACY AND CHUECH CONSTITUTION. whole business of uniting the church might fall through, which would have been the issue, had the king been successful. We by no means beheve this of the pope, but we have no doubt of the guilt of Ms kins- meny i The honest, free-spirited German historian, Theodoric of Niem, also an eye-witness, looks upon the whole as a plot of Gregory, hatched up to defeat the negotiations for peace. Speaking of the pope's flight to the castle of St. Angelo, he says : " This he did from design, and with the intent that if the enemy got the upper hand, and proceeded to besiege him in that castle, he might have it to plead as an excuse for his non-appearance at the first and second terms that he was deprived of his liberty." And he concludes his account of the results brought about by the understanding which, as he supposes, existed between the two allies, who were bound together by a common political interest, with the beautiful words so often verified in history with regard to events by which great and important changes are supposed to be prepared : •'But man's craft avails nothing in opposition to the divine counsels. "a In proportion as the crafty pope Benedict found that his rival had no serious intention of fulfilling the agreement, in the same proportion he manifested the utmost readiness to fulfil it faithfully on his part, a^ he could plainly foresee, that nothing would come of it, and he now had it in his power to throw the whole blame on Gregory. At the first-appointed time he came to Savona. But Gregory travelled slowly ; first to Viterbo. Then, in September, he came to Siena ; but instead of getting to Savona, either at the first or the second term, he remained at Siena from September to January. He had great skill in inventing reasons for not complying with the invitations of the cardinals, and of the envoys coming to him from all directions for the purpose of urging him to end the schism. There was no route which for him would be a safe one. He got up processions to implore divine grace for the promotion of the peace of the church ; grant- ed indulgences to such as took part in them ; sent letters of indulgence to those m all the countries that acknowledged him, who by their in- tercessions helped on the restoration of peace to the church, hoping thus to deceive the multitude. The Franciscans who were his friends, found it necessary at mass to justify the procrastination of the pope in their sermons, and to tell the people that he could not make the jour- ney to Savona without exposing himself and the cardinals to danger. Finally the pope arrived at Lucca. From this place Aretin wrote a letter relating to the negotiations for peace : "After we had arrived at Lucca, numerous messengers passed to and fro ; but nothing is as yet accomplished, nor has a single step been taken which seems to me cal- culated to inspire the least hope. In the other pope there is no hon- esty of purpose whatsoever ; though he disguises his motives with won- derful adroitness, so as to deceive the unwary. But beUeve me, there is nothing sound about him ; for if there were, what is there to prevent ' Aretin. epp. 1. 2, 7. tutia non sufFragatiu- humana. L. 3, c. 18, ^ Sed contra divinam ordinationem as- fin. GREGORY XII. AND BENEDICT XIII. 75 the object from being accomplished ? For if either one of the two were really willing to do what he has sworn to do, the other would be obliged to fulfil his part whether willing or not willing. For what excuse or evasion could he have ? But now when both delay, one furnishes the other with means of evasion and excuse. Our pope is of a straight- forward, simple nature ; but a good and simple man is easily deceived by dishonest knaves. For some who are hoping to obtain honorable posts from him have contrived to get hold of him by flattery. These fill his mind with idle fears, and often bring him round again when he intends to do what is right. As the present tone of feeling is, I apprehend trouble ; for more acrimony of hatred, more violent indigna- tion could not exist. "1 We see from these words, dictated by the im- mediate impression of the moment, the high state of excitement pro- duced among the attendants on the pope at Lucca by these under- handed arts, and the fears that were entertained that some violent out- break would give vent to the suppressed feehngs of indignation. And so it happened, that in the middle of the fasts a Carmelite, preachmg. before the pope, the cardinals and the foreign envoys assembled here on the business of the union, felt impelled, turning round to the pope, to exhort him urgently that he would spare no effort to hasten the union, reminding him of the assurances which he had so repeatedly given. Two nephews of the pope, who had great influence with him, were so exasperated at this, that they caused the preacher to be dragged out of the church and cast into prison, where he languished for many days, and a worse fate would have befallen him had not pow- erful friends interposed in his behalf. He was forbidden to preach any more ; and Gregory, to secure himself for the future against being disturbed by such honest admonitions, ordered that no person should thereafter be allowed to preach before him, unless his discourse had first been examined by some one of his immediate attendants.^ The pope was in no want of men, such as his nephews, whose selfish inte- rests would naturally prompt them to confirm him in his designs against the union. Among these belonged in particular one of those indi- viduals whose lives afford the most striking testimony to the monstrous corruption of the church of this time, — a Franciscan who, sunk in crime, had been led by some outward occasion or other, in the later years of his manhood, to become a monk, and whom king Ladislaus employed on his political errands, and called his father confessor. Through him, the king had carried on his negotiations with pope Gre- gory, and the latter always kept him near his person. Theodoric of Niem relates, that a citizen of Lucca with whom this Franciscan resid- ed while the pope was stopping at that city, told him he never met anywhere with so bad a man, nor would he suffer him to remam in his house, were he not compelled to do so by fear of the governing author- ities in Lucca. 3 The two popes approached a few steps nearer toge- ther ; for when Gregory arrived at Lucca, Benedict advanced to Porto ' Aretin. cpp. 1, 2, 10. ^ Theod. a Niem de schism, lib. 3. c. 15 Thcod. a Niem de schism, lib. 3, c. 25. 76 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. Venere. And yet it seemed as if they were never to meet. In vain negotiations were entered into respecting a place of interview with which both parties could be satisfied. None was to be found safe enough for both. Gregory feared the hostile power at sea; and dared not approach too near the coast. Benedict could not venture too far from the coast, as he stood in fear of ambuscades by land.^ Aretin, an eye-witness of these evasive tricks, writes : " Thus, one of the popes, like a marine animal, was afraid to trust himself on dry land, the other, hke a land animal, shuddered at sight of the waves. "i But what added to the vexation was this, that according to the common be- lief there was no danger, either to the one if he ventured on dry land, nor to the other if he visited the coast. And it was the general opin- ion, that they both clearly understood the same thing, but hypocriti cally pretended fear, for the purpose of cheating men out of their ear- nest expectations. Hence there were loud complaints, and men be- gan already to speak openly against these proceedings. All were fill- ed with indignation, that persons of their age, for both were past sev- enty, for the sake of sitting a few years in the papal chair, should put themselves beyond all fear of God and the judgment of mankind. Aretin takes notice of the impression which this conduct of the two popes produced on the general mind. "What — says he — could happen to us more shameful and more dishonorable than that the two parties, after having shortly before voluntarily fixed upon a place for the restoration of union among christians, should immediately thereupon, when the expectations of all Avere intensely raised, show an unwilling- ness to come to tiie spot ? Some one may say, dost thou venture to write this, when thou belongest among the pope's confidants? Yes. The case is so ; for why should I now flatter him, and feign as if I thought otherwise : for I am one of the Christians and one of the Italians. It grieves me that the former should be defrauded of the union and of peace, and the latter accused of being faithless, and promise-breakers."a Gregory at length gave it to be understood, that he no longer had any thoughts of joining with his rival in a common abdication. He made trial of other arts. He put forth on the sixth of July the proclamation for a general council, whose place of assembling he would more distinctly announce. As a reason for this he alleged the experience which had been gained, that a common abdication was a. thing impracticable ; the council, however, included in itself all other means of restoring church concord. At the same time he assert- ed, in defiance of the freer tendencies now springing up, that it belonged to the pope alone to convoke a general council ; that one assembled without his permission was but a conciUabidiim. and should be considered as altogether destitute of authority.3 Tliis council was at a later period actually assembled at Aquileia, but could do nothing more than play an insignificant farce. The cardinals were not in ' Ita alter quasi aquaticum animal in * L. c. siccum exire, alter quasi terrestre undas ^ Theodoric a Niem de schism, lib. 3, c .as[)iccre perhorrebat. Aretini epp. lib. 2, 36. GREGORY Xir. AND BENEDICT XIII. 7" clined to let themselves be mocked any longer by the pope ; tc share the disgrace and the exasperated feeling which he must ne- cessarily encounter. Matters were coming to an open contest be- tween them and the pope. Gregory, unmindful of the oath which he had taken, was desirous of appointing four new cardinals, partly for the purpose of promoting his nephews and favorites, partly that he might procure for himself, in these creatures, some support against the older cardinals ; but the latter manifested violent opposition and declined to acknowledge, as their colleagues, the persons who, in spite of them, were nominated by the pope. As they had the worst to fear from the obstinate pope, and wished to act with more freedom in some other place, where they could be safer, they fled to Pisa.' As to Pope Benedict, he was made more haughty by the weakness of his rival. But he could meet with as httle success as the latter in carrying out his designs. He had to sustain a still severer contest with the more liberal spirit in France. The king sent him a letter, threatening, that unless the pope came to some agreement with his op- ponent to restore concord to the church by the festival of Ascension of the following year, France would again renounce him and declare herself neutral. Benedict replied to this by a series of violent steps. He issued a bull threatening the ban and the interdict. Tliis was publicly torn in pieces, and the pope, at an assembly of the uni- versity of Paris, was declared a schismatic and heretic. Proceedings were set on foot against those who had taken part in the drawing up and publication of that bull ; and suspected individuals were violently persecuted. Among these was Clemangis, who continued, it is true, to be a friend of Benedict and dissatisfied with violent measures, as also Gerson was, but who could appeal to the fact, that he knew no- thing at all about the steps of Benedict, and also that the bull bore in- ternal evidence of being contrary to his style.s The Gallic church separated itself entirely from the pope. Orders were given to the French governor at Genoa to take possession of Benedict's person ; but he succeeded in making his escape to his native country, Aragon ; where he played oif a similar farce with Gregory, in the convocation of a pretended general council. Eight cardinals of his party repaired to Pisa ; and all who vrce there assembled now joined in putting forth a proclamation for a general council in the year 1409, which should put an end to the schism and bring about a reformation of the church in its head and members, and whose place of meeting should be at Pisa. Upon this council the eyes of all who had at heart the well being of the church in western Christendom, were directed. Two great prob- lems were to be worked out by that council, of which one could not be worked out without the other ; the long and earnestly desired restoration of concord, and the long and earnestly desired reform of a church cor- rupted and stained with sin in all its parts, and deeply sunk in world- liness. Everything depended at first on the question, whether the ' See the account of this atFair iu iVre- ' Clemang. ep. 42, p. 129. :iii"s report, epp. lib. 2, 13. T3 PAPACY A^■D CHTRCH coxsTiTmoy. council -vvould proceed with clear consciousBess, on the principles of a freer system of ecelesiasncal laTV. It should be conscious thai itself constituted the highest representation of the church, since it was called to pass judgment even upon popes ; otherwise it must suc- cumb to their policy, and fail as all previous attempts to do awav the schism had failed. But then it was very difficult for the cardinals to emancipate themselves at once from a system of church govern- ment which had obtained for a long series of centuries, which was in- terwoven into all parts of the church administration, and which up- held itself by its own consistency. It was a contest between an old period and a new one which must break path-way for itself. The men who, with the full consciousness of knowledge, expressed and defended the spirit of the new period, thus exerting an influence on the formation of a new public opinion, had the great merit of preparing the way for a happy issue of the council of Pisa. In this, the university of Paris took the most important place ; and the principal leader of the movement in this university was chan- cellor Gerson ; a man whose influence, both as a writer and a speaker, was preeminently great. Let us first cast a glance, then, at the principles of reform diflFosed abroad by this writer prior to the com- mencement of the cotmcil of Pisa. The system of the church Theocracy, such as we have seen evolv- ing itself from the times of the third century, was here by no means abandoned ; but it was to be purified from the heterogeneous elements which in the course of the middle ages had become mixed up with it, or which had proceeded from the development of the principle once expressed and steaiiily carried out to its extreme consequences, and to be reduced back again to its original foundation before the middle ages. The externalized conception of the church, as of an organic whole, to be traced up through the succession of bishops and the representation of church unity in the Roman church as cathedra Petri to a divine ori- gin, was held fast as one and identical with the essence of Christianity itself. But the conception of this one universal church was placed foremost, as the original and highest idea : and the authority of a sin- gle head of the church governance was made subordinate to this high- est spiritual power, and very much lowered. Papal absolutism was to be overturned : the universal church to recover her rights, the author- ity of single bishop»s, and the independence of single national churches to be restored. Its independent authority was to be secured to the sovereignty of the state. The state was to be emancipated from the tutelage of church Theocracy, which had swallowed up all author- ity into itself. They were essentially the same principles as those which had already, when the Pseudo-Isidorean decretals first began to claim validity, sent forth from Prance an influence to counteract the rising power of the popes. Grerson took his departtire from a concep- tion of the church and of its unity, which might have conducted hini to a more proformd and spiritual mode of apprehending the matter. The relation of the church to Christ, as its sole unconditionally neces- sary, invisible head, was that to which at first he gave the chief pro gerson's principles of reform. 79 minence. The essential unity of the church, as Christ's spiritual body, the corpus mysticum, reposed solely on union with him, the invi- sible Head, diffusing his life-giving influence through the whole. Bui he presently assumed, that the diffusion of this influence was condi- tioned on the organism of the external church governance founded by Ohrist himself, whereby the form was prescribed under which alone this spirit could at any time be active. Hence he considered the hierarchy in all its gradations, as a thing immutable, necessary for all times, and so the presence of a visible, ministerial and accidental chief at the head of the church government, appeared to him to be also necessary. Still he supposes that, inasmuch as the church when the papacy is va- cant again produces such a head from herself, and inasmuch as she can in certain moments subsist under the guidance of the one invisible head, without that visible head, so also she has power to pass judgment on popes, to displace them, and may continue to subsist for a time under the o^uidance of a general council of bishops, which represents her, with- out such a visible head, although the latter as a general thing is ne- cessarv to her organism ; and she must ever reproduce such a head from herself. In the case of the exercise of that supreme guidance of the church by the popes, we should distinguish what is essential from what is unessen- tial, what is mutable from what is immutable, what is founded in divine right from wiiat is founded in the letter of a positive law. As the good of the whole is the highest law, and it is only for that the power of the pope subsists, that power may be modified and limited by a general oruin, qui di- 879 A. ^i valde perversus • COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 103 of Austria, wishing to take advantage of the bad terms on wliicli the duke stood with the emperor Sigismund, the zealous promoter of church reform ; and he made the duke agree that in case the pope should not find himself safe in Constance, the duke should afford him protec- tion in his neighboring domain. Thus his plan was already laid. It was already his intention, in case he failed of carrying out his schemes at Constance, to try the experiment of making his escape by flight, so as to break up the council. During the journey the pope's carriage was upset in the snow. This was looked upon by himself and many others as a bad omen. He arrived at Constance on the 28th of October, and after several adjournments the council was opened. The pope was calculating that the votes would be taken by the number of persons, and was therefore hoping to carry out his measures by the major- ity of single votes, particularly from the Italian nation, upon which he might depend. But his designs were penetrated and defeated. In a proposition relating to the form of transacting business, the fact was noticed, that the pope had on his side a majority of poor prelates be- longing to the Italians, exceeding the number of deputies present from any other nation ; that he had appointed fifty chamberlains ; that by the administration of various oaths, by presents or by threats he had secured numbers to himself ; so that by the majority of votes he could manage all matters as he pleased. To guard against unfairness from this cause, it was deemed best that the votes should be taken by nations rather than by persons. ^ This proposition was carried, in spite of all the opposition of the papal party. The council was divided for the present into four nations, Italians, French, Germans, and English. The de- puties of each nation held their separate meetings, and whatever was determined upon by the majority in these meetings, passed as the judgment of the nation. Then the committees of the several different nations reported their separate decrees in the general congregations of the deputies of all the four nations, and whatever was decreed by the majority of the four votes in these meetings was to be pro- claimed in the public sessions as a decree of the council. It would be important, again, for the interest of the pope, if none but bishops and abbots were allowed a definitive vote in the council. Among these, independent thinkers were fewer in number ; among the titular- bishops and abbots especially, were many creatures of the pope. But it was endeavored to prevent this also. Even two cardinals, of whom one was Cardinal d'Ailly, declared in the discussions on this matter, that from the time of the foundation of the universities, doc- tors of theology, doctors of the canon and the civil law, men to whom were entrusted the office of teaching and preaching, could not but have more weight than titular-bishops and abbots, Avho neither preached nor taught, nor had any cure of souls ; and that the learn- ing of the former must be set as a make-weight over ag£,inst ihe ad- vantage which the higher but ignorant prelates obtai-aed fror^i Uieir authority. In deciding on matters of faith espe^'^iUy, tbcdisviii) ' V. D. Hardt. torn. II, p. 230. 10-i PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. learning could not be dispensed with. Furthermore, inferior ecclesi astics who exercised the office of preaching and had the cure of souls, had a better right to join in the discussion of purely spiritual matters, than those who were bishops merely by title, and abbots. Cardinal St. Marci called the ignorant prelates mitred asses. It was remark- ed, in the next place, that in business relating to the extermination of schism, and the restoration of peace to the church, the princes and their envoys were not to be excluded from the right of voting, since the matter was so intimately connected with the interest of princes and their subjects. Moreover, their assistance was required to execute the decrees of the council on these matters.' This proposition also was adopted ; and thus the most free-minded, sagacious, and indepen- dent men obtained great influence at the council, an influence which the pope had special reason to dread. The prelates devoted to the pope demanded, that the first business to be attended to should be the confirmation of the council of Pisa ; from this it was to be derived, as a necessary consequence, that the only business before the present council, was to carry out the decrees of the council of Pisa ; that the council therefore should proceed on the assumption that the authority of Pope John XXIII. was alone valid, and that the only thing neces- sary was to persuade or to compel the other two popes to submit. 2 Against this, it was observed by d' Ailly ^ and others, that the council of Constance was not competent to confirm the council of Pisa, stand- ing as it did on the same footing of authority with its own ; and the only influence of such a proceeding would be to unsettle the minds of men, as if that general council were not a legal one by itself; but the council of Constance must be regarded as an independent continu ation of the council at Pisa, and act accordingly. Thus they ought to proceed in reference to the reformation of the church in its head and members, and the restoration of church unity. Hence it might be inferred, that the council was competent, if the general good of the church required it and her union was to be secured in no other way, to oblige all the three popes to resign. This form of transacting business could not fail to work favorably on the course of the council. The effects of the freer mode of pro- ceeding soon manifested themselves. A man stained with so many vices as this Balthazar Cossa, whose crimes were known to so many^ must soon be exposed. In the month of February, of the year 1415, a number of charges against the pope were laid before the council, relating to every species of vice and crime, and which, for the most part at least, were too true. To the pope, who had his secret spies in all quarters, this was soon reported ; and at first he was tlirown into great trepidation and anxiety, for his conscience accused him. He called round him certain cardinals and other prelates, his confidents, for the purpose of consulting what was to be done under these jrit- •cal circumstances. He endeavored to make himself friends by pro- • Ibid. p. 228. ^ Tom. II, p. 194. « V. d. Hardt. torn. IV, 1 p. 2.3 sq. COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 105 mises and presents. Already he entertained the design, as it is said, to appear before the council, and on many points confess his guilt aa a sinful man; but to deny other things, and to claim that being pope, he could be deposed only for heresy. But there was no intention of pushing matters to an extreme. The crimes chai-ged were of a nature so grossly bad, that the council must have hesitated about the propri- ety of bringing such matters into public discussion, to the disgrace of the papacy and of the church ; matters which could not fail to scan- dalize many. It was considered a better course, not to enter into any further examination of these matters, but only to take advantage of the bad position of the pope to induce him to resign, and thus make the way easier to an extermination of the schism. When this pro- posal was laid before the pope, he was at first very glad of an oppor- tunity to get out of his worst difficulty so easily. But he concealed his satisfaction, and assuming a serious mien, declared himself inclined, for the sake of the peace of the church, to resign, if the other two popes would also do the same, since in this case alone would it be of any use.i But having somewhat recovered from his first fright, John began to assume again a more haughty tone. He drew up such forms of abdication as still left him a subterfuge, so that he might avoid the necessity of laying down the papal office. Men had learned caution from earlier experiences, and were disposed in all cases to be on the look out : hence they had some objections to find with each of the three forms of abdication which the pope proposed. It evidences the utter shamelessness and moral stupidity of Balthazar Cossa, a man conscious of such infamous crimes, that he was still capable of begin- ning the third form of abdication in words like these : 2 "Although the most holy father is bound by no vow, by no oath, or promise, which he may have given, yet he promises and vows, for the sake of the peace of the christian people of God and the church, that he will of his own free accord give them peace by his abdication, in person, or through his authorized agents," etc. Finally, John consented, on the first of March, to present before the assembled council a form of abdication such as should be prescribed for him. This announcement excited great joy, and the Te Deum was sung. Still an abdication of the pope conditioned on the proviso, that the other two popes should also do the same, failed of giving perfect satisfaction by reason of the con- dition itself, since it was impossible to reckon on the course which the other two popes might take. Now as the emperor Sigismund was about making a journey to Nice for the purpose of treating with Pope Benedict about his resignation, Pope John was strongly urged, for the sake of putting an end forever to all evasions, to give the emperor himself full powers, or to send in his company an agent fully author- ized to make the abdication in his name at once. But in the mean- time, John had succeeded in bringing over to the side of his interests a number of princes and prelates ; he might hope to sow discord lu ' V. d. Ilardt. torn. IV, p. 41, and the resident at the Roman court in Constance words of Tlieod. of Niem, who then was a torn. II, c. 3, p. 391. « Tom U, c. 21, p, 234. 106 PAPACY AND CHURCH COXSTITUTION. the council, since many were still too much entangled in the old church system, to feel at liberty to approve any sterner measures against the pope. Not only were the Italians of this temper, or else inclined to the interest of the pope in other ways, but a breach was already threat- ening to take place betwixt the freer party, which consisted of the Germans and the English, and at whose head was the emperor, and the French deputies on the other side. But this division was fortunately prevented by the exertions of the emperor. Thus the pope struggled every way against the above proposition, as if by following it he would compromise his dignity. He proposed to make the journey him- self to Nice for the purpose of treating with Pope Benedict. But taught by the experience which they had had of Benedict XIII. and Gregory XII., the council had no confidence in the sincerity of this proposal, and feared that the pope, having once got away from Con- stance, would endeavor to effect a dissolution of the council. In vain had the pope endeavored to soften the heart of the emperor Sigis- mund, in whom the more liberal party ever found their strongest sup- port, by the present of the golden rose, consecrated on Palm-Sunday, a mark of honor with which princes were seldom gratified by the j)opes ; in vain did he pretend that the climate of Constance did not agree with his health, as an excuse for leaving that city, to be followed by attempts to break up the council ; the emperor pointed out to him the unsatisfactory character of these pretences, and offered him any more agreeable spot which he might choose for a residence in the vicinity of Constance. Already rumors were afloat about the pope's designs to get away from Constance, and secret directions given to those hav- ing custody of the gates, not to allow him to escape. The pope con- tradicted all such rumors before the emperor himself. Meanwhile, Duke Frederic of Austria, according to the plan agreed on with the pope, came on the 20th of March to Constance, and while he was di- verting the public attention by a magnificent tournament on the next following days, Pope John escaped in the darkness of the evening, dis- guised as a groom, and fled to Schaffhausen. Balthazar Cossa, whose conscience seems to have been completely blunted, could now, under the protection of Duke Frederic, and at a distance from the council, breathe more freely : he could now more easily indulge the hope that he should yet succeed in sowing discord among the prelates of the council, and effect its dissolution, as well-dis- posed persons of that time feared he might do. He put forth from Schaffhausen letters in justification of the course he had taken, full of holy pretensions. Sometimes he justified his flight by pleading danger to his health from the unfavorable climate of Constance, compelling him to take this course ; sometimes he complains of the emperor, as hinder- ing the free action of the council, putting restrictions on the pope him- self, and threatening him. He used in justifjang his conduct the words which we have already cited, words so customary in the diplomatic style of hypocrisy, " It was a fear such as might overcome even a steadfast man." He summoned the cardinals and papal officials to meet him at Schaffhausen on pain of the ban. Many actually com- COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 107 plied with the summons. They travelled backwards and forwards between the council and the pope, executing the pope's secret commis- sions ; and they succeeded in stirring up contention in the council. Many began already to say, No pope, no council, and the council seemed disposed to remove to some other spot. Already the worst was to be feared. The canonical priest, Zacharias of Urie, a native of Constance, and the historian of the council, who wrote at this mo- ment, makes the complaining church express her fears, that, as at Pisa, the schism instead of being healed was multiplied, so from the council of Constance Avould result an increase rather than a cure of the evil. The pope would succeed, under the protection of Duke Frederic, in escaping to Bologna ; he would establish his authority as pope in Italy ; the council would choose a new one ; neither Gregory nor Benedict would resign ; and then there would be four popes at once.^ But by the constancy of the independent members of the French, German, and EngHsh nations, by the vigorous measures of the emperor Sigismund and his cooperation with Chancellor Gerson. who was, even then, called the soul of the council (anima coucilii), it was so managed, that the infamous man, who still called himself pope, and to whom the selfish interests of many lent support, did not succeed in carrying out his maxim, Divide, et iinpera. Gerson, in compliance with the request of the university of Paris, held before the assembled council, on the 2od of March, a grave discourse in exposition of the new and freer system of ecclesiastical law, boldly setting forth the principles already propounded by him, and on the recognition of which, he behoved, all independent action of the council must be based. In this discourse, he defines the idea of a general council as follows : 2 "It is an assemblage of all orders of the catholic church convoked by legitimate authority, excluding no person, whoever he may be, that demands to be heard, and for the pui'pose of deliber- ating and determining in a wholesome manner, on all matters relating to the needful guidance of the church in faith and manners." He proceeds to say, " If the church or general council decrees anything relating to the guidance of the church, the pope is not so exalted even above positive law, as to be authorized arbitrarily to annul such decrees, in the way and in the sense in which they were decreed. Although a general council cannot annul the pope's plenitude of power, conferred on him by Christ in a supernatural way, still it may modify the use of that power by determinate laws, and by confining it within a certain range for the edification of the church, with reference to which the papal power, as well as all other authority entrusted to man, was instituted. And this is the ultimate basis of all church reformation. A church assembly may be convoked in many cases without the express sanction and the express proposal of the pope, though he may have been law- fully elected and still living. One case is when he is accused and challenged to hear the church, according to the direction of Christ ; V. d. Ilardt. torn. I, p. 179 sq. ^ Gersonis orat. in v. d. Ilardt. torn. II, p. 272. 108 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. and he obstinately refuses to call a meeting of the church. Anothei case is, when important affairs are to be deliberated upon in a general assembly and the pope declines to convoke it. Another case, when it has already been determined by one general council that another shall be held at a certain time ; and the last case, whenever a lawful doubt exists with regard to the pretensions of several individuals contendmg with each other for the papal office. The authority of this council is such, that whoever seeks knowingly, in a direct or indirect manner, to dissolve it and destroy its authority, or to remove it to another place, or to set up another council in opposition to it, subjects himself to the suspicion of creating a schism, or a heresy." Such an one may be accused before the council, and must defend himself before thg same, to whatever order he may belong. That the council is greater than the pope is evident from the words of Christ, that the offending broth- er should be accused before the church, a law which admits of no ex- ception. Now then, if the pope gives occasion of scandal to the whole church, and perseveres in it to the great injury of faith and good manners, ought he not to be punished according to that law ? ^ This discourse was communicated to the cardinals by the emperor Sigismund, at first in manuscript ; but such as were governed by the spirit of the party, and devoted to the papal interest, could of course, only condemn the principles here expressed. They declined being present at the time the discourse was delivered, lest by so doing they might seem to give countenance to the principles set forth in it. The Patriarch John of Antioch ventured to lay down positions standing in direct contradiction to those principles. He was an advocate for un- conditional papal absolutism. From the fact that Christ had given to Peter the power of the Keys, he inferred that, in the pope, as succes- sor of the apostle Peter, resides all plenitude of ecclesiastical power ; all authority of the church and of a general council could only proceed from him ; the council therefore was subject to him, not he to the council ; without him no council could subsist ; he was responsible to none other than the Lord ; and though he plunged multitudes of souls into hell, no one could call him to account.^ It is easy to see what might be expected from the advocates of such a bent: and such principles, it must be confessed, were required, in order to defend such a pope as Balthazar Cossa. Cardinal d'Ailly called the patriarch to account on the spot, for maintaining such positions : as he also refuted them afterwards in a book. The patriarch, beset on all hands, ex- cused himself by saying, that he had expressed these views, not as assertions, but by way of disputation. After much controversy between the cardinals devoted to the papal interest and system, and the liberal men in the council, on whose side stood the emperor Sigismund, it was finally brought about that, in the fourth session of the council, on the 30th of March, the principles ex- pressed by chancellor Gerson were proclaimed in the name of the whole council. This notable session, constituting an epoch in the pro- ' P. 278. =^ Tom. II, p. 297 ; toni. IV, p. 6C COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 109 ceeclings of the council,^ expressed the following prmciples, to wit : — First., that this council, lawfully assembled in the Holy Spirit, and representing the catholic church militant, has received its authority di- rectly from Christ, which every one, to whatever order he may belong, even though it be the papal, is bound to obey in whatever relates to faith and to the extermination of schism. Secondly, that Popo John is not authorized to remove the Roman court and its ofiBcials to another place. This canon, as it was drawn up in the assembly of the nations, had however attached to it an important addition — " in all things relating to the reformation of the church in its head and mem- bers." But against this clause, as also against many other points at variance with the hitherto prevailing system of the church constitution, the cardinals had protested ; and the cardinal Francis a Zabarellis, bishop of Florence, commonly known under the name of the " Floren- tine cardinal," otherwise a man rather disposed to favor reform, had taken the liberty to omit this clause in the proclamation of the canon.2 With this, however, the council was not at all satisfied ; and it was carried, in spite of all protestations on the part of all the cardinals, that the bishop of Posen should, in the fifth session on the 6th of April, read this decree in its unabbreviated form. Meantime the cardinals, owing to the connection known to exist between several of them and the worthless John, and owing to their protests against the freer proceed- ings of the council, were rendering themselves, every day, more sus- pected and more hated. In this struggle of parties at the council, was manifested a contrariety of views, which did not augur any favor- able issue. One overture, handed in to the council by a prelate, and which certainly w^as based on some foundation of truth, deserves notice. He proposed, that in all transactions relating to the reformation of the church in its head and members, the cardinals should not be allowed to participate, inasmuch as they were a party concerned, and there- fore could not be judges. The cardinals, whose duty it was to elect as pope the best man, or at least one not altogether bad, having knowingly elected so abominable a man, and by this abuse of their power given so great scandal to the whole church, had by so doing rendered them- selves unworthy of participating in the election of a pope ; they de- served other punishments, but for these reasons should not be allowed to share in these transactions of the council. It was, moreover, al- leged against them, as a reason for excluding them from these transac- tions, that they had rendered themselves liable to suspicion by the ftict that several of them had followed the pope in his scandalous flight, whereby he had given oflFence to the whole church ; that they had as- serted, on their return, that a council without the pope was no council, but only a conciliabulum ; that so long as the pope was not deprived of his authority, or this authority was not suspended, no man, however ' Em. a Schelstrate tractat. de sensu ct ' Thus Gobelinus Pei-sona, wlio was ductoritate decretorum Constant, concilii present at the council, reports : Cosmo- scss. ([uarta ct quinta circa potestatera ec- drom. in Meibom. rer. germ, torn, I. Hel clesiasticam, cum actis et gestis ad iUa maestadii 1688, p. 339; also v. d. Ilardt speciaut, Komae 1686, p. 226. torn. IV, pp. 87, 88. VOL. V. 10 110 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. mighty, however endowed with spiritul gifts, nor the council even, could effect a reformation ; because Pope John would always find men ready to stand up for him, ready to be made rich by him ; would al- ways find purchasers of dignities, and therefore means to replenish hig exchequer.' At this time appeared before the assembled council a messenger from the University of Paris, the Benedictine Gentianus, and delivered a violent discourse against the pope and the cardinals.^ He complained that through the papal party the business before the council was delayed to the injury of the church. Ever since the be ginning of November, the transactions had been strangely retarded by the pope and the cardinals, by many unprofitable transactions, un- til the tst of March, on which day the pope had laid before the coun- cil a form of abdication. But when invited to nominate commissioners with full powers to carry, in his name, this abdication into effect, he had constantly dechned ; and the cardinals, who followed him in this, had delayed matters by continually proposing amendments, to the great hazard of their souls, and to the great injury of this council. Then the pope had paid no regard to his oath, had fled by night in disguise, for the purpose of breaking up the council, abandoning everything for which it was his duty to sacrifice himself. But a great part of the car- dinals had followed the pope, hoping to go to Italy or to some other agreeable spot. But as they had not succeeded in their designs, some of them, out of shame, had come back ; others, as they had disgraced themselves, remained behind in Schaifhausen, lest a worse thing might befall them. Then, the cardinals had opened negotiations with the council, designed to retard its proceedings by mere talk. As an ex- ample of their intrigues, he states that cardinal Francis Zabarella had been bold enough to proclaim that decree respecting the supreme au- thority of the council, in a mutilated form ; taking upon himself the liberty of thus trifling with the council. Men who thought themselves entitled to take such liberties as these, deserved no longer to be admit- ted to the deliberations. What sort of people these cardinals were, had been shown by their election of Pope John. They had sworn to choose the best man ; but they had still chosen that John, whom they well knew at the time was a tyrant in disposition, an assassin, a man guilty of si- mony, and stained with other crimes. If a person like this was the best man among them, what sort of men were they themselves ? The present evils had grown out of those earlier ones. The pope and the cardinals and their faction sought daily, by all they did, to bring it about that this council, exhausted by excessive labor and expense, should be compelled to break up. They ought no longer, then, to be trusted ; but all fellowship with them should be withdrawn by those who would not perish with them in their sins. They ought no longer to be trusted, for they trifled with the council. Who, indeed, had ever given greater scandal to the church, than this Pope John and his friends, with their retainers ? those traflickers who, in so unheard-of a man- ner, had higgled away, in bargains, as they would swine in the market, ' Gobelin, p. 340. * V. d. Hardt. torn. II, p. 180 sq. COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. Ill bishoprics, abbacies, canonicates, and garish-churches. In fact, the bulls were drawn up, not in the apostolical chancery, but in the count- ing-houses of bankers or merchants, among the Florentines. Christ drove the sellers and buyers out of the temple ; the pope and his ad- herents had brought them into the temple, and caused their tables to be set up there. Let the council, therefore, in order to bring to nought these deceptive arts, proceed undisturbed in their decrees, and make use of the power which God had given them. Let them but approve themselves as constant men in Constance^ — so he concluded — and the Lord would give them the victory, and crush Satan under their feet.2 But such voices could have no other effect than to lead the cardi- nals to maintain their rights with so much the more decision, and to stand up for the prerogative of the Roman church, without which no thing could be done. It was only with great difficulty that a breach could be prevented between the two stiffly-opposed parties. The coun cil, in strict conformity to the principles which had been announced, acted as the highest independent tribunal of the church. The pope, flying this way and that, addressed to the council extravagant demands, with which they could not properly comply, as the price of his abdica- tion, and so spun out the negotiations. They finally resolved, therefore, to take the last decisive step, without paying any attention to the pro- tests of those cardinals who were devoted to the pope. The pope's trial was made the order of the day, and in the seventh session, on the 2d of May, a citation was issued for him to appear before the council. Duke Frederic of Austria had, in the mean time, been compelled by the emperor Sigismund, to surrender into his hands the person of Pope John, and he was conveyed to Ratolfszell, a few miles from Con- stance, and there held in close confinement. The council had set for- ward the acts of the process — the witnesses were heard. On account of the heavy charges brought against him, he was first, in the session of the 14th of May, suspended from all spiritual offices ; and then, in the eleventh session, on the 29th of May, was pronounced upon him the solemn sentence of deposition. Among other charges brought against him was one^ that he stubbornly denied the immortality of the soul. It is indeed by no means improbable that a dead faith, or superstition sufficient to hush an accusing conscience by outward modes of expung- ing sin, may aocompany a life as stained with crimes as was that of Balthazar Cossa ; but still the conduct of this awfully wicked man be- comes more explicable to us on the supposition of a decided and con- scious infidelity. The council, in pronouncing upon him the sentence of deposition on account of his ignominious flight from Constance, on account of his perjury, of the scandal he had given to the church, of his promoting schism, still reserved to itself the right of proceeding against him on account of his other transgressions, with greater or less severity, as might seem good to the assembled fathers.'* On the next ' A play on words: Si in Constantia * Gobelin. Cosmodr. aet. VI, 1. 1. p. 341. t'onstantes fueritis. '* V. d. Hardt. torn. IV, p. 281. ■^ V. d. Hardt. torn II, p. 284. 112 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. day this sentence, passed by tlfe council, was shown to Balthazar Cossa, in his prison at Ratolfszell. He testified repentance for his former life, calmly laid off the papal insignia, and handed them over to the deputies, and declared that, from the time he had put them on, he had not enjoyed one quiet day. Balthazar Cossa was then removed to the castle of Gottleben, not far distant from Constance, and given over to the custody of the palsgrave Louis of Bavaria. By the deposition of Balthazar Cossa, one important obstacle in the way of restoring peace to the church was removed. Negotiations were now opened with the other two popes, Gregory XII. and Bene- dict XIII. The council had uniformly, in compliance with the advice of its wiser members, followed the principle of not allowing itself, in relations so new and extraordinary, to be governed by the letter of the hitherto prevailing laws ; but to proceed with freedom, as the greatest good of the church required. So they acted in the present case. They were ready to give way in everything, provided only the schism could be utterly exterminated, and unity restored to the church. With Gregory XII. this course succeeded. It having been intimated to him that he might convoke the council anew and then recognize it, he did so, and then gave in the desired abdication, before the council, by his delegate Malatesta. Benedict XIII. was, to be sure, more obstinate ; and nothing could be done with him. But by far the greatest part of the Spanish nation, which had thus far been devoted to his person, now deserted him and recognized the council. Thus in the year 1417, they had happily resolved one of their problems, and restored unity to the church. It was at present a council almost unanimously recog- nized by all the nations of Western Christendom, and the deputies of the Spanish nation now added themselves to it, so that from this time it consisted of five nations. But two problems now remained to be resolved : the long-desired reformation in the head and members, and the choice of a universally-acknowledged pope. The last was not a matter of very great difficulty, provided the form of papal election could be so arranged that all foreign and disturbing influences could be kept out of the way, and the chief influence in the selection could be secured to the better and wiser members of the council. Neither did so much depend on the person of the pope, provided the general guid- ance of the church were better ordered, provided that limits were set to all abuse of the papal authority, all arbitrary proceedings of the su- preme pontiflT, by means of an ecclesiastical legislation ; provided a higher tribunal could be instituted, before which even popes might be arraigned in case they abused their power. Much more difficult was the resolution of the first problem ; for this could never be carried out in a thorough manner, without conflicting with the selfish interests of many corporations and individuals. And particularly if papal authority should be restored, this might easily succeed, as at Pisa, in frustrating any thorough-going reformation of the church. Already, in the month of August of the year 1415, a committee from the cardinals and deputies of the nations, — a collegium reform- atorium, — had been appointed to consult on the affairs connected with COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 113 the reformation of the church ; and this committee had continued it3 deUberations. Many propositions of a more liberal stamp had been discussed and settled respecting the improvement of the church con- stitution, the extermination of many abuses, ecclesiastical extortions, the matters of penance and indulgence, free church elections, the veneration of relics and of saints, the control of papal authority. Sol- emn processions of various kinds had been appointed for the purpose of imploring the divine blessing on the reformation of the church. But, it must be confessed, the corruption of manners which reigned in Constance during the meeting of the council ; the multitude of prosti- tutes, who had found theii way into that city : the bad example which so many set ; simony which was practised during the very acts of reform ; all this furnished no very promising augury of a successful result. And even while the business of the council was proceeding, serious men stood forth, and spoke plainly to the assembled prelates, on the open contradiction between their lives and the promise of a church reformation. We may notice here, in particular, discourses preached by the Franciscan Bernard Baptisatus (Baptise) during the Deliberations on these matters ia the year 1417. He says : i " The masses and processions and other things we busy ourselves with, have little or no value in the sight of God, through the fault of many Phari- sees, who come here and pray to God in the temple." In all this he saw no true penitence, no devout prayer. " The prelates, alas ! — says he — have come to such extreme pride, that they hardly consider the people worthy of praying to God for the same things ; they hardly can join them in imploring the divine grace or in singing the Veni Creator spiritus. He then distinguishes different classes of Pharisees assembled at the council — graduates, who never attended mass, ser- mons or processions ; holders of benefices, also parish priests, lazy, immersed in the business of the world, without devotion ; men who served not God, but lived after the flesh. A second class were those who visited the Lord's temple, but whilst there, whispered falsehoods, laughed and made fun, slept, or carried on indecent conversation. A third class w^ere those who came to church with a long train of attend- ants, standing in the way of the processions, and staring about on all sides. He mentions, as a fourth class, those who made a trade of ecclesiastical things. They bought or sold. Such simony, he- affirms, could not be extinguished by sermons and tracts, but only by the execution of the law ; the persons guilty of it should meet Avith con- dign punishment. The fifth class consisted of those who busied them- selves with science, but not science relating to divine things, but with the study of the poets, of worldly philosophy, and especially of juris- prudence. He styles the Roman court — of which it was said, it cared nothing for the sheep but only for the wool — not a divine court, but a court of devils. He hints that it had been revealed to one of the council, that unless simony should from henceforth be exterminated from the church, and the tyranny in it cast down, a dreadful perseeu ' V. d. Hardt. torn. I, p. 881. 10* 114 PAPACY AND CHCRCH CONSTITUTION. tion would shortly start up against the clergy, such as had never beet- before. On the degeneracy of the clergy he uses the strong language that they had already almost wholly gone over to the devil. Then addressmg himself to those who had to elect the new pope, he says: " Be you no Pharisees ! Suffer not yourselves to be bribed by money in this election, as was done before.' Suffer not yourselves to be mis- led by ignorance, to be disturbed by fear, to be turned aside by par- tiality for any one." Everything now depended on the question whether the election of a pope or the reformation of the church should be the first thing to be looked after. This must have been well understood by all who had at heart the best good of the church, all the unprejudiced, all who were not bribed by some particular interest. Let us hear how the enlight- ened Nicholas of Clemangis, — who, having now retired from the din of the world, busied himself in silence with the study of the Bible, and, remote from the passions which agitated others, formed his opinion from the experience of the past, — how this man contemplated the then situation of the council of Constance. Writing about the council to his friend, Nicholas de Baya,2 he says : " What are we clergymen to do amid so many evils that affect us, and the still greater ones that threaten us, except to arm ourselves with the invincible shield of patience, and with the deepest contrition of our souls have recourse to the weapons of our warfare, which are tears and prayers ? Had the church zealously and in a manner worthy of her, long ago, betaken herself to these weapons, she would have secured the alleviation of her own troubles, and thus of many others which affect the whole world. But how is she to sorrow over others' evils, if she cannot weep over her own which are so grievous and deep-rooted ? How is she to help others, if she is too feeble to help herself, or so careless as to neglect to do it ? " The first and most important thing of all, he says, is to find out the cause of the distemper : It is the anger of God, which men have drawn upon themselves. He then proceeds : " If we would labor, then, to any effect for the healing of these wounds, we must proceed in this council in a very different way from what has hitherto been done ; and as I hear is done by the majority of ours who are still disposed to go to this council, not so much to seek peace for the church as to carry on the business of soliciting benefices for them- selves. For I understand that some are departing with huge rolls of petitions, others with recommendatory letters from their princes, others, and especially the bishops, with a view to maintain their rights of col- lation and of patronage. Thus nearly all go to the council to seek their own, and but very few to promote whatever makes for peace and for the cause of Christ; when, however, the truth is, as we have been taught by the experience of so long a time, that those are only means for keeping up and perpetuating the schism. Beheve me, such per- sons ought never to have been selected for this business, persons of ' Doubtless an allusion to the choice of * Ep. 102, p. 290 sq. Balthazar Cossa. COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 115 whom it is to be expected, that they will do more b\' their covetous- jiess to perplex the cause, than they can do by any zeal for peace tc promote it in any way ; but we should have chosen men who were especially free from ambition, and inspired with zeal for peace and church unity from heartfelt love, who would not do fawning homage to popes for the sake of gain, would not be slaves to party zeal, but seek to form alliances for the promotion of a wholesome concord, and not their own private ends. For who could hope that the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace could ever be restored amidst so much ambition, amidst such corrupting flattery, so many quarrels growing out of party zeal ? The Holy Ghost, the Author and mediator of peace, is not wont to be called down by such arts. Peace comes with the Holy Spirit to those who seek it in guileless love, not with the prompting of carnal inclinations. For although the majority may dif- fer from one another in their wishes and votes, as usually happens in councils, yet all must agree in love, that is, all must strive, out of charity, for concord. Those who do not so deserve not to assist in counsels for peace, which they are wont to destroy more than to pro- mote. Those who from a love without guile seek for concord do not defend their opinions with proud and pertinacious passion ; do not with self-glory rank themselves above others in understanding and wisdom ; do not seek diligently their own gain, their own glory and promotion. Such the Holy Spirit visits, such he assists, such he en- lightens. Such, enlightened from above, see what is right, what is good, what is to be followed, what is to be avoided, in affairs ; which others, blinded by the dust of their passions, are not wont to see. For the anointing of the Holy Ghost teaches them all things, and inspires them by secret influences with all that is profitable and health- ful." In order to participate in this guidance of the Holy Spirit — he says — those who would assist at the council must give themselves to true repentance, and employ every means of grace, to purify their souls from sin, and render them fitter temples for the Holy Spirit. If he who is preparing for fellowship with Christ in the communion betakes himself earnestly and in every way to acts of penitence, how should not he who would prepare his soul for the indwelling of the Holy Ghost, be solicitous above all things to have it cleansed and placed in suitable order for such a resident. " Of what use — says he — are masses, processions, and public invocations of the Holy Spi- rit, if the dwelling of the heart be not prepared for his reception ? What is it to invoke the grace of the Holy Spirit with a stupefied and polluted conscience, but to invite him with the lips, and exclude him by the manners ? God regards not the fine sounding voice, but the well ordered soul, — not the sweet gracefulness of harmony, but purity of conscience," And he held it necessary that not only those who personally attended the council, but all who had at heart the good of the church, should participate in this work of preparation. " In order to pray rightly for this laudable union, not only should this prepara- tion of the soul be made by those that attend the council, but the prelates should stir up the catholic people everywhere to take tha 116 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. same course." And according to the ancient custom of the fathers, they should appoint fasts and other penitential exercises for the peo- ple ; and when they are thus, so far as human frailty allows, more generally purified from the stains of sin, the prelates should appoint solemn processions to appease the divine anger, which the clergy should attend, with fasting and weeping, in sackcloth and ashes, set- ting an example to others, and the whole community should accom- pany them with their pi-ayers. During the whole sitting of the coun- cil should processions be made ; and the princes should join in them, not in princely state, but in simple and humble garb, or in the habih- ments of mourning, as we read concerning the king of Nineveh. And all cathoHc kings should for once lay aside their mutual enmities, and attend the council in person, except those who might have reason- able excuse for absence. First, because by their authority, the par- ties might be more easily induced to engage heartily in the business of establishing peace, and Avould stand in far greater awe of them than they did of the prelates and cardinals ; next, because their presence would contribute to give the council a more perfect feeling of security and ease. And should there be some persons present inclined to make difficulty and disturbance, they could not so easily carry their purpose into effect. In case these things were done, he saw some prospect of a new and more glorious condition of the church through a reformation in its head and members. Thus wrote Clemangis near the beginning of the council. But, after having watched from a distance its doings for a period of more than two years, he could not but perceive how very far short of his de- mands the council had fallen ; and his anxiety about the final issue could not but be immeasurably increased. He writes to the members of the council ; i " Men assembled for the express purpose of establish- ing peace on a sure foundation for the christian people, ought first to strive after peace with God for themselves, and then seek to preserve among each other the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, that Satan may not stir up new divisions among those who are contending for the repose and peace of God's people. Satan had already, as he was informed, tried by various devices to spread among them his nox- ious poison, and to divert them by many a cunning trick and delusion from their holy purpose, sometimes by drawing them away from the principal matter and plunging them into other strife-begetting ques- tions, sometimes by impelling them to new elections through the rest- less uneasiness of the ambitious, sometimes by throwing in their way new difficulties growing out of one cause and another. And probably, this father of lies and of all wickedness would never be quiet, but would seek to ruin the cause by new devices, so long as they could avail anything. But it was their business, amid all these difficulties and hindrances, to defeat his malice by their wisdom ; and they must confine all their solicitude to the great object, if their renowned as- sembly convoked for the reestablishment of peace, was not to break up ' Ep. 112 ad concilium generale, p. 311. COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 117 without accomplishing its purpose. For should such a thing happen, which God forefend ! then farewell to the unity of the church ; about the reestablishment of which such great hopes had been excited. Men would utterly despair of it ; and the schism among the Latins them- selves would, hke that between the Latin and the Greek churches, become an incurable one. Let them not desist, however, from their purpose, since God had already done so much for it, since by their suc- cess in removing two of the contending popes out of the way, they had peace, as it were, already in their hands. Let them not be moved by the violent demands of some, to proceed prematurely to the election of a new pope ; they could not, in the present circumstances, do a worse thing for the church. Let them not imitate the actions of those, who with good reason were blamed by them. Those over-hasty elec- tions had, in fact, brought ruin on the church : they had caused the schism to strike still deeper root, and plunged the church into those evils out of which it could not possibly be extricated, if the council should again proceed, before establishing the unity of the church on a safe foundation, to a new papal election. He warns them against the influence of ambitious men, who were seeking nothing but their own benefit ; of whom the world and the church were so full, that in com- parison to them, the rest were but few. Men had hitherto suffered themselves to be controlled too much by such persons, had bestowed too much attention on the mere distribution of benefices. Let them from the example of the past, then, take warning with regard to the future. The choice of a pope should be the very last thing of all. He proposes that the council in the meantime, should make an ordi- nance empowering the bishops to attend to the distribution of the bene- fices. He believes that it would, on the whole, have been much better for the Roman church, if it had not taken all this into its own hands, had not thus been diverted from the repose of meditation, and entangled in so much secular business. They should not let themselves be drawn aside by these minor affairs from the one great business. Nay, it were better that the benefices should remain for a longer time vacant, than that the looking after the greatest good of the entire church should thereby fall into neglect. There was not one way only, there were va- rious methods by which the heavenly physician could heal the distcm pers of the church ; and he lets them be discovered by those who earn- estly seek them : opens to those who humbly knock. If the objects attempted in one way, did not succeed, if they could not bring things themselves to harmonize with their plans and purposes, they ought, rather than give up, to accommodate themselves to circumstances : as SI wise man says, '' If you cannot do as you will, then you should do as you can." It was affirmed by many that one thing had been settled — which, however, he would not believe — namelj', that neither of the three rival popes should be elected again. Were they certain, then, upon whom the lot of the Holy Ghost would fall, or was it right to think of setting a limit or imposing a law on the Holy Ghost, who alone could guide the choice, and govern the souls of men ? What was the meaning of limiting the Holy Ghost by man's arbitrary will, except J.18 PAPACY AND CHURCH COXSTITUTION. to exclude him entirely? If the saying of Paul was irrefragable, that where the spirit is, there is liberty, how could we hope that the spirit would be there, where liberty was not ? Might it not possibly be the case, might not that case perhaps be just at hand, that unless they elected one of these individuals, they could not restore concord ? In such a case, any one surely could easily see, what course would be best, whether to elect such a person, or to go home without peace. He calls God to witness, that he did not say this out of favor to any man, but by reason of his sympathy with the suffering church. Assur- edlj' Clemangis was right in bringing the experiences of the past as a warning for the council ; certainly he was right in exhorting them against the over-hasty choice of a pope, in warning them against the plans of self-willed cunning, in inviting them to shape their course ac- cording to circumstances ; but with all the true things which he says in this letter, it is still easy to understand that, although he might not be willing to confess it himself, his old inclination in favor of Benedict XIII. governed him ; and he would have gladly persuaded the council to acknowledge him unanimously as pope, which, however, would hardly have been the suitable means then, either for restoring union to the church or for its reformation.! The emperor Sigismund had the Germans, English, and French on his side, when at the beginning he insisted that the reformation should precede the election of the pope. But the Italians and Spaniards were too strongly devoted to the old system to be able to reconcile it with their sense of propriety, that a council should any longer subsist with- out a pope. The cardinals were bound together by the esprit du corps, with the exception of two who agreed with the emperor. They feared that too many things would turn up contrary to their own interest from the freer tendencies of the council. They exerted an influence, also, on the other nations. The French nation, on whom D'Ailly had a great influence, were gained over to the project of hastening the papal election. The emperor found himself left alone with the Eng- lish and Germans. The German Dacher,who had charge of the ex- ternal affairs of the council, and served under the palsgrave, describes, in his simple and honest German style, the strong apprehensions which were felt that the reformation would be frustrated, if the election of a pope should be pushed forward first.2 The em}3eror and the party attached to him were called upon from many quarters to be careful not to depart from their plan. We may notice the speech of Stephen of Prague, probably Stephen Paletz, that fierce enemy of Huss, the man in whose eyes it was a damnable heresy to assert that the church ' This interest in favor of Benedict is would ride home, as soon as he had done evidenced also, when in the 132d letter ad up his own business ; and so the refornia- Reginaldum, p. 336, he traces the evils in tion would never take place. And more- France especiall}' to the circumstance, that over, wlien a pojje was chosen, if the tliinj^ the legitimate pope Benedict had been pleased him, lie would set about it; if it treated so abusively. did not please him, he would not have it. * ''But tiie Anglici and Germani want- The whole matter, then, depended on the ed to have the reformation done before the pope ; and so they let the matter hang • election. And if that were to be done and not a thought more was had about it.'' when the choice was made, every one V. d. Hardt. tom. IV, p. 1397. COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 119 could subsist without a visible head. Yet even he felt himself con- strained to demand before all things else the reformation of the church. Undoubtedly he had sufficiently experienced amidst the commotions in Bohemia, that it was nothing else but the crying abuses in the church that had operated most powerfully in calling forth those reactions. He invited the council before they elected a pope to proceed to the suppression of heresies, a business which it was competent to, even without a pope, as it was more than the pope and the cardinals, and by the guidance of the Holy Ghost infallible in matters of faith.' Speaking of the reformation needed in the mode of appointing to church offices, he says : " By reason of the many advantages, the wealth and honor connected with ecclesiastical offices, the foolish and the wise, the young and the old, the bad and the good, the learned and the unlearned, strive to obtain them. All seek, either by good means or by bad, to attain to the fat spiritual prebends. They are ready to move heaven and earth, expose themselves to great dangers and great hardships, such that if they endured the same for God'a sake, they would win the crown of martyrdom ; they will degrade themselves to the filth of kitchens, and to the menial service of grooms, for the sake of getting promoted to spiritual benefices." We may call to mind the agreement between this account and the language already cited of Chancellor Gerson, and of Henry of Hessia. He in- vites the prelates of the council in particular, now that they were approaching the end of their work of restoring peace to the church, to be on their guard against the devices of Satan, who was seeking to thwart this object, was now exciting so much the more division among them as his time was short. So we find a letter also from an unknown person, who, being a bishop of no diocese, calls himself a vagrant in the world,2 portraying to the emperor the corruption of the church in all its orders, and urgently inviting him to forward the cause of refor- mation. So we find the archbishop of Genoa delivering a speech and exhorting the emperor to perseverance in promoting the work of re- form.3 But must violent opposition to this course came from the ;i)art of the cardmals, who in the month of September presented two protests against the interference of the emperor and the eiforts of the German party, against whom they tried to excite suspicion. They comiilain, that although the larger and sounder part of the council, the French, Italian and Spanish nations, and the cardinals, two excepted, were of one mind on the subject, the Germans pertinaciously offered re- 6istance.4 They labor to show, that the greatest danger grew out of the long continued vacancy of the papal chair. The council, by per- ' V. d. Hurdt. torn. I, p. 833. ' Pilei, archiepiscopi Genucnsis paraene- * Ego eiiim Heinricus moliilis, episco- sis, il)id. p. 812. pus millius dioeceseos, viigorum vagus. ■• Tres nationes, Italiae videlicet, Galli- licet minimus inter ceteros nostrae con- ae et Hispaniae, quae faciuut multo majo- gregationis ministros ad hoc deputatus, rem et saniorem partem conciiii, et ultra legatus sen nuncius specialis, missus in dicti domini cardinales illara acceptaverint universum orbem, omnia videns, veniens caet. Schelstrat. p. 256. visitando limina beatorum Petri et Pauli, «tc. V. d Hardt. torn. I, p. 801. 120 PAPACY AND CHURCH CONSTITUTION. mitting this, was inflicting the greatest injury on its own credit. In many districts men were still undecided as to the stand which they meant to take in regard to this thing, and were waiting for the elec- tion, to see whether it would so turn out, that they could recognize the person to be elected as lawful pope. Already reports were in cir- culation about divisions in the council. Already men talked of some constraint under which it must labor.' It was to be feared, that if the election should be longer delayed, a new pope would be chosen at Rome, and find acknowledgment throughout all Italy. It was to be feared, that by some circumstance or other, the dissolution of the council — a thing no doubt which the cardinals themselves with their allies could do a great deal towards bringing about — might take place before any " step had been taken towards the election of a pope : and how then could they ever succeed in having a universally recog- nized pope, when there was no pope to convoke a council ? Thus these cardinals could never find it in their power to accept the princi- ples of a freer church law ; the old Roman church-system ever lay at the bottom of their creed. They complained that the Germans had left unanswered for three months their invitation that they should unite with themselves in deciding on the form of the papal elec- tion, which, to be sure, the Germans had done, but for the good rea- son, that the German party were for deferring everything else until the reformation of the church had been secured. They avowed that those who were ever standing in the way of the election of a pope, made themselves suspected of promoting the schism, inasmuch as the church, so long as it remained without a universally acknowledged head, was not restored as yet to its true unity. They Avashed their hands of all blame, should great dangers and mischiefs be found to spring out of this want of a univei-sally acknowledged pope ; they threw the responsibility of all this upon the Germans alone. They labor to show that the reasons given by the latter for postponing the election, were no reasons at all. They themselves also and the other three na- tions shared with the Germans the interest which the latter expressed for the reformation of the church, as they had indeed also taken their part in the transactions on that subject ; but there was nothing to hin- der them, while proceeding to the election of a pope, from acting also at the same time on the matter of church reform. The most im- portant thing in the reformation of the church, was to provide, in the first place, that the church should have a universally acknow- ledged visible head ; for the body without the head was a mutilated carcass. How could men speak of a reformation while this di'forma- tion still continued to exist ? To the unity of the church belonged two conditions, the union of the members among themselves, and their union with the head. The first they had attained ; the second was ' Nee non etiain, quod quorundam, qui re. Ibid. p. 257. We may probably un- t\dem concilio adhaeserunt, propter ru- derstand here a malicious allusion to the mores discordiarum, et quasi impressio- pretended limiting influence of the empe- num, quas in eodera concilio fieri audiunt, ror Sigismund. -enrinted at the University of Oxford, 4ienk upon Christ ; aiul with alle cleness, 1828. which edition lies here before us. Rile devotion, and alle charitye that God ^ Wyc.ket, p. 15: Tiierfore it semeth wolde gif him worschippe he Christ, and more that he blessed his discii)les, and also then he receives God ghostly more meed- his apostels, in whom tlie bread of lyfe fully than the prist that syngus tiie masse was lefte more then in materiall breade. in less charity. For the bodely etyng ne 156 HIoTOllY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. the same time ; where he cites Christ's promise that no one of his disciples should be lost except Judas. Christ says not, this bread is my body, or, that the bread should be given for the life of the world, — where it appears that Wicklif did not refer the pronoun " This " to the bread, but as Carlstadt afterwards seems to have done, to Christ's body.' And in proof of the assertion that all depends here upon the spirit, not upon the flesh, he cites the words of Christ in John 6 : 63 ; and next the words in John 12: 24 ; " From these words — he adds — we may perceive that Christ according to the flesh must die, and that in his death is given the fruit of eternal life for all who believe in him. Wicklif ever declares with great vehemence, his opposition to that doctrine of " the accidents without a subject," which to him seemed so much at variance with the bible and with reason. He represents it as one of Satan's most cunning manoeuvres, to succeed in persuading men to believe this monstrous doctrine. He thus expresses himself on the subject in his Trialogue.2 The cunning craft of Satan strove a long time to work up this delusion, to mislead the church into this heresy." He represents Satan as saying : " If by my representa- tive, the Antichrist, I can so far lead astray the faithful of the church, that they shall hold this sacrament to be no longer bread, but an abominable accident, I shall by that very thing lead them afterwards to believe Avhatever I will." He means that by the same analogy, it might be said to the communities : In whatever vices a prelate may live, yet this should never be beheved of him by the people his sub- jects. He would say that, by this analogy, those dignities of the clergy which are to be reverenced by laymen, may be retained in spite of all their crimes, if every thing was to be considered as an accident without a subject. He denominates the adoration of the host a species of idolatry. When it was objected, that this adoration was not paid to the host but to Christ, he rephed : " The same may be said of any creature, which according to this doctrine should therefore be adored ; for it is cer- tain, that in every creature is the trinity, and that is something far more perfect than the body of Christ.3 Yet Wicklif does not reject altogether the custom of adoration in this regard, since he says : *' Still we adore this host, according to the faith of scripture, in a way more safely warranted, and so also the cross of our Lord, or other images made by men." Wicklif went to such a length in his altogether too dogmatical zeal as to regard this doctrine both as an invention of Satan and also as an error incompatible with the existence of saving faith : and believed it necessary to suppose that those advocates of this doctrine, whom he • And often the scripture saitli, that Jesu ^ Lib. IV, p. 201. toke breade and brake it and gave it to •" Quia certum est, quod in qualibet his disciples .and sayd, take ye eat ye, this creatura est trinitas increata. et ilia est is my bodye that shalbe geven for you. longe perfectior quam est corpus ChristL But he sayd not this bread is my body, or P. 202. that the brede shuld be geven for tlie lyfe af the world. wicklif's doctrine of the lord's supper. 157 >vould not willingly cut off from salvation, as for example, Robert, bish- op of Lincoln, venerated by him as a witness for the truth, must, be- fore their departure, have come to the knowledge of this heresy, and repented of it.' We recognize here that one-sided dogmatic tendency of protestantism, which is inclined to lay an undue stress on formal conceptions. But at the same time we should carefully keep in mind, that before men were in a condition to understand the real historical process of development of the religious life and its relation to doctrine, they must have been quite incapable of understanding the relative ne- cessity of certain doctrinal modes of expression for certain times, in a certain spiritual atmosphere, though such modes of expression objec- tively considered, may be incorrect. Having thus thrown a glance at Wicklif's doctrine of the Lord's supper, we now return back to the history. In the year 1381, then, Wickhf put forth the following theses on the Lord's supper : " The right faith of a Christian is this, that this commendable sacrament is bread and body of Christ, as Christ is true God and true man ; and this faith is founded on Christ's own words in the gospels." He adverts to the testimony of the church fathers, and characterizes this faith as perfectly consonant with reason. He adduces the proofs in confirma- tion of it from the epistles of St. Paul. He calls upon the secular lords to defend this faith, as they were bound to do on peril of their salvation. The case, however, was quite different with WickUf 's attack on the doctrine of transubstantiatlon, from what it had been with his previous contests. When he attacked the tyranny and the vices of the clergy, of the mendicants, he could reckon on a host of aUies, even such as did not agree with him *in his dogmatic convictions. But here the question related to the weightiest doctrines of the church, the oppo- nents of which had long since been condemned as heretics. The chancellor of the university of Oxford called together twelve doctors, and with their concurrence, published a solemn judgment, declaring the theses put forth by Wicklif on the doctrine of transubstantiatlon to be heretical ; and the preaching of these views were forbidden on pe- nalty of imprisonment and the infliction of the ban. Wicklif, how- ever, did not allow himself to be disturbed by this proceeding, but boldly told the chancellor that neither he nor any other member ot" his council, would be able to point out anything heretical in him. Then following out his principles respecting the relation of the church to the state, he made his appeal to the king. Meanwhile, through the spread of Wicklif's principles, and owing to the impulse he had communicated and the influence of his party, which extended in various ways through the difterent ranks of society, to the very lowest, various foreign, secular, and political elements en- tered into the fermentation that had been produced, which thi'eatened a catastrophe. There were appearances similar to those which started ' Multos autem suppono seductos fuisse suppono de domino Lincolnicnsi. P 198 lac haeresi, qui tinaliter poenitebant, ut VOL. V. 14 158 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. up amidst the Donatist movements in North Africa, and in the peasant war connected with the German reformation. These movements seem to have sprung up originally independent of Wicklif 's influence, direct or mdirect, and to have been owing to other causes. The manifold oppressions of the country people called forth powerful reactions, and a little spark might grow into a large fire. The spirit that revolted against oppression brought on a disposition to resist all regular author- ity, and to reduce everything to a level. These movements do not seem even to have stood so closely connected with the reformatory tendency proceeding from Wicklif as the disturbances of the later peasant war in Germany stood with the ideas diffused by Luther, and misapprehended by some of the people. Still, the reformatory ele- ments set in motion by Wickclif might enter into combination with reformatory movements of a quite another character, relating purely to political matters ; and the attacks on the power and rule of a corrupt " clergy called forth by Wicklif might present somewhat the appear- ance of a common cause. Add to this, that men of a violent and fanatical spirit of reform placed themselves, at this time — like those enthusiasts attacked by Luther in his later days, the leaders of the people in the peasant war, — at the head of the excited people, or espoused their cause with visionary expectations. We cannot say that such men had been first roused by the impulse which proceeded from Wicklif, that they had first received and afterwards further developed the seeds which he scattered abroad. A man from whom some great movement proceeds seldom stands alone. Generally there is some common element in the spiritual atmosphere, which brings such men upon the pubhc stage, though minds of a kindred bent show themselves sometimes pure, sometimes the reverse ; in' some cases, full of good sense ; in others, extravagant and fanatical. So it seems to have been with the reformatory movements and elements of rebeUion against the hierarchy which appeared in England at the present time. There was a priest, John Balle, chaplain to the archbishop of Canterbury, not from Wicklif 's school, nor first aroused by Wicklif 's influence ; for, before the latter came upon the public stage, this person had already created a sensation by his preaching.'- This man seems not to have started, like Wicklif, from a determinate dogmatic tendency opposed to the dominant church system, but to have embarked in his under- takings merely as a practical reformer. Perhaps he appeared first as one of the preachers of repentance in those times, and vigorously attacked tbe reigning vices and immoralities of the day, understood how to work on the passions of the people, had many followers, and was thus carried along. from one step to another. He inveighed espe- cially against the vices prevailing among the clergy and the nobil- ity. This pleased the people.^ He declaimed against the superfluity 5f wealth among the clergy, spoke of their growing rich at the peo- ' Knighton says concerning Wiclclif's opinionibus praeparavit. Hist. angl. script, relations with hini : Hie habuit praecurso- torn. II, p. 2644. rem Johannem Balle, veluti Christus Jo- " Knighton, his violent opponent, says lianneni baptistani, qui vias suas in talibus of him: Qui praedicator famosissimus ha- INSURRECTION AMONG THE PEASANTRY. 159 pie's cost. Tithes — he said — ought not to be paid to parsons, when those that paid them were poorer than the parsons. Neither ought tithes or oblations to be paid, when it was evident that the laity led better lives than the parson.' He seems to have been zealous against the unchastit}^ of the clergy, and probably remonstrated as the repre- sentatives of the Hildebrandian reformatory spirit had formerly done, against the practice of allowing illegitimate sons of clergymen to obtain spiritual promotion.- In all this, as appears evident from what has been said, he presented numerous points of contact with Wicklif, which, however, is no proof of any farther relationship of spirit, or connection between the two men. Neither is it certain that John Balle, at any later period, embraced Wicklif 's doctrines. For when his opponents, who were also the fierce opponents of Wicklif, say that he dissemi- nated Wicklif 's doctrines among th*e people,^ still this amounts to no proof that he did so. After having thus wielded an influence over the people for a considerable time, he was finally arrested, and, to their great chagrin, cast into prison at Canterbury. Meanwhile insurrec- tion spread far and wide among the populace. The possessions of the archbishop were attacked. And it is a noticeable fact, though one that has often occurred at other times, that men impelled by a wild spirit of fanaticism, men, who in other respects indulged themselves in every species of abomination, wishing to appear only as champions for justice and liberty, Avould allow of no theft, no robbery to gratify private avarice. These mobs had attacked a castle belonging to the duke of Lancaster. He was particularly xmpopular with them. And yet we have seen that this duke was Wicklif 's ancient patron — which shows, again, that there could not have been any connection between these two different movements. On this occasion one of the mob stole a beautiful vessel of silver, which he wished to retain for himself; but his companions tossed him and the vase into the flames, crying : We are not thieves and robbers, but zealots for truth and justice ! 4 By this insurrectionary mob Balle was liberated from his dungeon and received with enthusiasm as a martyr. He stood up as a preacher before an audience of thousands, and added fuel to the flame. The multitude wanted to make him their archbishop and chancellor. One sentence in a sermon of his which he preached before a mob composeci of two hundred thousand people, characterizes the man : " Wher Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?"^ H tb«^" went on to prove that by nature all were created equal ; bondag-' iiehiitur apiid lak-os, qui per plura I'ctroac- are not to be taken in so literal a sense ta teni])ora vcrimm dei insipienter sparse- I'erhaps' they state his own conclusion rat, lollium cum tritico imniiscendo, laicis from a fact, rather tlian the fact as it reall_» nimis placens. P. 2634. When this op- was. His words are : Docuit etiam uenii- ponent says of him, that he mixed tares nem aptum rej^no dei, qui non in matri- .vith the ;;ood fruit in his sermons, it would monio natus fuisset. (ieem that even liis enemy must find ^ As Walsinj^ham says : Docuit et per- somethinj^ to commend in him, which may versa dogmata pertidi Johannis Wicklef refer to his practical exhortations. * Knighton, p. 2635. ' Walsingham, p. 275. * Walsingham, p. 275: Wahn Adam - That is, if we may gather this froni dalfe and Eve si>an, who was than a gen the words of Walsingham, which, coming tleman ! from tlie liiis of so violent an antagonist, 160 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. had been introduced only by sinful men, subjugating others, in opposi- tion to God's will ; for, if it had pleased God to create serfs, he would have determined, in the beginning of the world, who should be a serf and who a freeman. They should consider, then, he said to the as- sembled crowd, that the time had now come, when, casting off the yoke of servitude, they could enjoy the long desired liberty. There- fore he exhorted them to behave as men of understanding. And from love to the Father of the house, who purges the field from tares, they should feel bound also to do the same now ; first, putting to death the lords and nobles of the realm, then the judges and jurists, next, all whom they knew would in any other way do mischief to the common- wealth. Then, and not till then, would they secure to themselves peace and freedom for the future, when there was equal liberty, dig- nity and authority among them all. John Balle afterwards fell a victim to his fanaticism : he was taken prisoner and executed as a rebel. This insurrection of the peasantry, which led to great havoc and destruction, was finally put down by force. Now, although, as is evident, all this was a thing quite foreign from the spirit of Wicklif, yet it was eagerly seized upon afterwards by his enemies, as a pretext for connecting the aims and intentions of the so-called Lollards, with the object proposed by those disturbances. Many of Wicklif 's disci- ples among the clergy and the knights, disciples among the clergy who did not conduct their labors with the prudence of their master, and who manifested in their sermons too violent a zeal for reform, may have contributed to this result. Wicklif himself meddled too much with reform beginning from with- out, — a spirit which passed over, also, to the party he founded. And this circumstance would contribute, still more, to place his cause in a false light. He presented to the parhament, a paper, in which he proposed that the king and the realm should obey prelates only so far as, according to the teaching of Scripture, such obedience belonged to the obedience of Christ ; because otherwise Christ must obey Anti- christ. For there was no neutral ground between Christ and Antichrist. All obedience should be paid solely to Christ ; and any act of obedience not paid to him, must therefore be paid to Antichrist. He cites, ia proof, Christ's words : " He that is not for me is against me." That the money of the kingdom should be sent neither to the court of Rome, nor to Avignon, nor to any other foreign power, unless it were proved that men are bound to do so from Holy Scripture. That neither a car- dinal, nor any other man, had a right to enjoy the fruits of an English church, unless he duly resided there, or was lawfully employed in prose- cuting some affiiir of the realm, which had been approved by the nobles. For he would else not enter in through Christ, but as a disciple of Anti- christ ; and by human ordinances he would plunder the kingdom, like a robber, among the poor under his power, without returning any equiv- alent for the money obtained. That the king and the realm should be bound to extirpate the traitors of the realm, and to defend their own iigainst cruel enemies. That the common weal of the realm should not we burdened with inordinate taxes, until the patrimony, with which the Courtney's proceedings against wicklif. 161 clergy was endowed, was exhausted ; for that was all property of the poor, to be used for then- benefit in the spirit of charity ; as it would De, if the clergy lived in the perfection of primitive poverty. If any bishop or parish priest fell knowingly into the contempt of God, the king was not only warranted but also bound, to confiscate the temporal goods of such bishop or priest ; otherwise he would neglect the realm.' That the king should employ no bishop or priest in secular aifairs ; aa well king as clergyman would otherwise be Christ's betrayer. That the king should cause no person to be arrested because he remained under excommunication, till it should be proved by the law of God that he remained justly under excommunication ; for many had been excom- municated through haste and imprudence, in cases whei'e, according to the laws of God and the church, they ought not to have suffered ex- communication. To arrest a man, when he did his whole duty, was t work of the devil. The contrary, though its consequences might bt- neither felt nor cared for, yet reduced the state to great confusion , for an evil which is not felt, and which is therefore considered a trifle and little thought of, draws after it consequences only so much the more disastrous.^ The insurrection of the peasants had another injurious effect on Wick- lif s cause, that in the same year, 1381, the milder archbishop of Can- terbury, Simon Sudbury, was murdered, and William Courtney, bishop of London, a man inchned to more violent measures, one of the fiercest opponents of Wicklif, was appointed his successor to the see of Canter- bury. This prelate now took advantage of his power to proceed more vigorously against Wicklif. But the latter appealed to parliament, and in his memorial proposed, that all persons entangled in private religions devised by sinful men, should be left free to adopt, without molestation, the law of Christ alone, which, having been given by Christ to his apos- tles, was far more perfect than any such religion invented by sinful men. That all who had unreasonably and wrongfully condemned this whole counsel given by Christ should be corrected on account of so gross an error, and the same publicly made known. That tithes and oblations should be given and received to the end which God's law and the ordinances of the pope had determined ; and for the same reason they should be taken away, namely in all cases where they were not used conformably to their original design. Christ's doctrine of the holy supper should be publicly taught in the churches ; and the opposite doctrine, which had been set up by accursed hypocrites and heretics and by w^orldly priests ignorant of God's law, [_should be rejected.'^ The last thi-ee words were not found in the MSS. used by Lewis, and are therefore supplied by conjecture.-* Wicklif had, in the mean time, ever since his return from Bruges, become more bold and violent every day in his attacks upon the mendi- cants. In a paper put forth about this time (1382), he affirms that he could point out fifty heresies, and more, in their orders. He attacked ' Christum regis r'.or-'ni temporalis con- * Walsingham, p. 283. emptum ponder** •• Lewis, p. 84, (new ed. p. 98.) 14* 162 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. them as promoters of human ordinances to the injury of divine truth. He sought to show that their whole mode of hfe was one at variance with the example of Christ ; that by their vows Christian liberty waa abridged ; and, in a time when men were incapable of examining for themselves, obligations were imposed on them which they could not fulfil ; that men would thus be diverted from the most wholesome sort of hibor after the example of Christ, that of preaching Christ's gospel where it was most needed, without being confined to any single spot. He accused them of disturbing the parish priests in the labors of their calling.' While however, in other contests with this party, Wicklif could reckon upon powerful patrons, the case was altered in this con- troversy on so weighty a doctrine. To the Duke of Lancaster, Wicklif's old patron, this step of the reform- er was extremely unwelcome. It is said that he went himself, in person, to Oxford, for the purpose of advising Wicklif against this, course, and of persuading him not to meddle with these things. But Wicklif waa not so to be persuaded to give up a particle of the truth which he had advanced ; and we see that although he availed himself of such aid of the powerful as might offer itself, in opposing the hierarchy, and al- though he would gladly have joined himself with the civil power, yet it was far from any thoughts of his, to place rehance on these helps, and to begin the battle on this reliance. He bravely persevered, even when he saw his old patrons declaring against him. Courtney, the new archbishop of Canterbury, convoked on the 17th of May, in a Francis- can monastery in London, a council tQ examine into Wicklif's affair. The proceedings were interrupted by an earthquake ; for which reason Wicklif was wont to call this assembly derisively the earthquake- council.3 He regarded the event as a judgment of God in favor of his doctrine. He says, in his later confession : 3 " The council charged Christ and the saints with a heresy ; hence the earth trembled and shook, and a strong voice answered in the place of God, as it happened at the time of the last passion of Christ (John xii.), when he was condemned to bodily death." ^ The archbishop, however, encouraged the prelates by explaining the fact as a divine judgment of the oppo- site kind — a notification that, as nature was purified, by such shocks, of poisonous exhalations, so the church was to be purified of the venom of heresy. By this council a number of Wicklif's propositions were condemned, either as heretical or erroneous ; partly, such as he had actually affirmed, for example, on the Lord's supper ; on the limits of ecclesiastical and civil power ; on what belongs to the right discharge of the duties of clergymen : in opposition to the secularization of the church and of the papacy ; on tLj papal dignity, in its right sense, be- ing conditioned upon the personal character of the person administering it.5 The archbishop put forth an ordinance against the Wicklifite doc- ' Lewis, p. 20, (new ed. p. 30.) dampnyde to bodely detli. '- Lewis, p. 95, (new ed. p 117.) ' Wicklif says of these judgments of the ^ Knigiiton, p. 2650. council, the mendicunts have poisoned the •• Wherefore the erthe trerablide fayland kingdom of England at their earthquake maynnus voys ansveryde for God als it council in London. Dial. 292. dide in tyme of his passione wlian he was WICKLIP'S DEFENCE AGAIX3T THE EARTHQUAKE-COUNCIL. 163 trines, addressed to the chancellor of Oxford university, to which, however, the university at first paid but very little attention.^ But the archbishop induced King Richard to issue a command, directing that all persons who there taught Wicklifite doctrines should be placed under arrest.^ Wicklif speaks of the secret plots in London and Lin- coln, to kill off the poor priests.^ After this he published a new con- fession on the subject of the Lord's supper, in which he took pains to guard against the insinuation that he did not acknowledge the true body of Christ in the sacrament ; though he by no means retracted his opinions, but so expressed himself that there could be no difficulty in recognizing them in this new form. He declared,* very decidedly, against the doctrine pf transubstantiation ; inveighed against those whom he calls the sect of accident-worshippers, and after having spoken of the prevailing errors, concludes by saying : " But I believe the truth will finally conquer." He defended himself, in a particular tract, against the so-called earthquake-council. With regard to many of the doc- trines which had been condemned there, he could with perfect justice declare, that he had never preached them. Others, which he had really taught, he defended against the imputation of heresy. He cleared himself, for example, from the charge that he had made the ob- jective validity of the sacraments depend on the subjective character of the person who administered them. Sophisters ought to know that even a reprobate might still perform fully the sacramental acts, though it would be to his own condemnation ; for they are not the authors of these sacraments, but God reserves in his own hands that divine power on which the efficacy of sacraments depends. ^ With prayer, however, the case was quite different. In the seventh proposition condemned under his name, the assertion was ascribed to him, that a people may punish their sinning rulers according to their own good pleasure. On this point Wicklif, in defending himself, remarks : " This charge is in- serted in calumniation of the poor priests, with a view to make them odious to the secular lords ; when the truth is that the poor priests do their utmost to counteract, by the divine law, the insurrection of ser- vants against their lords, and declare to servants their obligation to obey their masters, even though they may be tyrants. In the paper in which he examines the articles condemning his doctrines,^ he persists in affirming that, according to the divine word, the king was bound tc deprive the clergy of the goods which they abused. The movements in Oxford induced Wicklif to retire in the same year, 1382, to his parish at Lutterworth. He was there seized with a paralysis. But his courage and zeal suffered no abatement under this affliction. He kept on contending to the very last. Meantime ' Walsiiigham, p. 286. phisters shuMen know well that a cursed ' Wilkins concilia magn. Brit. Lend, man doth fully tlie sacraments, thouj^h it 1737, torn. IV, p. 156. be to his damninj;, for they ben not autours ^ Quod tani Londiniae qiiam Lincolniae of these sacraments, but God kepetli that laborarunt assidue, ad sacerdotes fideles et divinity to himself Dauperes exstini^uendum. Dialog, p. 296. * The great sentence of curse expound- * Lewis, p. 272, (new ed. p. 323.) ed. Lewis, p. 99, (new ed. p. 121.) * Lewis, p. 96, (new ed. p. 118): So- 164 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. broke out the papal schism of which we have spoken. The enfeebling effect of this event on the papal power was favorable to Wicklif'a cause ; and he understood well how to avail himself of the divided opinions on the question who was pope, and of the quarrel between the two popes, to back up his attack on the papacy itself, and his arguments against the necessity of a visible supreme head of the church. Accordingly, in a paper on the schism he says : i " Trust we in the help of Christ on this point, for he hath begun already to help us graciously, in that he hath clove the head of Antichrist, and made the two parts fight one against the other. For it is not doubtful, that the sin of the popes, which hath been so long continued, hath brought in this division." He says, " Let the rival pontiffs continue to launch their anathemas against each other, or should one of them prevail, in either case a severe wound has been inflicted. He calls upon the emperor and kings to lend their assistance in this cause, to maintain God's law, to recover the heritage of the church, and to destroy the foul sins of clerks, saving their persons. Thus would peace be established, and simony destroyed. He contests the pre- tended infallibility of the popes, and denies their arrogant pretensions with regard to absolution and indulgence. 2 In a work still unpublish- ed " On the church and its government," after speaking of the prev- alence of simony in the church, he says : "And so God would no longer suffer the fiend to reign in only one such priest, but for the sin which they had done made division among two, so that men, in Christ's name, may the more easily overcome them both. Evil is weakened by diffusion, no less than good ; and this now moveth poor priests to speak heartily in this matter." In his sermons preached at Lutterworth, he made frequent allusions to the schism ; thus in a sermon on Romans xiii, when he says, " The pope is not on Christ's side, who put his soul for his sheep, but on the side of Antichrist who putteth many souls for his pride. This man feedeth not the sheep of Christ, as Christ thrice commanded Peter, but spoileth them and slayeth them, and lead- eth them many wrong ways." The bull proclaiming a crusade and indulgence, and put forth by pope Urban VI. against his rival Clement VII. in Avignon, afforded Wicklif occasion for many new and fierce assaults on the popes, in which he exposed the unchristian character of this procedure, and the futility of the proclamation of indulgence.3 In the paper above mentioned which contains a criticism of the sentences of condemnation passed on his doctrines, he reproaches the pope for using the banner of the cross, that symbol of peace, of grace, and of charity, to lead men on to the destruction of christians, from love to two false priests, open antichrists, in order to maintain their worldly state, and oppress Christendom. And he asks : " Why is not the proud priest in Rome willing to grant full pardon to all men when they live in peace, char- ity, and patience, as he grants it to all who will engage in the work > Vaughan, vol. II, p. 5. Lewis, p. 99, (new ed. p. 121 ) « Ibid. p. 6. WICKLIF S DEATH. 165 jf destroying christians ? " When cited by the pope to appear be- fore his tribunal in Rome, he published a bold letter to him, expressing his views openly. He declares that believing the gospel as he did, to be the supreme rule, higher than all other laws, he considered the pope as bound above all men to keep this law, being the highest representative of Christ on earth. For the greatness of Christ's re- presentative was not to be measured by the standard of worldly great- ness, but by the degree in which a person represents Christ by a vir- tuous life. He supposes that Christ, during his life on earth, was the poorest of men. No christian should follow the pope or any saint in heaven, except so far as such an one follows Christ. " For — says he — James and John were in error, and Peter and Paul sinned." He exhorts the pope, therefore, to surrender his secular rule to secular lords, and he would soon induce all his clergy to do the same ; for so had Christ done and taught his disciples to do, till the evil fiend blind- ed this world. So far as it depended on himself he was ready to go to Rome ; but Christ had bid him do the contrary, and taught him to obey God rather than man. "And I hope — he writes — of our pope, that he will be no antichrist nor act indirect contradiction to the wlil of Christ ; for if he cites me against reason, and this unreasonable citation is followed up, then he is an open antichrist." An honest in- tention did not suffice to excuse Peter, nor prevent Christ from calling him Satan ; so in the present case a blind intention and bad counsel would not serve to excuse the pope. But when he required poor jiriests to undertake a journey which was beyond their means, this could not be excused by the pious intention, nor so as to prevent his being called antichrist. God tempts no man beyond what he is able to bear ; why should a man require such a service from another ? •' Therefore — he concludes — we pray God in behalf of our Pope Urban VI., that his holy purpose of old may not be hindered and frus- trated by the fiend. And Christ, who cannot lie, says, that the fiend of man is in his own house." J While Wicklif was hearing mass on the day of the Holy Innocents, in the year 1884, in his church at Lutterworth, he fell down just as the host was elevated, struck by a violent shock of apoplexy ; his tongue was so palsied that ho could not speak till he died. This event took place on Silvester eve. We will now proceed to the exposition of Wicklif 's doctrine. His philosophy and theology were closely interwoven : accordingly the an- tagonism of realism and nominalism entered deeply also into his theology .2 Nominalism in fact appeared to him something heretical. It was by reason of this false confounding together of the provinces of philosophy and theology, that he accused the nominalists of necessa- rily misrepresenting the truth of Holy Scripture ; since in the history ' Lewis, letter of excuse to pope Urban pears to him Plato's doctrine of ideas. He VI, p. 283, (new ed. p. 333.) says : Certuin cst,quod sunt universalia ex " In support of his doctrine of the reality parti reitestiticata tain ab Aristotele, quani of general fonceptions he appeals to Aris- I'latone. Licet Plato subtilius ascendit in totle ; still more profound, however, ap- universalia idearum. Dial. p. 4J 166 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. of the creation of the species, they could not receive the account in its true sense, but must understand it as speaking of names, without real substance. 1 He took ground decidedly against those, who held to an opposition between truths philosophical and truths theological. He calls it infatuation to assert that any light of nature is at variance with the light of faith, so that in the light of faith it may be necessary to believe what in the light of nature is impossible. He held that such blindness was in reahty no light of nature, but darkness ; since two such contradictory lights could not possibly exist together.^ But since the fall, a certain imperfection cleaves to the weak hght of nature which God graciously remedies by imparting his own knowledge to mankind. And accordingly one man discovers by the light of nature, what ano- ther comes to know by the light of faith. Starting from his realism, Wicklif affirms a correspondence between truth in thou(/ht,sa\([ being as it is grounded in God. Men may frame to themselves many thoughts which do not correspond to being ; — thoughts of things which are in themselves impossible ; but these are no true thoughts. There is no actual reception of the substance of such thoughts into the soul, but a reception merely of their signs, a presentation of mere words. He distinguishes, as a realist, the intelligere res from the mere signa rerum, verba cogitare.^ But this cannot be transferred to God. Everything posited in his ideas is in ideal being one with himself; 4 hence that only is possible which is actual, though men may conceive of many things as possible, which in fact are not possible.^ Men may represent to themselves many monstrous things, to which no ideas in God correspond ; but God can know nothing which is not God him- self, or in some way ideally represented in God.^ Everything posi- tive in the creature must be referred to God ; God himself produces it, though not in the form in which it is produced by finite creatures.' He defends, against Aristotle, the Platonic doctrine of ideas. He finds in Aristotle a misapprehension of the nature of ideas, since by them is not to be understood anything self-subsistent ; the term, in his view, denotes the form in which God kaows things, the intellect ualit as creatiirce. The idea is, in its essence, God himself ; in its form, it is the mode in which God knows created things.^ With his doctrine of ideas accordingly is connected the proposition, that whatever is pos- ' Et species in Mose sonuerat in princi- * He supposes quod est and quod potest pio libri sui, vocans rerum creatarani prin- esse to be identical, quia omne quod habet cipia species et genera, ut patet in princi- esse intelligibile, est in deo. Omne sig- pio genesis, quam indubie species intellexit niticabile foret secundum esse intelligibile non esse terminos, vel conceptus, sicut ipse deus. somniant haeretici, exponentes tidcm scrip- * Deus non potest quicquara intelligere, turae ad sensum, que'm spiritus sanctus nisi sit ipse deus, vel in deo aliqnaliter non flagitat. Ibid. p. 42. ideatum. T. 10. - Qi.ux non talia duo lumina repugnan- ' Deus facit omne positivum, quod crea- tia. Ibid. p. 16. tura sua fecerit, et tamen ex hoc non se- ^ Sed quamvis homo vel diabolus pos- quitur, quod comedat, loquatur et ambulet sunt intelligere sic erronee, cum nee sua caet. P. 14. intellectio nee apparentia terminatnr ad ^ P. 25: Idea est essentialiter natura di- rem apparentem vel intellectam extra sig- vina, et formalitcr ratio, secundum quiuu lum. lliid. p. 116. deus intelligit creaturas. * Ibiu. p. 8. WICKLIP'S DOCTRINE OP PREDESTII.ATION. 167 sible is actual.^ He denies the existence in God of any such dis- tinction as that of power or faculty and action ; omnipotence, therefore, relates only to what actually takes place. And as God can produce nothing in himself which he does not actually produce, so he can pro- duce nothing without himself which he does not actually bring forth in its proper timc.^ We see in Wicklif the tendency of reform combined with an Augus- tinianism which went far beyond Augustin himself in its polemical hos- tility to everything that seemed verging on Pelagianism ; to all worth or ability on the part of the creature : and which, in fact, amounted to the denial of free-will. A one-sided religious element in Wicklif here united itself with his stern speculative consistency : we meet with elements which in their logical evolution would have led to pantheism. Everything, according to his notions, enters as a part necessarily into the fulfilment of the decrees of predestination. This excludes all conditions. No falling away from grace, therefore, is possible, because grace is a thing grounded in the divine predestination ; although for a transient moment a predestinated person may sin, and for a transient moment a reprobate partake of grace. In the developments of time, the fact that the one is a praescitus, the other a praedestinatus, is con- ditioned on the sinful life of the one and the pious life of the other ; but the original eternal ground of all is still the divine predestination, which is made actual by all temporal instrumentalities ; for all is grounded in the divine ideas, which are one with God himself. To the harmony of the world, to which God makes everything relate, be- long, according to the notions of Wicklif, both good and evil.^ It may be conceded, that many praeseiti find themselves in the state of grace in their present righteousness ; and that many praededinaii grievously sin in their present state of unrighteousness ; but the praeseiti never find themselves in the position of final perseverance, nor the praedesti- nati in that of final obduracy. On this ground, he rejects the meri- tum de congriio as an unscriptural fiction, something still worse than the doctrine of Pelagius.4 It is plain, that from Wicklif 's doctrine follow unconditional neces- sity ,5 and the denial of free-will and of contingency. Still Wicklif would not throw back the causality of evil upon God. — Evil, as such, is what- ever is not grounded in the divine ideas. It is known of God precise- ly as that which is not grounded in His ideas — per earentiam ideae ; as darkness is known by light, and as the absence of light. Still nothing is thereby gained for moral contemplation. Evolving that ' Deus nihil intclligit, nisi quod existit, praecedente tamen causa aeterna, tain ex dum potest existere, et sic omne quod ex- parte dei taliter ordinantis, quam ex parte istere potest, existit. P. 26. futurititionis creaturae taliter ordinatae. * Sicut deus ad intra nihil potest pro- Ibid. p. 74. ducere, nisi absolute necessario illud pro- ■* Ibid. p. 101. ducat, sic nihil ad extra potest producere, * Among the 45 articles attributed to nisi pro suo tempore illud producat. Pag. Wicklif. the proposition : Omnia do neces- JJ8. sitate absoluta eveniunt might justly be ^ Ita conccdendum vidctur, quod tem- condemned as one actually belonging to Dorale sit causa praedestinationis aeternae, him. 168 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. which is contained in the thought, it would follow from it that e\il, as evil, has for God no existence at all : but looked at from the standing- point of the idea, all is necessary as belonging to the harmony of the world. Wickhf himself confesses the mischievous practical conse- quences to which his doctrine of unconditional necessity would lead. But his iron mind refuses to be frightened by such consequences. He says : " The wicked may, no doubt, find occasion from this doctrine to do many wicked things, and if it be in their power will actually do them. But it is unknown who those are ; just as it is unknown to me but that some person Avill necessarily dash out my brains, and then grossly plead in excuse, that as the thing was necessary, he could not have helped it. But I will tell thee, for so irrational a deed he is necessarily guilty." ' Accordingly, all sin appears to him a necessary thing ; and so the punishment of sin. All is required in order to the beauty of the universe.s The whole multitude of the lost will serve to enhance the glory of the blessed.3 God is none the less free, for doing anything in a way which is unconditionally necessary; as for example, in the generation of the Son, and in the procession of the Holy Spirit. This agency, however, in the essence of God, is neces- sarily an eternal one ; and the facts which result from it are in time. So far as this goes, they may be styled contingent.^ It is an advan- tage of Wicklif 's reahstic bent, leading him to affirm, that everything possible must at some time be actual, that it enables him to put aside the idle questions of the later Scholasticism about mere possibihties. '^ And thus we are freed — says he — from many superfluous specula- tions, with which the heretics (among whom he classes the nominalists) torture themselves in regard to certain supposable cases. It is more wholesome to study settled truths than idly to lose ourselves in mere fictions, of which we cannot prove the possibihty, nor that they or the knowledge of them can be of the least benefit to man ; while many settled and profitable truths still He hidden from man." s The true protestant principle comes forth in Wicklif when he ascribes the whole work of salvation to Christ alone. He expresses it in oppo- sition to the worship of saints. There is no saint in word or deed deserving of praise, except so far as he has derived all that for which he is praised from Christ.6 " Hence our church 7 — he says — has this reasonable custom, that when a saint is invoked, she addresses the prayer to Christ : not principally to that saint, but to Christ." Nor is the festival of a saint to any purpose, except so far as it tends to magnify Christ, excites the soul to adore him, kindles in it the love of him. When, therefore, the observance of a saint-day deviates from I T^ial. p. 105, 4 ihi.i p 166 : Et patet, quod deiis non Vemmtanieii ilia concessa sequensest, illibertatur quodcumque facere. licet abso (|uod omnia peccata mundi de necessitate lute necessario illud agat. sicut non illiber evcnient, et per consequens, quod omnes tatur producere verbum vel s])iritum sane peccatores secundum formam, qua dous turn, licet absolute necessario illud agat decreverat, punientur, et totum hoc facit Actio tamen ista ad intra necessario ""est ad pulchntudinem universi. Ibid. p. 148. aeterna, et fiictio est temporalis. Ideo di Totus numerus damnatorura cedet eirur, quod factio est contingens. mundo ad profectum et gloriam iieatorum. * Ibid. p. 164. P- 154. « Ibid. p. 171. 7 Page 172. WICKLIF AGAINST THE WORSHIP OF SAINTS. 16"J this end, the motive must be avarice or some other sin. Hence many are disposed to think that all those festivals should be abolished, and the festival of Christ alone remain ; for thus Christ would be kept in more lively remembrance, and the devotion of the faithful •would not be so improperly distributed between Christ and his members. Foolish must he be who, instead of clinging to Christ alone, seeks the media- tion of some other. "For Christ — says he — ever lives near the Father and is the most ready to intercede for us, imparting himself to the soul of every wayfaring [ilgrim who loves him. Therefore should no man seek first the mediation of other saints, for he is more ready to help than any one of them." The soul must be distracted by the multitude of the blessed, to which it turns; the strength of the feeling for Christ must be weake»ed, as it is but a finite thing. It may like- wise turn out, that the foolish devotee is worshipjjing a canonized devil. " When only Christ is invoked, the other saints, at his bid- ding, help with their spiritual intercessions ; and, however much they may be worshipped apart, still they will assist none except in the mea- sure they ai'e commanded to do so by Christ. It seems a folly, to leave the fountain which is assuredly more ready to bestow itself on every one, and turn away to the distant and troubled brook ; and especially where fiiith does not teach that such a brook originates in the living fountain." At least, then, those saints only should be worshipped, who are known to be such from the word of God. He is opposed to particular churches taking pains to procure the canoniza- tion of their saints from the Roman see, a practice which he traces to avarice or the want of faith. "Who — says he — would ever think of employing the interest of some court fool to obtain an interview with the more accessible and more gracious king himself? The saints in heaven are no court fools ; but, incorporated by the grace of their Saviour with Christ, they are still infinitely less, in comparison with him, than the court fool is to his earthly prince." It were foolish, on a dangerous journey, to leave the straight and sure highway, and strike into some unsafe and unknown by-path ; inasmuch, then, as the life of Christ and his rules are plainly open for our inspection, it would seem as if we must consider the contemplation of the life of others as of far less account. He calls the canonization of saints,^ expressing doubtless his own opinion, though he speaks of it as the view of many, a blasphemous thing ; since without direct revelation no man can be certain about it. The miracles by which it was pretended to defend the canonization of saints, he puts down as delusions ; for the devil, who can clothe himself as an angel of light, might perform still greater miracles in the person of a departed reprobate. The devil never sleeps ; and he deceives the people whenever he can ; hence many, thus led astrav, honor a new-made saint more than the Lord Jesus Christ. Adopting the common definition of a sacrament, hivisibilis gratiae forma et causa, Wicklif remarks :^ " Every visible creature is also a ' Ibid. .). 174. * Ibid. p. ISO. VOL. V. 16 170 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Bacrament, since it is a visible form of the invisible grace of the Crea tor, exhibits the image of his ideas, and may become to creatures a cause of imitation and of knowledge. Even a sermon would, in thig sense, be a sacrament, since it is to the hearers a sign of holiness. He thinks that many signs might be cited from Scripture, which could be called sacraments with as much propriety as the seven.' " In the times of the Old Covenant — he says — the church, like a virgin still in her youth, had to be educated by many sensible signs ; but, with the growth of the church in the times of the law of grace, we are relieved from the necessity of giving so much heed to such signs." He finds a threefold abuse of signs in his own time : First, that signs of the Old Covenant were observed, which had been abolished. Secondly, a wan- ton coquetry with signs. There were many who showed such careful sohcitude for these signs, which had no foundation in Scripture but were mere human inventions, that they would sooner transgress one of the ten commandments, than deviate from them in the least. Thirdly, overloading the church which Christ intended should be free, with such figures, even beyond Avhat had been done in the church of the Old Testament. Avoiding this threefold abuse, the church should retain the moderate use of those signs in particular which had been institutcvl by Christ. Baptism, for example, was a sign instituted by Christ ; and is necessary, because in this our state of pilgrimage, we are without clear knowledge, and need to be guided in the right way by such figures.^ Confirmation, he represents as a calumny against God, since it is af- firmed by it, that bishops give the Holy Spirit in a new way, or con- firm the giving of it. But this means, giving more than the Holy Spirit. The apostles (in Acts, ch. viii.) only prayed that those who believed migl^t receive the Holy Ghost. He says : 3 " I boldly affirm, that in the early church, in the time of the apostle Paul, two orders of the clergy were sufficient, priests and deacons ; in the time of Paul, bishop and presbyter were the same." Also in his Dialogue, he asserts that reason, as well as God's word, requires that while the wants of the clergy should be provided for, they should not be overburthened with temporal things, because these temporal things were of no use to the possessors, except as applied to the ends of their spiritual calling. The greater the poverty under which an evangelical man discharged his vocation, the more acceptable he was to Christ, other things being equal.^ It seemed probable to him that Silvester and others, in ac- cepting the dotation, grievously sinned. But we may suppose that they afterwards did fruitful penance.^ He maintains that princes were not only authorized, but bound, on pain of damnation, to deprive the church of all her misappropriated secular goods : since they ought to repent of their own folly, and do satisfaction for the sinful act by which thev had defiled the church of Christ.*^ Was it objected that they had ^ Ibid. p. 181. • ferre tcmporalia ah ecclesia habitudinali- "^ Ibid- p. 215. ter delinqueute, nee solum quud illis licet * Ibid. p. 225. hoc Aicere, sed quod debeut .sub poena * Ibid. p. 2.32. damnationi.s gehennae, cum debent de sua ^ Ibid. p. 2.34. stultitia poenitere et satist'acere pro pecca- ^ Ibid. p. 237 ; Quod neduin possunt au- to, quo Christi ecclesiam macularunt. WICKLIF AdVlNSr IXD!;LGENCE3. 171 vowed such gifts to the church ? he replies : a vow at variance with duty is not binding ; as, for example, if a man has vowed to kill his brother, is he bound to perform that Avicked deed ? He declares heart- felt repentance and confession of sins before God to be the main thing on which all depends. Auricular confession he holds to be salutary, but not absolutely necessary.^ He contends against the doctrine of the thesaurus meritorum supererogationis, which laid the foundation for in- dulgences. He styles it a gross blasphemy; and remarks upon it ^ that neither the pope nor Christ can deal otherwise with souls, or other- wise grant remission, than as God has eternally ordained in his right- ous counsels. But it is not proved that the pope, or any other one, has any just reason for so doing. Then he asks, in what member of the church does this merit reside ? If it is in Christ and his members, then it would seem strange that the pope should have power to deprive the subjects of that which belongs to them ; first, because the acci- dent cannot exist separate from its subject ; secondly, because they have verily received their filll recompense in exact proportion to their desert. How then can the pope wrong God and them by any such pre- tended purloining ? Finally, by the same principle, the pope has power, by the authority thus conceded to him, of saving all ; and there- fore it would be his fault if one individual, living in his own time, should go to perdition. He affirms, that after the first thousand years, Satan was let loose for the next thousand, and that then the church declined remarkably from the imitation of Christ.^ Hence arose the efforts of pious men to bring about a reformation, men who sought to restore the living imitation of Christ. Among these he reckons the efforts of Dominick and Francis, in whom, however, he deplores the lack of Christian wisdom ; and he remarks that afterwards hypocrisy and impure motives soon crept in. If the order of Knights Templar was abolished on account of its de- generacy, how much more ought these orders to be abolished ?"* He complains of the pharisaical spirit of his age :5 " I turn — says he — to our Pharisees. The eyes of our private religion are too much daz- zled by that Pharisaical pride. For a bodily fast is prized more highly,, or its non-observance, which can be noticed, is more regarded, than spiritual fasting. Therefore, from the folly of those orders, Lord, de- liver us ! " In the writings of Wicklif, we meet with a remarkable proph- ecy of Luther's reformation, where he states that from monachism itself would go forth a reaction, founded in the very essence of Chris- tianity, against the monastic life, and to the renovation of the church in the spirit of Paul. " I suppose — says he — that some brothers, whom God may vouchsafe to teach, will be devoutly converted to the primitive religion of Christ, and abandoning their false interpretations of genuine Christianity, after having demanded or acquired for thera- Belves permission from Antichrist, will freely return to the original re- ' Ibid. p. 251. ' Ibid. p. 280. * V. 144 ^ Ibid. p. 278. * P. 284. 172 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE ligion of Christ ; and then they -will build up the church like Paul.'' ' Thus he expresses the expectation, that a return to the true way of fol- lowing Christ, would proceed from the bosom of monachism itself, that its friends would obtain liberty from the popes to live in their own way, or would find means of conquering that liberty, and this would be the commencement of a renovated church, purified from the Jewish leaven, a church in the sense of the apostle Paul. Wicklif was still entangled in the old scholastic views of the doc- trine of justification. He gave especial prominence to the subjective side of this doctrine ; and hence he agreed with Augustin and the schoolmen on this point, that no one could have certainty whether he belonged or not to the number of the elect. It is evident that in his case as in that of Augustin and the Thomists, this might be held in perfect consistency with his referring everything to grace alone, and placing freewill utterly in the back-ground. And hence, too, Wicklif may sometimes give prominence to the trust of a christian in the con- sciousness of his own pious life, though he regarded everything in that life as being but a work of divine grace. Accordingly he says : When God rewards a good work, he crowns his own gift. Hence, too, we may, with Vaughan,2 compare Wicklif with Luther, in his views of the doc- trine of justification. But trust in the redemption by Christ is, in truth, made the central point also by the scholastic theologians of the loth century. Yet, in making this subjective conception of justification his point of departure, and deriving everything from the divine fellowship of life with Christ, he came to a more profound and spiritual concep- tion of the church, as an inward unity to be traced to the same com- mon inward fact, in contradistinction from the outward unity contend- ed for on the position held by the church. " Holy Church — he says — is the congregation of just men for whom Christ shed his blood ; and not mere stones, and timber, and earthly dross, which the priests of Antichrist magnify more than the righteousness of God and the souls of men.3 So he declaims against those who, when men speak of holy church, understand thereby prelates and priests, with monks, canons, and friars, and all men who have tonsures, though they live accursedly, and never so contrary to the law of God. And he con- tends against the distinction which, from this point of view, was made between spirituals and seculars.4 " Those people — he says — would not reckon as belonging to the church the secular men of holy church, though they live never so truly according to God's law, and die in perfect charity. Nevertheless, all who shall be saved in the bliss of heaven are members of holy church, and no more." So from thia position he combats the hypothesis of the necessity of a visible head of the church. "Prelates — he observes — make many new points of belief, and say it is not enough to beheve in Jesus Christ, and to be ' P. 271 : Suppoiio autem, qnod aliqui fra- nem Christi priniaevam, et tunc aedijicabuni ires quos deus docere dignatur, ad rdigionem ecclesiam siait Paulus. ■ vrimaevam Christi devotius convertentur, et '^ II, 342. relicta sua perjidia sive obtenta sii-e petita ^ Ibid. II, 279. Antichristi licentia redibunt libere ad reliyio- * In his work not yet published: Of Pre lates. Vaughan, vol. II, p. 279. WICKLIF AGAINST THE NECESSITY OF THE PAPACY. 173 baptized — as Christ says in the gospel by St. Mark — except a man also believe that the bishop of Rome is tlie head of holy church. But certainly no apostle of Jesus Christ ever constrained any man to be lieve this of himself. And yet they were certain of their salvation in heaven. How then should any sinful wretch constrain men to believe that he is head of holy cliurch, while he knows not whether he shall be saved or lost ? " ^ A bishop of Rome might possibly be one of those who are to be condemned for their sins ; and in this case men would be compelled to regard a devil of hell as the head of holy church. He makes the true conception of a vicar of Christ to rest on the per- sonal imitation of Christ. In one who exliibits the contrary character, he sees not the vicar of Christ, but rather Antichrist ; as he says : '■^ The pope is the chief Aniichrist, for he himself falsely pretends that he is the most immediate vicar of Christ and most resembling him in life ; and, consequently, the most humble pilgrim, the poorest man, and the farthest removed from worldly men and worldly things ; when, however, the fact generally is, that he stands first in the opposite sins. He says in one of his last sermons : ^ "So long as Christ is in heaven, the church hath in him the best pope, and that distance hindereth him not in doing his deeds, as he promiseth that he is with his always to the end of the world. We dare not put two heads, lest the church be monstrous." The Head above is therefore commended as alone wor- thy of confidence. As he divided the church into three parts : preach- ers, defenders and laborers, so he describes the clergy in particular as persons whose office is to teach ; for it is characteristic of him to seize the clerical office on this particular side of it, as the preaching office. Preachers should set an example to all of Avalking after Clu-ist ; they should be nearest to Christ, and nearest heaven, and fullest of charity. -J But the manifold gradations of rank among the clergy he held to be utterly foreign to Christianity. Difficult as it then must have been, he could look at the apostolic age with sufficient freedom from prejudice to see that these distinctions were of later oriijin, that at the befrinnini' there was but one order of presbyters. There should be but one spiritual order, he supposed. Originally there were only priests and deacons ; but the fiend, he remarks, has changed this part to many colors, as seculars and religious. And these have both many parts, as popes and cardinals, and bishops, and archdeacons, etc. Hence have arisen sectarian animosities and the spirit of domination ; all this had come of men's forsaking the rule of the New Testament, according to which it were better that there should be but one order. ^ II. The Movements of Reform in BohExMia. 1. Forerunners of John Suss. The great reformatory movement in Bohemia dates back to Militz, the individual who gave the first impulse to it. We see his influence 1 Vaucrhan, vol. II, p. 273. •• Ibid. p. 274. - Dial, p. 130. ^ Ibid. * Vaughan, vol. 11, p. 273 note. 15* 174 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. continuing still to operate through his disciples, Matthias of Janow and John Huss. Militz came from Cremsia in Moravia. He was appoint- ed archdeacon to the cathedral church in Prague, enjoyed a hand- some income, and stood high in the esteem of the king of Bohemia, and of the emperor Charles IV., whose secretary and chancellor he was, and whom he attended when he went abroad, as for example, in his journey to German}'. • Even then he was distinguished for his untiring, pious zeal for the salvation of souls, for his self-sacrificing, disinterested charity. He devoted himself with an earnest spirit to the duty of church visitations, and when employed on this service de- clined the support he was entitled to from the parish priests, defray- ing his own expenses without living at the cost of any one. 2 His piety had a tinge of ascetic austerity ; a thing not uncommon in the most different periods, with persons of a serious, devout spirit, who, from grieving over the corruption of their times, and from disgust at the worldliness of a clergy sunk in luxury and ease, naturally fell into this peculiar bent. With his pastoral visitations he was in the habit of uniting exercises of penance, wearing a rough hair-shirt, or sometimes two, next to his skin.^ But the ardent zeal of this good man could not be satisfied with these labors. He felt himself impelled to take a more earnest interest, as a preacher and pastor, in the poor, forsaken peo- ple, whose necessities seemed to require it. This was a duty which he supposed he had yet to learn ; his life appeared to him to be still too worldly. He felt himself moved to renounce splendor, honor, comfort ; to strive after a closer imitation, even to the letter, of the life of Christ and the apostles. This idea, of whose influence in these times we have often had occasion to speak, the idea of following Christ in preaching the gospel in poverty and humility, had taken possession also of the heart of this devout man. He, therefore, resolved to re- sign his present post, and give up his whole income. In vain did the members of the cathedral chapter try to dissuade him from carrying this resolution into effect. In vain did Ernest, the archbishop of Prague, who felt unwilling to part with such a fellow-laborer, say to him, " What better thing can you possibly do, than to stand by your poor bishop in his watch over the flock ? " He retired, in the autumn of 1363, to the Httle town of Bischofteinitz, in the Pilsen circuit, where he spent half a year in the capacity of an assistant to the parish priest, zealously laboring as a preacher and curate. The priest owned a fine garden, stocked with fruit-trees. Militz felt himself strongly attracted to this spot. But the stern man, stern and severe to himself, looked even upon this as a temptation of Satan. Thou art come here, said he to himself, not to enjoy thy ease, but to work, to look after poor ' Vid. Franz Palacky Geschichte von ^ The words of his disciples in the bio- Bohmen, 3 Bd. 1 Abthiel. Prag. 1845, p. graphical sketch mentioned in the ])reced- 1 64. ing note, p. 45 : Statim coepit in cilicio per- ^ See the Life of Militz. by one of his agerc poenitentiam, et quando iter alicu- disciples, which the Jesuit Balbirus has jus partis arripiebat. tunc duo cilicia caute Miblished in the Miscellaneis hist, regni et secrete oognato suo clerico, nomine Ste- Bohemiae, Pragae, 1682, decadis I, lib. IV, phano, quasi pro majori suo thesauro stu- paj's II, tit. 34, p. 44. diose recommendaba'. cu^todienda. MILITZ, PREACHER OF REPENTANCE IN PRAGUE. 175 soals ; and he deined himself the relaxation of the garden and the en- joyment of its fruit. Having disciplined himself in this way for half a year, he returaed to Prague ; and without accepting any particular office to which a salary was affixed, he began to preach to the people in the language of the country, first at St. Nicholas in the Klein quarter, then at St. Aegidius in the old town. His novel and simple way of preaching met, at first, with but little favor.' He was derided on account of his pronunciation, and his want of readiness in repeating certain liturgical forms, and in announcing festivals. ^ He had but a small number of hearers. His friends advised him to give up preaching, as he could accomplish nothing in that way. How many devout and learned men had failed as preachers ! Why should he expend his energies to no purpose ? But Militz replied : " If I can save but a single soul, it will satisfy me. The example of my Saviour teaches me this, who did not DOCTRINE. Antichrist, by the blood of the Lamb, and build a safe highway to the land of eternal promise. Not a crusade, therefore, for the_ opening a way to the Jerusalem on earth, but a spiritual crusade, which, by the triumphant diffusion of the word of Christ, should make the heavenly Jerusalem accessible to all, was what Militz had in mind. He beholds, in spirit, how many martyrs would die for the truth, and by the Wood of these martyrs the sins of the Christian people should be expiated. " Were these to be silent — says he — the very stones would cry out." Militz, in the year 1367, felt himself called to go to Rome ; and took with him, as companions, Theodoric a monk, and one of his disciples of the ecclesiastical order. He went to Rome either because he hoped to find Pope Urban V. already there, (the report that Urban intended to trans- fer the seat of the papacy back to that city, having perhaps already reached Prague,) or because he thought it his duty to testify, first of all, in the ancient seat of the papacy and the chief city of Christendom, concerning the revelation of Antichrist and the preparation for Christ's second coming. He had resided in Rome a month, preparing himself, by study of the Scriptures, prayer, and fasting, for the work to which he felt himself called. The pope, however, did not make his appear- ance ; his return to Rome was still delayed, and Militz could no longer keep silent. He caused a notification to be posted up at the entrance of St. Peter's church, that on a certain day he would there make his public appearance and address the assembled multitude ; that he would announce the coming of Antichrist and exhort the people to pray for the pope and the emperor, that they might be enabled so to order the af- fairs of the church, in things spiritual and temporal, that the faithful might securely serve their Creator.i He proposed, moreover, to re- duce his sermon to writing, that his language might not be misconstrued and represented as heretical, and that what he spoke might be more widely pubhshed abroad .2 But a notice of this sort could not fail to excite suspicion, and Militz had already, by his castigatory sermons, drawn down upon himself the hatred of the mendicant monks in Prague ; he was therefore waylaid and apprehended, and the inquisitor, who be- longed to the Dominican order, placed him under arrest. He was to be called before the tribunal. His companion Theodoric was shut up in a Dominican convent. Militz, loaded with chains, was delivered .over to the Franciscans, to be kept in close confinement. He showed the greatest patience and gentleness under his sufferings ; not a word pose he meant that infidels were to be at- praedicare, quod antichristus venit, et co- tacked by force of arms. The import of hortari cos velles et populum, ut oren; the whole seems rather to be that the cru- pro domino nostro papa et pro domino sade was not to be one in the literal sense, imperatore, ut ita ordinent ecclesiam sanc- but the opposite — a spiritual crusade. tarn in spiritualibus et temporalibus, ut ' Militz himself reports this in his pa- securi fideles deserviant creatori. It is per on the Antichrist ; Et tunc jam de- evident that the author of the hiographi- sperassem de advcntu domini nostri pa- cal sketch of Militz, published by Balbin, pae, . . . et tunc irruit in me spiritus. ita had this paper before him, and that his nt mecontinere non possem,dicens in cor- account is founded on it. de, vade in Roma, publice pertracta, qua '"* Militz expresses himself as follows : qnouiodo affligctur hostis ecclesiae S. Pe- Et dabis in scriptis sermonem ilhini. m^ iii. >ic soUicitus fuisti intimare in Praga, immutent verba tua, et ut materia divol- quouiam eris praedicaturus, quod veils getur. RETURN OF MILITZ TO PRAGUE.* 181 of revenge escaped his lips ; his meek forbearance confounded his per- secutors. His companion Theodoric found it more difficult to suppress his indignation at such unjust treatment ; but Militz admonished him to think on the sufferings of Christ, who was led as a lamb to the slaughter, and opened not his mouth. A devout woman in Rome chari- tably undertook to provide for their wants ; but Militz was gieatly pained when he came to be informed that she sent better food to him than to his companion Theodoric. After having been long detained in close confinement, he was asked, what it had been his intention to preach. He requested his examiners to give him the Bible, which had been taken from him at the time of his arrest, with paper, pen, and ink, and he would put his discourse in writing. This was granted, and his fetters were removed. Before a large assembly of prelates and learned men, in the church of St. Peter, he delivered a discourse in Latin, which produced a great impression. He was then conducted back to his prison, but treated with less severity. It was in his cell that he afterwards composed his above-mentioned work " On the Antichrist," as appears from his own words : " The author writes this, a prisoner and in chains, troubled in spirit, longing for the freedom of Christ's church, longing that Christ would speak the word, Let it be, and it shall be ; and protesting that he has not kept back that which was in his heart, but has spoken it out to the church, and that he is prepared to hold fast to whatever the pope or the church may lay on him." But no sooner had Pope Urban arrived at Rome, than the situation of Militz was altered for the better. He was set free from prison and received into the palace of a cardinal ; he had a favorable audience with the pope, and returned back to Prague to the great joy of his community. The exultation at his return was the greater, because his enemies, the mendicants, had foretold to the people from the pulpit, that he would perish at the stake. He recommenced with new zeal his labors in Prague. He was not satisfiied with the little good that could be effected by his own personal labors in preaching. He was often heard to say : " Would that all were prophets." He set up a school for preachers. And when he had trained up an able young priest, he took pains himself to draw upon him the attention of the communities, pointing him out as one who would surpass his master, as one whom they should listen to with care. He founded an association composed of two or three hundred voung men, all of whom resided under the same roof with himself, were trained under his influence, and by his society. He copied the books which they wei^e to study, and gave them devotional books to cojjy themselves, for the sake of multiplying them. All here was to be free ; to flow spontaneously from the one animating spirit by which all were to be governed. An internal tie was all that held them together : Qo outward discipline or rule, no vow, no uniformity of dress. The disciples of Militz soon distinguished themselves by their serious, spirit- ual lives, and by their style of preaching. Hence they too, like him- self, were made JDutts of ridicule and persecution by the worldly-minded clergy, whom the lives of these exemplary young men stung with shame VOL. V. 16 182 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. and reproach. Thej were nick-named Militzans, Beghards. The bene ficence of Mihtz was without bounds. Crowds of the poor were always to be seen collected before his doors. He ga\^e all he had to help them ; reserving nothing at all for himself; so that when everything else was gone, he sold his books, the very books which he used himself, and which he kept ready to lend to any that needed.^ When he had nothing more he ran round among other clergymen and the rich, and collected contributions,^ never allowing himself to lose heart by any rude rebuff he might chance to receive from those whose charities he asked. Nothing was left him but the most indispensable articles of clothing ; not even what was needful to protect him, in midwinter, from the inclemency of the season. A rich man had said : Militz suflfered so much from the cold, he would be glad to present him with a set of furs if he could only be sure that he would keep it. On hearing of it, Militz observed : He was far from wishing to keep anything for himself alone ; on that condition he could not accept of the furs. He was often persecuted anfl stigmatized as a heretic ; but his patience and gentleness never failed him for a moment ; and he used to say : " Let me suffer ever so much persecution, when I bethink me of the fervent penitence of that poor woman — referring to one who had been converted by his means from a life of licentiousness and crime — the bitterest cup becomes sweet to me, for all /suffer is as nothing com- pared to the grief of that one woman." The enemies of Militz at length extracted from his sermons twelve articles, which they sent to a certain Master Klonkot, an agent of theirs, probably himself a Bohemian, who happened to be present at the papal court in Avignon. It is very manifest how wide an influ- ence Militz must have already gained by means of his school. The pope saw clearly that such doctrines would be disseminated through Bohemia, Poland, and Silesia. He put forth several bulls to the arch- bishop of Gnesen, the bishop of Breslau, the archbishop of Prague, and to the Emperor Charles IV. He expressed his surprise to the bishops that they should have tolerated until now the spread of such heretical, schismatic doctrines through so wide a circle ; called upon them to suppress the same, and bring Militz and his adherents to pun- ishment. Yet even Gregory XI. must assuredly have been still some- what uncertain himself whether wrong had not been done to Militz ; for he uses the qualifying expressions, — " if it is so" — " if you find that it is so." 3 In the bull addressed to the Emperor Charles, he says : " We have recently learned from the report of several credible persons, that a certain priest Militz, formerly a canonical at Prague, under the garb of sanctity, but in the spirit of temerity and selfcon- ceit, has taken upon himself the calhng to preach which does not belong to him, and has dared to teach openly in your dominions many ' Propter quod dum omnibus libris, words just cited : Tunc mutuando a divi- ^uos solos pro docendo habuerat, et pau- tibus et rogando non sine magnis contu- tos obligavit, vendidit et expendit, are the meliis et repulsa discurrendo. A^ords of Matth.of Janow. '•' Annales Raynaldi, torn. VII, 1374, ad ^ Matth.of Janow remarks, after the ann. Nr. 10 and 11, p. 251. DEATH OF MILITZ. CONRAD OF WALDHAUSEX. 183 errors, which are not only bad and rash, but also heretical and schis- matic, extremely mischievous and dangerous to the faithful, especiall;^ the simple. When the pope's bull arrived at Prague, the arch- bishop was confounded. He caused Militz to be cited, and complained to him of his perplexity. Militz, however, remained perfectly tranquil in the consciousness of his innocence, and bid the archbishop take courage, as his conscience was clear. He placed his trust in God and the power of the truth ; these would triumph over every assault. He went to Avignon in the year 1374 ; but died there while his cause was still pending.' In connection with Militz we should notice Conrad of Waldhausen,2 a German from Austria, who was distinguished in Bohemia as a preacher full of zeal for reform.3 He belonged to the order of St. Augustin, and exerted a great influence, at first as a priest, by his sermons, in Vien- na, from the year 1345 and onward, through a period of fifteen years.4 Within this period fell the jubilee already mentioned as having been proclaimed by Pope Clement VI. While an opportunity of this sort would be seized upon by the common preachers of indulgence to do still greater mischief to the souls of men, Conrad of Waldhausen would feel himself called upon the more to wake up the attention of the misguided people as a preacher of repentance. Without contending against the determinations of that church doctrine, to which he him- self was devoted, he might still endeavor to counteract the perni- cious influence of the ordinary preachers of indulgences, and to direct ' We follow here the report of Matth. the corrupt clerfiy, the Cistercian John of of Janow, as the one most worthy of ere- Stekna. When the friends of Huss. for ex- denee, who says of Militz : Avenione ex- ample, said in his justification, that he ulans est mortuus. It must be an error, was persecuted merely on account of his when it is said, in the biography published castigatory discourses against the corrupt by Balbinus, that he went to Rome. This clergy, this Andrew of Broda replied, by error might easily arise from the confound- ap])ealing to the examples of those three ing together of the curia Romana and the castigatory preachers before him, Militz, curia Avenionensis. It must also be a mis- the above mentioned Conrad, and John of take that, as the report in Balbin has it, Stekna, who, however, had not been accu- Militz returned back to Prague and died sed of heresy; and he says in this con- there. We might suggest the inquiry, nection : Nam et ab antiquis temporibus whether, in the biography preserved in Milicius, Conradus, Sczekna et alii caet. Balbin, a report got up in the lifetime of The simple fact, tliat the two last names Militz, and another composed after his were not separated from each othjr by a deatli. may not' be blended together. comma, led to the entire mistake. - This Conrad of Waldhausen first be- ^ Matth. of Janow characterizes both came better known through the research- Militz and Conrad oi' Waldhausen as men es of Palacky, to whom I am indebted full of the spirit of Elijah. He says : Con- fer the fii-st oral communications respect- radus Walthauser, homo utique religiosus ing liim, (see his History of Bohemia, 3, et devotus, qui dictis suis et scriptis prin- 1, 161 if, and note 225) and through those cipales metro])oles sanctae ecclesiae reple- of P. -lordan in his paper, " Die Vorlaiifer verunt utjiote Romam et Avenionem, ubi des Hussitenthums in Bohmen," which Papa, et Bohemiam atque Pragam. lAi learned man may also have availed him- ecclesiae imperatoris. Unas ipsorum Con self of Palacky's researches. An errone- radus in Praga occubuit, ubi Caesar, caet. ously printed passage in Cochlacus (liis- * We take this from a remark made by toriae Hussitarum libri XII., p. 42,) taken the man himself in his piece in defence from the writing of a contemporary of Huss, of himself, composed in 1364, and still un- the Bohemian theologian Andrew of Bro- published : Jam per quindecim annos la da. who wrote against Huss, caused this boriosae coram ducibus Austriaecoram(|ua 'orerunner of Huss to be forgotten and to populo multo palam concionc caet. DC confounded with another castigator of 184 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. men's attention to the internal moral conditions which were lequired in order to derive any true benefit from indulgences. It seems, that he was led by this occasion of the jubilee to make the pilgrimage him- self to Rome, and, that on this journey and after his return from it, he labored as a preacher of repentance in Austria and Bohemia till he arrived at Prague. We take this from his own writings. For when, at some later period, his violent enemies of the two orders of mendicant friars accused him of disturbing everywhere by his sermons the public peace, — a charge often brought against preachers who by their search- ing discourses produced some movement which was opposed to the selfish interests of many, — he in defending himself compares this accusation with the one brought against Christ, namely, that he stirred up the people ; that he taught from city to city, in the whole land of Judea, beginning from Galilee even unto Jerusalem ; where he re- marks, — and so they say of me : He has set the people in commotion, beginning — and, herein, at least, they speak the truth — beginning from Rome, the seat of the apostolical chair, in the year of the jubilee, and teaching through all Austria even to this city of Prague, from this time, by God's wonderful dealing, become an imperial city.^ This happened, therefore, in the year 1350. By these labors he must have become known to the king of Bohemia, the Emperor Charles IV., who sought in every way to advance the interests of the Bohemian people. The emperor endeavored to secure him for this country, and, in the year 1360, he was called, as parish priest, to the city of Leitmeritz Partly his earnest wish to labor on a wider scale for the salvation of souls and against the corruption of these times, an opportunity for which was offered to him in Prague, and partly a controversy in which he became involved with a convent of Dominicans and Franciscans, who sought to circumscribe the activity of the parish priest and to take everj'thing into their own hands, induced him to make his appearance as a preacher in Prague.^ He preached, first, for a year, in the church of St. Gain, in Prague.3 But the crowd of people who were impressed by his preaching, constantly increased ; and, as he thought it wrong to withhold God's word from any one who was drawn to hear it, but felt bound to labor for the salvation of as many as he could, he preached, the church being no longer large enough for his audience, in the open market-place to the vast crowds who there assembled around him. He also, like Militz, supposed that he saw in the anti- christian spirit ' Commovit ])o])iiliim ilocens per uni- stiilissent sibi populum suiim, et sibi at- versam Austriain, iiu-ipiens, ut veruni sal- traxissent. And he grants that tliis was tern in hoc dicant, a Homana civitate se- one reason, but not the only one. nor the dis apostolicae, anno Jubilaeo docens per chief one. Respondeo, quod ista omnia universara Austriain usijue banc .scil. in sunt vera, praeter hoc, quod dixerunt, esse Pragam. ex tunc mirabiliterdei dispensatu hoc praecipuam causaui sed tantum fuit civitatem imperialem. concausa. " Conrad's opponents allege, as the rea- ^ His own words are: Ego Conradus son why he left his parisli, what he him- in Waldhausen profcssus^ ordinem S. Au- self stated: (Scripserunt, me dixisse in gustini canonicorum regnlarium et Lotho- quodam sermone, causam, quare in paro- mir Pragensis dioeceseos Plebaniis verbum chia mea nou residerera, esse.) quia ipsam dci in civitate Pragensi quasi per atinum duo monasteria fratrum inendicantium at- continuum praedicassem in ecclesia S tenuassent ibidem, et asset ratio, quia ab- Galli. CONRAD OF WALDHAUSEN. 185 of his times, the signs of the last preparatory epoch which was to precede the second advent of Christ ; and his sermons were frequently taken up in directing the attention of his hearers to these signs, in warning them against the impending dangers, exhorting them to watch- fulness over themselves and against the insidious spread of antichrist- ian corruption. "Not willing — says he — that the blood of souls phould be required at my hands, I traced, as I was able, in the Holy Scripture, the future dangers impending over the souls of men." i Accordingly he attacked, in his sermons, the prevailing vices in all ranks of society, the pride of dress in the women ; usury ; lightness, and vanity in the youth. Many, under the influence of his preaching, experienced an entire change of heart. He produced such an effect on many usurers that they restored back their wrongful gains ; this he required them to do, as evidence of their conversion. A certain young man, by the name of Slanko, was looked upon as one of the most remarkable examples of his singular power in reaching the souls of men. This person took the lead among the giddy, light-minded youth, given up to every vanity. Without any purpose of devotion he visited the churches, where he amused himself with looking round upon the young ladies, nodding to them, and throwing pebbles at them, even during the fasts ; and so he went on during all the first part of the time that Conrad was preaching at Prague. But, struck by some remark of the preacher, he changed his whole course of life, became one of his most attentive and devout hearers, to be found always by his side ; and Conrad often alluded to the change that had taken place in him, as evidence of the power of transforming grace.^ Even the Jews often went to hear him preach. Some of his friends would have prevented this ; but Conrad, who was zealous for the salva- tion of all human souls, and could not approve of this exclusion of the Jews, reminded his friends that, according to the prophecy of Isaiah, their conversion in great numbers was some time or other to be expected. They ought never to doubt of the power of the gospel and of divine grace. He would pleasantly remark that " if it was in the power of divine grace to change the worldly heart of a Slanko, why might it not also overcome the unbelief of the Jews." 3 He thus speaks of the matter himself : "• It so happened that many Jews, of both sexes, at- tended my preaching, sitting and standing promiscuously in the crowd among the Christians ; and it was told me that a number of Christians supposed that the Jews must be avoided, and wished to prevent them from attending my preaching for the future. I then said : I have ' Nolens sanguinem animarum de man- inquietus ; postea fuit conversus cum niul- tbus meis requiri, equidem in scripturis lis aliis complicibus suis ejusdem vanita- sanctis vidi tidelius, ut potui, pericula an- lis, quod valde devote mecura sedebat in iraarum fiitura. quadragesima ad serinoncm. * Conrad says of him: lUe f'ucrat valde ^ The words of Conrad: De hoc juvene indisciplinatus" ante adventum meiim in jocose dixi, arguens per locum a minori, Pra<'-am. Ita quando civissae, quibus ho- sciens quod non aegre ferret, et quia bonus nisa1)at, vel quaecunque aliae sedebant in amicus mens esset, et de hoc gaudebat : quadragesima in praedicationc, jaciebat Ex quo conversus est iUe, posset etiam super carum capillos. Etiam in principio Judaeus convcrti. adventus mei in Pragam fuit ali(£uamdiu 16* 186 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. heard that some of you have been keeping away the Jews, who Avere attentive, hearers, from my sermons. I beg you not to do this again ; for the last day is approaching, before which, according to Isaiah, all the Jews are to be converted. Peradventure some one of these may, by the grace of God, be converted." And to show that this was by no means impossible, he cites the example of Slanko. In pointing beyond a mere outside Christianity to its true essence, in exposing the various ways in which men deceived themselves with regard to the demands of Christianity, the various means resorted to for the purpose of hushing the alarms of conscience, and bolstering up a life of immorality, he was led to contend earnestly against the influ- ence of the mendicant friars, who by their mock-sanctity imposed on the multitude, while they encouraged and promoted the false reliance in various outward works ; and in warning men against the false prophets who were to appear in the last times, he felt compelled to draw his illustrations chiefly from the mendicants. He spoke with great emphasis against every species of simony, but especially against that form of it which was stealthily practised under the garb of absolute poverty by the begging-monks. Simony he pronounced to be heresy. There was, as he thought, a still worse heresy than that of the Pneu- matomachi, who declared the Holy Ghost to be a mere creature ; namely when, by simony, the Holy Ghost was employed as a means of getting monej'. The former only made the Holy Ghost a ministrant creature to God the Father ; but they who practised simony made the Holy Ghost their own spirit, their own minister.' He regarded it as no better than simony, to ask pay for taking in and nursing the sick, and to decline receiving young women or young men into the convents except for a certain stipulated sum. He had applied at first to Ernest, archbishop of Prague, and requested him to put a stop to this simony. But this prelate assured him that it was out of his power ; most of the convents being exempted from his jurisdiction, and under the control of priors of the mendicant order.2 No other course remained for him, therefore, but to lift up his voice against the evil, in his sermons and in his intercourse with men. He inveighed against the mock-sanctity of the monks, who endeavored to deceive the simple to the great injury of their souls ; and through weak-minded, bigoted females in particu lar, introduced their corrupting influence into families, procured lega- cies to be made to their order, and its superior holiness to be com- mended, so as to induce parents to give up to them their boys. " These persons — he says — often deceive the simple, by pretending to a holy poverty, putting on the garb of an hypocritical sanctity ; and whilst, for outside show, they carry that devotion on their lips, which is not, I fear, in their hearts, they rob those who confess to them of what ' lUi enim Macedoniani creaturam et arcliiepiscopo Pragensi id ipsum significa- servum del patris et filii spiritum sane- re, quod talibus, ne fiei-ent, remedium ad- tum delirando fatebantur. Isti vero eun- hiberet opportunum. Qui resijondit, quod dein spiritum sanctum efficiunt suum monasteria nioiiialiura f'eiaj omnia essent servum, quia divendunt ipsum quasi ad- ab ejus cura in civitate Pragensi exempts versarii. sed sub alis fratrum ordinum mendiian - This Conrad relates himself : Domino tium, ut communiter essent. CONRAD OF AfALDHAUSEN. 187 belongs rightfully, when they have done "with it, to their heirs. But let these simple persons hear what our Lord threatens to such, in hia parables (Matt. 23: 23)." • No man, he held, could be forced to be virtuous. All goodness must proceed from free choice and conviction. Hence he objected to the practice, customary with parents, of carrying their children to the convents, where they were to be put under a perpet- ual vow to the monastic life, though it was quite uncertain whether they would be fitted for it or willing to undertake it on arriving at mature years. "They only — he said — who are led by the Spirit of God, are the sons of God. That which the Spirit only can effect, is not to be forcibly imposed upon one from without." We recognize, in all this, the Augustinian ; one on whom the doctrines of Augustin had exerted a great and decided influence. He himself remarks, in clear- ing himself from the reproaches which were thrown on him for using such expressions : " Because I was informed that the people of Prague had been persuaded by those monks to vow the consecration to their orders of boys still in the mother's womb, and to give them the names of the saints of those orders, I spoke pubUcly against such a practice, except on the express condition that their children should be held to such vows only in case they met with their own concurrence when they came of age. 2 For otherwise it would inevitably be attended with danger to the souls of both children and parents." Therefore he held parents responsible for the injury which might accrue to their children, if such a mode of life was forced upon them contrary to their own wishes. He had nothing to say against the monastic life, in itself considered. But he made a distinction between this life and the strange offshoots from it, against which he felt it the more incumbent on him to warn men, in proportion to the high regard which he enter- tained for the institution. Referring to the remarks of Augustin, he declared, that while in monasticism, if it corresponded to its idea, was to be found the most perfect mode of Christian life ; so in it, when de- generated, was also to be found the greatest wickedness. Refusing to retract what he had said on this point, but rather confirming it, he wrote : " I say and write what I never wrote, or said from the pulpit, before, moved to do this now by such an unwarranted contradiction, that he who has a son or friend whom he loves, and whose welfare he holds dear, should no more allow him to enter into one of these orders, — in which manifestly, and as it were by authority, owing to the cor rupt influence of a bad custom, it has become necessary to live con- trary to the rule of the orders and to the profession — than he who wants to cross the Danube, should voluntarily embark in a leaky craft, ' Immo tales creberrime praetextu suae diebam per praedictos fratres, ut pueri sanctae paupertatis et habitu simulatae adhuc in vcntris matrum existentes suis sanctitatis simplices decipientes et eorum ordinibus voverent, procurari et nomina devotionibus, ore. sed ut timeo. non cor- sanctorum vel sanctarum sui ordinis no- de ostensis, oontitentes, privant bonis suis, minari, quae ne fierent nt potui jiublice quibus post mortem deberent vivere hae- prohibui, nisi si hoc pacto sui primum redes eorum. Sed audiant, quid dominus voluissent hoc votum, cum ad annos dis- lalibus in fijijura similitudinis comminetur. cretionis pervenerit, suo libero arbitrio * Quia homines civitatis Pragensis au- ratificare. 18S HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. thereby exposing his life to danger." > And after quoting certain re- marks of St. Bernard, referring to the degeneracy of the monks, he adds : " But I say, St. Bernard, what would thy language be now, didst thou behold the mendicant friars sitting in those splendid palaces, which they own in spite of the apostoHcal prohibition ! " It were bet- ter, he thinks, only for the sake of escaping corruption and securing salvation, to remain in the world ; for, as well in the monastic life as in the world. Pure worship and undefiled before God and the Father is this : to visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep one's self unspotted from the world. To the monks, who trusted in the holiness of their order, he applied what John the Baptist had said in rebuking the theocratical pride of the Jews, — that God was able, out of these stones, to raise up children to Abraham. "No monk — says he — is entitled to hope that he shall be saved because the founder of his order was a holy man ; it would be precisely the same as if I should hope in St. Augustin, and expect to be made blessed by his holiness without any good works of my own." " I believe — says he — that if St. Fran- cis himself should find fault with them for their wickedness, he must prove, according to their own professions, to be a bad man, and they would never acknowledge him as the founder of their order ; so very far, alas ! have they departed from the purity of their foundation, and from their original poverty. He distinguishes, indeed, the primitive mode of hving among the mendicants, as laid down by their rule, from that which contradicted it ; yet it is very evident, that he was very far from regarding the institution of the mendicant orders, in itself consid- ered, as the highest degree of the imitation of Christ. On the contrary, he disputes the position, that such poverty corresponded to the original type of the life of Christ. He affirms that Christ never begged. In proof of this, he states that when Christ paid the tribute for himself and for Peter, he did not beg it, but caused it to be found in the mouth of the fish ; that Christ was styled not the carpenter's son merely, but the carpenter ; explaining the words, " Is not this the carpenter's son ? " as if the people had said. We have not seen him studying, but at work with his father the carpenter. He ofiered to give sixty groats to any one who could cite a single passage from the New Testament, showing that Christ had ever begged.2 He himself repented, as it would seem, of his earlier mode of life, which his order had imposed ; for he says : *' 0, had I but known it ten years ago, I would then, for the glory of God, have devoted myself entirely to study ; but from henceforth I will consecrate my whole life to study, to the cultivation of a prayerful ' Dico et scribo, quod prius nunquam nulliis volens Danubium traiisire, sponte scrips! vel dixi in ambone, tali contra- intraret navem corruptam, ubi tamen esset dictione indebita motus, quod quilibet ha- in periculo corpus. bens puerum vel amicuni dilii;ens, quera •- Dixi. quod quicunque ex iis fuerit pri- velit salvari, videat, ne in aliquem ordi- mus. qui ostenderit mihi ex scriptura ca- nem ipsos intrare procuret, in (pio nuini- nonica, Christum mendicasse, cujus ratio- t'este et quasi jam ex auctoritate propter nes solvere non possim, dabo sibi unam corruptelam pravae consuetudinis sit ne- sexagenarian! grossorum pro cappa pannj eesse vivere contra regulam ejusdem or- rudis. Jinis ct professionem, attendens, quod COXRAD OF WALDHAUSEN. 189 spirit and to preaching." He contests the notion, that it was a pecu- liarly holy and meritorious work to give alms to the monks, instead of providing for the support of the truly necessitous poor. " 0, — he writes — what will the Lord say, in that day of fearful judgment, ta those who, when they were not needy themselves, snatched away their alms from the truly poor, the real beggars. Assuredly will it be in his power to say — I was hungry, and ye gave me no meat : ye took away from me, what was to serve as my food. Much rather — said he — should we give to the poor and to the true beggars, than to a rich and strong man, who begs while he might work. And I believe — he proceeds — all men of sound understanding would agree with me in this : since not an individual would say that we are bound to give to the rich man, rather than to the poor Lazarus ; that we should give to those that riot at feasts, and leave to die, of hunger, the poor beg- gars who seek to feed themselves with the crumbs that fall from the table." He bore his testimony against the fraudful quackery carried on with pretended rehcs of saints. " The people — said he — often allow themselves to be imposed u}X)n with relics. A head of St. Bar- bara, it was reported, existed somewhere in Prussia ; and yet many held that they had such a head in Prague." And he adds, in confir- mation : " So true is it, that they often love the perishable bodies of saints more than their meritorious works for the sake of the kingdom of heaven ; when the truth is that the saints do not make holiness, but holiness made the saints ; therefore holiness should not be loved less than the saints." ^ He applies to them what Christ says of the Phari- sees, who garnished the sepulchres of the mui-dered prophets, while in heart they resembled their murderers. The reason why they honored the tombs of the prophets, Christ tells them, was that they found it a source of gain. They deceived the simple by this show of religion .2 While Conrad prevailed on the usurers, who were converted under his sermons, to prove the sincerity of their repentance by returning the gains they had made from unlawful interest, to those whom they had robbed, directly contrary to this was the practice of the mendicants, who tranquillized the consciences of usurers, by inspiring in them a false confidence in absolution, because they ministered to their avarice. He could lay it to their charge, that they had absolved from all his sins, and buried with ceremonious pomp, a usurer who had never re- stored back his unlawful gains, though he had made a large donation to them.3 He reproaches them with the folly of celebrating mass for him whose soul might, in all probability, be with that of the rich man in hell.4 He says of the mendicants : " We may see those who would be pillars ' Quod sicut verum est, quod saepe plus ^ Conrad's words : Ipsum, postposita diligunt pereuntia sanctorum corpora, omnium conscientia, in ecclesia sua abso- quam imitcntur et diligantur propter coe- lutum suo deci-eto ab omnibus peccatis suis, leste regnum ipsorum merita, cum tamen gloriose et cum magna processione fratrum sancti non fecerint sanctitatem, sed saneti- altisone cantando per jontera apportatum tas sanctos. Unde sanctitas non minus sepelissent. quam saneti esset diligenda. * Non attendentes, quod anima illius * Quia sepulera prophetar^m pecuniam cum divite epulone fuisset in inferno se lis solvebant, siinplices per hujusmodi spe- pulta. ciem religionis decipiebant. 190 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND" DOCTRINE. of the church, stroiring about in the cities, or to the castles, and through the country, without returning to their convents for two or more months ; and there is nothing which they preach more zealously than — " Give us, and we will pray for you." Thus they sought only their own, and not the things which are Jesus Christ's, and laid the foundation of endless troubles in the church. ^ One effect of his own preaching, he tells us, was that the mendicants lost all their hearers.- He says that their preachers had, often, not more than four bigoted women, Beguines as they were called, to hear their German sermons. ^ But they made use of these women, who were so devoted to them, as tools to get up a party against Conrad, whom they hated. " Then I saw — he writes — that they whispered, in their corners, calumnious reports about my sermons and my doctrines, that they muttered against me, and through their Beguins inflamed the minds of the people with hostility to my doctrine ; and that they declaimed against me in the public market-place," etc,4 Applying to his own case the parable of the sheep and good shepherd, he says of his opponents : " Should they come into my fold, I do not believe that my flock would be led far astray by them ; but I would give them a taste of the salt of God's word ; for these sheep will not care for the barren and perhaps noxious pasturage which others would give them, but as I hope, will follow the voice of their shepherd, when they hear it, as the salt which cannot lose its savor." 5 The mendicant monks reproached him with having forsaken his parish, and made his appearance ere called for, as a preacher in Prague. But he met them by appealing to the divine call whichjmd moved him to preach in Prague, characterizing these monks themselves, who would hinder another from preaching, as dumb dogs.^ He says : " He who is afraid to speak the truth, is not a true preacher sent of God. Unmoved, therefore, will I praise the Word, Lord, in thee, and not be afraid. I long after the glory of our Saviour." •' While I am wilhng to answer them — he says — who say Christ has not sent me, I am greatly at a loss Avhen I ask what the proof is of their own mission. For if we look at the heart and the conduct as the proof of those who are sent of God, it will be evident that by them the rules of Christ are not at all observed. For Christ said to his preachers, when he sent them forth. Freely ye havereceived, freely give. But no sooner have they a congregation, than they set up a money table to make ' Eos, qui se dicunt columnas ecclesiae, "• Et per beginas suas homines inducere per villas, civitates, castra discurrentes vi- ad oppositionem doctrinae meae et in pub- disses, sed infra duos menses vel quod lico foro declamare, caet. amplius ad monasteria non redeuntes, et * Non credo, quod amplius sinant se nil aliud ita ferventer sicut " Date nobis, duci per ipsos oviculas meas, sed dabo eis et orabimus pro vobis " praedicantes, et de sale verbi dei, sicut potero ad lingen- tantum quae sua sunt, et non Jesu Chris- dum, quia non curabunt infructuosa et ti quaerentes, et infinita scandala in eccle- forte noxia pascua aliorum, sed suum pas- sia ponentes. torem audientes, ut spei'o, vocem ejus se- . '^ Videntes se ab omnibus auditoribus quentur tanquam sal non infatuandura, »uis derelictos. * Populum, quos turn etiara recedente ^ Alibi vel in suis monasteriis populum me non multum curassent, cum omnes nullum, sed quatuor beginas vel quinque facti sint quasi canes muti. in sermoniDus suis teutonicis, ut hodierna leclamat evidentia. CONRAD OF WALDHAUSEN. 191 money out of their hearers." When Conrad had thus turned agamst him the hatred of the mendicants, no pains were spared on their part to convict him of heresy, and expose him to persecution. They forgot the mutual jealousies and animosities which generally divided Dominicans and Franciscans, and entered into a league against their common enemy. He compared such a coalition with the alliance of Herod and Pi- late against Christ.' As Conrad had won the warm esteem and affection of multitudes, his enemies by their persecutions of him drew the hatred of the people upon themselves, which they signified by frequently assault- ing their agents, though never put up to this by Conrad. When they accused him of stirring up the people against them, he could reply to them with truth, that they had brought this shame upon themselves by their crafty plots against him, and would do so again, as often as thev a'ied the same experiment.^ In the year 1364, when the general of the Dominican order, who was at the same time papal legate, visited Prague, the two orders of the Dominicans and Franciscans, of whom we have just spoken, drew up in concert 29 articles, which they had extracted from his sermons, and placed them in the hands of the archbishop of Prague, that he might be brought up for examination on these charges. The archbishop upon this convoked an assembly which was numerously attended ; but, on the day appointed for the trial, no one dared to appear against Conrad as a public accuser. He afterwards composed a paper in defence of himself, of which we have freely made use in the preceding narrative. He showed, first, that his opponents had either exaggerated or miscon- strued his language ; then he repeated, for substance, what he had actually said, and what had induced his opponents to accuse him of heresy. When they complained that he disturbed everywhere the public peace, his reply was : " I say, that in my sermons I never aimed at disturbing the public peace, and never have disturbed it ; 1 mean the peace of the good." He adverts to the example of Christ, who, in his intercourse with the Scribes and Pharisees, undoubtedly disturbed the peace ; even as he said, I am not come to bring peace on the earth, but a sword. " When I am complained of, then, for dis- turbing such peace as this, I take it cheerfully, for our Lord says : '• So persecuted they the prophets which were before you," etc. He refers to the zeal of Elisha against the golden calves set up by Jeroboam, and remarks : " These golden calves, many in our time Avould be strongly opposed to have thus thrown away. They would prefer to have them used to decorate the bodies of the saints, and thus add to their gains.^ 0, how many are there, who would suffer a great deal for their order, but who could not be induced to sufier even a little in the way of preaching the pure truth." Still later in the season of the same year, the Archduke Rudolph of Austria, being on ' His words are : Duo magni hostes ^ His words : Quos nostri temporis qui- sibi mutuo t'uerunt conciliati. dam nequaquam sic abjicerent, imo inde '' Ipsi sibi ipsis causa horum opprobrio- sanctorum corpora, ut inde consequeren- rum praetcritorum et interea secutorum tur majora hicra, vestirent. et etiam futiirorum per suam indiviosam ct malitiosam mei vexatiouem. 192 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. a visit to Prague, wished to get Conrad back again to Vienna ; but the latter could not be induced to go, being fully persuaded that it was his duty to remain still in the blessed circle of his labors in Prague, whatever persecution he might have to encounter. He plead the obli- gations under which he had been laid by the emperor as his excuse for not accepting the invitation. i Thus Conrad continued to labor in Prague, finally as parish priest of the Teyn church, till his death, which happened in 1369. If the two persons of whom we have just spoken were distinguished for their activity as practical men, and prepared the way by this means for the reformatory tendencies in the Bohemian church, the same thing cannot indeed be said of Matthias of Janow ; but his inferiority as a practical man was more than compensated by the Avide influence he ex- erted through his writings and by his scientific exposition of principles. In his works we may find not only the reformatory ideas which passed over from him to Huss, but also the incipient germs of those christian principles which at a later period Avere unfolded, in Germany, hy Luther, although the latter never came directly under the influence of INIatthias of Janow. Of Huss it may be said with more truth, that he fell behind Matthias of Janow, than that he passed beyond him. Mat- thias of Janow, son of Wenzel of Janow, a Bohemian knight, had re- sided six years at the university of Paris, pursuing philosophical and theological studies ; hence he was called the Parisian master (magis- ter Parisiensis). But the man who contributed most to the particular shaping of his later religious and theological development was Militz, a man the general impression of whose life filled him with such profound and enthusiastic admiration. It is plain from his writings, that he had travelled much in Germany and in Italy ; and that he had visited Rome. He shows a famihar acquaintance with the relations and the customs of different countries. Thus, in speaking of his residence in Lucca, under Pope Urban VI., he mentions a law which he there heard promulgated, directing that unmarried females should neither wear ornaments of gold or silver, nor any dress offending against the strictest rules of moral propriety .2 He seems in the earlier part of his life, to have been given to the prevailing notions and tendencies of his time ; until, perhaps through the influence of Militz, he became pene- trated with that holy fire, as he expresses it, which left him no rest.s In still another place, he speaks of this revolution in his religious expe- rience, stating how, in the light of God's word, the corruption of the church of his time, by which he himself was affected, first became clearly apparent to him, and how, by the grace of God, he had been rescued from it. " Once — says he — my mind was encompassed by a thick wall ; I thought of nothing but what delighted the eye and the ' His words : Me hoc facere non posse, conis proclamari. quod mulieres innuptae ((tii ])er dominum imperatorem essem be- non deferant aurum et argentum, nee non iiL'ririatus. alias quascunque vestes impudicas et pro- ■' Sed et in Lucca solemni in Lombar- fanas. In his book hereafter to be cited, dia civitate tempore papae Urbani VI. au- ^ We shall presently cite these words divi publice per Ticos et plateas voce prae- more at length. LIFE OF JIATTHIAS OF JANOW. 198 «ar, till it pleased the Lord Jesus to draw me as a brand from the burning. And while I, worst slave to my passions, was- resisting him in every way, he delivered me from the flames of Sodom, and brought me into the place of sorrow, of great adversities and of much con- tempt. Then first I became poor and contrite ; and searched with trembling the word of God. I began to admire the truth in the holy Scriptures, to see how, in all things, it must be exactly fulfilled ; then first I began to wonder at the deep Aviles of Satan, to see how he dark- ened the minds of all, even those who seemed to think themselves wisest." After describing how he thus came to understand the corrup- tion of the church,! ^e says : " And there entered me, that is, into my heart, a certain unusual, new, and powerful fire, but a very blessed fire, and which still continues to burn within me, and is kindled the more in proportion as I lift my soul in prayer to God and to our Lord Jesus Christ the crucified ; and it never abates nor leaves me, except when I forget the Lord Jesus Christ, and fail to observe the right dis- cipUne in eating and drinking ; then I am enveloped in clouds, and unfitted for all good works, till, with my whole heart and with deep sorrow I return to Christ, the true physician, the severe judge, he who punishes all sin, even to idle words and foolish thoughts." 2 And he moreover intimates that, before this, he shared in an opinion which be- longed to the common church spirit, though a new light dawned after- wards on his mind ; he thought, namely, before he had experienced that internal change in his views and feelings, with the majority of the clergy, that the laity ought to be kept from frequent participation of the Lord's supper. He himself says : " Concerning the jealousy and pride of those clergymen who are displeased with the frequent partici- pation of the Lord's supper by the laity, I am silent ; since I was myself, in like manner, under the influence of such feelings in forme,- days ; and I am conscious that I was, myself, oftentimes actuated by such jealousy when I, in like manner, dissuaded lay persons from such frequent enjoyment of the communion. I had not, as yet, expe- rienced the singular light on this subject which came to me from above." 3 These words certainly do not refer merely to a change in his views on ' Et piissimus Jesus elevavit mentem a piece in the above cited work of Jauo v, meam, ut co^noscercm homines absorptos which may be found, under the title De a vanitate ; et tunc legcns intellexi lucide sacerdotura et monaclioruni canialium ahomiuationem desolationis, stantem late, aliominatione, printed among tiie works nimis alte et firmiter in loco sancto caet. of Huss, and under his name, I, fol. 376 De sacerdot. et monach. carnalium al)om- seq. I was betrayed into a mistake when inatione. in Huss' Works, Norib. 1558, I made use of this extract as belonging to I, fol. 398. p. 2, cap. 22. Huss, in my account of the life of that re- - Et ingressus est in me. id est in pectus former, in my " Klciiie Gelegenheitsclirif- meum, quidam ignis etiam corjjoraliter ten." Berlin, 1829, S. 223. suhtilis, novus, fortis et inusitatus, sed val- ^ Taceo super iioc, de invidia et super- de dulcissimus : et continuatus usque mo- bia talium, quibus vcxantur, cum indig- do, et semper tanto magis succenditur, nantur de communione frequente a plebe- quanto magis elevor in oratione ad deum jis, (piia talibus fui ol)noxius similiter, et et dominum Jesum Christum crucifixum ; mc ipsum agitatum pluries invidia recog- ct nunquam recedit, vel remittitur, nisi novi, cum similiter talem frequentem cora- quando obHviscor Christi Jesu. quando munionem sacramenti dissuadebam plebe- rclaxo disciplinam in comcdendo vel po- jis: adhuc non cram singulari lumine su- tando. Ibid. This extract is taken firom per hoc de excelso visitatus- VOL. V. 17 194 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. a particular point, but to one of a much deeper and more radical character ; for it is evident from them, that at an earlier period of his life, he was affected with the same spiritual pride, the same contempt of the laitj which others had ; was conscious of being an utter stranger to those ideas, that dawned later upon him, with regard to the univer- sal priesthood of Christians. In the year 1381, he became a preben- dary at Prague ; and the experience which he here gained of the world- liness of the higher clergy in the meetings of the cathedral chapter, is alluded to by himself, where he complains of the noisy squabbles of the procurators and advocates ; " which — says he — auj one will have it in his power to witness who is ever employed in their consistories." ' It was his particular business to preside over the confessional, where doubtless would be manifested his great zeal for the spiritual good of souls, and where he had great opportunity to inform himself more mi- nutely of the good or bad in all classes of society, and of the religious wants of the people. That he did not fail to make the most of it is apparent from the observations which he has recorded in a work of his presently to be mentioned. He died before the end of the century, in the year 1394. The work from which we get the clearest insight into the spirit and influence of Matthias of Janow, is a piece of his own which still remains, in great part,2 buried in manuscripts, entitled De regulis veteris et novi Testamenti. The exegetical matter forms the smallest part of the whole. It is chiefly taken up with reflections on the historj^ of the times and hints concerning the future, based on the rules of the Old and New Testaments, on the prophetical elements which they contain. Although there is a great deal in the details which is arbitrary, parti- cularly in the apocalyptic calculations, yet grand prophetic glances into the future are also to be found. He pourtrays the utter corruption of the church in all its parts, and explains the causes of it. His full in- tuition of the present is here presented to view. It is not a coherent exposition : it seems to be made up of several independent treatises composed at different times. Hence we may notice repetitions ; cer- tain fundamental ideas are ever turning up again. As a chronological characteristic we may notice, for example, ciiat iu one place seven years are supposed to have elapsed since the beginning of the great papal schism, which would correspond with the year 1385 ; but, in other places, we find him referring to the synod held in Prague, iu 1389, of which we shall speak hereafter. Matthias of Janow himself, speaking of the motives which induced him to write this Avork, says : " The Lord Jesus instructed me how to write all this which relates to the present condition of priests, that is, the carnal ones, and which throws ' Lites, contentiones,strepitus —quod '•'All except the fragment above cited videre poterit, qui in consistoriis illorum and published under the name of Huss. fuerit aiiquando occupatus. See the frag- Some interesting extracts from the work mem from the work of Matth. of Janow have been recently published by P. Jordan about to be mentioned, which wrongly in his paper, " Die Vorlaiifer" des Hussi goes under the name of Huss, in his work tenthums in Bohmen." De regno, populo, vita et moribus Anti- christi, cap. 21, fol. 374, p. 2. JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. TESTAMENT!. 195 light on the character of these times ; but what the end is in which all t!iis is to result, he only knows Avho set me to work. And he sent me his spirit who shoots the fire into my bones and into my heart, leaving me no rest till I expose the hidden shame of the mother of harlots (the corrupt church as symbolized in Revelation)." ^ He has many things to complain of in the clergy ; that they were absorbed in worldly business, governed by worldly motives ; that they neglected spiritual things ; that the least of all their concerns was the study of the Bible and of the old church-teachers. He speaks of them as " Men who knew nothing of the spirit of Jesus the crucified, who had never medi- tated day and night on the law of the Lord ; — carnal-minded priests. 1'hey are men — he proceeds — who are not wholly devoted to the study of the Holy Scriptures, who have not been instructed in them from their youth, yet, for all this, they boldly stand forth as teachers, because perhaps they possess a certain gift of elocution ; and they pro- vide themselves with collections of sermons, postills for every day in the year, and so, without any further search into the Holy Scriptures, they hold forth those current homilies, preaching with great ostenta- tion. They are people who know nothing about the Bible. Such persons do not preach from devotion, and from joy in the Divine Word, nor from zeal to edify the people ; but because this is the business assigned to them, or because they are fond of making a display of their skill in speaking, or because they are hunting after popularity, and find gratification in being favored and honored by the people. So they have recourse to their collections of sermons, or put together fine words, and furnish out their discourses with stories, and with promises of large indulgences." It was already objected to the preachers of reform, to Janow, and men of a kindred spirit, that they exposed to the people, in the spoken language of the country, the wickedness of the clergy and monks, thus injuring their reputation. In defending himself against this reproach, Janow says, alluding to the words of Christ, (Matt. 16 : 6.) : " Here we find plainly refuted, those who iu their sermons say the vices of the regular clergy and monks ought not to be exposed in discourses held in the spoken language of the coun- try." The clergy and monks were not a little exasperated by such admonitory discourses to the people. This preaching, they said, made them contemptible and odious to the people ; as if they themselves did not know or want to know the course pursued by Jesus the crucified ; for he purposely exposed before the masses of the people the hypocrisy and wickedness of the religious orders of the teachers and priests, and exhorted his disciples to beware of their doctrines, although these Driests were filled with rage and took the utmost offence at this. He offers as reasons for pursuing this course with the people, that it was necessary in order that the devout clergy and monks might not suffer ' Dominus Jesus institiiit me ad scri- et misit me spiritus ejus, qui mittit ignem bendum ea omnia, quae contingunt statum in ossibus meis et in nieo pectore. et quie- praesentem sacerdotum, puta carnalium, tum esse non sinit, quin revelem tiliuni in- et ijuae explicant qualitatem horuin tem- iquitatis et ])erdirionis, et quin deuudem poium ; ad quern autem finera hoc perve- ac discooperiam abdita decoris fomicariaa iiat, ipse solus novit, qui me in id posuit; mulieris. 196 HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. injury from being confounded with those others, in order that the piety of the former might shine forth more conspicuously in contrast with the wickedness of the latter, in order that these latter might by such public exposure be led to repentance, in order that others might be put on their guard against the infection of their example. Like distempered sheep they should be separated from the sound, lest other christians should fall into the same corruption. In remarking upon the words of Christ relative to the sending forth of the angels before the day of judgment, (Matt. 13 : 41,) which he refers to the send- ing forth of messengers or preachers, in the last times, for the purpose of purifying the church from its dross, he says : It is to subserve also another purpose, to keep the simple people from following after raven- ing wolves, to make them certain of the guides whom they should adhere to, and of those whose counsels they should avoid ; and, again, to remove from the sinful laity every such ground of excuse for their vices, as they plead when they say to those who correct them, do not the monks and the clergy even the same ? — On the other side it was maintained, that even in wicked ecclesiastics their office should be respected ; no man could be permitted to set up himself as judge over them, contrary to the rules of order ; and, in proof of this, the appeal was made to Matt. 28 : 2, 3. To this he rephes : Such language of reproof is pointed expressly against hypocrites, who enter not by the door into the sheepfold. All such are thieves and robbers. Hypo- crites will not punish and betray one another. They can be known as such only by the spiritually minded. They do not know themselves. Christ, in the passage already referred to, (Matt. 16 : 6,) exhorts to watchfulness. Janow describes it as one of the cunning tricks of the arch enemy to persuade men that Antichrist is still to come, when, in truth, he is now present and so has been for a long time ; but men are less on their guard against him, when they look for him as yet to come. " Lest — says he — the abomination of desolation " (Matt. 24 : 15,) should be plainly manifest to men, he has invented the fiction of another abomination still to come, that the church, plunged still deeper in error, may pay homage to the fearful abomination which is present, while she pictures to herself another which is still m the future.! It is a common, everyday fact, that Antichrists go forth in endless numbers, and still they are looking forward for some other and future Antichrist." As to the person of Antichrist, he affirms, that it was neither to be a Jew, nor a Pagan ; neither a Saracen, nor a world- ly tyrant, persecuting Christendom. All these had been already ; hence they could not so easily deceive. Satan must invent some new method of attacking Christianity. He then defines Antichrist as fol- lows : " He is and will be a man who opposes christian truth and the christian life in the way of deception ; he is and will be the most wicked christian, falsely styling himself by that name, assuming the highest station in the church, and possessing the highest consideration, arro- ' Nc tamen ipsa abominatio reveletur* rorem, quatenus sic horremlam al)omina- lin^it alia ii abominationeiu affiUuram, ut tionem venerans atque colens, nihilomiaus pfi'iiuc ainplius immittat ecclesiara in cr- uiiam aliam fiituram fabuletur. JANOW DE REGULIS V. ET N. TESTAMENTI. 197 gating dominion over all ecclesiastics and laymen ; one who, by the working of Satan, knows how to make subservient to his own ends and to his own will the corporations of the rich and wise in the entire church ; one who has the preponderance in honors and in riches, but who especially misappropriates the goods of Christ, the Holy Scrip- tures, the sacraments, and all that belongs to the hopes of rehgion, to his own aggrandizement and to the gratijScation of his own passions ; deceitfully perverting spiritual things to carnal ends, and in a crafty and subtle manner employing what was designed for the salvation of a christian people, as means to lead them astray from the truth and power of Christ." It is easy to see how Matthias of Janow might in- tend under this picture to represent the entire secularized hierarchy. It was not to be imagined that Antichrist would form a particular sect, or particular disciples and apostles. Nor would he come upon the church preaching his own name, in the open and obvious manner with which jNIohammed spread abroad his doctrines; that would be a tyran- ny too strikingly apparent, not at all fitted to deceive mankind. Anti- christ must be more cunning than all that. His organs must stand forth in the name of Christ, and profess to be his ministers. He was thus to deceive men under the mask of Christianity.' The multitude of carnal men, led on by the most subtle artifices of wicked spirits, had been brought to think that, in following fables, they were pursuing the right way ; to believe that in persecuting Christ's believers, or Christ and his power, they were persecuting Antichrist and the false doc- trines of his agents, just as itihappened with those Jews and Pagans who called Christ a deceiver, and put him and his apostles to death, supposing that by so doing they did God service. Thus too the actual Antichrists would dream of another Antichrist to come. Commenting on 1 John 4 : 3,2 he thus addresses the christians of his time : " Every spirit who dissolves Christ, is Antichrist." Jesus is all power, all wis- dom, and all love. Every christian, therefore, who from design, either in great or in small, in a part or in the whole, dissolves this, dissolves Jesus ; for he destroys and dissolves God's power, God's wisdom and love ; and so, in the mystical sense, he is Antichrist. An Antichrist is every evil spirit, who in any way, directly or indirectly, opposes him- self to the christian faith and christian manners among christians." Al- though Christ is eternal, and therefore all opposition to the divine being may be regarded as in a certain sense opposition to Christ, still, in the proper sense, he thinks there was no Antichrist before the incarnation. ^ Hence the devil, although a liar and murderer from the beginning, yet ' Non est autumandum, quod isdem an- * After tlie Vulgate : Et oinnis spiri- tichristus congregaret sibi alicjuam seetam tus, qui solvit Jesum, ex deo non est. Et singularem, vel discipulos et apostolos, hie est antiehristus, de (juo audistis quo- suis iniquis studiis consentientes, sic ut .liara venit, et nunc jam in mundo est. notorie et publiee ecclesiam invadet, at- •* Sed non fuit antiehristus. quia tunc que verbo suo et praedieatione sui nom- adhue non erat Christus, quia secundum inis in populis nianifcste genres per se niodum loquendi logice, licet ista ])iopo- seducet. velut' fecit Machonietus in Sara- sitio sit vera, Christus semper fuit, ta- cenis; non faeiet tali raodo, nam hoe tie- men haec est vera, ante incarnationera ret tyranniee solum et uimis manifeste, filii dei non fuit antiehristus. Tel stolide et rude. 17* 198 HrSTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. first began to be Christ's murderer, and Antichrist, at the beginning of the christian church ; but not everywhere, but only in the church which is the body and the kingdom of Christ. Before the time of Christ's appearance, Satan did not need many arts to maintain his dominion over men. For Satan had already brought mankind once under his yoke ; and strongly armed he kept watch over his palace, (Luke 11 : 21.) ; his goods were in peace, and he needed not give himself much trouble or use much deception. But when Christ appeared, and the Spirit was poured out upon men in seven-fold gifts, (compare Isaiah 11 : 2,) when everything visible and invisible was made ministrant to their salvation, (where he refers to Romans 8 : 38,) the case was altered. And as the evil spirit was now disarmed and laid bare by Christ, he must summon to his aid the collective host of most malig- nant spirits, and employ their busy and cunning natures in the work of deceiving and warring against the saints of God. " And so he has continued to do, down to the present day. Nothing is weaker than Satan when exposed to the light. i He works through worthless monks ; carnal priests ; the wise of this world ; great teachers ; for these are his most efficient tools of mischief." Applying, to his own times, the passage in 2 Thess. 2 : 9, he seeks to show, that in those times also, Antichrist deceived and drew men to himself by false miracles, won- ders wrought by Satanic agency, thus turning the love of the miracu- lous to his own ends. ''Our modern hypocrites — says he — are so fully possessed of the seven spirits, that there is nothing they can approve, in deed or word, however otherwise profitable or commend- able, unless they see signs and wonders. And, in truth, they ask for signs more than even the Jews did ; thus showing that they are a still more perverse and adulterous generation than were the Jews in the time of Christ. This is hid from us, that for these many years genu- ine miracles have ceased to be wrought by the faithfal ; and especially now, in the time of Antichrist, for the trial of their faith." He sup- poses that as faith was to maintain itself in the time of Antichrist, under trials, miracles could not be given any longer for its sup- port ; false miracles only were to be permitted for the trial of faith. And then he says : " But Satan and his instruments are allowed to perform miracles by demoniacal agencies, on account of them that perish because they would not receive the love of the truth." In another place, he says : God suffers many works to be done by the agency of Satan, that hypocrites, in spite of their lukewarm and sen- sual life, may receive honor from men, and other simple ones may be drawn over by such wonders to their side. And the more such won- ders are done in the name of Christ, through images and relics of saints, or in holy places, the more dangerous they are, on account of their greater influence in misleading the simple into false doctrines, so as to neglect the truth of the sacraments of the church, and to surren- der themselves to fables and human ordinances, and the supei-stition of sellers in the house of God. Such delusions, he thinks, Satan was ' Nihil imbecillius diabolo denudato. JAXOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 199 allowed to practise, particularly on account of those unthankful christ- ians, who were ashamed of the truth and humility of Chrisc, and of the opprobrium of his cross, despising the sacraments and especially the body and blood of Christ ; and even the Holy Scriptures had become to them common and contemptible as if they were a fable, or a very lovely song.' Therefore had the devil obtained from the Lord so much power to deceive ; but only in secret, only in the mystery of Antichrist ; 30 that his ministers should lie in the name of Christ, and that their miracles should be wrought through the image of Christ, and through the bones and other relics of saints. " For, before God I ask you, how can any faithful christian wonder, if Satan receives power to exe- cute divine judgment on evil-doers, that his lying wonders should be ■wrought even through images or the bones of the saints, when power was given him over Christ in the temptation? " The prediction in the second epistle to the Thessalonians (2: 3) rela- tive to the falling away which should come first, Jauow supposes had been already accomplished in the moral falling away. " Faith — he says — is styled fides formata because it is made up of all the virtues. For it requires all other virtues in connection with itself, and is kept fresh and sound by every virtue .2 Hence it follows, that a fiilling away from the faith consists especially in the admission of every kind of sin, and the omission of every kind of virtue ; " and because we see, on the whole, at the present day, in the time of Antichrist, all the virtues neglected among Christian people." ^ He holds to a slow and gradual evolution of the two kingdoms of Christ and Antichrist, side by side. The destruction of Antichrist and the multiplication of the true wit- nesses of Jesus Christ, were to take place in a gradual manner, begin- ning from that present time, till all should be carried into fulfilment. The time had begun in the year 1340 ; where we are to observe, that Satan had been gradually working, through Antichrist as his instru- ment, for a long period of time, introducing evil under the appearance of good among the people of God, turning good customs into abuse, dif- fusing more widely, every day, his principal errors. While Satan, then, "was thus gradually to introduce the mysteries of his Antichrist into the church, keeping his toils concealed ; so, on the other hand, the Lord Christ, gradually manifesting himself in his beloved disciples, was at length, before the final judgment, to reveal himself in a great multitude of preachers. The spiritual revelation of Christ, through his genuine organs, the spiritual annihilation of Antichrist by the same, and a new illumination of the church, were to prepare it for the last personal ap- pearance of Christ, and precede that event. In this spiritual sense he anderstood much of that which is said concerning tlie victory of Christ over Antichrist, and concerning the signs of Christ's appearance. Thus ' Verbum dei quoque et omnis scriptura ^ Sei familiares sibi ita red gentur neque expugnabuntur ab inimicis. dere, ut quaelilx't jmncta in iis contents ** Quia dominus Jesus ipsis assistit aeque semper et ubique id nianum habeat et in bene et aeque proprie et immediate cum promptu. snis cooperatoribus et suis fidelibus cum JANOW'S AVORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 205 would be absolutely necessary for each individual, if he would avoid being entrapped in many things by Satan, and at length condemned as a transgressor. And while the parish priests are thus burdened, thoy on their own part burden the laymen, the communities, the head" of households, with extortions and human ordinances, devised for the purpose of gain ; and deprive them of many of the liberties pertaining to divine worship. " And if one — says he — should act differently from what these ordinances require, he knows that he must incur the anger of God and his saints, or the anathema. They have enthralled the conscience of the people, declaring the transgression of their rules to be a mortal sin ; for in these days they lay more stress on a failure to observe minutely the order of the liturgy, than on the sins of lying, of a sleepy indolence, or covetousness, or anything of the like nature ; so that men now-a-days are more afraid to transgress one of these hu- man ordinances than the commandments of God himself." " The more ordinances there are — says he — the more frequent are transgressions and the stronger the temptations to transgress. Neither do they con- sider how these multifarious ordinances force the multitude to despise them and the commandments of the Lord at the same time ; which arises from the fact that he whose mind is turned on many things, is so much the less fitted for single duties ; and from the fact that such ordinances, since they relate to sensible and outward things, appear to the communities in a peculiarly clear light, and inspire in them reverence ; while the commandments of God are spiritual, and God who ordains them is a being whom they cannot see. Such ordinances, therefore, owing to the constant presence of the lawgiver, make a greater impression on the multitude than the commandments of the invisible God. Then, again, these commandments appear to carnal men as every-day matters ; while those human ordinances, being something new, make a stronger impression on the minds of the people. Again, men are fond of seeking their salvation in such sensible and corporeal things, which lie near their capacities ; and lose sight of the Crucified, who alone is the salvation of souls. And they settle it fast in their consciences, that they can be justified by such visible things, though the spiritual love of Christ may be absent from their hearts." He seeks to show how this multitude of laws, and this externalization of re- ligion, lead men away from Christ. "In these days — he says — Satan has done much to draw away Christians from Christ ; for in these days men are ashamed even to mention Jesus the crucified, or him Avho was spit upon.' Nay, they abhor to hear such truths ; and they vehemently censure and persecute the persons who thus confess Christ. And such things have already been introduced into the pulpit ; so that those false prophets despise and persecute the men who confess Jesus who was crucified and spit upon, and say it is quite enough to pro- nounce such words once a-year;^ and the same false prophets extol to ' Idcirco hac via Satanas multum hodie suspensum in patibulo aut horrcnde occi- profecit in Christianorum abductione, nam sum. nodie jam Christiani horrent nominare Je- ' Et dicant, quod sufficit talia seinel in «um ciuciri.Kum vel Jesum consputum vel anno nominare. VOL. V. 18 206 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. the skies their stately ceremonies and their ordinances addressed to the eyes of the people, and pronounce anathema on every man who does not punctiliously observe them. Satan does all that lies in his power to bring it about that the memory of Jesus Christ should be obliterated from the hearts of Christians." Appealing to the apostle Paul, he maintains, that many laws avail nothing ; " for man's unbridled wick- edness, ever striving to exceed weight and measure, will not be kept in check by human laws and ordinances, when it always despises the laws of God ; for it is continually breaking over the latter, and the more, with greater effort, greater pride and contempt, in proportion as it meets with obstacles to hinder it. Let not precepts and prohibitions, then, be multiplied in the church ; for by means of them the devil has acquired a great power of involving the people in greater guilt ; partly because, as has been said, he takes occasion from these ordinances to tempt them, and partly because these ordinances ensnare men's con- sciences, and make the sins of the unrighteous still heavier." He ac- knowledges that evil doers ought to be punished on account of their transgression of the commandments of the Lord, and ought to be re- strained from the commission of sin, by prohibitions ; that those should be tamed and subdued by terror who still remain at a stage little supe- rior to that of brutes, who have no understanding of that whicli is good ^ ' But the righteous, they who are actuated by the Spirit of Jesus the crucified, stand in no need of multiplied human commands and prohi- bitions ; because the Spirit of God guides and teaches them, and be- cause they practise the virtues and obey the truths of God spontane- ously and cheerfully, like a good tree, which brings forth good fruit of itself, God ever supplying the power from above ; 2 because such, made free by the indwelling Spirit of Christ, generally feel themselves cramped and confined by the multitude of ordinances, even in the per- formance of virtuous works." He illustrates this by the case of the Jews who would have prevented Jesus from heahng the sick because it was the sabbath day ; also by the case of the Pharisees, who would have kept Christ from plucking the ears of corn on the sabbath ; and by the reply which he made to them (Matt. 12: 7). "No man — says he — can possibly invent laws suited to every contingency and re- lation ; the Spirit of God alone can do this, who knows all things and holds them together ; and inasmuch as this Spirit is present every- where and to all men, the spirit of man also, which is in himself, which with the Spirit of Christ alone knows what is in man. This spirit of man, which is everywhere in men, which everywhere searcheth the man as such, has the knowledge of his powers and of his wants, this ' Iniqui tamen indigent poena vel vin- ^ Si vero sunt justi et acti spiritu Jesa dicta pro suis peccatis et pro transgres- crucifixi, tunc hi non indigent mandatis sione praeceptorum dominicorum ; impedi- et contradietionibus humanis plurificatis, endi sunt a suis maiis conatibus. vel in fum quia docet eos et ducit spiritus dei, 2orum prava voluntate per hujusmodi turn quia voluntarie ct dulciter virtutes et praecepta prohibitiva, quae parant viam veritates dei operantur, tanquam bona ar- justitiae ad vindictam exsequendam prop- bor per se fructus bonos producens, deo ter terrorem bestiaruni, in quibus non est desuper dante. lionorum intellectus. JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 207 alone can give to each man befitting laws and establish them. Tie brings in illustration of this the ten commandments, which are plain to every one, even the dullest of understanding, so that no man can pretend that he is embarrassed by them ; and Jesus the crucified, who is the power of God and the wisdom of God, has in a certain manner briefly summed them up in a single precept, requiring love to God and our neighbor ; for love is the fulfilment of the law, and love is the perfect law of liberty. All other and multiplied laws of men — he says — are superfluous and inadequate. They ought not to be called traditions, but superstitions. No man can frame a law adapted to all times and placea and circumstances, which is not contained in that one precept. To the class above mentioned, he reckons the laws regulating fasts, seasons of prayer, the number of hymns which are to be sung, and the like. To them he ascribes frequent disquietude of conscience, which arose from the fear of having transgressed such laivs. The confessions of the priests served to illustrate the same thing ; they made it much more a matter of conscience to have committed a mistake with regard to ecclesiastical hours, than to have transgressed any one of the laws of God. He wishes things might be so ordered that no other fear or punishment should ever be held up before the flocks than in reference to the words of Jesus Christ and his commands. All other inventions of men should be regarded simply as counsels. At the same time, however, while he thus refers everything to the law of Christ as the only valid law, he defends himself against the objection, that by so doing he would over- turn all human law, and says : "I have not been so presumptuous, I protest, as to attack the decrees and ordinances of the holy fathers and of the approved councils, who, actuated by the Holy Ghost, have so done and ordered all that has been done and ordered by them; but my attack is directed against those who, instead of being inspired by the love of Christ, strive and have striven, under the impulse of their passions, to glorify themselves, and who take more delight in the glory of their oivn name, than in honoring the name of Jesus who was crucified." Thus human laws were to be recognized only as such, and the commandments of God to remain in their dignity, and as such to be reverenced and obeyed. This the faithful apostle of Christ, who might well serve as an example to all disciples, had wonderfully illustrated in himself: for Paul (in 1 Cor. vii.) distinguishes what he says in his own name from what he makes known as a precept of the Lord. " Mark — says he — with what discrimination and moderation he speaks to his flock, so as nowhere to impose a necessity and nowhere to inspire fear, except for the precepts and words of the Lord Jesus Christ." He places in contrast with this the form of the papal bull : Jubemus man- damus, etc. Following directly after this is a prophetic utterance : '' I speak to all ; let him who is capable of receiving it, receive it. So have I gathered from the holy Scriptures, and I believe, that all the above-named u'orks of men, ordinances and ceremonies, ^vill be iitterlij ■extirpated, cut up by the roots and cease ; and Giod alone u'illbc exalted, ^nd his word ivill abide forever ; and the time is close at hand, when 208 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. these ordinances shall he abolished.'''''^ In another place he says; " All rules are one ; they proceed from one principle and aim at one end. They do not obtain their authority from themselves, nor are they observed in the church of God on their own account ; but they are in- separably included in the same holy law of Christ, which is inscribed by the Holy Spirit on the hearts of believers,^which binds many widely- separated nations in union with one another, and makes all dwell with one set of manners in the house of Jesus the crucified. While the one commandment of Christ, and his one sacrifice preserved in the church, greatly promote unity, so on the other hand, the multitudinous pre- scriptions of men burden and disturb the collective body of the church of Christ." He is continually falling back on the principle, that unity among men can only come from the word of God ; a forced uniformity would of necessity produce nothing but divisions. He endeavors also, in his own way, to establish this principle speculatively. God alone is the infallible and self-sufficient being, needing no rules from without to govern his conduct. His own will is his rule, and his wisdom is the immutable rule for that. This supreme rule is the Father himself; the Son of God is the rule for all creatures. This primal type and this rule is the Word of the Father ; the Father worketh everything through him ; and after the same analogy, the Holy Spirit is the beauty and the proportion of this rule, which nowise differs in essence from that primal type ; hence the Holy Spirit and the Word are the only true rule for all that relates to man ; hence, therefore, the Father is the shaping principle, from which all things proceed ; the Son the shaping princi- ple towards which all things aim ; the Holy Ghost the principle in which all things repose ; and yet there are not three rules or forms, but one. Hence he infers that the highest rule, by which everything is to be tried, is Christ, that single rule, which is alone necessary and alone sufficient for all apostles and every man that cometh into the world, in all matters, in every place, and at all times ; not only for men, but also for angels, because he is himself that truth and wisdom which works mightily from one end of being to the other. God imparted to all essences a tendency and direction to their ultimate end, and in their just relation to that consists their perfection and the perfection of the universe. This is the imnost determining rule for each essence, but it is a thing not different from the essence of the object itself. The rule by which all things are governed, is a different matter. This, holy Scripture calls by various names, God's word, God's will, etc. Although this is the common rule for all, yet it is the rule preeminently for rational beings ; because other beings cannot consciously appre- hend it, nor freely appropriate it as their own.=^ Then he comes upon ' Et puto, quod omnia praenotata opera auctorisatae in dei ecclesia, ut definitae hominum, caerimoniae et traditiones fun- seorsim, sed inclusae indivisibiliter in una ilitus destruentur et cessabunt, et exaltabi- eademque sancta le^e et regula Christiana tur deus solus, et verbum ipsius manebit a Christo Jesu tradita per spiritum sanc- in aeternum, et tempus illud jam iiistat, turn in cordibus fidelium descripta. ill quo ilia evacuabuntur. ^Quoniam omnes res aliaea rationalibus '-' Hegulae omnes sunt unum et ex uno creaturis, quamvis ab hac veritate et se- aii luium, non autem per se celebratie et cundum earn gubernantur pro sua natura JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. TESTAMENTI, 209 the idea of positive law, and says : " This has not been able to reform rational beings who have fallen from the truth inwardly inscribed on their hearts ; but rather became an occasion of still greater departures from order, and internal hardness through sin. Sin, he remarks, with allusion to the well known words of the apostle Paul, became still more sin than it was before, from the very circumstance that it was now for- bidden not only by the law within, but by another from withoui.' For the more men are provided with means of grace, the more knowledge they have, the greater in the same proportion is their guilt, when, on account of sin, these means and this knowledge are despised. God now finally determined to communicate to man his will in the most perfect manner, by teaching him, through the Holy Spirit, all truth in a living way ; and here he cites the words : It is the Spirit that quickeneth, the flesh profiteth nothing ; and outwardly he set be- fore him his will through the revelation of the incarnate Word ; re- minding man of his duty in a way the most cogent and the most effec- tive, both from within, by the incarnate Word that dwells in us, and from without, by his divine works standing before our eyes ; from within, by grace and love, from without, by the sacraments which con- tain and produce grace. This internal inscription of the truth upon the heart, includes in it the two preceding revelations of it (he means, without doubt, positive law and the law of conscience), and has vivified and reformed them." - After having spoken, as already before, of the sim- plicity of the ten commandments, and of the fact that these had been sum- med up in the one commandment of iove, he observes that Jesus, who sim- plifies everything, had abolished the multitude of sacrifices and ceremonies, and substituted in their place the one heavenly sacrifice : this was so or- dered for the purpose of preserving unity in the church. Even the apostles had subsequently imposed no new ordinances, or but very few, and they had given no other commandment than the love of God and of our neighbor, which last they had sought chiefly to commend, to impress, and to spread abroad among the nations. Hence Christ had left no written law for those who came after him, though he might, in various ways, have done so during his life time ; but he only gave his good Spirit, the Spirit of the Father in the hearts of the faithful, as the alone living and perfect law, and the all-sufficient rule of life. So too the apostles had given but few laws, since they doubtless knew, that the law of the Holy Spirit sufficed, which teacheth all truth, always, everywhere, in the most internal and immediate way. This led him to explain him- self on a matter which seemed to be at variance with these views, viz. the apostolical ordinances of the assembly at Jerusalem. We will cite this remarkable passage, which contains a great deal of good sense. ""• The apostles let themselves down to the weakness of the new con- verts from Judaism ; and by so doing they softened, in some measure, vel forma, tamen eandera non cognoscunt, et foris peccatum proliibebatur. iieque habent in suis operationibus elec- * Haec itaque veritatis inscriptio colle- tioiiem. git in se ambas praecedentes, easque vivi- ' Multo ma{;is enim peccatum peccantis ficavit et reformavit. tunc erat, quani prius. quia jam de intus 18* 210 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCIKINE. the hostile tone of feeling entertained by the Jews towards the Chris tians ; and thej would show, thereby, their reverence for the ancient law, that the synagogue might not seem to be cast aside so all at once ; for the ancient mother, who was now dead, should be buried in a re- spectful manner." ' Having spoken next against the multiplying of laws, because of the difficulty which the laity must experience of knowing them all, he adds : " For this reason I have myself come to the set- tled conclusion that it would be a salutary thing, and calculated to restore peace and union to Christendom, to root up that whole planta- tion, and once more sum up the whole in that single precept, to bring back the Christian church to those sound and simple beginnings where it would be needful to retain but a few, and those only the apostolical laws. For I believe, before my Lord Jesus the crucified, that the law of the Holy Spirit, and the common fathers, the parish priests, the pope and the bishops, parochial clergy and their assistants, all these are sufficient for the right guidance of the communities, and that they are sufficient for each individual, sufficient to resolve every question, and to decide all matters before the judicial tribunals and the tribu- nal of conscience." From these principles he thinks it possible also to demonstrate that monastic orders are not needed for the governance of the church. Though Matthias did not take any open stand against the hierarchi- cal system, yet he appears nevertheless to have been a forerunner of Protestantism in this, that he everywhere holds distinctly up to view the immediate reference of the religious consciousness to Christ, and makes the true unity of the church to rest solely upon that foundation. But of the many passages relating to this point which might be cited, we will select only the following : " It is Jesus Christ himself, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit ever dwells in his church and in each, even most insignificant portion of it, holding together, sustaining and vitalizing the whole and all the parts, directly and from within giv- ing growth outwardly to the whole and to each, even the most insignifi- cant part. He is, therefore, himself the spirit and life of his church, his mystical body. 2 Jesus, the crucified, is the vine ; and all the branches proceeding from him and abiding in him, have and ought to have respect to him alone,3 and other foundation can no man lay than that is laid." This immediate reference of the religious consciousness to Christ being placed at the head, everything else must take its shap- ing accordingly ; and we recognize here the germinal principle of a new- spirit, destined to burst asunder the old forms under which the christ- ian spirit had been shackled and confined. He says, '" all unity pre- ' Condescendentes infirmitati fratrum parti ejus et minutissimae semper assist- Hovitiorum ex Judaismo conversorum, et ens totum et quamlibet ipsiiis partem im- pef hoc compescentes aliqnaliter Christ- mediate atque intrinsece continet, susten- ianorum injuriam, et propter reverentiam tat et viviticat, dat incrementuiii toti et legis vetoris. ne tarn cito refutata videre- cuilibet et minimae parti ejus, quapropier tur syna<;oga, quia mater antiquata, jam ipse est spiritus et vita suae ecclesiae et mortua cum reverentia deduceretur ad se- sui corporis mystici pnlcrum. ^ Ad quam ipsum solum habent et de - Jesus est solus, qui cum patre et sane- bent habere totaliter suum respectum. U) spiriui toti ecclesiae suae et cuilibet JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. LT X. T. 211 supposes a reference to some principle."' But that which forms the unity of the church is the one God, one Lord, one Master, one rehgion, one law, one commandment.^ " All christians who possess the spirit of Jesus the crucified, and who are impelled by the same spirit, and who alone have not departed from their God, are the one church of Christ, his beautiful bride, his body ; and they are not of this world, as Christ is not of this world, and therefore the world hates them." The unity that has proceeded from Christ he places in contrast with those antag- onisms among men and nations that have grown out of their apostasy from God. " Difference creates the differences among nations and their mutual alienation from each other, just as, on the other hand, uni- ty in the acknowledgment of one God contributes especially to bring about unity among nations." This he observes, was a thing well un- derstood by the ancient kings, and especially by the Romans, who — which is undoubtedly a mistake so far as it concerns the Romans — en- deavored to bring all the nations which they subdued, to the worship of one God such as they would have him to be. Idolatry — he says — and apostasy from the true God is not now merely what it was in earlier periods, gross idolatry in the proper sense ; but the setting up of an idol in the mind and the affections, and placing such an idol in the tem- ple of the Holy Ghost ; that is, to love the present world, and that which is in the world, just this is apostasy from God, and idolatry. " Since — he says — it is already the day of light and of truth ; since in Jesus Christ the supreme God has already come so near to men ; nay, the greatest union has taken place, of God with men and of men with God, because it is no longer God afar off, but a God near at hand, dwelling even now, in the most intimate manner, in the souls that are worthy of him ;3 since God has already appeared on earth and Avalked with men, the very fact that christians should suffer themselves to be engrossed by the cares of this world, that they should let their love and their imitation be directed to any other than Jesus Christ, the true God, or that they should make the home of their souls in this world rather than in the Lord their God, or that they should cling with their affections more to the world than to Christ, is plainly a falhng away, an apostasy from God and a preference for idols in the spirit and tem- per of the soul, is already a separation from union with the body of Christ, and a becoming incorporated with the body of Antichrist, of the god of this world." Considering the matter from this point of view, he is of the opinion, that what St. Paul says of the apostasy of the last times, might already be apphed to his own time. He says of his contemporaries : " They would attain to justification, and be- ' Universitas dieitur ab uno aliquo, ad unus raagister, uua rcligio, una lex, unuin quod omnia supposita universitatis liabent praeceptum. urdinem ct attriluitionem, ct nisi sit tale ■* Quia jam est dies lucis et veritatis, unum principalc, a quo reli(iua omnia et propinquitas summi dei ad homines in tale quid, quod possit formare do multis Cliristo Jesu, imo unio maxima dei ad universitatem et conservare, non unitas homines et lioniinum euni deo, quia jam oeque universitas, sed dispersa diversitas factus est non deus de longinquo, sed deus esset. de prope. imo deus jam intims inhabitiiia * lUud vero tale unum, faciens unita- animas diguas se. tem ecclesiae est unus deus, unus dominus. 212 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. lieve they can obtain it by many labors, with much expense, in the per- formance even to satiety, of all the newly appointed ceremonies ; and yet Christ is become to their hearts as one dead ; they have nothing of his spirit, they see and know him not. Hence they perform all their isolated works according to the letter, and in a spirit of fear ac- cording to the law ; but they know nothing of the true liberty, of the freedom which is in the spirit of Jesus Christ. Hence they appear to be little if at all different from the Scribes and Pharisees, among the ancient people of the Jews, on whom our Lord Jesus Christ often de- nounced wo ; and the apostle Paul has often reproached such persons with apostatizing from the christian faith. And all Holy Scripture, all christian faith proclaims, preaches and confesses, that Jesus Christ the crucified alone is the one Saviour, and the end of the law for righteous- ness to every one that believeth ; that he alone is all power, all wisdom for every christian, he himself the alpha, the beginning and the end, and that every one who is longing and striving to be a just and virtu- ous man, must first of all and immediately put on Christ himself and his spirit, because he is himself the way, the truth and the life. Aftei him alone, first of all, and with the whole heart, we should seek ; be- gin to glorify him and to carry him in our souls, who alone hath re- deemed us at that great price, his precious blood." He charges it upon his contemporaries that when they separated faith from works in their mistaken search after self-righteousness, they substituted in place of the genuine christian morality, a morality which they had learned in the schools of ancient philosophy. " Because they did not like to retain Christ crucified in their knowledge, the Son of God gave them over to a reprobate mind (Rom. 1: 28), to expend their efforts in building up their own righteousness ; and they think they shall be able to attain to a virtuous life after the methods of Aristotle, of Plato and the other philosophers, by their own efforts and virtuous habits. "i On the basis of these general views he forms his conception of the church in its true sense, as a community taking its outward form from a prin- ciple within itself, by its common reference to Christ ; he styles the church the body of Christ, the community of the elect.2 For as he makes the Augustinian system his point of departure, he everywhere gives special prominence to the antithesis of elect and non-elect. Placing that immediate reference of the rehgious consciousness to Christ at the head, he is forced, even though he leaves the entire hie- rarchical system untouched, still to admit those consequences, by which the hitherto separating wall between priests and laymen must be bro- ken down, the idea of the universal priesthood revived, Christianity made to appear as a principle of purification from all that is of the ' Ut cum magnis laboribus suorum stu- Words of Janow from the work already diorum velint suam justitiam statuere, et cited in the fragment published under the per omnia ad modum Aristotelis aut Pla- name of Huss, cap. 10, fol. 370. p. 2. A tonis ceterorumque philosophoram se pos- similar passage is also found in the work se ad vitam virtuosam pervenire per studia which has not as yet been published : Ec- j)ropria et virtutes usuales. clesia electorum, quae proprie et solum esJ * Ecclesia electorum est unicum proprie corpus mysticum Christi. et solum corpus mysticum Christi Jesu. JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 213 world, the priestly character restored to the entire life, and the dis- tinction of an inferior and a higher position in christian life, the sever- ance of the consilia and the prcecepta done away with. " Every christian — says he — is already an anointed man, and a priest;"— where he refers for proof to tlie well known passages of the New Tes- tament relating to this point. Attacking from this position the over- valuation of the monastic orders and denying the spiritual superiority which they arrogated to themselves, he says, " there are many, stand- ing in the opinion of the multitude at the very summit of holiness and of christian religion, who reply to those inquiring after the shortest way to salvation, that there is no other except to serve Christ after a per- fect manner in this or that order ; so certain is it to every one, that a person belonging to such an order is seldom or never condemned, and that he who enters such an order is as speedily delivered from all pun- ishment and guilt, as if he were born anew of water and the Spirit. He who questions this, exposes himself to an irreconcilable war." He vigorously attacks this opinion, the supposed opposition between spir- ituals and seculars. " It is evident, that to style christians the tvorld and seculars is a calumnious misrepresentation." He cites the words of Christ " That which is born of the Spirit, is spirit." '* One of the greatest trials that Christ's chosen can meet with is this, that when a christian, whatever he may be, man or woman, virgin or widow, is heartily inclined to do penance for his or her sins, and to serve Jesus Christ in an orderly manner, if such a person lives in the midst of the christian community, and thus consecrates his life to Christ with a view to live more perfectly in the simplicity of the spirit, and for suitable reasons does not enter one of those monastic orders, he must at once suffer persecution from them and from his own associates, must be looked upon as a heretic and be called by the vulgar a Beghard, a Beguine, a Turlepinus, or by some such reproachful epithet. Such an one must be called up and put on trial, to determine whether he is a heretic." From this and similar utterances of Matthias we find, what is confirmed also by other indications in the history of these times, that those who distinguished themselves among the laity by a more earnest and strict piety than common, and more especially societies composed of such persons, were very sure to be objects of jealousy, to be stigmatized as heretical, and persecuted by the monastic orders ; while on the other hand they were derided and treated with abuse by the common nominal christians. Beghards was a nickname applied in the same way at that time as Pietists at a later period, by an ambi- tious clergy, zealots for the letter of orthodoxy, and by the vulgar people of the world. After this, Matthias of Janow saj-s, " Where- fore the men of Christ, who live in the midst of our present christians, nust either enter into some monastic order, or else do their works of jharity only in secret." In a passage where he places the laity on a par with ecclesiastics as to their title to daily or frequent communion, .>f which we shall speak more particularly hereafter, he says ; " Al- though the priest or minister of the church has precedence over the holy laity in this, that it belongs to him to offer, to consecrate and to 214 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. distribute the body of Christ, yet they are equals as it regards the en- joyment of the Holy supper ; and although the priest has a nobler and more eminent vocation in the church than any layman, yet every lay- man who in a right and holy manner fulfils his calling or his service in the church, is alike useful to the priest and to the church, because at his own proper position, a position quite as necessary for Christ's body, he serves Christ in his vocation, and therefore earns from him his daily bread, if he does but live just as uprightly and faithfully to the Lord Jesus, and as long as he perseveres, as he should do, in the vocation to which God has called him. As the priest singing, pray- ing and administering the sacraments thereby serves our common Lord, Jesus Christ, and is therein useful to the church ; so the peasant in ploughing, and pasturing his cattle, as long as he stands fast in the common love, serves the Lord Jesus Christ and is necessary and use- ful to his family or to the holy church. The same holds good of other laymen such as tradesmen and artisans in civil society. i For as it Avould fare ill with the church of God to be without priests or soldiers, so neither could she dispense with, or even subsist without, peasants and men of other occupations. As the manner of calling and the works of the former are necessary, so too are the various callings and works of the latter. And as the calling of the former and its exercise comes to them from Jesus Christ, so the various callings and employ- ments of the latter have come from God and Christ ; the calling of the latter indeed is more primitive and more indispensable than that of the former, since the occupation and practice of husbandry and of the other trades existed earlier than that of the priest. Countrymen and soldiers do not exist for the sake of priests, but priests for the sake of the peasantry and the soldiers." He endeavors to show, that the term saint is to be applied to every christian, whose life answers to his name, although there are different degrees in the application of this name, as there are in progressive sanctification. " The term christian — he remarks — denotes a man sanctified by baptism, which by another name is called unction ; hence the christian is one anointed. So one is called a saint in virtue of that sanctifying grace,2 which is realized by a meritorious life and the virtues. This sanctifying grace, however, and the first baptismal grace are substantially the same ; the only difference being that sanctifying grace consists in the good use of that first grace.3 And thus every christian, so far as he is such, is a saint ; since he has been sanctified by the first baptisnial grace ; just as every saint must, by reason of his holy walk and vir- ' Sicut sacei-dos psallens et orans atque ^ Nee diffcrt in alio, nisi quod gratia saeramenta administrans per hoc servit gratum faciens est bonus usus gratiac gra- communi domino Jesu Cliristo, et in eo tis datae seu gratiae primae. When St. est utilis ecclesiae, ita rusticus arando et Paul says : '' By grace I am what I am," sua pecora pascendo manens in communi he makes this refer to that objective grace caritate similiter in eo ipso optimc servit which may be used in diti'crcnt ways ac- Jesu Christo, et est utilis et neccssarius cording to the different bent of the will ipsius familiae vel ecclesiae sacrosanctac, the gratia gratis data; but when St. Paul et ita de aliis singulis laieis mechanicis in says : ■' and this grace was in mc not in republica. vain," he makes this refer to grace in tiie * The gratia gratum faciens. second, subjective sense. JANOAV'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 215 tues, be a true christian. All who have been sanctified, have been sanctified by the anointing of grace and the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus ; and hence it follows, that every christian is a saint and every saint a christian ; and, as one cannot have the use of grace without itg habit, so one cannot be a christian and at the same time not a saint. Do not object to me the bad christians, who have lost the first grace by reason of their misuse of it ; for these are not christians — save as the term is improperly understood — any more than the painted figure of a vap.n is a man. But if you object that the baptismal sign and the fides informis are to be found even in bad christians, and that this is enough to entitle one to the name of christian, I answer, that the mere sign, if the grace be not present, is not enough either to make one a christian or to entitle one to the name of christian ;" where he introduces the following comparison : " A hoop hung out before a house (this in Bohemia must have been the sign of an inn) still does not make the place an inn, if there is no wine in the house." Those, he supposes, who merely made profession of Christianity, with whom it was no more than an outward mask, their lives testifying against their profession, deserved rather to be called antichristians than christians. But though every christian is a saint, every christian is not equally so ; but there are different degrees of holiness among a christian people. " While man remains in the present life, the way of progress in holy living is ever open before him, this entire life being either a progres- sion or a retrogression." He attacks here those mystical Beghards, condemned in the year 1311 at the council of Vienne, who held that man may in the present life reach the stage of perfection, that he may become absolutely sinless, so as to be incapable of further prog- ress in grace ; arguing that if continual progress were possible, one might become more perfect than Christ. Now he supposes that though degrees of progressive development infinitely different are conceiva- ble, yet the fathers have distinguished three principal stages ; that of beginners, that of the progressive, and that of the perfect ; or the married, widows and virgins. He rebukes the pride of the clergy. Did a man offend a clergyman, the bolt of excommunication was point- ed at him forthwith ; but did he injure a layman, the wrong doer es- caped with impunity. •' By the just judgment of God we are — says he — fallen like Lucifer." In the contempt poured upon the clergy, that is, he recognizes a merited divine judgment. So in animadvert- ing upon the false distinction of spirituals and seculars, and hierar- chical self-conceit, while he gives distinct prominence to that fellowship of the community of saints which excludes every selfish feeling, he remarks : This union caimot be restored, unless thosa are first exclu- ded, who are sunk in self-love, and in place of them the number of those is multiplied who are zealous for that union of the clmrch, and which is still more, who serve the cause of Christ rather than their own interests. He points not only at such as sought their own advan- tage in earthly things, but at those too, who in the spiritual life made their own interest alone the end, far removed from that love to com- mon Christendom consisting of the perfect and the imperfect, the 216 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. righteous and the weak. They, he says, who begin with despising the common manners of their fellow-christians, who begin with extoll- ing in particular their own societies and brotherhoods, as compared with others, mar by this course the unity of the christian church and disturb christian peace. They begin by thinking highly of themselves and would exalt themselves above the common mass of christians, hold themselves to be the only spirituals and apostolicals, and call the great mass of other christians Babylon and the world ; they pretend that they alone fulfil the counsels of Christ, that the people neither can at- tain nor ought to attain the same perfection. Nor is it necessary to salvation ; they are only bound to it by their vows. Thus from the position which he uniformly maintains, the great principle of the one- ness of the christian life, Matthias of Janow carries on his attacks against the false distinction of clericals and seculars, and at the same time against a distinction grounded upon the same views, which had stood good for so many centuries, and had been adopted by the scho- lastic theology into the concatenation of its system, whereby it was more firmly established, the distinction of consilia and frcBcepta. Af- ter the words above cited he remarks, " applying all this to themselves alone and excluding the people, they set up themselves as objects of the greatest veneration, thereby promoting in the rest of the people great freedom of the flesh, the relaxation of all christian discipline, and great self-deception on the part of the simple, who plead in ex cuse of themselves, we are worldly people, living in the flesh; we may be permitted to have this or that." And if there happen to be in christ ian communities persons who seek to reach, according to their mea sure, evangelical perfection in their mode of life, as poverty, chastity, obedience to their spiritual superiors, the other ordinary christians will soon persecute them." He illustrates this by the same facts which we have noticed already, that the monks from jealousy persecuted such persons under the name of Beghards and Beguines, telling them that if they wanted to lead a life of that sort they should become monks. What have you to do with the world ? What have you in common with the people of the world ? " Hence it comes about that among the common laity, no pious people are to be found." He complains that those who were devout among the laity were suspected ; and yet they were best qualified by word and example to advance and confirm the progress of others. And since such saints were the people's neigh- bors, were regarded by them as equals with whom they associated in the daily business of life, they might easily provoke imitation in e^^eiy thing ; which could not happen in the case of the monks, who stood so far apart from the people in their calling, and in their modes and hab- its of life.' The conduct of these devout people being looked upon by the others with suspicion, carnal and lukewarm christians were led to cherish the delusion, that it was well with them ; in spite of their ' Et quia per id, quod sunt tales sancti, vel possunt esse in monachis et religiosis, rulgo intimo propinqui pares in vita et qui extant niinis longinqui in vita sua f i conimixti in contuhcrnio, imitabiles fa- professione a plebibus. ciiiter in omnibus, quae nequaquam sunt JANOW*S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 217 worldly and lukewarm affections they still thought themselves sure of salvation, observing that all who sought to live godly hves among the christian people were despised bj the monks. They were flattered in this their delusion by citations from scripture, falsely interpreted. He gives the following as an example : " There is no better thing than to lead a moderate life, and not to differ too much from the rest of the world ; for no men are worse than those who would be righteous over- much." With this zeal in maintaining the universal priesthood of the faithful, the equality of Christian worth and dignity in all orders and profes- sions, Matthias united the deepest interest in another object, one which then formed a weighty point of controversy between the different par- ties concerned, the question relating to the frequent or daily commu- nion of laj'men. While in the seventeenth century, in the Catholic church of France, it was thought an indication of greater Christian se- riousness, greater zeal for true conversion, to invite laymen to abstain for a while from the communion, in order to prepare themselves for the more worthy participation of it, and avoid the mistake of using it as an opus operatum, the case seems to have been exactly reversed in the period of which we are speaking. The party who were most zealous to awaken the laity and promote their Christian advancement, of whom Matthias of Janow may be considered a representative, were urgent for inviting the laity to this frequent participation, inasmuch as this sacrament was the best means for promoting Christian growth, for ex- citing and strengthening faith : but the opposite party feared lest the laity should be put on a level with the clergy. Matthias of Janow took the liveliest interest in this controversy. He was ever falling back up- on it, and indeed wrote a paper on the subject, which is incorporated in the greater work already mentioned. The stamp of his whole peculiar Christian bent is impressed upon these polemical transactions ; and it deserves to be noticed that he uniformly expresses himself as if he thought the laity also were entitled to partake of the communion in both kinds. Many of the arguments which he adduces, admit of being equally applied to show that the laity may partake of the cup as well as of the bread, and ought not, in this respect, to be placed lower than the clergy ; and we cannot doubt, that the recognition of the equal right of the laity in this matter, also, lay at the bottom, as he every- where tacitly assumes it. " It is — says he — doing God and Christ the greatest wrong, for one to deny himself or others the frequent par- taking of the body of Christ." He assumes that God, who in the highest sense belongs to all, and is in the highest sense good, and inca- pable of any respect to persons, must take delight in all who are wil- ling to receive him.^ He cites the passages, where Christ invites men to his fellowship. He appeals to the analogy of the Old Testament, to the daily sacrifice, which corresponded to the Lord's supper ;2 here, too, were bread and wine, just as both must be together in the holy ■ Quiii (leus summe communis et sum- in omnibus, qui eum susfipiur.t, vult de- tn" lionus sine acceptatione pcrsonarum, lectari. '^The juge sacrilicium. VOL. V. 19 218 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. supper.' He complains that, in his time, this daily sacrifice had ceased) as the vain people had generally, or for the most part, forsaken the daily or frequent enjoyment of the supper, and approached it but once, or hardly once in a year ; and then, in the case of many, it was done not from devotion, but only from hypocrisy, or a sort of constraint, which each laid on himself ; and it was already looked upon as an abuse, to be always participating in the Lord's supper. There had arisen a Judaizing set, who tried to dissuade the people from the prac- tice of daily communion. He declaims against priests so destitute of all love towards the Christian people,^ who cruelly kept away the hun- gry and thirsty flock from provisions which were their own,3 and who set themselves to oppose others who took delight in feeding the poor. He reminds his opponents of Gamaliel's language in the Acts of the Apostles. The effects of frequent communion among the laity were appealed to in defence of the practice and as a proof that the thing was of God. In those priests who exhorted the people to frequent commu- nion, he sees true Christian love ; and speaks of their animating influ- ence on the laity. Desire for the frequent enjoyment of the commu- nion, he said, was on the increase among the laity ; and it would con- tinue to rise higher in proportion to the fervency of devotion among the Christian people. We here meet with a remark relating to the incipi- ent renovation of the religious life, which deserves notice. "It is already well known — he says — that the spirit of devotion and the glow of charity is reviving among the communities, and the words of our sermons rise to life again, because the Spirit of Jesus works in them." He repels the insinuation, that the celebration of mass, in which all partook spiritually, the spiritual participation of the Lord's supper in faith, is enough. It might suffice for an angel, but not for men, composed of soul and body. If that were true, there was no need of the incarnation of the Son of God, and the institution of the holy supper it- self would be superfluous. He who voluntarily deprives himself of the bodily enjoyment of the holy supper, deserves also to be deprived of the spiritual enjoyment of it. " For — says he — the experience of every year teaches, that the5 ,vho come to the communion but once a year, or but seldom, do for th ; most part fail also to participate in the res sacramenti ; for such persons come to the ordinance in the spirit of bondage, and remain strangers to the holy joy, the sober bliss of the spirit of Christ." •* They show it by this, that they look forward to that day and that hour in a spirit of slavish fear, instead of hailing it with joy. They are only driven to the observance by the custom of their church and the prescription of their teachers ; and they rejoice when the season is over, and do not wish for its return, thinking they are now free to live as they list. They who esteemed themselves unworthy, ' Propter quotidianam frequentiam et borare, sine foedere, sine pia ad populum propter dualitatem utriusque speciei, panis aff'ectionc. et vini. a quibus hoc sacrificium integra- •* Plebcjis esurientibus et sitientibus su- tur. Here we may perceive that the ne- um cibnm et potum crudeliter denegant. cessity of the two kinds is expressly as- ■* Accedunt eniin tiniore servili, et in sumed. nullo tales gustant spirituale gaudiuni vel - Inipii, qui ret'ugiunt, cum plebibus la- alicjuid duh;edinis spiritus Jesu. JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 219 and abstained from the communion through humihty, should be encour* aged the more ; because they truly humbled themselves, they were worthy of being exalted by God. Christ came to bring down the lofty, and lift up the lowly. He thinks that as worldly priests cared nothing for the laity, and never invited them to the frequent enjoyment of the holy supper, it would be no rashness in the latter to demand the en- joyment of this bread which was meant for them. He refers to Christ's words : He that is not with me, is against me ; he that gathereth not with rae, scattereth abroad. But that man is not with Jesus, who, though bound to do so, yet neglects to provide for the salvation of those souls that seemed placed in his way. Was it objected, that the dig- nity of the priests would suifer by so doing, he would answer : " The man who speaks thus plainly evinces that he is a man actuated by a zeal that is without knowledge, for he censures as an impropriety, what he would certainly wish to take place if he were animated by the good Spirit of God." He appeals to the words of Moses, who wished that all might be prophets. But these, filled with the spirit of envy, would be lords. When they complained of the zeal of the laity to enjoy frequent communion, they resembled the Jews who said, " Perceive ye how ye prevail nothing ? behold, the world has gone after him ! " (John 12 : 19.) He affirms that many of the laity were not inferior in virtue, in meritorious works, in love of the sacraments, to the priests ; it was here also true that soldiers, harlots, and publicans went into the king- dom of heaven before the scribes and pharisees. Though laymen should partake daily of the Lord's supper, yet they would not for this reason be placed on a level with the priests ; for the laity would still be the peo- ple, and the priests would, by virtue of their calling, still be set over them. If, they said. The priests would be less reverenced, the direct contrary would prove to be the fact, because the people, in the case supposed, would be more attached to their priests, would cling to them more closely as they received from them greater benefits and more fre- quently, as the sheep cluster around their shepherds from whom they receive their food ; so because the priests would be compelled to labor more for their communities, to hear their confessions, and to bestow on them the sacrament, whence would naturally spring up greater love and gratitude towards them ; and because this love in them would be re- newed, the Lord being in the midst of those gathered together in his name, he who produces in the hearts of subjects the obedience due to their superiors ; and because it is the first and most excellent fruit of this sacrament to bind tlie church (which is Christ's body) and its members, each in its own place, with Christ. Such was the power of this sacrament to make the multitude of the people one. It was now objected that the case of priests differed from that of laymen ; because priests were, by their office, obliged continually to hold mass ; hence they were the more excusable if they were not always prepared to par- take worthily of the supper. To this he replies : they sinned not the less, but far more by their unworthy participation, because the charac- ter, the position and calling of unworthy priests, were a great griev- ance. He attacks those famous men who had tauirlit in their writings 220 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTKINE. that women in particular ought to be discouraged from frequent com munion ; he opposes to them the Christian principle that all such dis tinctions are annulled in the new creation ; as it is said, One Father, one Spirit, one faith, one Lord, one baptism for all. Weakness was no reason for such exclusion ; for God had chosen tha weak things of the world to confound the things that are mighty. He next speaks against the prohibition put forth probably in the year 1389, by the synod of Prague, against the frequent communion of the laity ; > and remarks : *' Those modern hypocrites, doctors and prelates, who live without God, know not what they are about, and what sort of an ordinance the con- tinual sacrifice of the Lord in the church is." It was so called, not be- cause the priests continually celebrated and enjoyed it, but because the holy church offers and enjoys it in common. He appeals to Christ's words, which are addressed to all : Take and eat. He retorts the ob- jection drawn from the words of the apostle Paul respecting unworthy jjarticipation. The apostle does not discourage Christians generally from daily partaking of the holy supper, but the unworthy, that they might make themselves worthy of it, and take more pains to sanctify themselves for it. He admonishes them ; he does not dissuade, but teaches in what way they ought to present and enjoy this sacrament. On this subject Matthias of Janow composed an express treatise in the form of a letter. He explains why he complied with his friend's invitation that he should write something on the matter in question. " For — says he — I bethink me thou must be concerned for the welfare of thy neighbors, and especially of the common people, since thou art desirous they should all be more often united to Christ by partaking of his precious body and blood ; which certainly must come from thy good heart through the working of the Holy Spirit ; for I was also inci- ted to write something on this subject by the false zeal of some." He then mentions the various motives and reasons which influenced those who opposed the daily communion of the laity. " Some — he says — carry an outward show of zeal for the Lord, yet not witli knowl- edge ; and they pretend that tliey would thereby preserve the reve- rence which is due to the sacrament. " These — he says — entertain ing too carnal views of the sacrament, fear where there is no reason for fear, lest our Lord Jesus should suffer anew, in this sacrament, some violence, or contempt, or injury ; whereas our Lord having once died, death hath no more power over him in any way ; for, in giving his now spiritual body, which is no longer capable of suffering, to the whole world and to each individual, richly to enjoy, he nevertheless suffers no change in himself. They evince their sympathy with the Lord Jesus too foolishly in this, that they are so hard towards their neighbors. They are cruel towards the members of Christ. Those foolish and un- faithful servants, who are set over but a few things, are friends to those who lead bad lives, and by their bad lives every day throw contempt on the sacrament, and they favor their party. Others fear to extend this sacrament to the people, lest they should hazard the safety of their ' See further on p. 233. JAXOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET X. T. 221 own souls." Christ, however, had presented the sacrament to the un- worthy Judas, and the church had never decreed that any not un- worthy could be kept back from the enjoyment of the holy supper. He argues, on the other hand, that even though the laity should par- take of the communion but once a-year, there might still be many among them unworthy. Others — says he — do not enter upon any such arguments, but contend only from love of strife and the heat of passion, against the frequent communion of the laity. He next men- tions those who proudly despised the poor among the people, and were afraid that by frequent communion they would be put too much on a level with themselves.' He quotes some of their characteristic language : " Those Beghards and Beguines are striving hard to put themselves on a level with the priests." He says of them : " They desire not to know that to all Christ's faithful it has been said, Ye are a royal priest- hood ;" and he brings up the passages referring to this point, in the Apocalypse. In attacking the wall of separation erected by the hie- rarchy between clergy and laity, and bringing distinctly up to notice the work' of the Holy Spirit among laymen, he does not forget to apply the same principles of reasoning also to the female sex. He notices the fact that, in his time, there were women of distinguished piety, whose lives presented a strong contrast to the corrupt world. " As before, — he says — in comparing laymen with monks and priests, it was re- remarked that our Lord having rejected the wise of this world on ac- count of their pride and hypocrisy, would the more abundantly reveal his salvation to the little ones among the people ; so, in comparing men and women, something similar might be said with regard to the recipiency of the latter for the gifts of Christ. Whereas men commonly, at the present time, conscious of their natural gifts, do not know how to humble themselves and to bear the reproach of Christ ; or if they have the advantage in some gifts of grace, directly ascribe it, in their self- complacency, to efforts of their own, and so do not prove loyal to the Lord Jesus Christ ; therefore God and Jesus Christ, forsaking such men, transfers his treasures to women ; for he has chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty (1 Cor. 1: 27). And hence women are to be found in these times, virgins and widows, who zealously do penance, hasten to the holy sacraments, and take the kingdom of God before the men, who are occupied with the vanities of this world. Hence we may observe, how the ordinary women fill the churches at prayers, occupy the seats at sermons, present themselves before the priests for confession, seem to be full of sobs and tears, receive daily, in constant devotion and with joy, the holy supper, forsake the pomp of the world together with its pleasures, are ever abounding in love to Christ, ever thinking on the cause of the Lord, and joyfully and thankfully receiving manifestations and visions of the Lord. Thus the women are a hundred fold more rich in spirit- ual blessings, in these times, than the men." He then refers tc the ' Hi sunt, qui ferme quemlibet de plebe plebeios audaciter nuncupando. dedignantur, bestias et llibaldos pauperes 19* 222 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. examples of Hilclegard, of Brigitta hi Sweden, and of many other womor whom he had known in Paris, Rome, and Nuremberg,^ and of stUl more in Prague ; " and how I admired the Lord Jesus in his works." 2 " They — says he — who admire the rich men of this world, because they can gain a good deal out of them, are priests to whose eyes the mighty monarch of this world appears as one to be feared and reve- renced, even though he be a man of crime, but who abuse and despise them that fear God. When a rich man comes to such, and asks them to hear his confession, or to offer him the sacraments, how readily and cheerfully do they bestow them on him. But when the poor of the flock beg them to hear their confessions and give them the communion, they do it with difficulty and after long delay, and as if they were tired of the business ; but if they demand the sacraments of the church re- peatedly, these men begin to mutter that they give them the headache, or to complain that they take up too much of their time, and finally the poor are repelled away, not without signs of impatience." He main tains that " every Christian to whom the frequent or daily spiritual par- ticipation of the body of Christ is granted, will also be in a suitable frame for the frequent or daily enjoyment of the communion, because he who is worthy of that which is granted only to the holy, is also worthy of that which is granted alike to the bad and the good. This spiritual participation through devotion and faith, is a thing which God alone produces in man ; as Christ himself says : It is the spizit that maketh alive, the flesh profiteth nothing. But in the dis- tribution of the holy supper, which serves to the increase of grace in those who worthily partake, the minister of the church is the cooperat- ing agent." Again : " What the Holy Ghost has wrought in a human soul, no man should destroy. But the fervor of devotion is what the Holy Ghost has wrought, and hence the hungering and thirsting after the frequent enjoyment of the Lord's supper. For assuredly this thirsting after the sacrament, which arises from the devotion of faith, is itself a work of the Holy Ghost," and he cites the words of Christ in which he invites every one that thirsteth to himself. " This thirsting — he observes — is certainly one way in which the Father draweth to the Son. This work of the Holy Ghost, this drawing of the Father to the Son, is what he would destroy who presumes in any way what- ever to forbid it." Referring to the words of St. Peter in Acts 10 : 47, he finely remarks : " Who will dare refuse the bodily sacrament to those, on whom the spiritual grace has been bestowed by God him- self? Hence it follows, certainly, that every Christian who has that faith in Christ which works by love may often worthily receive the body of Christ ; every one who belie vingly attends mass, and who devoutly with heart and lips, confesses himself a sinner, is worthy of it, and it is for his benefit that he should partake at the mass of. the ' We are here reminded that Nurem- was some connection between the Friends berg was a seat of the Friends of God, and of God in this district and the Friends of of Margaret Ebnerin and her connection reform in Bohemia. with Henry of Nordlingen Vid. Heuman- ^ See Jordan, Vorlaufer des Hussiten- ni Opusculii pag. 331 sq. Perhaps there thums in Bohmen. S. 62. JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 22-3 body of Christ." But few, and those notorious sinners, should b« excluded from the communion ; as for example, adulterers, harlots, usurers. But such persons when excluded should be publicly named ; Bo that the faithful may understand that no fellowi'hip is to be had with such in the sacraments, and avoid the contagions of their bad example. They too who give public scandal by their vices ought on every Sunday to be pubhcly and solemnly named, and debarred from the sacraments. He places in the same class such as go indecently 01 too extravagantly dressed/ which is an evident mark of pride, so that no reasonable ground of excuse can be offered for it. He refers to an ordinance relating to this matter put forth by the archbishop of Prague ,2 and to another by Pope Urban VI, the promulgation of which had been witnessed by himself during his residence in Italy .3 He affirms that beginners and those moving forward in the christian life stand in more need of the sacraments than the perfect, for in- stance the saints in bliss. He compares the communication of Christ in the holy supper with milk otfered to babes. Thus the incarnate Word lets himself down to man's wants and weaknesses, mystically communicating himself to them under the outward forms of bread and wine. 4 Thus it happens that the behever, who partakes only of bread and wine, and, by this act in itself considered, experiences no spiritual enjoyment, but is brought in oontact with the forms of bread and wine only with his senses, cannot fail by earnest striving to attain to such a frame as to imbibe the sweet spirit of devotion into his inmost soul, and to taste and see how good the Lord is ; ^ and thus he is nourished and strengthened and refreshed in spirit. This is, for mankind, a rock ; a rock of refreshment for him to whom it has been given to suck honey out of the rock, and oil out of the flinty rock : a flinty rock to carnal minded men, who perceive not, in this venerable sacra- ment, the things of the Spirit of God ; " and for this reason they lightly esteem it, and take no pains to secure the frequent enjoyment of it ; they make no haste to this holy supper." It is the flintiest rock to the Jews and the Greeks, to him who believes not, and says. How can this man give us his flesh to eat? (John vi}. " But to us, who are in Christ Jesus, and believe God, and in him have tasted the good word ' Quales sunt, qui deportant calceos ro- caro factum, et rairo modo cornposuit in stratos in pedil)us, auruni et argentum ro- eucharistia, ut essent manna al)sconditum liis. cornuti in pcdibus in barbis et omnes et omnis multitudo dulcedinis sacramcnto induti veste bottata et ])eregi'ina. sub speciebus panis et vini abscondita, -' Jam nostris teinporibus aichiepiscopus quemadmodum lac puero matris ejus cela- Pragensis Johannes publice excommuni- turn est in mamillis, et veluti puer nullum cari praecepit hujusmodi tilios Belial, qui vestigium lactis videns suis oculis, labori- defendebant rostra in calceis et cornutas ose sugens ubero, in intimis suis dulcedi- vestes et impudicas: nam tempore, quo nem percipit, quandoque pascitur et valde scribo, coram Jesu sum testis illius, et sta- delectatur. bam ante foras templi, vetans tales ana- * Ita prorsus quilibet iidelis nulla suavi- 'hemate percussos divinis officiis interesse. tate speciem Jesu ab eo in hoc sacramen- ' See above, page 192. to percipiens, sed solum species panis et * Corpus domini et sanguis est lac da- vini sensilius suis tractans, tum per cona- tum pueris, ut sugerent, lac de petra ole- tus et laborem interioris hominis sugit umque de saxo durissimo, quia verbum hunc devotionis spiritum suavem in mc- raio factum est, ut homo sic panem angel- dullis suae animae, et degustat, quam sii i i)rum manducaret, sicque digessit verbum vis est dominus. 224 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE, of the Lord, to us it is sweet indeed as the mother's nourishing breast." The laitj were often more worthy by reason of their free spontaneous longing, than mere priests by vocation. The faithful, god-worthy long- ing of such laymen was evidenced by this, that nothing could keep them back ; they forsook everything in this world, their homes, their yokes of oxen,i their wives. '" All that was gain to them, they counted as loss, that they might so win Christ, by often and gladly partaking of his body and blood." He goes on to describe the longing of these pious laymen, and to show what sacrifices they made to satisfy it. " They demand it humbly of their priests if it can be done ; and, if refused, they press them with still more importunity, begging, adjur- ing them, and requiring it of them till they grow tiresome. And when they find themselves repulsed in every way by the inferior clergy, from ignorance, negligence, or pride, they apply next to priests of a higher degree, to the bishops and their officials, and never cease, timid as they may be, unpleasant as they may find the duty, to urge and entreat, that they would procure for them a more frequent pre- sentation of the Lord." He affirms that no un worthiness of the Christ • ian, if he be but conscious of it, and make confession of it, can unfit him for the frequent or daily enjoyment of the communion. The con- trary rather holds good. If a person deems himself worthy or holy, and boasts of being so, this makes the Christian unworthy ; for it is pride and the worst kind of hypocrisy .2 Any Christian who in this present life held himself to be worthy of the daily communion, and professed as much of himself, whatever position that Christian might hold, and however much he might surpass others in virtue, and who looked upon others as unworthy, that man was alone and especially unworthy. The holy supper appears to him to be the highest act of worship, one with which nothing else was to be compared ; and if it was objected that yet the celebration of the high festivals consisted in song and prayer, and the grand and imposing variety of holy ceremo- nies ; he rephed. Still all this was not to be compared with the act of partaking of the festival of the Lord in spirit and in truth. All this, says he, song, prayer, preaching is but a preparation for the festival, and a certain participation in the fellowship with Christ ; but after all it was not the true and spiritual festival ot" Christ, for it was not the bread that came down from heaven. He says : " Nominal Christians, worldly Chi-istians, those of a carnal mind, who have not the Spirit of Christ, never partake freely, with great desire and thankful heart, of the body of Christ ; but, as often as they come to the sacrament, it is done with constraint, through the force of a custom observed from child- hood, or from slavish fear." He compares the way in which the Chris- tian assimilates this spiritual food and takes it up into his being, with ' Doubtless with allusion to the excuses crebra commuiiione, sed raagis e contra- offered in the parable of the marriage sup- rio : omnis dignitas moralis credita vel per. confessa de se ipso dignitas vel sanctitas, ^ Est hie advertendum, quod omnis in- ilia nimis facit indignum Christianum, dignitas in Christiano allegabilis undecun- quia est superbia et liypocrisis pessima. que, si est cognita et confessa in veritate, coeca et mendosa. joa facit eum indignum quotidiana vel JANOW'S WORK DE KEGULIS V. ET N. T. 225 the assimilating process in the case of natural food. " The sinner — he says — is at the first unhke Jesus Christ; but, bj degrees, faster or slower, the life and spirit of the sinful man become transformed into the spirit and life of Jesus Christ, and pass into the most intimate union with him, no longer to be separated by any human power." He citea a remark from St. Augustin, where the latter represents Christ as say- ing, in relation to the holy supper. It is not thou who art to trans- form me into thyself, as the food for thy body, but thou art to be transformed into me. " And this is preeminently the way in which God is glorified, and wonderfully appears in his saints, that that Word, from whom all things have sprung, in whom and b^ whom are all things, — of. whom it is said, that he shall at last be all in all, — does in this way draw back again and transform all things into himself." i He then complains that the holy supper should in his own days be so commo-nly neglected. among Christians, that they no longer earnest- ly endeavored to have their spirit transformed into the life and Spirit of Christ, but rather hindered it. It seemed to be their great end and aim to have a comfortable and quiet life in the world. They did not strive to be transformed into Christ, but longed and labored, as much as in them lay, that Christ should be transformed into them- selves ; they sought not to become like to Jesus Christ, but desired rather that Jesus Christ should be like to themselves : 2 which was the greatest imaginable wrong, the very sin of Lucifer. It was a thing unworthy of this glorious sacrament, to think of compelling men to partake of it. This never should be done except in the case of those weak Christians who ventured not to come. He blames those that advised people of a wicked hfe to keep away from the sacrament ; for it could in nowise profit them to persevere in their wicked life, and, for this reason, continue to be strangers to the remedy which was the safest for them. Such unworthy persons therefore should rather be advised to leave off their wicked life, and in company with the saints go frequently to the Lord's festival. He declares his disagree- ment with the advice commonly given that every man should examine himself, and, if he found himself unworthy, abstain from the Lord's supper. In opposition to this, he cites the words of St. Paul, 1 Cor. 11 : 28, and lays emphasis on the phrase, Let a man examine himself and so let him eat, — not, and so let him abstain. He seems also to infer from these words, that this self examination was to serve only as a preparation to enable one worthily to partake of the holy sujjper. He notices another objection : It suffices to receive the holy sacra- ment but once ; for at this one time we receive all. To this he re- ' Quod illud verbum, ex quo omnia, in ad hoc se ponunt, ut honam vitam, seu quo omnia et per quod omnia, quod ulti- delicatam et quietam habeant in hoc mun- mo dicitur esse omnia in omnibus, tali do. Non laborant in Christum commu- niodo et via in se ipsum iterum convertit tari, sed cupiunt et quantum in se est, (a- vt diirerit omnia. ciunt, Christum in se ipsos converti, non - Nee satagunt, digne Titam suam car- desidcrant esse Christi ,Jesu similes, sed iialem et spiritum suura vacuum et inan- Christum Jesum cupiunt esse similein sib' I ni converti in vitam ct spiritum Jesu ipsis. (.'hristi, quinimo impediunt, quia de facto 226 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. plies : God has given it to his Son alone, to have life in himself so ag never to be in need of receiving it anew ; but for all creatures it is not enough to have received life once ; the life thus received, in order to be preserved, needs to be constantly communicated anew from above ; and in order that it may be thus communicated, in order that the natural life in created beings may be continually renewed in them, they require food. But, this holds good too of the true, divine, and blessed life. It is not enough that it should have once been commu- nicated from above through the medium of faith and baptism ; for the maintenance of the same, it was requisite that it should ever be given to them anew from the Father, by the Son, in the Holy Ghost, through the medium of the Lord's supper.' " Although — says he — our Lord gives to Christians the beginning of a life of grace, a blessed life, through faith, as it is written, The just shall live by faith, and through baptism ; yet he has in his infinite wisdom ordained this sacrament, and directed Christians to repeat it daily, or at least often, for the purpose of preserving or continuing this life of grace. The Christian, well-grounded in the faith, ought to know that Jesus the crucified is the beginning and the end of his life of grace, in the general and in the particular, because, without him, he can do nothing." 2 We may understand from these words how Matthias of Janow apprehended the relation of the holy supper to baptism ; that through the Lord's supper, the divine fife once received in baptism, should be renewedly and ever more completely appropriated in communion with Christ, till it should thoroughly interpenetrate the entire human nature. Accordingly, to the objection that since eternal life is communicated in the Lord's supper, it is enough to have received it once, he replies : " This does not follow ; for God, in his infinite providence, has not so ordained it ; but rather thus, that the man who seeks it, and in spirit partakes of it daily, should possess it." He employs the following illus- tration : " The sun continually gives out his light and communicates that element to our eyes ; but he that would take the sunlight into his eyes and enjoy the blessing of it, must have his eyes turned to the light, and be susceptible of its influences ; and he must constantly re- ceive the light from the sun, or as often as he would use it. But if he shuts his eyes, or from some accident ceases to receive the hght con stantly radiating from the sun, he shortly loses the Avhole, nor is a par- * Bet diligenter notandum, quod deus turae viventi secundum suara specialem pater soli unigenito filio dedit, vitam ha- sapientiam atque suaritatem ordinavit ci- bere in semet ipso ab aeterno et substan- bum et apposuit, ut sic per cibi sui proprii tialiter, et nuUi alterae (?) creaturae, sed crebram vel continuam sumptionem conti quia omnes creaturae accipient participa- nuaret delectabiliter et suaviter suam vi- tionem suae vitae a deo per filium in spi- tam. ritu sancto, et quod oranes creaturae ac- ^ Licet dominus dat piincipium vitae cepta vita a deo, specialiter vita beatiiica gratuitaeet beatiticae Christianis pertidem, et perpetua, de qua hie sermo, necesse ha- sicut scriptum est : Justus autem meus ex berent, earn accipere a deo suo, et quod tide vivit, et per baptismum, taraen cum nou sufficit semel accipere vitam suara a hoc ex immensa sua sapientia et bonitate deo in praesenti, sed necesse habet conti- ordinavit, hoc sacramentum altaris ct sta- nue respicerc, et pro vita sua conservanda tuit Christianis iterandum quotidie aut ct continuanda, et deum solum requirere alias saepe ad eandem vitam gratiae con- .id hoc. Igitur per hoc deus omni crea- servaudara et continuandam. JAXOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET X. T. 227 tide to be had till he turns once more to the sun." He calls the holy supper the food, which has been prepared for and given to men wounded, weak, and blind, to unclean sinners, to those who sigh and mourn over their sins. He complains of the clergy who were not willing to distrib- ute to these the food designed expressly for their use, but reserved it for angels, waited for angels, waited for such as led an angel-like hfe, to come and appropriate it ; or who would only partake of it for them- selves, because they were called the angels for the people, or were set over them as such; when the truth was. they were neither like the an- gels, nor set over them, but had been taken from that sinful race of man, and were set among sinful men, and over them. Such bad stew- ards — he says — crush to the earth, in their way of prescribing and of administering penance, the little ones in Christ, by a wisdom which, as it comes not from the Spirit of our most loving and bounteous Saviour, must needs be called a fleshly wisdom. It was their fault that such persons fell back into sin, torn away as they Avere, so cruelly and vio- lently, from the breast of their mother. He taxes them, namely, with troubling the consciences of these persons by requiring of them too se- vere a life, and laying on their necks intolerable burdens. He condemns the current opinion tJaat it was quite sufficient for christian laymen, if, after the preparation of the fasts, they partook of the communion once at Easter festival. " When those days are over — says he — they soon forget the whole, and fall back again into their old vain habits of life. They relax from the holy discipline they had commenced, and begin once more to put themselves on a level with this vain world, so that the man is scarcely if ever to be found, who, after having gone through his penance and received the holy sacrament, perseveres in the right way, and worthily reforms his life according to the requirements of Chris- tianity." To such outside repentance he applies what Christ says of the evil spirit driven from a man and then returning with seven others still worse than himself. The poor people are thus led to suppose that things forbidden are to be avoided only on fast days, that at these seasons alone penance is necessary to be done, and that it suf- fices, for salvation, to confess one's sins and receive the body and blood of the Lord ; to call to mind his passion, or vokmtarily suffer with him. " But with all this, they hold fast to the freedom of the flesh, conform in all else to this world, love the world and that which is of it the whole day. The same christian people — he says — think they are safely in Christ when, in carnal security, they have observed according to custom, the things of religion, without any of the true life and spirit of Jesus the crucified. 0, blindness of Israel! — he ex- claims — 0, fatal mistake ! which, if it were possible, might deceive even God's elect ; 0, deceitful and partial spirit of Satan ; and alas ! for the sufferings of the saints, who truly repent, who on account of this communion are insulted and despised by their seemingly pious breth- ren, and accused of heresy!" He then refers back to an example which had been cited against him, to the case of those old eremites, who could only receive the holy supper at rare intervals, and remarks : •' With these persons, it was altogether another aftair ; they had Uved 228 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. an angel-like life ; and what might be true of them, could not be ap- plied to those, who were placed amid the conflicts of the world. Those eremites had no priest to distribute the Lord's supper to them. In such cases, the Lord Christ is ever wont to supply, by his own presence, the absence of priests. To the objection that a special preparation is necessary in order to worthy participation in the communion, he replies : The preparation of souls for this festival, does not require a fortj- days' fast ; for the spirit of a Christian must be one ever pressing on- ward, never retrograding ; one ever rising in aspiration and prayer to God ; ever open to divine impressions. " But even suppose the spirit not to be in this right state of preparation ; yet it may transport itself at once into the proper frame. For spirit and will are not bound to time or to place. For to these conditions men's bodies are subject, but not the soul and spirit ; the latter perform their actions in a sphere out of space and time." ^ "' The activity of the spirit and especially when turned upon spirit- ual things, excludes the train of successive motions ; for it proceeds from that which is incapable of division and relates to that which is incapable of division and above space and time, which introduce suc- cession.^ Next, a worthy preparation cannot proceed from the spirit of man, but must proceed rather from the spirit of Christ, which is omnipotent, and in which therefore no division of successive moments can find place in matters pertaining to its own essence, namely, spirit- ual things. What is said in Holy Scripture of the paschal lamb once offered has reference only to the one sacrifice offered by Christ ; but far from us be the thought that Christians are to celebrate the memory of Christ's passion only once a year, — a remembrance which ought on the contrary to be uninterruptedly present to their minds. "3 He sup- poses the case of a priest who should say to a person wishing to re- ceive the communion, Go away ; for to-day thou art unworthy ; and come back worthier to-morrow or in a week ; in the place of such a person he would reply, I know I am unworthy ; therefore it is that I come begging and trembhng to thee ; because thou hast received in my behalf from my God and Jesus Christ the power to render me worthy who am unworthy, since by thy prayer thou canst absolve me, and by giving me my portion of our daily bread, canst change me into the same ; and all that pertains to the making me worthy of that bread I have already, in my perfect will ; for to will is present with me, but how to perform that which is good, I find not. But all that which the spirit must further produce out of me and in me, I hope to find in that daily bread. Therefore I beg of you to give me this day our dai- ly bread, and am in haste for it. Thus strengthened and enlightened, ' Quodsi forte est spiritus in eo non successive, quoniam sunt indivisibilium ad praeparatus, tune spiritus potest subito indivisibilia supra locum et tempus, quae Ki-aeparari, turn quia spiritus seu mens aut deferunt successionem. ^•oluntas lion requirit tempus, non locum ; '■' Absit autem hoc a Cliristianis, quod his enim corpora sunt subjecta, non mens, debeant solum semel in anno agere me- iion spiritus hominis, sed omnino suas moriam dominicae passionis, quae conti i)pL'rationes agunt extra tempus et locum, nuis momentis debet in ipsoruni pectori - Turn quia actus mentis et spiritus, bus demorari. praccipue quoad divina, sunt sine motu JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 229 and made alive in Christ, I shall in him find a waj to accomplish what is already present in ray will. But if thou deemest me not worthy today to receive from thee the daily bread, as I am today unworthy, so neither wilt thou present it to me to-morrow ; because neither to- morrow, nor the next day, nor ever, so long as I live in this body of death and sin, shall I be worthy enough of this our heavenly bread, so far as that itself is concerned. He stands up for the pious lay- men who demanded with importunity the daily communion, and vindi- cating them from the reproach of rashness, declares it rather a work of the grace of God and of necessity. " As regards the former — says he — I assume it to be well known, that the longing to partake of Christ's body and blood, from faith and love, does not spring from flesh and blood, and cannot spring from them ; but only from the ope- ration of divine grace or from the spirit of Jesus Christ." He pro- ceeds to speak of those who, bowed down under a sense of their sins, dare not come forward to partake of the holy supper, and remarks that persons in this temper of mind, who are so deeply penetrated with the sense of their own un worthiness, are the most worthy of all. " Hence that person — he says — is in the end filled with still greater love and ardent longing for the Lord Jesus, who at the very time he falls into such divers temptations, flies to the Lord Jesus, and hui*ries to his sacrament, and though all would frighten him from it, still an- swers : Against 1dm only have I sinned, and done evil in his sight, and therefore I fly to him alone ; for though he slay me, yet will I trust in him, and though he thrust me down to hell, still I know that even in this he does what is best, for he cannot do wrong ; and I trust that he will also bring me out of the pit, He who alone casteth down to hell, and bringeth up therefrom." In this he sees the character of true love, which casteth out fear, which is stronger than death, which many waters cannot quench nor floods drown. When in opposition to these views was held up the necessity of submission to ecclesiastical order, the direction of Christ to his disciples to observe and do what- soever was bidden them by those who sat in Moses' seat, he answered : *' Yes, if they build up the communities and put forth godly com- mands ; but if they knowingly pull them down, and teach men to sin, Ave are by no means bound to obey them in these things, but ought rather to follow the inward anointing, which teacheth all things, or the spirit of Jesus Christ, who is everywhere, and especially in God's children, whom he himself directly guides, as the only teacher and true shepherd." It was necessary to obey God rather than men, to try the spirits to see whether they were of God. He affirms, that the primitive priest following Christ's example had always first taken the holy supper himself, and then distributed it to the others in order. tSuch had continued to be the practice from the time of the Apostles for the period of a thousand years, until in these more recent times, through the increase and spread of sin, this perpetual sacrifice had been abolished. To the objection that the spiritual jjarticipation was lufficient he answers : " It is something greater, something more per- manently for the saving good of the Christian to eat and drink the iu- VOL. V. 20 230 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. carnate word in the most inward and real manner, than to hear and believe his words. The truth did not declare that He who speaketh or he who heareth my words, the same shall abide in me and I in him ; but Christ repeatedly says : He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood remaineth in me and I in him." It was objected by opponents, that the holy supper would by too frequent use become too every-day an affair, and lose its true significance. To this he replies : " Never will Christians grow weary of it ; on the other hand, the longer they intermit it, the more will the holy longing for it abate in them, and the pains which they would otherwise take to enjoy it diminish. Another delight, the lust of the flesh, will take possession of the soul, darken it, and cause it to forget that holy joy in the sacrament. By worldli- ness the spirit is rendered daily more unfit for receiving the holy sup- per." This truth he finds typified in the behavior of the Jews with the manna ; when they longed after the fleshpots and cucumbers of Egypt, the manna Avas no longer relished ; and when they arrived in the land of promise, and began to busy themselves with cultivating the fruits of the earth, the manna was taken from them. A simple spirit- ual participation was sufficient, and might be substituted for the bodily, where the longing was present, but for unavoidable reasons could not be satisfied. " By special privilege — he says — not according to the common rule, Christ himself brings about in the most hidden manner the spiritual participation of his body by those of whom he knows it to be true, that they worthily long to partake of his body, and would gladly receive it every day, and pray for it, in their prayers to God in the Paternoster and ask it of men, the ministers of the church, — Christians who, when they cannot enjoy the privilege of the sacrament, mourn and sigh over the deprivation with an unendurable hunger and thirst, such and such alone does the spirit of Christ visit directly, when and where he pleases, causing them by virtue of his own grace to manducate spiritually and bodily, sometimes in the mass, sometimes after the mass, morning or evening, by night or by day, in a secret and invisible manner."' He reaffirms it over and over that pious laymen stood in no respect whatever inferior to the priests as proper subjects for the enjoyment of the Lord's supper, but frequently surpassed them in holy simplicity and innocence. In partaking of that sacrament the most important qualification was great simplicity of faith ; hence all human science served rather to distract and dissipate, to destroy devo- tion, fervency of the affections, and stability oj^ faith.^ It is evident ' Illis dico spiritus Jesu manducationem vult et cum vult, ex sua gratia fiiciens ip- sui toi-poris spiritualem ex singular! pri- sos corporalitcr spiritualiter manducare, vilcgio, non ex communi pacto et ordina- aliquando in niissa, aliquando post mis- tione solusmet operatur intime, quos ipse sam, post prandium, de mane, de vespere, videt, quam digne affectant Christi corpus in nocte vel.in die, latenter et occulte. manducare et vellent omni die, et iioc ro- ^ 8implicitate sancta et innocentia, quo gant et apud deum in oratione dominica ad hoc ipsis plebejis suttragante praecipue St apud homines et ministros ecclcsiae, et circa beatiticum altaris sacramentum, ubi si fieri ipsis sacramentaliter non potest, requiritur maxima simplicitas sanctae fidei dolent et ingemiscunt. fame et siti vexati, Christianae ; et omnis scientia humana ui spiritu suo et necessitate male patien- ideo magis ii)idem venit ad dissipationem, ■»cs ;talihus igitur solum occurrit spirit Jesu devotionis et caritatis destructionem et iu Ciiristi, et plurimum si vult et quaudo crcdendo tirmitatem. JANOW'S WORK DE REGULIS V. ET N. T. 231 from the passages above cited that Matthias of Janow constantly pre- supposes no diflference to exist, as to the privilege of the full enjoy- ment of the holy supper in both kinds, between priests and lajaiien ; and he expressly points to the sacrifices of the Old Testament as ante- •'types of this sacrament in as far as both forms belonged to its com- pleteness and integrity ;i and, as he says, that the whole multitude should taste the sweetness of the sacrament that is hidden beneath the species of bread and wine, it follows that in his view the whole multi- tude should partake of both forms of the Lord's supper.'-* Matthias of Janow, as we have already remarked in passing, men- tions among the signs of the time which indicated the degeneracy of the church, and announced the coming in of Antichrist, the schism between the two popes ; and in common with many of the best men of his age he regarded this schism as a symptom of the distempered condition of the church, and an admonition from God designed to bring men to the consciousness of her corruption and to awaken the longing for her regeneration. This schism he ascribes to the pleasure-pursuing, pomp- loving, worldly spirit of the cardinals. " It never arose — he says — from any love which the cardinals had for Christ and his church, but from their love of themselves and their love of the world.^ Nor did this schism tend ultimately to the injury of the church, but was rather a benefit, inasmuch as the kingdom of Antichrist would thereby be more easily and more speedily destro3^ed. Those days would be short- ened for the elect's sake. Besides, the church would get rid of the numberless multitude of hypocrites. He affirms, too, that it was only the external appearance of the church which could be affected by this schism, her essential being was raised above its influence. " The body of the omnipotent and altogether indivisible Jesus Christ, the commu- nity of saints, is not divided, neither indeed can be divided : " — that church which, by virtue of its eternal and immutable unity, depends wholly on the unity of God, and of the Lord Jesus Christ, and of his spirit. As he discovers in the prevailing selfish element the cause of all divisions of the church and of all her corruptions, so it seems to him that restoration of church unity and a reformation of the church can proceed only from the overcoming of that selfish element. He says, the blissful unity of the church can never be truly restored, until men governed by self-love are removed entirely out of the way, and their places filled by those in vastly multiplied numbers who over- flow with zeal for the true unity of the church, — men who seek not their own but the things of Jesus Christ ; which selfseeking he ap- plies not to those alone who seek their own in the things of this world, but to those also who in spiritual things are seeking only to set up ' Sacrificium Icgis fuit hoc sacrificium Christiani. quotquot ibidem congregati, propter dualitatcm iitrius(jue speciei, sumebant cornmuniter de illo pane coelcsti panis et vini, ex quibus hoc sacrificium a ministerio et de adice, ita quod primus integratur sacerdos accepit, dehinc dedit omnibus. - Et omnis multitude dulcedinis sacra- •* Cum non ex eo scliisma hoc factum mento sul) speciebus panis et vini abscond- est, quod dilexissent Christum Jcsum et ita; and. in the passage above quoted, the ejus ecclesiara, scd ex eo. (juod se ipsos important words in this view : Omnes amaveruut et huuc mundum. 232 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. themselves and their party, looking down with contempt upon all others.' As one symptom of the fall of the church, and a premoni tory sign of the last times, he considers the various oppositions of party, of which each would claim Christ exclusively for itself ; — the party of the Roman popes among the Italians, the party of the popes at Avignon among the French, the Greek church, the different orders of monks, spiritual and secular fraternities. Everywhere the cry was : Lo here is Christ, and lo there is Christ. The church was no longer a city on a hill, conspicuous to all, but split into three parts.^ But although he reckons schism generally among the signs of corruption, yet the greatest right belonged in his opinion, comparatively speaking, to Urban VI ; and he regarded it generally as a work of Satan and Antichrist, that Clement VI. should gain such power against the law fid pope ; and that so many persons distinguished even for intelli- gence could be deceived. " Antichrist — he says — has exalted him- self against the true pope. Urban VI. He has persecuted and killed the saints ; and attacked the entire church with such party spirit and craft, that he has drawn wholly over to himself the sacred college of the cardinals and made other colleges wavering, and the whole body of the wise, as for example, the university of Paris and other universi- ties." We have already observed, how, since the time of Militz, the an- tagonism between a reform and anti-reform tendency among the clergy and laity had been continually evolving itself. Matthias of Janow was, without doubt, at this time the centre and nucleus of the reform tendency ; as we might easily infer, indeed, that he would be, from his principles thus far unfolded ; and he himself, in various places, mentions the existence of this antagonism: " They — says he — who are apostles and preachers of Antichrist, oppress the apostles, the wise men and prophets of Christ, persecuting them in various ways, and boldly asserting, that these ministers of Christ are heretics, hypo- crites, and Antichrists. And since many and mighty members of Antichrist'^ go forth in a countless variety of ways, they persecute the members of Christ who are few and weak, compelling them to go from one city to another by driving them from the synagogues, (^ex- cluding them from the fellowship of the church). Whenever one of the society of such Christians ventures to be somewhat more free of speech, and to hve more wortliily of Christ than is coui.iiun, he is ' Ego illos hie piito magis se ipsos teni, Francigenas ad occidenteiii. — Ecce amante.s et quae sua sunt inquirentes pri- ol)Scuritas solis et lunae, ut et civitas po- vate, qui non tam in rebus corporalibus et sita supra niontera abscondita et ohnubi- variis, quae sua sunt quacrunt, non i.[\\\w lata, ([uod videri non possit. — Hodie di- proxinioruni vel eonimunitatis Cliristi tide- cunt Francigenae cum suo oecidentali liuni, sed et in rebus spiritualilius et prim- eomitivo : liic est Christus, Italiei vero et uriis tantum sua commoda inquirunt. ex- Komani ad meridiem attirmant dicentes : sortes ab amore communis fraternitatis imo hie est Christus et non alibi. Et ec- fhristianae, ([ua composita est ex perfectis clesia Graecorum ad oiientem asseverat et imperfectis, ex justis et intirmis. pertinaeiter dieens : non ibi nee alibi, sed ■^ C'ivitas ilia magna orbis christianorum hie nobiscum est Christus. in tres j)artes de taeto est conscissa, sive ' Membra fortia et multa antichristL liomanos ad meridiem, Graeeos ad orien- JANOW AND THE SYNOD OF PRAGUE IN 1389. 233 directly called a Beghard, or by some other heretical name, or merely Bet down as a hypocrite or fool. If he do but in a small degree imitate his crucified master, and confess his truth, he will experience at once a fierce persecution from some side of the thick body of Anti- christ. If thou dost not live just as they do, thou wilt be judged to be nothing else but a poor superstitious creature or a false guide." This antagonism became strikingly manifest at the remarkable synod of Prague, of the year 1389, when the dominant party pronounced against the principle of reform : that synod by which, as it is said, Matthias of Janow was compelled to make a recantation — particu- larly of the principles he held in relation to the full participation of the laity in the Lord's supper. There may be some question with regard to the nature of the explanations which he made on this occa- sion, and whicli were interpreted as a recantation. It is evident, at least, that subsequently he continued to inculcate the same principles, and was zealously opposed to that synod. Let us listen to his own words on this subject : " Alas ! several colleges and the multitude of those who style themselves masters and men of wisdom, lay it down as an ordinance of God in the church, that images of wood, of stone, and of silver, and such like, are to be prayed to and worshipped by Christ- ians, though Holy Scripture is in plain and express contradiction thereto: " — where he appeals to the law of the Old Testament. He ingenuously rejects, as we have already shown, the testimony cited from Thomas Aquinas and other schoolmen, in defence of this image- worship. Simply on account of this was the reproach of idolatry cast upon the church by Jev.-s and Pagans. " Although a sophist and logician might perhaps defend himself against the arguments used by the Jews, without doing violence to his conscience and his faith ; yet the unlearned people of the christian communities are undoubtedly overcome by them, and seriously injured in purity of christian faith." The allusion here is to the artificial interpretations and distinctions, employed among the Greeks since the seventh century, and among the Latins since the triumph of image-worship, to defend this image- worship against the reproach of idolatry, and to reconcile it with the purely spiritual worship of God ; a method which the synod of Prague seems also to have employed. But Matthias of Janow, a man so watchfully observant of the wants of the people, knew how little capa- ble the simple laity were of comprehending all this, and how much the purity of faith among them must accordingly suffer iujury or be dis- turbed thereby. Hence he remarks : '' Teachers say a great deal in the schools, which ought never to be so preached before the common people ; though holy cliurch has tolerated images and figures, and teaches that they may be venerated, yet she has never taught that they should be prayed to or adored." Then, after having shown the corrupting iutiuence of an extravagant image-worship on the religious life, and of the custom of extolling the miracles wrought by them, he remarks : " Yet there are at the present day many great and famous men who hold that such things are of use to the simple ; nay, that it is useful to preach such things, because men should piously believe, that 20* 234 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Buch things are of God. God, then, according to what they aflBrm, has, in these times, passed by his saints and his chosen, and turned his regard to images of stone. And as God has ceased to perform hig wonders in his own name and by his word, he now works them through wood and stone. ^ Or does a holy and faithful God, perhaps, display his power by these images and other such lifeless things ? And would he thus, by making that power depend on such images, secure an en- trance among his christian people for the idolatry of the pagans ? Or would he, by this, show favor to Satan, that the latter making himself like God, might, by lying works, be able to appropriate divine honors to himself? Or is it perhaps permitted the great enemy, in punish- ment of unthankful Christians, to enter into all forms of seduction and falsehood, carrying out through the instrumentality of men that seem to others very pious and holy, but are not so in fact, his work of seduction. by performing his signs and wonders through them ? They have decided and ordained by synodal decree that it should be preach- ed to the people that they ought piously to believe a divine power resides in wooden images, and painted canvas." And he goes on to say : " Who can fail to perceive, how corrupting this must be to the rude and sensuous people, when he but considers that the people of the laity at the present day, who have not the spirit of the Lord Jesus, are not at all able to rise in spirit to spiritual things ! " And he adds : Because some preachers of the church of Christ and of his cross, have not disputed the propriety of the thing in general, that men should have images, but have attacked by sound christian doc- trine the fables and inventions of men and the deceptions of certain individuals,2 therefore the above mentioned men of wisdom have assail- ed these preachers, held them up to public scorn, and sought in every way to compel them to utter falsehood ; ^ then they have enjoined silence on them, for a time, that these stones may circulate, the truth of Christ being thus trampled under foot.^ " How then can that man — he says — who sees that the truth stands thus, and judges correct- ly of individual facts, say or believe otherwise than that those times of Antichrist are at hand, when he finds that such an ordinance has resulted from the long deliberation of our wise men, teachers and doc- tors of theology and of the canon law, in a solemn and famous assem- bly ? Hence not a man was found among them, to stand forth inge- nuously in defence of the truth." "All that now remains for us — he says — is to desire and pray for reform by the destruction of Anti- christ himself, and to lift up our heads, for our redemption draweth nigh." He remarks, again, about that synod of Prague, that the ' lyiturnc propterea, quod cessavit do- •* Mox hi praefati sapientes, comprelien- minus Jesus miracula et virtutes suas in sis ipsis praedicatoribus, eosdein ludibrio iiomiue suo et per verbum operari, jam per publice expositos omnibus modis ipsos lapides et lij^na operatur ? meutiri compellere sunt eouati. - C^uibusdara praedicatoribus ecclesiae ■• Dehinc silentium ipsis pro tempore Christi et ejus crucis, eo quod non qui- posuerunt, ut proiude tabulae supra de- dem imagines liabendas, sed fabulas et scriptae promotioucm luibeant et proces- talia tictitia iiomiimm atque deceptiones sum, veritate Christi Jesu siccine in platea quorundain sunt aggressi impugnandum corrueute. per doctriuam sauam Cliristi. MATTHIAS OF JAXOW. JOHN HliSS. 235 masters who endeavored to draw away the laity from the frequent participation of the Lord's supper, had, in fact forbidden by a synodal decree that this sacrament should be given to the faithful who de- manded it, oftener than once a month. These are his words : " Alas ! for myself, they have forced me by their importunate clamor at that synod to agree that the faithful generally should not be invited tc daily communion." 2. John Jffuss, the Bohemian Reformer. Next after these reformers, or men inspired with the spirit of re- form, came the individual through whose instrumentality it was that the more general and violent movement for which the way had thus been prepared broke forth, in Bohemia. John Huss was born, on the 6th of July, 1369, at Hussinetz, a Bo- hemian village lying within the circle of Prachim and towards the bor- ders of Bavaria. Descended from a poor family, he was early inured to labor and deprivation, and thus laid the foundation for those Chris tian virtues, which afterwards distinguished him. He studied philoso- phy and theologj^ at the university of Prague. This university, it is true, was a seat of churchly orthodoxy ; but at the same time the an- tagonistic tendencies of two different nationalities seem already to have begun there gradually to unfold themselves — the strict church tendency of the Germans, as opposed to the more liberal one of the Bohemians. The teacher of Huss, Stanislaus of Znaim, belonged to the more liberal party, as we shall hereafter see. In the year 1396, Huss received his master's degree, and began himself to lecture, at the university, in the year 1398. A man, however, of his Christian seriousness and deep- seated piety, must certainly have felt himself shocked and repelled by the worldly lives of the degenerate Bohemian clergy and monks, and driven, in this way, into a more confirmed habit of communing with him- self and seeking after God. We have seen indeed how, ever since the times of John Militz, an opposition had been springing up between the great majority of worldly priests and a smaller company earnestly de- voted to their holy vocation and to the cause of God among the Bohe- mian clergy. We have seen how Militz gave birth to a tendency that connected itself more closely with the New Testament, and how, in particular, Matthias of Janow directed attention to the apostolical church, and to a reform" after the pattern of that church. Huss could not have remained unaffected by such influences. Between the two parties, then already struggling with each other in Bohemia, he must 30on have made his choice. The influence of Matthias of Janow's wiitings on his direction as a theologian, is not to be mistaken. A cir- cumstance which had much to do in moulding the religious character of Huss, and in beating the path for his active labors as a reformer, was his call to discliarge the spiritual oflice in a sphere where he could ob- tain a more intimate knowledge of the religious needs of the people, and was brought into more immediate and living contact with them. In the year 1391, John of Milheim, a member of the royal council of 236 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Bohemia, and Creutz, a merchant (the latter of whom gave the reai estate, a house which belonged to him, for the object), associated for the purpose of founding a chapel, to be devoted particularly to the preaching of the gospel in the vulgar tongue, for the benefit of the peo- ple. We have an example, here, of that practical christian spirit which, since the time of Militz's labors, had been awakened among the laity in Bohemia, and to the existence of which Matthias of Janow bore his testimony, as we have seen. This spirit is also evidenced, in a remarka- ble manner, in the original title-deed of the foundation, which runs as follows : " The merciful God, who in the seed of his word has left be- hind him a provision for them that fear him, so ordered it, by the insti- tutions of the fathers, that the preaching of God's word should not be bound, it being the freest as it is the most profitable act for the church and her members;" and then, after appealing for proof to Christ's words, the founder goes on to say : " For had he not bequeathed to us the seed of God's word and of holy preaching, we should have been like unto Sodom and Gomorrha." Christ moreover had given commis- sion to his disciples, when he appeared to them after his resurrection, to preach the word, so as to preserve constantly in the world the living memory of himself. But since all his actions are doctrines to them that truly believe on him, he (the founder) had carefully considered that the city of Prague, though possessing many places consecrated to the worship of God and used for a variety of purposes connected with that worship, was still destitute of a place devoted especially to preaching ; but preachers, particularly in the Bohemian tongue, were under the un- befitting necessity of strolling about for this purpose, to houses and corners ; therefore the founder endowed a chapel consecrated to the Innocents, and named ' Bethlehem,' or the House of Bread, for the use of the common people, that they might be refreshed with the bread of holy preaching. • Over this church a preacher was to be placed as rec- tor, whose special duty it should be, to hold forth the word of God, on every Sunday and festival day, in the Bohemian tongue. ^ It is a proof of the high reputation in which Huss already stood, and of the expectations excited by the peculiar bent of his religious character, that in the year 1401 he should be appointed the preacher over this founda- tion. His sermons, glowing with all that fervor of love from which they j)roceeded, and backed up by a pious, exemplary life, coupled with gen- tle and amiable manners, made a powerful impression. A little com- munity gathered around him, of warm and devoted friends ; and a new Christian life started forth, from him, among the people. He be- came more intimately acquainted, as a curer of souls to the lower class ' Quam Bethlehem, quod interpretatiir nus ad sonum campanum diebus singulis domus panis, censui appeUandain liac con- ab ecclesia celebribus mane et facto pran- sideratione, ut ibidem popuius communis dio, et tempore adventus et quadragesiinae et Christi tideles pane praedicationis sane- mane tantum horis solitis, et prout in aliis tae retici debeant. See Felzel, account of ecclesiis praedicari est consuetum, verbum the Life of King Wenceslaus, Frajjue, dei communi populo civitatis in vulgar! 1788; Document No. 81, p. 103. Bohemico sit ad praedicandum astrictus. * Words of tlie Record of foundation Pag. 105. respecting hi'-i duties : Ut dictus capella- HUSS PLACED AS PREACHER AT BETHLEHEM CHAPEL. 287 of the people, with the corrupting influence of a religion reduced en tirely to a round of outward ceremonies, and of the superstition which gave countenance and support to immorality, and was thus led to attack the Boui'ces of so much mischief, to dwell with increasing earnestness upon the essence of a practical Christianity, bringing forth its fruits from a principle seated in the heart, and to rebuke with emphatic severity the prevailing vices. So long as he chiefly attacked the corruption among the laity, he was left unmolested. The new archbishop of Prague, Zbynek of Ilasenburg, appointed to that office in the year 1403, was not himself, by any means, a man of purely spiritual bent, but one ac- customed to mingle freely in secular affliirs, and even to take a part in warlike enterprizes ; yet he was opposed to ecclesiastical abuses, and to the superstition therewith connected. He was desirous of introducing a stricter discipline into his diocese, and he must have had some knowl- edge of Huss, and have esteemed him as a zealous reformer ; for, in en- tering upon his duties as archbishop, he invited Huss to give him direct information of all the abuses which came under his personal observa- tion ; or, if he should not happen to be in Prague, to inform him by letter.i Accordingly he availed himself of the assistance and advice of Huss in an important transaction which took place soon after his en- trance upon office, the object of which was to suppress a certain super- stition and the abuses which had grown out of it. The matter was of this sort : at Wilsnack, in the district of Priegnitz, a church had been destroyed by a knight some time in the fourteenth century. Part of a stone altar had been left standing. In one of its cavities were found three wafers, colored red, as if with blood ; a phenomenon the like of which has often occurred from the earliest times, and which has as of- ten, under various religions, been construed into the miraculous ; but a phenomenon satisfactorily explained by more recent investigations into natural causes, it being now well known that bread and similar sub- stances, long exposed to moisture, are wont to be covered with an animal product, the constituent parts of which are discernible only under the microscope, but which to the naked eye bears a close resemblance to blood.2 But in these times, the remarkable appearance w^as regarded as a symbol of the blood of Christ. The report of so extraordinary a miracle created a great sensation : stories were soon circulated, of won- derful cures performed on the spot ; numerous pilgrimages were made to it from Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Hungary, Poland, and Bohe- mia. Various tricks would naturally be resorted to, in that age, by the corrupt clergy and monks, to help on the self-deception, which could not fail to be attended with great mischief to the religious and moral ' This is evident from a letter written sentia per litcram defectum Inijusniodi by Huss to tins archbishop at the time nuntiarem. This fragment of the letter when a rupture had already taken place was first published by the Bohemian his- between the two men, in which he adverts torian, Palacky, in his History of Bohemia, to tlie invitation then given to him. His HI. 1 p. 216. .vords are: Saepissime reitero, qualiter * See the Extract from Ehrenberg's pa- in princi])io vestri regiminis mihi pro re- per on the Monas prodigiosa in the month- gula ])aternitas vestra instituer.at, ut quot- ly report of the Academy of Sciences, in iescuiKiiie ali(iuem defectum erga regimen Berlin, for October, 1848. conspicerem. mo.\ personaliter aut in ab- 238 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. life of the people. Archbishop Zbynek appointed, therefore, a commit- tee of three masters to inquire into the matter ; and as their report was unfavorable to the pilgrims, the spurious character of those pre- tended miracles having been exposed, Zbynek put forth an or^er pro- hibiting all such pilgrimages from his own diocese. One of these masters was Huss, who probably had great influence in bringing about the de- cision.' This was his first opportunity of standing forth publicly against superstition, and it was done under the authority of the archbishop himself. He composed, on this occasion, his paper on the proper mode of regarding the glorified blood of Christ.^ In this tract it is very evi dent that he was still entirely given to the prevailing doctrines of the church, even on the article of transubstantiation ; but he ventured al- ready to call in question the stories generally believed since the time of Paschasius Radbert, relative to the miraculous appearances of the body and blood of Christ. We already find in him a representative of the genuine Christian spirit, as opposed to the miracle-hunting spirit of his age. " The glorified body of Christ — he says — exists dimen- sionally in heaven alone, though truly and really in the sacrament of the altar. Nothing that belonged to this body could be separated from it and present, by itself, alone upon earth. All that is said, there- fore, about relics of Christ's body, or of his blood, as being present in this place or that, must be false. He who pretends to believe anything of this sort, dishonors the blood of Christ, no less than if he worship- ped, under that name, the blood of a dead horse. But alas! — he says — the iniquity of greedy ecclesiastics has increased to such extent that messengers of Antichrist, following their master the devil, have exhibited their own blood as the blood of Christ, at the eucharist, and the same is adored by foolish and unbelieving Christians, who unbehev- ingly seek after wonders." He calls those who were seeking after such wonders, more unbelieving than Thomas, because though after the Lord had shown himself to the unbelieving Thomas he believed, they would not believe on him even when glorified and exalted at the right hand of the Father, but required sensible signs of his presence. Christ was now hidden from sight, present only to faith ; this constituted the es- sence of faith, the meritum fidei, that it takes hold of things hidden, in- visible ; this was therefore more wholesome and conducive to the life of religion than if the blood of Christ were visibly present. We ought confidently to believe that if it had been better for us to see Christ bodily present among us, he would not have deprived us of this privi- lege. But because faith would be destitute of merit, if accompanied with the experience of sense, therefore Christ with his blood has been pleased to withdraw himself from our sight. He applies to his contempo- raries what St. Paul says of the sign-seeking spirit of the Jews, to whom Christ crucified was a stumbling block. Like Matthias of Janow, he is ' Huss Iiimself mentions this commis- * Deteiminatio qnaestionis, cum suo sion : Etiam fuimus tres magistri deputa- tractatulo de omni sanguine Olj'istf glo- ti per dominum archiepiscopum ad exam- rificato. Joannis Hus opera, N(^lil^erg inandum homines, de quibus praedicabant 1558, torn. I. fol 154 pag. 2 sq. fuisse facta miracula. Fol. 162, 2. HUSS OX THE WILSNACK MIRACLE. 239 inclined to attribute the miracles with which the wicked clergy sought to delude the people, to evil spirits. The laity, by their confidence in such miracles, were drawn away from the essential thing, true love, and hardened in their sins. Like Matthias of Janow, he applies the words of Christ to those that would say, Lo ! here is Christ, or there, to those who said. The blood of Christ is here, or it is there ; they were not to be believed. Like Matthias of Janow, he looks upon those pious frauds by which the laity were led astray, as the present secretly- working power of Antichrist, and applies to them what St. Paul, in the epistles to the Thessalonians, says of the workings of Antichrist. The faithful should, in a proper way, use all diligence to live simply accord- ing to the law of the gospel, and put no faith in fables and lying won- ders, or wonders actually wrought by evil spirits or wicked men. Thus would they, in a more quiet manner, grow confirmed in the faith of the Lord. Such miracles rendered it the more necessary for each individ- ual to fortify himself with the word of God, so as to avoid being deceived by false prophets and false Messiahs, whose •appearance Christ foretold. He cites one example of fraud : A citizen of Prague, with a lame hand, had hung up a silver hand as a votive oiFering, in honor of the bloody wafers in Wilsnack. Wishing, however, to test the honesty of the pi-iests, he staid three days in the place ; but before the time expired, he must hear how a priest had publicly referred to this offering of the silver hand, as a proof of the miraculous cui'e of the lame one. The citizen of Prague convicted him of the falsehood by showing his hand, which remained as lame as ever. And for the truth of this statement, Huss appeals to the testimony of many who knew the person referred to. "• Truly — he says — if the priests faithfully observed Christ's evangeli- cal counsel and preached Chnsfs ivords to the people, rather than ly- ing wonders, our gracious Saviour would guide the steps of both priests and people out of the bad way, the way of sin and falsehood." He complains that, in their distresses, people were more inclined to invoke help from the blood of Christ, than from God, and to place their hopes upon a mere creature than upon the Creator. Even now, says he, it is not easy to find a district which is not famous for some appearance of the blood of Christ. The worst transgressors, robbers and the like, were made to feel secure in sin by their confidence in such blood, and these were the best patrons and friends of this miraculous blood, though they persecuted Christ himself, and unrighteously shed his blood, in his members. The archbishop had directed the curates to announce on every Sunday that the pilgrimage to Wilsnack was forbidden on pain of the ban. But though the young archbishop stood at the beginning on these friendly terms with Huss, still we might be led to presume from the different spirit of the two men, that it would be impossible for them to unite their efforts in promoting reform except to a certain extent, and that an occasion might easily arise in which this internal opposition would be forced to show itself by some outward manifestation. It •was impossible that Huss, with the spirit of reform by which he wa^ 240 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. actuated, should stop short at the bounds which the archbishop from the position which he occupied would be ^pt to prescribe to himself. In connection with the antagonism of the reform and anti-reform ten- dencies existing in the movements of the time, it would not be long before such an occasion must present itself. Aside from the political interests, which afterwards became mixed in, Huss could not fail in the end to be involved by his very principles of reform, which led him farther than he could calculate upon, in a quarrel with the arch- bishop. For Huss, who was governed solely by the religious inter- est, would be continually led by it to take one step after another in his attacks on the corruption of the church ; whilst, on the other hand, Zbynek was induced by reasons of policy to stop short, as soon as he had any grounds to apprehend that he was coming into conflict with the hierarchical system. Huss needed no excitement from without to keep his zeal for reform in vigorous activity. One thing, moreover, which must have had great influence in giving the turn to his theolo- gical development, was, that he had diligently devoted himself to the study of the Bible, of the old church fathers, particularly Augustin, in whose writings he seems to have been deeply read, and of Kobert of Lincoln ; — of all which we have abundant evidence in his writings. In the ideas thrown out by Matthias of Janow, the needful matter had already been supplied ; and from these alone, without any additional influence from Wicklif, a contest might in these times easily evolve itself, capable of being pushed to any extreme by the opposition of the great anti-reform party. Whatever lies involved in principles that have once found entrance into human consciousness, is ever shaped forth and carried still further out by the movements of history. Wc find in the principles of Janow the incipient germ of the whole reform movement in Bohemia ; and it might have remained wholly national, wholly independent of the English spirit. And, in fact, we may constantly observe this difterence, that, in the theology of Oxford, the speculative spirit was the predominant one ; while the Bohemian re- form, from those first promoters and representatives of it, whose char- acters we have already described, had taken an altogether practical direction. It is true, that so far as it regards the consequences which \ outwardly manifested themselves at first, it had great influence, as will hereafter appear, that the reform spirit in Prague stood in some connection with the opinions of Wicklif, denounced as heretical. The reform movements in Bohemia would not, perhaps, separated from this connection, have risen so suddenly to so great importance ; still we cannot on this account agree with those who ascribe to Wicklif 's writ- ings so great an influence on the development of the reform opposition io the hierarchy in Bohemia. It is, moreover, of great importance here, to anything like a right understanding of the phenomena of the religious and theological spirit, to distinguish well internal and ex- ternal causes, internal and external connections. And if, on the one hand, through the influence of Wickhf's writings, and the connection of the movements originating with Huss with those excited by Wicklif, the position of the reform party in Bohemia afterwards became a HUSS AND WICKLIF. 241 dangerous one, still we must consider, on the other hand, that it was precisely owing to the way in which Huss connected himself with Wicklif, that a large number of friends and adherents were procured for him at the outset, wiiom he could hardly have gained by the pure- ly reform and anti-hierarchical interest; — friends, indeed, who, for the very reason that they did not sym[)athize at all with the interest for a purely Christian reform which actuated Huss from the begin- ning, did not harmonize with him in temper and spirit, and would on that very account be soon led to separate from him, and even to come out against him. Only so long as it was an affair of the school, and particularly of the philosophical school, and this affair was treated as a common cause of the nation, could they remain connected with him ; but this very circumstance which, at the outset, gave to the party of Huss so great an ascendancy at Prague university, could not have existed independently of the connection between the reform tendency in Bohemia and the cause of Wicklif 's school ; as will be apparent from the facts now to be presented. A Bohemian princess, Anna, sister to King Wenceslaus, had mar- ried Richard II, king of England.^ This would of course lead the way to a more familiar intercourse between the two nations ; and the disciples of Wicklif, who were enthusiastic in their endeavors to diffuse the writings, the philosophical and theological doctrines of their mas- ter, would assuredly not fail to take advantage of such an opening for this purpuse. The connection also between the two flourishing univer sities, which doubtless. independently of this event, was a lively one, would be still more promoted by it. Young English theologians came from Oxford to Prague. Bohemians studied in Oxford, and were there seized with enthusiasm for the doctrines of Wicklif; though we should not lose sight of the fact, that Wicklif was not merely the representative of a particular theological bent, but also by philosoph- ical writings, having no connection whatever Avith the theological in- terest, and particularly by his work already mentioned, which created an epoch of its own, the treatise on the reality of general conceptions, was one of the most important representatives of the philosophical school of realism ; and, though with him, as we have seen, the philo- sophical and theological interest, philosophical and theological princi- })les were intimately connected, yet this was not at all a necessary connection in itself; and one might adopt the philosophical opinions of Wicklif, esteem him highly as a philosopher, without agreeing with him on that account in his theological views. From this it is the more easily to be explained how Wicklif 's writings might already for a long tune have been considerably read at the University of Prague, without creating any ecclesiastical movements whatever, or rendering the orthodoxy of those persons suspected who occupied themselves with the study of certain writings of WickUf. Huss himself declares ' She was in the habit of reading the tin, German, and Bohemian tongue* Sew Testament ; and carried with her to Comp. Palacky lU. 1 p. 24. England a boolv of the gospels in the La- VOL. V. 21 242 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. in a paper composed about the year 1411,' that for thirty years, there- fore from the year 1381, writings of Wickhf were read at Prague university, and that he himself had been m the habit of reading them for more than 20 years, that is, before the year 1391.2 It is evident from what has been said, that the spread of Wicklif *8 writings in Prague fell within the last years of the life of Matthias of Janow ; yet, although traces perhaps of a reference to doctrines of Wicklif may be discovered in his work already noticed, still he must have occupied himself but very little with them, and they must have exercised httle or no particular influence on his mind. He pursued his course after an independent manner in the path to which the sug- gestions that came originally from Militz had conducted him. But Huss, as we may gather with certainty from his own language already cited, had at a very early period read many of Wicklif's writings. What attracted him in these writings was partly the philosophical real- ism, partly the spirit of reform as opposed to the secularization of the church, of the monastic orders, and of the clergy, which they contain- ed, and that inclination to adhere to the New Testament as the only source of doctrine, the striving after a renovation of the Christian life in the sense of apostolical Christianity. Let us hear the words of Huss himself on this point : " I am drawn to him — he says — by the reputation he enjoys with the good, not the bad priests at the Univer- sity of Oxford, and generally with the people, though not with the bad, covetous, pomp-loving, dissipated prelates and priests. I am attracted by his writings, in which he expends every effort to conduct all men back to the law of Christ, and especially the clergy, inviting them to let go the pomp and dominion of the world and live with the apostles according to the life of Christ. I am attracted by the love which he had for the law of Christ, maintaining its truth and holding that not one jot or tittle of it could fail." 3 He mentions here in par- ticular, for illustration the book composed by Wicklif on the truth of Holy Scripture, in which he endeavored to establish the validity of the law of Christ in its whole extent. And he then adverts to the fact that many of Wicklif's writings were on purely philosophical sub- jects, which, as they did not at all affect the truths of faith, could be read without danger. It is evident, therefore, that Huss agreed with Wicklif only up to that point to which his interest for reform had already led him in following the steps of Matthias of Janow. To Wicklif, as we have seen, his attack on the doctrine of transubstantia- tion, and his pecuhar views of the Lord's sui)per, were of especial importance ; but we do not perceive that these had had any particular influence on Huss. On this matter he never passed beyond what was ' Replica contra Anglicum Joannem toto conamine, omnes homines ad legem Stokes, opp. I, fol. 108. Christi reducere, et clerum praecipue, ut ^ Universitas ab annis triginta habet et dimittendo saeculi pompam, domination- legit libros ipsius Joan. Wicletf. Egoque em vivat cum apostolis vitam Christi. et membra nostrae uuiversitatis habemus Movet me aft'ectus suus, queni ad Christi et legimus illos libros ab annis viginti et legem habuit, asserens de veritate ejus, pluribus. Ibid. quae non potest in uno iota vel apice f'al- ^ Movent me sua scripta, quibus nititur lere. Ibid. fol. 109. 1. IIUSS AND WICKLIF. 24^ simply practical ; — as already seen, he gave special prominence to the spu'itual fellowship with Christ, to the truth that he himself is thf> bri.'a'l of the soul, without entering more minutely into the question ab Mit the relation of the bread and wine to tiie body and blood of Chi-iit.' Huss may have had the less hesitation about availing him- seir of the writings of Wicklif, inasmuch as two young men who came from Oxford to Prague, — one an Englishman,^ the other a Bohemian, probably the Count Nicholas of Fauitisch, hereafter to be mentioned, had brought with them a document authenticated by the seal of the University of Oxford, in \vhich Wicklif's orthodoxy was duly testified. IIuss is reported to have read this document from the pulpit to liis congregation as a testimonial in favor of that Wicklif who had been denounced as a heretic. Now it is evident, we admit, that such a declaration was altogether opposed to the spirit of the academical authorities who then ruled at Oxford. It was a forgery, to which the seal of the university had been fraudulently appended — the fabrica- tion of false documents of this sort being at that time no uncommon ' We find nothing in the writings of Huss, which indicates that, in respect of tliis doctrine, he had, as Palacky supposes, (III. l.s. 197aud 198), through the intlu ence of Wiclvlif, been at least led to wdver, and did not, till a later period, take a de- cidedly different view from Wicklif on this point. In general, we think we liave not observed that Huss allowed himself to be determined in his doctrinal convictions at first more and afterwards less by the in- tiiience of Wicklif It seems to us much more to correspond with the actual course of the development of his doctrinal opin- ions, to suppose that he was led by his principles and the opposition which grew out of them, step hy step fartlier away from the church tendency, and not that lie was more decided in his 0])position at thfc beginning, and afterwards grew mild- er. Even, on the occasion of his trial at Prague, in 1414, of which a protocol drawn up by Peter of Mladcnowic, secretary to the Knight of Chhiin, has been pul)lished in the Studien und Kritiken (Jahrg. 1837, Heft 1), Huss absolutely repels the ch:M-ge that he had ever attacked the doctrine of transul)stantiation. Huss here declares that lie could not possibly have spoken before the people in the Hohcinian tongue DU the uccidfMtibus sine sulijtdo, Ijecause this language contained no terms whatever by which such a conception could be express- ed : but he had said, guarding against any misinterpretation of his language, that as a man's body is veiled under his shirt, so the body of Christ is in a co'-^'iin sense veiled beneath the form of the i)rcad, and as the soul is concealed within the body, BO the body of Christ is concealed under the figure of the bread. And he appeals 'or proof to the language of an ancient hymn, and to words of St. Augustin, wliic h mark a distinction between that which faith perceives, and that which is mani- fest to the senses in the Lord's supper. That when he speaks of a forma panis, he means to intimate the remaining beiiind of the substance, cannot be proved. He atiirms. that when he spoke of the remain- ing behind of the bread in the Lord's sup- per, he meant only Christ the heavenly bread, which is ortercd in the sacrament. Now we might, it is true, suspect that IIuss took the liberty to conceal his real opinion in this ambiguous phraseology, or that he, at a later period, resorted to sophistical interpretations of the language earlier used by him; but still we shall find no ground whatever to accuse him of any such thing. It is, in fact, one of the particulars which characterize the practical bent i)eculiar to Huss, to give special prominence to the statement that Christ himself is tlie bread of the soul in the Lord's supper, and if now he ever laid the whole stress upon this, it may have been interpreted by his o|ipo- nents as if he always spoke only of the bread present in tiie Lord's supper, in fact we find that Huss afterwards, in a pa- per hereafter to be cited, was actually un- der the necessity of vindicaiing himself against such a perversion of his language, and of explaining his real meaning. ■■* We have taken no notice of the story about a picture drawn by the two English- men on the walls of a room which they had hired, which cx!iil)ited the contrast between the worldly entrance of the pope into Heme, and the entrance of Christ into Jerusulem, the so called Antithesis C/iristi et Antichristi, and of the commotions to which it led; because we do not certainly know that the narrative of the Hussit" 244 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. khing at Oxford ; ' but it is certain that Huss himself was deceived in this case ; he could know nothi^ig about this manufactory of false documents at Oxford, and his admiration of Wicklif might in this case easily incline him to believe without further examination.^ Further- more, the struggle for and against Wicklif, as well as the antagonism of realism and nominalism was an affair of national interest. Under the Emperor Charles IV, king of Bohemia, the founder of the Univer- sity of Prague, many Germans had resorted thither, obtained impor- tant posts, and sought to gain on their own side the greatest influence at the university. This circumstance had excited great jealousy be- twixt the two nations. Much enthusiasm was awakened at that time among the Bohemians for the maintenance of their own nationality in language and literature. Among the peculiar qualities of Huss be- longed an ardent love of his country and people. His efforts for the cultivation of the Bohemian language and orthography were praised by those competent to judge, and his influence in this regard is said to have extended even to other Slavic populations.^ Now as the Ger- mans were zealous nominalists, so the Bohemians, on the other hand, were no less zealous realists, and the Bohemian theologians at the university were at first more inclined to the freer opinions and in favor of Wicklif. It was the Bohemian theological party to which Huss belonged, and to the head of which he was constantly advancing by his zeal, his active labors, and his theological culture. His teachers at the university of Prague, Stanislaus and Peter of Znaim, and his uni- versit}^ friend, Stephen Paletz belonged to this bent, and followed it in their writings and lectures. Stanislaus of Znaim seems indeed to have proceeded farther in the interest for Wicklif than Huss himself, in that he judged more favorably of his attack upon the doctrine of transubstdntiation. Huss cites the following words of Stanislaus, which he pronounced in his commentary on the Sentences of Wicklif. " A certain teacher, WickUf, in other things a profound philosopher and theologian, dehvers this opinion, (which he cites), and has pub- licly and often protested, as one may find in his writings, that as an obedient son of the church he is ready to believe, when he is convin- ced, the contrary, nay, if it be necessary, even to suffer death in cor- historian, Theobald, which, in other re- ing and using such a fraudulent documents spects, contains many inaccurate state- by Englishmen, he was able to make a ments, is to be relied upon, and we have clear and simple statement of the whole found in the writings of Huss himself no affair in justitication of his conduct in the allusion whatever to this affair which he case, and to appeal to the testimony of his is said to have touched upon in his ser- earlier like-minded friend, Stephen Paletz, mons at that time. wlio had been equally deceived with him- ' The seal of the university of Oxford self, and who now appeared at Constance \.-as much al)used in those days. Petrus as his accuser. Quumque confessus esset, Paganus or Payne, a clergyman, had con- propterea quod sub signo universitatis a trived to get it into his hands, and used it duobus scholasticis allata esset, illique for the purjiose of lending an appearance etiam de iis scholasticis quaererent, re- of authenticity to tiiat ])a])er guu up in spondit : ino amicus mens (signiticabat favor of Wicklif, as if it were an official autem Stejjhanum Paletz) alterum ex iis document. See Wood historia et antiqui- ae(iue novit atque ego, alter nescio qui tates universitatis Oxoniensis I, pag. 203. fuerit. Hermann v. d. Hardt acta concili; ^ When Huss, at his trial in Constance, Constantiensis torn. IV, pag. 328. on the 8th of June, was accused of publish- ■' See Palacky III, 1 S. 298 ff. IIUSS STANDING UP FOR THE BOHEMIAN NATIONALITY. litO rection of his error. And many, who are less able to see than he is, denounce him as a heretic in this and other things, and defame the reputation of those who read his writings, not perceiving that among thorns may be found tiie must beautiful roses, even though he may really have uttered much that is heretical." And the same teacher says of the doctrine of transubstantiation : " unless a new determination of the church or a satisfactory argument can prove this, it is not requisite for the catholic faith to adopt it."^ We should here un- doubtedly keep in mind, that the doctrine of transubstantiation no longer, as in the eai'lier centuries of the middle age, corresponded to a bent of spirit that ruled the whole age, and to a form of intuition grounded therein ; that unembarrassed, childhke faith no longer predo- minated ; doubts would rise even in the minds of those who were most cheerfully disposed to hold fast in all tilings to the authority of the church, as is plain from the fact that from Duns Scotus onward, a William Occam, a Durand, a Peter d'Ailly, themselves had to ac- knowledge that reason and scripture would lead to a different view, if the church had not otherwise decided. Huss subsequently reproach- ed his friend, Paletz, for his crab-like movement, and accused him of having changed from a realist to a nominalist.^ By the German party a mock mass upon their Bohemian opponents, the Wicklifites, was got up, and in it the genealogy of Christ was thus travestied — Peter of Znaim begat Stanislaus of Znaim, Stanislaus begat Stephen Paletz, and the latter begot Huss, intimating how Wicklifitism had spread from one to the other.3 An individual, who had great influence on the movements called forth in Prague by the contest for and against Wicklif, was one whom ■we shall often have occasion to mention as a fellow-combatant with Huss, the chevalier Jerome of Prague.'* He was one of the few knights in Bohemia distinguished by their zeal for science and literary culture. ^ ' Hus, responsio ad scripta raagistri shown that this statement has grown out Stanislaus de Znoyma ; opp. 1 pag. 267 et of an error, by which the Chevalier Je- 288. rome had been confounded with another ' Jam te cum Stanislao non poneres ad less known zealous friend of Wicklif 's defendendum librura de universalibus ; doctrines in Prague, the Chevalier Nich- and : Fuistis realistae, c^im jam sitis ter- olas of Fauliisch. See Palacky III. 1 s. ministae. Responsio ad scripta Paletz; 192, Note 245. [Palacky ascribes the er- opp I, pag. 260. Jam rebus dimissis, con- ror not to Aeneas Sylvius but to his read- versa., es ad signa vel terminos, retroce- ers. Editor.] dens sicut cancer. Ibid. pag. 262. * In these stirring times of the Bohe- ^ Missa, quam Teutonici blaspheme con- mian nation there were some such. Pa- finixerant, in qua per modum libri gene- lacky, for example, (III, 1 p. 187), men- rationis primo ponitur Stanislaus, qui ge- tions the Chevalier Thomas of Stituey, nuit Pctriim de Znoyma, et Petrus de the author of many papers, whose most Znoyma genuit Paletz et Paletz genuit important work ajjpeared in tiie year 1374, Hus. L. c. pag. 255, 2. and who was still living at the close of * Jerome is mentioned (according to the fourteenth century. It characterizes Aeneas Sylvius in his Historia Boliemica, the natrional movement in Bohemia, that cap. XXXV, who describes him as a ])u- even in the case of this person, a man tridus piscis : Tum quod crat fainiliae zealously devoted to scientitic and literary suae cognomen, Putridum pisccm, id est, pursuits, the religious element, as Palacky foer.idum virus, in cives suos evomuit) as alleges, is the predominant one m his writ being connected with the noble Boiicmian ings. family of Faulfisch. But, Palackv has " 21* 246 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Jerome of Prague, several years younger than Huss, his youthful friend, stood faithfully by his side, as we frequently see men the most widely diifering in character and in mental gifts, in times forming epochs in the evolution of the kingdom of God, each supplying the other's de- ficiencies, cooperating and contending together, as did afterwards Lu- ther and Melancthon, although the relation in the present instance was a somewhat different one, Huss, a man of more calmness and discre- tion, of a character at once firm and gentle, more inclined to modera- tion, possessed of less numerous and diversified gifts, of a less excitable spirit, fonder of retirement within himself and silent self-seclusion than of mingling in the busy turmoils of life — Jerome, full of life and ar- dor, of an enterprising spirit, not disposed to remain still and quiet a long time in one place, whom we find now in Oxford, next at Paris, then at Jerusalem, in Hungary, at Vienna, and in Russia, everywhere attracting observation and everywhere provoking opposition, a man possessed of a gift of discourse that bore everything before it, but who in the excitement of the moment was easily led to pass beyond proper bounds, one who needed the cool considerateness of a Huss to act as a check on his activity. Jerome had, in 1398, returned from Oxfoi^d to Prague, and brought with him many writings of Wicklif not before known, which he endeavored to circulate through the whole country and among all ranks and conditions of people. He stood up, with great enthusiasm, for the doctrines of Wicklif. He is reported to have said : " Until now, we had nothing but the shell of science ; Wicklif first laid open the kernel." After the contest for and against Wicklif, ever excited afresh by the connection between Oxford and Prague, had gone on for a considerable time in secret, the matter finally came to an open rupture. At the re- quest of the archiepiscopal officials and cathedral chapter of Prague, a meeting of the university was held on the 28th of May, 1403, and forty-five propositions ascribed to Wicklif were laid before that body for examination. Here, for the first time, it came to an open and violent struggle between the Bohemian and the German party. The repre- sentatives of the former in part defended the propositions complained of, and partly they maintained that they were not taught in the sense ascribed to them. In this assembly, one of the warm advocates of Wick- lifs cause in Bohemia, Master Nicholas of Leitomysl, declared that these articles had been falsified by a certain Master Hiibner, who more richly deserved to be burned than the two poor fellows who had been burned for counterfeiting saffron (an herb much sought for and used in those times). Huss himself declared at this time, as ever afterwards, that he could not agree to the unconditional condemnation of those propositions, though neither was he disposed to defend them all ; for many of them had been interpolated by that Master Hiibner. He could not join in any such condemnation, lest h? sh'^uld bring on himself the woes denounced on such as called evil good, and good evil.i Also the teacher of Huss, Stanislaus of Znaim, stood forth at this ' From IIuss's remarks in the trial above mentioned. Stud. u. Krit. 1837, I, s. 132. THE FORTY-FIVE PROPOSITIONS OF WICKLIP. 217 lime as a defender of the forty-five propositions ; and Huss notices him as the first who took up the word in defence.' Still, by the vast ma- jority of votes on the side of the German nation, the condemnation of the forty-five articles was carried througli. According to the then arrangements of the university of Prague, the Germans, who kept firmly united, would, in all public meetings, of course obtain the vic- tory. The votes were taken by nations ; and the university of Prague was divided into four nations. One was the Bohemian ; the three oth- ers, Bavarian, Saxon, and Polish, of which latter, half were Germans, namely Silesians. Accordingly the ]Johemians, who were scarcely one to three, must always succumb. Every victory which the German party won in this way, could only serve to augment the bitter feeling of hostility between the two nations, and between the Wicklifite and anti-Wicklifite parties. The defenders of the writings and doctrines of Wicklif, however, allowed themselves the less to be disturbed by the condemnation pronounced at this convocation, as they had not in fact acknowledged all those propositions to be propositions really laid down by Wicklif. By this condemnation, therefore, nothing or what amounted to nothing had been accomplished ; and the opponents of Wicklif'a cause were obliged to look round them and conjure up sharper measures. Already Bohemian prelates themselves complained at the court of Rome, that Wicklif 's heresies had spread even to that spot,2 and in the year L405,Pope Innocent VII. was moved thereby to put forth a bull addressed to archbishop Zbynek, calling upon him to suppress and punish the Wick- lifite heresies then spreading in Bohemia. The archbishop complied with this call, and at a synod held in Prague, in the year 1406, published an ordinance, threatening ecclesiastical penalties against those who presumed to teach the doctrines of Wicklif.3 At the same time he enacted, in the same year, a law for the maintenance of the doctrine of transubstantiation, directing all preachers within his diocese to teach, on Corpus-Christi day and on all other days, the doctrine that, after the words of consecration, the substance of the bread and wine were no longer present, but only body and blood of Christ. The name of Wick- lif, however, was not here mentioned.^ This of course could not affect Huss, as he had never declared himself opposed to the doctrine of transubstantiation. In the next place, it was brought about by the measures of the archbishop that, as the three other nations of the uni- versity of Prague had always pronounced against the opinions of Wick- ' Huss says of him: Reminisceretur, 'Item anno 1406. D. Zl)ynko arcliiepis- quomodo primus fuit ad defendendum, ne copus Prag. edidit statutum, et eodem an- articuli, quos ipse dicit erroncos, damna- no in synodo publice mandavit. quod qui- lentur. Imo et argucbat audacter in con- cunque praedicaret, asscreret vcl disputaret gregatione universitatis. Kesp. ad scripta errores Wiclefl', in certas ibidem nomina- Mag. Stan, de Znoyraa. Hus opp. I pag tsvs inciderct poenas. Clirou. univers. Prag. 288. Palacky p. 214. * See tlie words from the Chronicles of * See the ordinance in a paper by the Prague University, in Palacky III, 1 s. abbot Stephen of Dola, in the diocese of 213 : Innocentius papa VII. instigavit et Olmutz, composed in 1408 ; Medulla tri- monuit Zbynkoncm archicpiseopum Pra- tici seu Anti-\Vickleffu6, published by Fez, gensem, ut sit diligens et soUicitus ad Thesaurus anecdotorum novissimus torn errores WicletV et haereses exstirpandas. IV, pars 2 pag. 158. Hanc monitionem praclati procuraverunr. 218 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. lif, and therefore in all further measures against them, the only ques tion was with regard to the Bohemian nation, among whom alone these opinions found defenders, the members of this body held, in the year 1408, a great convocation, in which the condemnation of those fort}^- five propositions was again proposed. But as the unconditional con- demnation of them could not, on account of the resistance of the party of Huss,be carried through, such a qualified one was passed as nobody could find fault with, because it was left open to each to explain the propositions in his own sense. It was decreed, namely, that no one should presume to maintain any one of those forty-five propositions, in their heretical, erroneous, or scandalous sense. • Men were not satis- fied, therefore, with this measure, by which the desired end could, in no way, be attained. While hitherto every graduate had hberty to read lectures at the university of Prague on any book of a teacher of the uni- versities of Prague, Paris, or Oxford ;2 and this permission had given occasion for the reading of lectures upon many of Wicklif's writings in Prague, and was taken advantage of to spread more widely the enthu- siasm for him and for his doctrines ; the liberty was now restricted, on this particular side. An ordinance was passed that, for the future, no bachelor should hold public lectures on any one of the three tracts of Wicklif, intitled the Dialogue, the Trialogue, and the De Eueharis- tia ; and no person should make any proposition relating to Wicklif's books and doctrines, a subject of public disputation.^ Neither does this prohibition, therefore, extend to all Wickhf's writings, but only to those in which he either had set forth his doctrine of the holy supper, or the whole of his theological system. Up to this time, the good understanding between Huss and the archbishop had not been disturbed, in any open manner. Zbynek could not, as yet, have Avithdrawn from him his confidence ; he must still have highly appreciated his zeal for the reform of the church, and for the removal of abuses ; for he chose him, as late as the year 1407, to deliver the exhortatory discourse before his clergy as- sembled at a synod of the diocese. We recognize in it those princi- ples with regard to the destination of the clergy, which Huss enter- tained in common with Matthias of Janow and Wicklif They were the principles which, in theory and practice, distinguished the clergy who were friendly to reform, and who already bore, in Bohemia, the names clerus evangellcus and pauperes sacerdotes Christie He had chosen for his text the passage in Ephesians 6: 14, and employed these ' Quatenus nemo quemquam illorurn, si, Parisiensi vel Oxoniensi magistro vcl articulorum XLV. audeat teiiere, docere magistris compilata, et dummodo ista :m- vi'l defendere in sensilms coram haereticis, tea fidelitcr correxerit, et pronuntiatorcm ;iut erroneis, ant scandalosis. Palackvl. assumserit idoneum et valentem. Palacky c. p. 222. ' p. 188. ' Qui vis magistrorum potent super quo- ' Palaclvy III, 1 p. 222. libit lihro de faeultate artium proprie dicta * Paletz was disposed afterwards to find liare. perse vcl per alium idoneum pronun- something arrogant in the claim, which tiando; i)oterit quoque scripta aliorum et seemed to be implied in these appella- dicia per se aut per alium pronunliare, tions, quod in doctrina et in scriptis se au- dummodo sint ab aliquo vel aliquibus fa- dent clerum evangelicum nominare. Hus moso vel famosis de universitate Pragen- resp. ad scr. Paletz ; opera I, pag. 260. DISCOURSE OF HUSS LEFORE THE DIOCESAN SYNOD. 249 words for the purpose of bringing the clergy to a consciousness of their vocation, as opposed to the then existing worldliness of the clergy in Bohemia. For the purpose of bringing clearly to view the destination of the clergy, he explains the grounds of the division of Christendom into three orders, Avhich ever lay at bottom of his proposal for the re- form of the entire social state, viz. the clergy, the secular nobilitv, who should make their power subservient to the promotion of the law of Christ, and the rest of the people standing in obedience to the two parts, as their leaders in things spiritual and secular. The clergy ought to take the lead of all others in following Christ under the form of a servant, in meekness, humility, purity, and poverty. Huss was still entangled in the distinction made between the consilia evangelica and the praecepta, above which Matthias of Janow had, as we have earlier seen, already risen in recognizing the equal christian vocation of all men, Huss regarded it as the calling of the clergy to exhibit to all, even in the observance of the " evangelical counsels," a pattern of christian perfection. Hence he must have held to the necessity of celibacy in the clergy. The cler- gy ought literally to fulfil the precepts of the Sermon on the Mount ; therefore never to give an oath ; their yea and nay ought to be suffi- cient. They ought literally to realize what Christ had said in the ser- mon on the mount, on loving our enemies, on bearing wrongs. The thriving of christian life in all others, must therefore be conditioned on the fact that the clergy let their light shine before others, in the literal copying after Christ. It was in the falling away of the clergy from this, their true destination, that Huss, as he here declares, found the cause of the corruptions in the rest of Christendom, the contemplation of which filled his soul, more and more every day, with that heart sorrow which formed one of the strong features of his character. He says in this re- gard, contemplating Christians as soldiers of Christ, and the clergy as those who ought to take the foremost position in the marshalled host ; "it is clearly evident that the clergy should lead the order of battle in the spiritual conflict. But if they are unfit for the contest, the victory is seldom or never won ; since they, betaking themselves to flight, or struck down and put into confusion, fill the next ranks of the army with despair or irresolution. Now if the clergy are struck down or slain, this will hinder the rest of the army from conquering the enemy ; but if they treacherously enter into a league with the enemy, they will pre- pare the way for them to vanquish, more easily and treacherously, the army of our Lord Jesus Christ. For this is the reason why, in our days, the christian army is overcome by the flesh, the world, the devil, and pagans." * As Huss considered it a part of the clerical calling to set the example of following Christ, and regarded the clergy as " vicars of Christ," in this sense, so when they exhibited the opposite of this in their lives, he stigmatizes tliem as Antichrist ; and accordingly he here expresses, before the archhi-ohop and clenis, the view which, from the time of Militz, had been transmitted to all the representatives of this reform tendency, and which in the development of the consequences proceeding thc-efrom, would be directed against the whole hierarchical ' Hus opp. II, pag. 32. 250 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. fabric, that the true Antichrist was already present in the corrupt clergy, whose life and doctrine stood in mutual contradiction. He also attacks expressly, in this discourse, the countenance given to superstition. " Many — says he — stand waiting for gifts by letters of fraternities,' bv far-sought indulgences, by fictitious rehcs, by painted images of saints." 2 Still the measures which the archbishop, by his interest to support the church and by the injunction received from Rome, was impelled to take to prevent the spread of Wicklifitism, would necessarily bring about by degrees a change in the relations which had subsisted between Zby- nek and Huss. The archbishop's official, John of Kebel, presided, over a judicial examination instituted against several clergymen accused of Wicklifite errors : Nicholas of Welenowitz, preacher at the church of the Holy Spirit in Prague, Master Matthias Pater of Knin, a certain bachelor Sigmund of Jistebnitz, and others. One of these, Nicho- las of Welenowitz, commonly called Abraham, deserves special notice. He is said to have asserted that laymen as well as priests might be al- lowed to preach the gospel.^ This is an important fact to us, as an indication of the religious bent of spirit which had passed over from Mat- thias of Janow to the party of Huss, — the tendency which once moro brought up to notice the universal priesthood of Christians. It is also a circumstance marking the character of this clergyman, that at his trial he declined swearing except by the living God, that he would not swear by the crucifix, the gospels, or the saints, because no oath could be taken on things created. Huss took part with the man in reference to this point, honoring the conscientiousness which refused to transfer to any created thing the honor due to God alone. He opposed to those judges the authority of St. Chrysostom.4 In vain was the intercession ' Documents whereby certain spiritual * We take this from the Trial of Huss, societies adopted others into the comma- in the year 1414, a document of which nity of their merits. Ajrainst abuses of much use has been made ah-eady. The this sort, and the confidence placed in words of Huss are : Istud dixi coram in- them, Matthias of Janow had often spoken, quisitoribus Magistro Mauricio et Jaroslao Attacking these epistolae fraternitatum episcopo, et coram vicario in spiritualibus, was reckoned also among the peculiarities quando vexabant sacerdotem Abraham, of Wicklifitism. as we may see from what dicentes coram me, quod noluisset jurare the abbot Stephen of Dola says about it Ad quern dixi coram ipsis : Non vis tn in the paper cited above. He tries to de- jurare 1 Qui respondit : Juravi ipsis per fend them as special testimonies of love deum vivum, quod voio veritatem dicere, to persons who had conferred peculiar et ipsi urgebant me, ut jurarem supra favors: Si quas autem tradimus humiliter evangelium et imaginem crucifixi. Ouibus et devote pro deo petentibus societatis pe- ego Joannes Hus dixi, quod sanctus Jo. culiaris in Christo literas, nihil aliud agi- Chrysostomus nos vocat stultos. qui ex- tur, ubi recta intentio custoditur, nisi ut petunt juramentum super creatura, quasi salvis communibus ecclesiae praecibus, ali- majus sit jurare per creaturam, quam per quid specialis beuelicii specialibus bene- deum. Et statim vicarius in spiriiualibus foctoribus faciamus pro talibus in vita et nomine Bibel dixit furiose : Ha Magister, in morte pariter. L. c. pag. 240. vos venistis nuc ad audiendum, et non ar ^ Multi enim stant quaerentcs mnnera. guendum. Cui dixi : Ecce vos istum sa- per fraternitatum literas, per exquisitas cerdotem condemnare, dicentes eum tenere indulgentias, per fictas reliquias et per errorem Waklensium, et ipse juravit vobis imagines coloratas. Pag. 36. per deum. estne hoc justum ? Et alia mul- ' From the Acts of the Consistory of ta loquebar iis. See Stud. u. Krit. 1. c Prauue. of the vear 1408. cited by Palackv page 139 and 140. Ill, 1 p. 223. Note 287. zbtnek's measures against wicklifitism. 251 of Huss. Nicholas was thrown into prison, and after some days released, but banished from the diocese. Huss, in a letter, vehemently reproached the archbishop on account of this proceeding. " What is this! that men stained with innocent blood, men guilty of every crime, shall be found walking abroad almost with impunity ; while humble priests, who spend all their efforts to destroy sin, who fulfil their duties under your church guidance, in a good temper, never follow avarice, but give them- selv-es for nothing to God's service and the proclamation of his word, are cast into dungeons as heretics, and must suffer banishment for preacli- ing the gospel ? " > Here, for the first time, the thing came out openly which we have said was inevitable, that although the archbishop, at the beginning, countenanced the reform tendency in Huss, yet the opposite character of their principles and of their tempers must lead to a rupture between them as soon as the activity of Huss as a reformer passed be- yond a certani limit. And when the first impulse had been given, he covdd not fail to be carried still farther, by the movements in this pe- riod of a great crisis of the church. A document which bears testi- mony to the extreme excitement between the WickUfite party in Bohe- mia and the representatives of the old hierarchical system in its whole extent, is a Avork composed in these times, about the year 1408, by the abbot of the convent of Dola, in the diocese of Olmutz ; the object of which was to guard against and to refute the Wicklifite heresies. Dola was a man by no means disposed to defend the abuses of simony and the i^ad conduct of the clergy and monks. He complains of it as a grievance, that important men in Bohemia, a country hitherto exempt from all here- sies, had contributed to bring their nation into bad repute with foreigners, particularly with the Germans ; that they openly and secretly dissemi- nated the Wicklifite doctrines ;2 that the writings of Wicklif were scat- tered over the whole world.3 He describes the party as one that boasted of having first made familiar the understanding of the Scriptures, and taken pains to have the gospel preached everywhere. He quotes from their own Ups the words : " We preach ; we proclaim the word of God ; we guide the people.* He gives us to understand that they attacked all others as ignorant men (no doubt in reference to their knowledge of the Scripture) ; that they were opponents of the monks, of the conven- tual clergy ; as the latter, in fact, were the most decidedly opposed to the more liberal christian tendency.^ Already, too, he found it neces- sary to defend the doctrine of indulgences against the objections of this party .6 The author of this work attacks no individual name ; he does not even mention that of Huss, whom he undoubtedly had in his eye ' Qualiter hoc est, .^iiod inccstuosi et * Stephanas Dohiiius Antiwiklcffiis, in varie ciiminosi absque ri.o correctionis — Pez, thesanr. torn. IV pars 2 pag. 184. iiieedunt libere, sacerdotes aiitem hiimiles, ' Quae in orbe terraruni hiiic indc dis- spinas peccati evellentcs. olliiMuni Vcstri furrunt scripta per chartulas. Ibid, pag iin]derte.s regiminis ex bono artcctu, non 213. t;L(]uentes avaritiam, sed gratis pro deo se * Ibid. ])ag. 209. otierentes ad evangelisationis laborcm, * Non sumus, inquiunt, sicut caeteri ho taniquam haeretici maiiicipantur carceri- minum, idiotae et chiustrales. Ibid. bus, et e.xiliuni propter evangelisatioiicm * Ibid. pag. 214. ipsius evauixelii ])atiuntur^ caet. Palack III. 1 p. 223, Not( 288. 252 HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. in speaking of " men who seemed to be of some consequence." i But a i this time the Wicklifites, so called, would be treated Avithmore forbeai- ance, a? the opposition within the Bohemian party itself, at the univer- sity of Prague, had not as yet broken out ; and the abbot himself had, earlier, stood on friendly terms with Huss, and describes him as a man formerly inclined to support the church, and likeminded with himself.^ But although such excitement existed between the two parties, yet archbishop Zbynek thought that enough had been done on his part for the suppression of the Wicklifite heresy. He may not have been, him- self, so very zealous in this matter. He had his reasons for exercising Ibi'bearance towards the party of Huss, which had important adherents in all ranks of society. Violent steps might, in the present times of fer- mentation, lead to fearful commotions ; and King Wenceslaus had not, since the accession of Pope Boniface IX., stood on the best terms with the Roman court, as the latter had failed to afford him the desired as- sistance in his struggle with Rupert for the imperial dignity. His openly avowed breach with the court of Rome, would be favorable to the refoi-m party in Bohemia ; and archbishop Zbynek could not reckon on the king's support in carrying out his measures against Wicklifitism. As it might be very prejudicial to the king's interests in relation to German affairs, that suspicions should be raised against the Bohemians by the spread of reports importing that they were inclined to the Wick- lifite heresy, he was the more urgent with the archbishop to set on foot an investigation which should vindicate the good character of the Bohe- mians. In July of the year 1408, Zbynek declared, at a diocesan synod held at Prague, that it had been found, after investigation, that no Wick- lifite heresy existed at present in Bohemia. ^ At the same time, however, he ordered that the writings of Wicklif should be delivered up, — an order which ended in mere words, the bishop not having the power, and perhaps at that time not even a serious intention, of actually car- rying out so radical a measure. Up to this time, the Bohemians at the university of Prague were still united together, by a common national interest, against the predomi- nance of the Germans. The party favorable to reform would be the most desirous to overthrow this preponderance, the Germans being, on account of their philosophical and theological opinions, the fiercest oppo- ' Qui vitlentur esse aliquid. himself as an old friend of Huss ; which * Tu vero homo olim unanimis, qui si- confusion was already noticed by the Bene- mul niecum dulces capiebas cibos, magni- dictine Pez, the editor of the writings of ficasti super me supplantationem, in his tWs abbot. Antihussus, Pez thes. torn. IV pars. 2, pag. ' See what Palacky (III, 1 p. 224), re 380. Cochlteus cites this passage and much marks, on the authority of certain MS other matter from this book in his work records, and the words of the Jurist, Mas Historiae Hussitarum lib. I. pag. 39; but he ter Jesenitz, in his Repetitio pro defen- mames the author Stephen Paletz. Doubt- sione causae Joann. Hus : Cum in regno less he was led to confound him with Ste- Boemiae nullus fidei erroneus vel haereti phen Paletz, on account of his having the cus hujusque sit compertus vel convictus, same christian name, Stephen, and be- prout pronunciatio principum et baronum •cause the abbot in the place cited, where inter dominum Sbynconem piae memoriaa Cochlaeus instead of simiil reads semel, archiepiscopum olim Pragensem et partem ^hich would give a totally ditl'erent sense adversam approbat. Hus opp. I fol. 332 2 vii variance with the context, speaks of MORE MODERATE PROCEEDINGS OF ZBYXE.v. 253 nents of the new theological tendency ; and by their cooperation, as had been shown at the convocation assembled to condemn the forty-five articles of Wicklif, all measures directed against this tendency might easily be carried through. Combined, in the case of Huss and Jerome, with the religious interest, was that of patriotism ; and on tliis side they might count on receiving the support of many who did not agree with them in reli";ious and doctrinal matters. Huss, the confessor of queen Sophia, could for this reason exercise a greater uitluence at court. His friend Jei'ome moved in the most respectable circles. They were supported, in this cause, by the most influential of the nobility. Add to this that King Wenceslaus had a strong political motive, con- nected with his politico-ecclesiastical plans, for favoring the Bohemian more than the German [tarty in the university. Meantime took place the renunciation of both the rival popes, by the great majority of the cardinals, and the iiroclamation of the council of Pisa. The king, who had been urged by France, and had separated from Gregory XII, was disposed to embrace the cause of the council. In this view, he might expect more support from the party in favor of reform, than from the Germans, who were devoted to the cause of papal despotism. Thus he was induced to put forth an edict, whereby a change was made in the relation of votes at the university of Prague, three being given to the Bohemians, while only one was allowed to the foreigners. Teachers and students of the German nation carried into effect, in the month of Sep- tember, a resolution which they had bound themselves, under the most sacred oaths, to execute in case the king would give no heed to their remonstrances, and forsook Prague in vast numbers. The number who left, it seems, cannot be exactly estimated. They who reckon highest, estimate it at 44,000 ; the lowest estimate is 5,000.' Only 2,000 stu- dents are said to have been left in Prague. This was an event which, in its consequences, had the most impor- tant influence on the development of the contest which is now the subject of our contera[)lation. The Bohemian party at the university had now gained decidedly the ascendency, as was soon made evident by the choice of Huss as rector of the university. But it turned out here as it usually does in political, ecclesiastical, and religious afliiirs, with combinations formed of conflicting elements, and held together only by tlie bond of a common opjiosition. The national interest had thus far brought into union with Huss a set of men who were unlike him in spirit and temper, and were only not conscious as yet of the opposition really existing between them. A crisis must now arrive, which would operate to separate those who valued the interests of Christianity and reform above all things else, from those who were not disposed in any case to renounce the dominant church tendency. The decisive events which transpired in this stormy period must soon bring about the dissolution of such a union, which was no longer held to- ' See the dissertation of J. Th. Held: Pelzel on the history of the Emi'eror Wen- " Illustratio rcnun anno 1409 in universi- ceslaus, and Pahickv, 1. c tate Pratjena gestaruni," and the essays of VOL. V. 22 254 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. gether by the interest of a common opposition ; and men who had fought side by side must be led to fight against each other. Men who had been friends must become the most violent enemies. Amongst those who left the university were to be found eminent scholars who obtained important situations abroad. This emigration w'as the occa- sion of the founding of the new university at Leipsic. And the most injurious reports were now circulated abroad respecting the heresies of the party of Huss. All who were determined to maintain the old church system, not merely the friends of the papal absolutism of the middle age, but also those disposed to favor reform, the adherents of the Parisian theology, believed they saw a dangerous revolution, threatening the overthrow of all ecclesiastical order, breaking forth from Bohemia, and were therefore of the ojnnion that every effort should be made to avert this danger. The city of Prague suffered a great loss by this emigration. Even commerce felt the blow ; as many merchants had sent their sons to Prague with a view to push their business in that city, and these young men had in part got themselves matriculated in order to enjoy the privileges of the university. An odious light was cast upon Jerome and Huss as the authors of the mischief; and this was marked as one of the ruinous effects of reli- gious schism. Jerome of Prague must therefore defend himself and his friend against the charges brought against them on this side also, at the council of Constance ; and he sets forth the motives of patriot- ism, which had induced them to obtain this decree from King Wen- ceslaus. After having given an account of the ascendency which the Germans had gained ever after the foundation of the University of Prague, he said, that when he and Huss and other nobles, in Bohe- mia, perceived that the whole effect of all this would be to exterminate the Bohemian language, they had gone to the kmg ; and he had per- suaded his friend Huss, in his Bohemian sermons, to make the people take notice that they ought no longer to tolerate such a thing, nor suffer themselves to be so treated by the Germans ; and so, with the help of the Bohemian nobility and others of their countrymen, they had finally carried the thing through. i In like manner Huss was accused, as we find it laid to his charge in his last trial in Prague, in the year 1414, of having driven the German students from the university. But he replied ; the German students were driven away by nobody. Their own oath alone drove them away ; they pledged themselves on penalty of excommunication for perjury, the forfeiture of their honor, and a pecuniary mulct of 60 groats, that not one of them would re- main at the university, if they did not have the right of tln-ee votes. According to the law of God, and by natural right, the Bohemians ought to have the first claim to offices within the Bohemian realm ; ' Ipse vero Ilieronymus videns hoc. una Bohemicalem, quod talia amplius susti- cum Mag. Joann. Hus iveruiit ad regera nere non deberent, quod ita tractareimir Bohemiae, concludentes, quod talia esscnt per Teutonicos. Jerome, in liis last lieur- ivs niali exempli et tenderent in dcstruc- ing at Constance. See V d. Hardt, acta lionem linguae Bohemieulis Et persua- concilii Constantiensis tom. IV, pars 2. '^it jMag. Joann. Hus, quod in sermonibus pag. 758. lioheraicalibus deberet inducere populura DEPARTURE OF THE GERMANS FROM PRAGUE. 255 just as the French have in France, and the Germans in their coun- tries. Of what sort of use would it be for a Bohemian parish priest or bishop to settle down in Germany, if he were not familiar with the German tongue, and therefore had about the same power over his flock as a dumb dog which could not bark ? " The same power would a German have among us Bohemians. Knowing, therefore, that this is contrary to the law of God and natural right, I saj that it is not allowable." i Meantime, King Wenceslaus, who had never been a friend of the hierarchy, became daily more involved in controversy with the arch- bishop and the clergy. The influence of this was, that he promoted thereby, without intending it, the movements of reform, besides contri- buting on the one hand to strengthen the party of Huss, and, on the other, to draw upon him still more numerous and more dangerous enemies. The archbishop and clergy would not abandon Pope Gre- gory XII, whose obedience the king had renounced, nor recognize the general council assembled at Pisa, whose cause Wenceslaus sought to promote. The king was for carrying out his will in his own states. He met with fierce resistance from the clergy ; many refused to conti- nue divine worship. Violent attacks were made on the archbishop and the clergy by the king and his favorites, who, partly as the king's instruments, partly from private grudges, eagerly sought to humble the prelates. Many betook themselves to flight ; their goods were confiscated. The king, too, was probably inclined to indulge in acts of arbitrary self-will. Huss now considered it to be his duty to de- clare himself in favor of the cause of the council in his sermons, and to promote it in every way, as there was far more reason to expect something might be done for the reform of the church by the council than by either of the popes. By so doing he would gain the favor of the king, but so much the more draw upon himself the enmity of the archbishop and the clergy ; and this was attended with important consequences on the later events. Huss himself points to this in his letter hereafter to be noticed to the college of Cardinals in Rome, as the prime cause of the violent rupture between him and the arch- bishop. He says, the grievous oppressions which he was compelled to bear, originated in the fact, that at the time of the renunciation of Pope Gregory XII, he had strongly recommended and constantly preached to all the nobles, princes, and lords, to the clergy and the people, the duty of taking part with the general council for restoring unity to the church. Hence the archbishop Zbynek had forbidden to ail masters of the university who sided with the college of cardinals, and particularly to himself, by a public notice ix)sted on the churches, the exercise of all priestly functions within his diocese. 2 In like manner Huss expressed himself, on this subject, at the council of Constance. He was accused, namely, of having sowed discord and schism be- tween the spiritual and secular powers ; hence had arisen the perse- ' Depos. test, in the Stud. u. Krit. 1. c. ' Hus opp. I fol. 93. V\:n. 256 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. cution of the bishop and the clergy, and the plundering of their goods To this Huss re|)lied : Nothing of the kind had happened through any fault of his Tlie schism between church and state had flillen out eai- lior, and it had arisen in this way: King Wenceslaus had been induced to abandon Pope Gregory XII, who favored Duke Rupert of Bavaria in the competition for the imperial dignity, and to apply to the college of cardinals, which held out to him the hope of obtaining the vote of the pope then to be elected. Now as archbishop Zbynek and the clergy opposed the king in this step, and many suspended divine worship and left Prague, and in fact were followed by the archbishop himself, the king had easily granted that the goods of those wdio had fled to avoid being compelled to side with the king, should be taken from them.' By these commotions Huss was led, in setting forth the necessity of a reformation of the church to his numerous hearers in Bethlehem chapel, .<> portray the corruption of the clergy in all its parts, in dark colors in- deed, but certainly not exceeding the truth. For this he had been much reproached, both at that time and more recently. Wliile the clergy heard him with pleasure when he fearlessly attacked the reigning vices among other classes of men, they could no longer tolerate him when he attacked their own. They laid a complaint against him before the king ; but the king, who was not displeased with what he had done, replied to them : When Huss preached sharp discourses against the prin-ces and lords, they had complacently looked on ; now their turn had come, and they must make the best of it. Upon this was founded the charge that Huss had stirred up the laity to rebellion against the clergy. On the occasion of his trial at Prague, in the year 1414, he was forced to de- fend himself against this charge ; and he said : " I hope that, by the grace of God, I have never preached in an unbecoming manner. Against the vices of the clergy I have undoubtedly preached ; and I hope that I shall preach against them before the council (of Constance) ; not in any extravagant and irregular way, nor so as to show any dispo- sition to injure their good name, but so as to restore their good name, and to give them occasion for correcting their faults. For he who seeks to remove the vices in his neighbors, from good motives, seeks most ef- fectually to restore their good name. 0, how much would it conduce to the good name of every one, if, whenever he heard his vices rebuked in a sermon, he would renounce them, and afterwards, by a good life, secure to himself the praise of God and all holy men." When he was accused of drawing away, by his sermons, the laity of other churches from their parish priests and leading them to disobey those priests, he replied, that he had never, in any way, enticed subjects from a holy obedience to their superio^s, but from unlawful obedience ; he had taught that they should not follow those set over them and parish priests in doing that which is wrong. 2 It was cast as a special reproach upon Huss, as it had already been before upon Matthias of Janow,^ that he openly attacked, before the people, in the Bohemian tongue, the vices ' See Hardt torn. IV, pars 2, pag. 311 et * See Stud. u. Crit. a. a. 0. p. 143. 312. * See above p. 174. HUBS IN CONTENTION WITH THE CLERGY. 257 of the clergy. In reference to this, Cardinal d'Ailly afterwards said to him, at the council of Constance, " Certainly thou hast not observed a just moderation in thy sermons and writings. Oughtest thou not to have adapted thy sermons to the particularneedsof thy hearers ? For what was the necessity or advantage of preaching before the people against cardinals, when no cardinal was present ? Such things should rather be said in their presence, than to their injury before the laity." To this Huss replied : " Priests and other learned men were present to hear my sermons,^ and what I said was on their account, and for the purpose of warning them." 2 Huss, at some later period, composea a tract, in vindication of himself against the charge of having done wrong in openly attacking the vices of the clergy in his sermons, and pointed out the reasons which had led him to do so. He states, in particular, the following good ends, which such discourses might subserve : first, it might be of advantage to the clergy themselves, that they should be made ashamed of their faults and led to repentance ; secondly, that the worth of good clergymen would shine brighter by the contrast. Thirdly, that good clergymen would, by comparison with the bad, gain so much the more the love of the people, and bad ones fall so much the more into contempt. Fourthly, that the good clergy and laity thus learned to avdd the bad, as mangy sheep and wolves. And he applies here the- words of Christ on the final separation (Matt. 13: 41), which, after the manner of Matthias of Janow,3 he understands as referring to her- alds or preachers, designated as Christ's angels, sent forth in the last times for the purpose of separating the good from the bad. Fifthly,, that the simple laity might not imitate those wolves in their life and conduct. Sixthly, that the sinful laity might be stripped of every ex- cuse ; since it was their wont to say. The priests preach against our unchastity and other vices, and say nothing of their own unchastity and their own vices. Either this is no sin, or they are for monopolizing it to themselves. And since it was their wont to say. The priests be- hold the mote in our eyes, but not the beam in their own ; let them first cast out the beam in their own eyes, and then tell us that we should cast out the mote from ours ; and since, again, it was their wont to say. Why dost thou reprove me ? — the priests do the same ; why dost thou not reprove them ? Is it perchance no sin in their case ? Next, because if the prelate be a bad man, perhaps an Antichrist, and if, perhaps on account of his wickedness, the people will not obey hira even in what is right ; the preacher is bound to call upon them to act according to the example of Christ ; to follow the precepts which such lay down, but not imitate their actions (Matt. 28: 2, 3 and 1 Pet. 2: 18). Finally, because the students, when they listen with the people to sermons attacking the vices of the clergy, seek to avoid such, and to prepare themselves, in a better way, for their future calling ; or if they ' What Huss here says is confirmed by ' Quia sermonibus meis sacerdotes et the words of the abbot of Dohi in his Dia- alii docti viri interfuerunt, illoruin causa logus vokitilis adv. Ilussutn : Auditoruiu haec a me dicta sunt, ut sibi caverent multorum millium diversi status et gene- See Hardt torn. IV, pars 2, pag. 317 ris supputatio. Fez thesaur. torn. IV, pars •* See above, p. 196. a, pag. 462. 22* 258 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. are conscious of being guilty of still greater sins, which would be incom- patible with their undertaking so sacred a vocation, they are moved to forsake them betimes. ^ In a later performance, Huss appeals to the maxim that sin can at most hurt a good man only when it is not knoA\'n to be sin ; when exposed, it is rendered harmless.s Another contempo- rary, the Bohemian theologian Andrew of Broda, says, to be sure, in a writing addressed to Huss, that he was not persecuted expressly be- cause he attacked the vices of the clergy ; for the same thing had been done already, before him, by John Militz, Conrad of Waldhausen, and John Stekna.3 But it is evident, from our preceding narrative, that the two first-named individuals did actually draw down upon themselves persecution by their castigatory sermons against the clergy. It may be gathered from the words of Matthias of Janow, cited on a former page, how certainly such castigatory preachers exposed themselves to perse- cutions and to defamation as heretics ; and it lay in the very nature of the case that, as the excited feelings between the two parties, that of the dominant clergy and of the friends of reform, increased in in- tensity, so the persecutions against the castigatory preachers would in- crease in violence. Now as it concerns Huss, his connection with Wicklifitism, and the complication of his cause with many other mat ters which we have pointed out, contributed no doubt to aggravate his case. And as he cultivated the growth of that which had been sown by his predecessors, so he was under the necessity also of reaping, in the bad as well as the good sense, what they had but sown. The clergy of Prague, who had already, near the end of the year 1408, entered a complaint against Huss before the archbishop, re- newed their complaint in still stronger terms during the year in which, for the reasons already mentioned, the breach grew more violent. The charges which they brought against Huss were as follows : that he stir- red up the people against the clergy, the Bohemians against the Ger mans ; preached disrespect to the church and disregard to her power of punishing ; styled Rome the seat of Antichrist, and declared every clergyman who demanded a fee for distributing the sacrament a here- tic ; that he openly praised Wicklif, and had expressed the wish that his soul might finally arrive where Wicklif's soul was.4 In reference to the charge relating to his opinion of Wicklif, Huss in his trial a( Prague, in the year 1414, remarked : " I say, and have said, that Wicklif was, as I hope, a good Christian ; and I hope he is m the king- dom of heaven ; and so too have I expressed myself in my sermons. ' See the tract De arguendo clero pro ' Andrew of Broda, in his Responsio tt concione. Hus opp. I, fol. 150, 2 sq. the epistola, qua a Joann. Hus tentatui ^ Nulla autem i-es sic exterminat bonura, fuerat, ut velin partem ejus transiret, vei queniadmodum simulatum bonum. Nam saltern non ohsisteret: Nam et ab antiquis manit'estum malum tamquam malum fu- temporibus Milicius, Conradus, Sczekna gitur et cavetur. Malum autem sub spe- ot alii quam plurimi contra clericos prae- cie boni celatum, dum non cognoscitur, dicaverunt. See Cochlaeus, hist. Huss nee cavetur, scd etiam quasi bonum susci- lib. I, pag. 42. pitur et non conjunctum est bono, id est * Palacky III, 1, p. 246 Christo, ideo extcrminat bonum. Respon- sio ad scriptum octo doctorum, Opp. I, fol 305, 2. HUSS IN CONTENTION WITH THE CLERGY. 259 Hence I hope also to-day, though I never affirmed it as a fact, that Wicklif belonged to the number of the saved ; because I do not choose to condemn any man, respecting whom I have no testimony of Scripture and no revela- tion, no spiritual knowledge, that he belongs to the number of the repro- bate ; for our Saviour says, Judge not, that ye be not judged."^ On the presentation of these complaints, archbishop Zbynek charged his inquisitor. Master Mauritius of Prague, to inquire into them, and at the same time to examine by virtue of what authority it was that ser- mons and divine worship were held in Bethlehem chapel. We perceive here, already, a wish in the archbishop to find some reason for putting a stop to those labors of Huss in Bethlehem chapel which exerted so great an influence on the people. It is much to be questioned whether Huss, under the existing circumstances, when the bonds of the diocese were relaxed by discordant opinions respecting the recognition of the council of Pisa, would have acknowledged the competency of that spir- itual court. He himself, however, addressed to Rome a complaint against the archbishop, and the latter was cited to Rome on the 14th of December of the year 1409. Yet in the meanwhile the more gene- ral commotions in the church brought about a change in the whole sit- uation of the affair. After the council of Pisa had successfully asserted itself as the supreme tribunal of the church, the archbishop dared no longer to resist. He ac- knowledged Alexander V, the pope appointed by the council. But when the cause of the council had made good its way through Bohemia, Huss received no thanks for what he had done in the struggle with the domi- nant church party for the furtherance of the cause of the council. Zbynek was able to obtain more from the pope for giving up his oppo- sition. His complaints, laid before the latter, respecting the dissemina- tion of the Wicklifite heresy in these districts, met with the more ready acceptance because of his submission ; and Alexander V. was induced by the archbishop to put forth, soon afterwards and as early as De- cember of the year 1409, a bull in which he declares he had heard that the heresies of Wicklif, and especially his denial of the doctrine of tran- substantiation, were spreading far and wide in Bohemia. He called upon tiie archbishop to employ vigorous measures for tlio suppression of these heresies. He should cause all the writings of Wicklif to be de- livered up into his hands, appoint a committee of four doctors of theol- ogy and two doctors of canon law to examine the same, and proceed in conformity with the judgment they should give. All clergymen who re- fused to deliver up those writings, or who should defend Wicklifite here- sies, he should cause to be arrested and deprived of their benefices, and in case of necessity the aid of the secular power should be called in. As private chapels served to spread errors among the people, sermons for the future should be preached, in Bohemia, only in cathedrals, parish and conventual churches, and prohibited in all private charches.^ This papal bull did not arrive in Bohemia until ten weeks after it had ' Depos. test. 1. c. p. 129 and 130. ' For Alexander's bull, see Raynaldi an nalcs ecclesiastic, torn. XVII, pag. 39G. 230 HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. been put forth, and was proclaimed on the 9th of March, 1410. It wad the first in the series of great convulsions which the Bohemian church was destined henceforth to suifer, the beginning of the great com- motions in the midst of which Huss was borne on, from one step in ad- vance to another. Zbynek had probably been the more confident that by means of this expression of the supreme authority of the church he should be able to crush the party at a blow, because King Wenceslaus had not only recognized Alexander V. as a pope elected by the council favored by himself, but in addition to this had, in earlier times, been on terms of personal friendship with the new pope. Fn- the latter, when Cardinal Villargi, had decidedly supported the cause of the king in his competition for the imperial dignity ; and it might therefore be ex- pected that the king would be ready to evince his gratitude by obedi- ence to all his ordinances. But the bull, which bore evidence on its face of being a work of Zbynek, aimed particularly against Huss and his friends, was received with great indignation by important men in Bohemia and about the king's person. In the present excited state of feeling, men easily foresaw that great disturbances must necessarily arise if the archbishop can-ied the bull into execution. The cause of Huss was espoused by the most eminent of the nobility around the per- son of the king.^ By their influence the king's prejudices were excited against the bull and against Zbynek the author of it. His suspicions may have been aroused against Zbynek as an enemy to the realm, the man who had brought it into the bad odor of heresy, though he himself had, as Huss asserted, very recently declared it, as the result of an in- vestigation made under the sanction of the assembly in Prague already mentioned, that no Wicklifite heresy existed at present in Bohemia. The bull was declared to be in many ways a garbled and interpolated one, and therefore of no force. Huss himself excited suspicions against it on this ground, and employed at first every lawful means in his power, under the circumstances of those times, to withhold obedience while he showed all respect to the Roman church. He appealed from the pope male informato to the pope melius informandiim. The archbishop, however, was not to be disturbed by all this. He issued his prohibition against preaching in private chapels, and applied this also to Bethle- hem chapel. Huss thought this contrary to the right granted in the foundation-charter ; he thought he was secured from harm himself by his appeal ; and at all events was determined to act on the principle that it was right to obey God rather than men, and that no man should be induced to desist from a divine vocation by the arbitrary will of an individual. Zbynek issued, moreover, a command that all the writings ' His connection with those in power ciples on the minds of the people and of was an odious imputation brought against the kniglits, from which everything else Huss by the above mentioned abbot of resulted as a matter of course ; just as in Dola ; Et popularis vulgi favor ct saecu- later times Luther acquired, without seek- lare brachium praestabat manifestum prae- ing it, his migiity influence over the minds sidium. Fez thes. IV, 2, pag. 390. But of the people and the knights, through the Huss stood by no means in need of the jiower of the truths which he proclaimed, secular power to promote the spread of his From the respectable knights and barons, principles ; but it was a consequence of however, the influence in Bohemia passed the influence of his mind and of his prin- over to the king. DELIVERING UP OF WICKLIF'S WRITINGS. 261 of Wicklif should be delivered up to lilm for examination within six days. Huss obeyed this injunction, declaring himself ready (which certainly was honestly meant on his part, and cannot justly be ascribed to any motive of pride) to condemn them himself, whenever an error could be pointed out in them. Zbynek now actually ]jroceeded, after many writings of Wicklif had been delivered up, to appoint a committee of examination in the manner prescribed in the bull ; and this committee pronounced sentence of condemnation on a certain number of Wicklif's ■writings : the Dialogue, the Trialogue, and also (a thing which was afterwards particularly noticed by the friends of Wicklif, and with good reason, and which would cause the whole affair to be regarded in a more unfavorable light) on writings of simply philosophical import, as for example his important work on the reality of general conceptions, and on works containing nothing but mathematical and physical disqui- sitions, as their titles sufficiently indicated. These books were all to be committed to the flames, and thus put out of the way of doing harm. The very announcement of this sentence produced disturbances. At a convocation of the university, it was resolved to send in a petition to the king, that he would prevent the execution of such a sentence, on account of the extreme peril to which it would expose the peace of the university and of all Bohemia.' The king promised the delegates of the university that he would comply with their request. The archbishop, on hearing of this, hastened to get the start of the king ; and on the next day, the 16th of June, repeated the proclamation of the above sentence on the writings of Wicklif. When the king learned of this, he caused the archbishop to be asked, whether it was really his intention to bura the books. Zbynek promised that he would do nothing against Wick- lif's writings without the king's consent ; and for this reason put off the execution of the sentence. But he was far from intending reallv to give up the execution of the sentence, in spite of all the remonstrances against such a proceeding, alleging in excuse of his conduct that the king had not expressly forbidden him to burn the books. On the 16th of July, 14:10, having surrounded his palace with a watch, he actually caused two hundred volumes, among which were not only the writings of Wicklif, but also some of Militz and others, to be burned, without the slightest regard to rights of private property, as was afterwards remem- bered to his reproach. This step of the archbishop was the signal for great disturbances and violent controversies in Prague. Even blood was spilt. So great a movement in the minds of men could not be put down with force. The attempt to put it down by an act of arbitrary power, would have only led to still greater violence. The burning of the books had no othei* effect than to expose the archbishop to contempt and ridicule ; and it was a great shock to his authority. Ribald and satiri- cal songs, of which he was made the subject, were openly sung in the Streets of Prague, to the purport, " the archbishop has yet to learn hia ABC; he has caused books to be burned, without knowing what waa ' Ne exiiide confiisio toti regno, domi- zel's account of the life of Kinj,' Wmces- no regi et universitati inferatur. See Pel- laus I. in Urkundsnbuch, No. 220, p. 130. 202 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. in them ! " ^ King Wenceslaus himself, though no friend of the arch- bishop, believed it necessary to put some check on these proceedings ; and is said to have forbidden, on pain of death, these satirical songs on the archbishop. 2 Two contemporaries, belonging to the opposite par- ties, are agreed in stating, that by this burning of his books, the enthu- siasm for Wicklif was increased rather than diminished. One was Huss's zealous opponent, the abbot Stephen of Dola, who at the same time was hlind enough to trace the origin of all the troubles to the diso- bedience of Huss. This writer cites, from the lips of one of Wicklif's ad- herents, the following words : " The archbishop has burnt many famous Avritings of Wicklif ; yet he has not been able to burn them all. For we have still quite a number left ; and we are continually searching in all quarters for others to add to this number, and to supply the place of those lost. Let the archbishop again bid us deliver them up to him, and let him see whether we will obey him ! " 3 The second is Huss himself, who says : " I call the burning of books a poor business. Such burning never yet removed a single sin from the hearts of men (if he who condemned could not prove anything), but has only de- stroyed many truths, many beautiful and fine thoughts, and multiplied among the people disturbances, enmities, suspicions, and murders." 4 When now the news of the death of Alexander V, and of the accession to the government of John XXIII, arrived in Prague, Huss followed up his earlier appeal, already mentioned, by another addressed to this new pope. In this appellatory document he endeavored to point out what was arbitrary and unreasonable in the conduct of Zbynek, that he had caused books to be burnt which contained no theological matter what- ever, but which related simply to w^orldly sciences, quite contrary to the example of holy men of old, as for example Moses and Daniel, who appropriated to themselves the knowledge of unbelieving nations. Paul cited verses from Grecian poets ; the church had always sanc- tioned the practice of studying the books of heretics for the purpose of ' Pelzel Gesch. Wenceslaus Thl. II, s. Christi odiosam multiplicacionem lenoci- 568. nantis cantiei didicisset serenissimus et * The abbot of Dola describes the im- mai;;nificus princeps Ilomanoium et Bohe- pression produced by the burning of the iniae rex Wenceshius. divino edoctus sjn- books, in the words presently to be cited, ritu, A'olens tarn stolidam et publicam jrre- but unjustly lays the blame of all not on verentiam devota et debita recompensare the caprice and folly of the archbishop, reverentia, reu^io pnl)licae vocis statuit de- whom he designates as a man of God, but creto, ut neiiuaquam quisquam airiplius to the mischievous influence of Huss, eandem denientiae cantilenam non sohiini though the whole was a natural conse- sub facultatum forensium, sed et sub cuiji- quence of the aftair, and such as by the talis scntentiae poena audcat dccantare. laws of liuman nature always take place Stephen of Dohi in Antihussus, in P'z. under similar circumstances. The abbot IV, 2. p. 417 and 418. of Dola says of the archbisho]): Factus ' Pez thes. IV, 2, pag. 386. fuit ex inobedientia et reb.ellione illius * Mahim dico coml)ustioncm lilirorum. Mag. Hus velut contemptibilis et paene quae combustio nullum peccatum de cord- fabula in populo. ita ut plerique insolentes ibus hominum (nisi condemnatores proba-- rulgares ac ironicas de eodem viro dei verint) sustulit, sed veritates multas et confingei'ent et (lecanerent cantiones pub- sententiaspulchras et sulitiles in scri;ito- lice per plateas contra justissimam et zelo destruxit. et in populo disturbia. invidias,. catholicae tidei commodam combustionem ditt'amationes, odia multiplicavlt et boiui- librorum istius hacreticae pravitatis. Cu- cidia. Ilus pro defcnslone llbri de trini- jus cum frcquenlationem et irreverentiae tate Joann. Wicltlt, upp. I, fol. 106. APPEAL OF HDSS TO JOHN XXIII. 263 refuting them ; and at the universities provided with papal privileges, the writings of Aristotle and Averrhoes were studied, though they con- tained much that was contrary to the truths of faith. The writings of Origen were not burned, and yet heresies were to be found in them; and in the short space of time occupied by the commission, it was im- possible that so many books could be so thoroughly read and examined as to enable the members to pass judgment upon them. Against the prohibition to preach in Bethlehem chapel, he contends that Christ, who left behind him the seed of his word as the provision for souls, did not mean to have it bound. Christ himself preached everywhere, in the streets, in the fields, and on the lake. For if lie had not left be- hind, for us, the seed of his word, we should have been even as Sodom and Gomorrah. After his resurrection, he had transferred the office of preaching to his disciples forever. With this commission of Christ, and the ordinances of the fathers, this prohibition of Zbynek stood in direct contradiction. And he cites the rule that, in things necessary to salva- tion, one should obey God rather than man, Huss made this appeal in conjunction with many other masters and preachers.^ The language which he employs in it was little suited indeed to be understood or ap- preciated by the monster John XXIII. and the court which he had gathered. Huss, from this time onward, composed several writings, which seem to have had their origin in public disputations held by him in the university ;2 and in these productions he expounded, more at length, the reasons why he could not obey the archbishop in those ordi- nances, and defended many doctrines and writings of Wicklif against the condemnation that had been passed on them. These papers evince the christian temper of his mind at that time ; they show how firmly re- solved he was already to suffer the loss of all things for the cause of Christ, and that even then martyrdom was not far absent from his thoughts ; and they also show with what enthusiastic confidence, in- spired by a christian sense of the force of truth, he looked forward to the ultimate triumph of the truth he defended. We may mention here his tract De trinitate, which he wrote in the year 1410. He begins the public academical act, from which that paper proceeded, by explaining, that it had never entered into his mind to persist in obstinately main- taining anything which was contrary to the Holy Scriptures, or in any way erroneous ; but if he asserted anything of this sort, from ignorance or inadvertency, he would cheerfully and humbly retract it. And if any person of the church, whoever he might be, would teach him better by quotation from Scripture, or rational argument, he was perfectly ready to concur with him. " For — he says — from the earliest period of my studies until now, have I laid it down as a rule, that whenever I heard a more correct opinion on any subject whatever advanced, I would, with joy and humility, give up my earlier opinion ; being well aware that what we know is vastly less than what we do not know." 3 In a later ' Apellatio Joann. IIiis ab Archiepis- ascendo. 0pp. I, fol. 103. copo ad sedein apostolifam, opp. I. fol. 89. ■' Nam a prirao stuiUi mei tempore hoc ■•^ As we infer horn tlic words with wliicli mihi statui pro rejjula, ut quotieseunqua ais tract I)e trinitate begins: Cathedram saniorem seiitmtiani in quacunqiie materia 264 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. paper on Tithes, of the year 1412, he points out three diflferent sources of tiie knowledge of that truth which is always to be held fast — Holy Scripture, reason, and experience of the senses.' Not as though Huss meant to place these truths on a level, as to their substance and matter ; but as truthfulness, and steadfastness in maintaining that which had been made out as true, belonged among the fundamental traits of his charac- ter, so he was resolved never to give up, at any price, a truth which he had gained, Avhatever it might be, or from whatever source it might have come. We see how, in the soul of Huss, it was a principle already formed and firmly established, to derive all the truths of faith directly from Scripture, and to acknowledge nothing to be such truth which did not appear to rest on that foundation. As Christ was the great centre of his faith and of his life, so he had determined to adhere only to his word as the rule of faith and life. But with this he could still join a firm adherence to the existing doctrines of the church, being not as yet conscious of any contradiction between them and the sacred Scriptures ; because his whole theological development had sprung out of the prac- tical element. As he had not the remotest idea of deserting the actual church and forming a new one, so he could still seek to unite the two things together ; though he was already firmly resolved to sacrifice everything to the truth as clearly gathered from the Scriptures, and to reject all that stood in conflict with it, or which he clearly made out to be such. He still clung to church tradition ; but it appeared to him only as the historical evolution of the truth contained, as to its essence, in the sacred Scriptures, an evolution of the germs therein contained, as he expresses it in his tract De decimis,^ mentioned just above, where he says : " Law, as determined by the prelates, is styled canonical law ; and its purpose is to restrain, within due limits, whatever stands in con- flict with the holy laws of the church. It may be compared with the evangelical law, the latter being the articles of faith which have been determined by the holy synods. As the man remains the same, though he may appear in a diiferent dress, and under ditferent, changeable and accidental characters, so it is the same law or the same evangelical truth which is contained implicitly/, or unfolded in the gospel, and is after- wards expounded by the church in another but not contradictory man- ner." ^ He declares, in reference to the forty-five propositions of Wick- lif, " Because it tends to prejudice too much the interests of salvation, to condemn any truth without examination,"^ as our Lord says, Judge percipcrem, a priori sententia gaudenter ad rebelles sacris regulis coercendum. Et et luimiliter declinarem, sciens, quoniam potest etiam intelligi, ut commiinicansjuri ilia quae scimus, sunt minima illorum, evangelico, ut sunt articuli fidei, in Sanctis quae ignoramus. Hus de trinitate, opp. I, synodis sive conciliis explanati. Sicut fol. 105. enini idem est homo in vestibus aut acci- ' Videlicet in vcritate in scn]itura sacra dentibus notitiam inducentibus varians, explicita,"in vcritate ab infallihili ratione sic cadem est lex vel Veritas evangelica in elaborata et in veritate experimentaliter a evangelio implicita vel detecta, et per ec- sensu cognita. Hus de decimis, opp. I, fol. clesiam postmodum aliter, sed non con 125, 2. trarie explanata. '■' Hus opp. I fol. 128, 2. ■* In the edition lying before us wo ^ Jus canonicum vocatur jus a praelato find, it is true, exanime condemnare veri- vel praelatis institutum et promulgatum tatem ; but we think we may take it for DEFENS. QUOR. ART, J. WICKLIP BY HUSS. 265 not, that ye be not judged, the university of Prague demands, so far aa it does not concur in the condemnation of those forty-five articles, the proof, from the appointed doctors, of the reasonableness of that con- demnation, and that they should show wherein each of those articles ig false, by the authority of Scripture, or by arguments of infiiUible reason." In reference to the prohibition directed against preaching in Beth- lehem chapel, he says : " Where is there any authority of Holy Writ, or where are there any rational grounds for forbidding preaching in so public a place, fitted up for that very purpose, in the midst of the great city of Prague ? Nothing else can be at the bottom of this, but the jealousy of Antichrist.i He exhibits Pope Alexander V. in con- trast with the apostles. "For — says he — when that pope heard at his court that Bohemia received the word of God, he did not send Peter and John to pray for the Bohemians, and to lay their hands on them, that in hearing the word of God they might receive the Holy Ghost ; but he sent back some ill-disposed persons belonging to Bohe- mia, and commanded, in his bull, that the word of God should not bo preached in private chapels." ^ Huss opposes to the arbitrary self-will of a man, which would hinder him from preaching, his own divine call. He says : " He who lives conformably to the law of Christ, and animated by a disposition of sincere love, has singly in view the glory of God, and his own and his neighbor's salvation, and preaches not lies, not ribaldry, not fables, but the law of Christ and the doctrines of the holy fathers of the church, he who so preaches when times of distress come, when a pope or a bishop is wanting, or he who takes his stand in opposition to heretics or false teachers, such a person never arro- gates to himself the call to preach without authority ; and it is not to be doubted, that the man in such case is sent of God." The inter- nal divine call, Huss asserts, which springs from the work of the Holy Spirit on the soul, is of more authority'' than any outward call proceed- ing from men ; and a person may be constrained by this internal call from God to stand forth even in opposition to the ordinances of man. Those ecclesiastical laws had been given only for the purpose of re- straining the bad. Not for a righteous man is the law made, but for sinners. Where the spirit of God is, there is liberty .3 Now we may granted that this, as many other passages had not heen forbidden him to preach, but in this edition of the works of Huss, is in- to found a school in tliis place; wiiich, correct, and that the text should read, however, in the sense of Huss was nothing sine examine. Defens. quor. art. J. Wic- else tiian to found here a genuine ciiristiau left', opp. I, fol. 111. church ; though to this abbot it would ap- ' De trinit., opp. I, fol 106, 2. The ah- pear only as a " School of Satan." vSo he hot of Dola quotes as a common saying expresses himself: Non ut verlnim Christi among the party of Huss, that the word occultetur, scd ut oceasio conventiculi et of God cannot l)e bound. His opinion on satanicae scholae illius impii Wicleff" hae- the contrary was, that Huss had not been retici de medio tolleretur. Antihussus, Fez forbidden to preach at all, but only, for thcs. IV, 2, pag. 373. special reasons, to preach in this partieu- '^ llesponsio ad scriptum octo doctor- lar chapel; and here the duty of obedience um, opp. I, fol. 29S, 1. to his superiors ought to have been felt ■'' Justo enim lex non est posita, sed ubi by him as of paramount ol)ligation. The spiritus dei, ibi libertas, et si spiritu del Bethlehem Chapel is here denominated ducimini, non estis sub lege. Def. articnl the Wicletistarum insidiosa spelunca. It quor. J. WiclefF, opp. I, fol. 115. VOL. V. 23 2>QQ HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. easily conceive how revolting such language of christian freedom of spirit must have appeared to those who knew of nothing higher than the stiff ordinances of the church ; how they must have looked upon it as tending to the overthrow of all ecclesiastical order. But the ob- jection now brought up, was that such an internal divine call was hidden from all but the subject of it. Kvery man could affirm this of himself: every heretic, every fanatic, might stand up under that pretence. Some outward sign of such an internal divine call was requisite therefore ; either an express testimony of Holy Scripture, or an evident miracle. To this Huss replied : and the reader will bo struck with the coincidence of the views he expresses with those of Matthias of Janow, — " Antichrist was to have the power of deceiving by wonders. In the last times, miracles are to be retrenched from the church. She is to go about only in the form of a servant ; she is to be tried by patience. The lying wonders of the servants of Anti- christ are to serve for the trial of faith. By its own intrinsic power, faith shall preserve itself in the elect, superior to all arts of deception. This is the substance of that which Huss sets forth and illustrates by copious extracts from the sayings of the older church teachers. " Pro- phecy — he says — is wrapt in obscurity ; the gift of healing removed ; the power of long-protracted fasting diminished ; the word of doctrine silent ; miracles are withheld. Not that divine providence utterly suspends these things ; but they are not to be seen openly and in great variety, as in earlier times. All this, however, is so ordered by a wonderful arrangement of divine providence, that God's mercy and justice may be revealed precisely in this way ; for while the church of Christ must, after the withdrawal of her miraculous gifts, appear in greater lowliness, and the righteous who venerate her on account of the hope of heavenly good, not on account of visible signs, fail of their reward in this earthly life, there will, on the other hand, be a more speedy manifestation of the temper of the wicked who, disdaining to follow after the invisible things which the church promises, cUng fast to visible signs." i In this mode of contemplating the condition of the church in the last times, we recognize an adherent of the doctrine of absolute pre- destination ; though the truth contained in these same views might •also be held independent of this doctrine. This servant-form of the true church, in which the power of the invisible godlike is all that attracts, as contrasted with the abundance of lying wonders in the •worldly church of Antichrist, appearing in visible glory, serves as a ' Nam proohetia absconditur, curation- subtractis miraculorum virtutibus sancta um gratia aufertur, prolixioris abstinentiae ecclesia velut ahjectior apparet et bono- virtus imminuitur, doctrinae verba conti- rum praemium quiescit, qui illam propter cescunt, miraculorum prodigia toUentur. spem coelestium, non propter praesentia Quae quidem nequaquam superna disposi- signa venerantur, et raalorum meus contra tio funditus subtrahit, sed non haec, sicut ilia citius ostcnditur, qui sequi quae pro- prioribus temporibus aperte ac multiplici- mittit invisibilia negligunt, dum signis vi- ler ostendit, quod tamen mira dispcnsa- sibilibus continentur. Dei'eiisio articul tione agitur, ut una ex re divina simul et quor. J. Wicleif, opp. I, fol. 115, 2. pictas et justitia compleatur, dum enira DEFENSIO ART. QUOR. J. WICKLIF BY HUSS. 267 means of separatin;^ the elect from the reprobate. The elect must pass through this trial in order to bring out their genuine character ; the reprobate must be deceived according to the just judgment of God. He proceeds to infer, therefore, from what had been said, that in these times it is rather the servants of Antichrist, than the servants of Christ, who will make themselves known by wonders. He says : "It is a greater miracle to confess the truth and practise righteous- ness, than to perform marvellous works to the outward senses." And he then adds : The priest or deacon who loves his enemies, despises riches, esteems as nothing the glory of this world, avoids entanglin-" liimself in worldly business, and patiently endures terrible threaten- ings, even persecutions for the gospel's sake, such a priest or deacon performs miracles, and has the witness within him that he is a genuine disciple of Christ." He appeals to various fine remarks of Augustin, Gregory, and Chrysostom, on miracles, those witnesses to the genuine Christian view of the miracle, which, in spite of all errors, runs through the whole history of the church, and also to the words of Christ, Matt. 5: 16. John 10: 38. Matt. 7: 22., and then concludes: "It is evident that every priest or deacon, who confesses the truth and practises righteousness, has a virtual testimony in this very thing, that he is sent of God, and that he needs not prove this divine mission by miracles, nor by an express passage of Holy Writ, relating personally to himself as one sent of God to preach the gospel." i Ev^en now Huss gives utterance to the resolution, which he observed faithfully to the end. " In order that I may not make myself guilty, then, by my silence, forsaking the truth for a piece of bread, or through fear of man, I avow it to be my purpose to defend the truth which God has enabled me to know, and especially the truth of the Holy Scriptures, even to death ; since I know that the truth stands, and is forever mighty, and abides eternally ; and with her there is no respect of persons.2 And, if the fear of death should terrify me, still I hope in my God and in the assistance of the Holy Sjjirit, that the Lord himself will give me firmness. And if I have found favor in his sight, he will crown me with martyrdom.^ But, what more glorious triumpli is there than this ? Inciting his faithful to this victory our Lord says : Fear not them that kill the body, (Matt. 10 : 28)." We may here adil the words uttered by Huss in his tract on Tithes : " As it is necessary for men gifted with reason to hear, to speak, and ' Ex his piitet, quod qnilihtn diaconus mamiin dcserens veritatem, volo verita- vel sacerdos confitens veritatoin vt faciens tem, quam mihi deus coj^uoscere conces- justitiam habet testimonium cfBcax, quod serit, et pracsertim scri])turac divinae us- ipse est missus a dco, et quod non opor- que ad mortem defendere, scicns, quia tet ipsum probare illam inissionem per Veritas mauct et invalescit in aeternuni et operationem miraculi, propter operation- obtinet in saecula saeeulorum, ajiud (piam em justitiae. nee per scripturam, quae ex- non est accipere personas nccjue ditteren- presse ipsum nomine exprimeret, ([uod ad tias. De trin., o|)p. I, 106. evangclisandum a domino foret missus. ^ Et si timor mortis terrere voluerit. Ibid. fol. 116, 2. spero de deo mco et spiritus saneti auxilio, * Ne ergo istis speciebus consensus per- quod ipse dominus dabit constantiara. Et cuterer et spccialiter consensu non repre- si gratiam invenero in oculis suis, martyr hensionis, mutescens culpabiliter, propter io coronabit. Ibid, buccellam panis, aut propter timorem hu- 268 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. to love the truth, and to guard carefully against everything that mio-ht thwart it ; as the truth itself triumphs over everything and is mighty forever, (where he refers to the words of Christ : Let your communi- cation be Yea, yea; naj^, nay) ; who, but a fool, would venture to condemn or to affirm any article, especially in what pertains to faith and manners, until he has informed himself about the truth of it ? " i If some writers, both in ancient 2 and in modern times, have been disposed to find in Huss a proud or a fanatical striving after martyr- dom, we cannot in this agree with them at all. It was simply the presentiment of death, which could not, in such a time, fail to fill the mind of a witness for the truth, coming out in the face of the world : for that truth to which he had devoted his entire life as a sacrifice. The conduct of Huss down to the hour of his martyrdom will show ua nothing but the genuine Christian martyr, who with enthusiasm, yet with cool self-possession and resignation to the divine will, seeks not the martyr's crown, but when it is offered accepts it in godly joy from the hand of the giver. It was laid as a serious charge against Huss, as we have seen, that he pubUcly discussed contested articles of faith. In reference to this, he says: "'How often did Christ dispute witii companies of the Jews and priests ; how often, according to the Acta of the Apostles, did his disciples, how often have the holy teachers of the church, and the scholastic doctors, disputed on the matters of faith." 3 The principles of Wicklif which Huss defended contained much that would make him appear to the advocates of the old hierarchical sys- tem a very dangerous adversary, a destructionist ; and Huss himself, in defending these principles, was led to say many things which doubtless were liable to misapprehension. We have already re- marked that, with Wicklif, he looked upon it as the destination of the clergy to copy, in all things, the example of Christ, who took upon him the form of a servant, and to resemble him therefore in poverty. What- ever the clergy obtained for their support, should be regarded simply as gift of free love. The spontaneous affection of those for whose spiritual benefit they labored, should afford them what was necessary for the body. But they should require only what was absolutely needful for their support, and nothing which ministered to superfluity.'' From the superfluous abundance of temporal goods, he derived the corruption of the worldly clergy. He was forced to complain that, especially in Bohe- mia, the fourth part of all the landed estates were in the hands of the clergy.5 Accordingly, with Wicklif, he finds the princes to be in the ' De decimis, opp. I, fol. 125, 2. confirmares te sequentium, traderes te po- * The abbot of Dola. in the year 1411, tins fiammis ultrieibus concremandum. already finds that Huss will die at the Antihussus, Fez thes. IV, 2, pag. 383. stake rather than recant; but from his ^ De trinitate, opp. I, fol. 107, 2. false conception of humility and ol)edience, * Compare his ract De decimis, of tha taken from the position of Roman Cath- year 1412. oliiism, he sees in this only a want of hu- * Cum plus quam quarta pars regni sit niility, and spiritual pride. So he says: devoluta ad manum mortuam. De abla- Antii[uam humiliatus revocans revocanda tione bonorum, vol. I, 1412, opp. I, fol de tuae sublimitatis descenderes pestilenti 122, 2. cathedra, ut vel sic tuorum lapidea corda HUSS ON RIGHT OF PROPERTY. 269 riglit ; and looks upon it as a work of christian charity in them to de- prive the clergy of that superfluity of earthly goods which they abused, and which was the means of their corruption.^ Thus should the clergy be brought back to poverty and to the holy life of the primitive apos- tolical church. This was an error, indeed, in the case of Huss as well as of Wicklif ; an error that was followed by mischievous consequences, and which arose from their not paying sufficient regard to the course things had actually taken in history, and from their supposing that a glorious condition of the church connected with an altogetlier different stage of progress, was to be thus suddenly restored from without. In expressing these views, Huss attached them to a proposition already laid down by the ancient teachers of the church, which, theoretically considered, con- tained in it a sublime truth, leading the mind back to Christ himself and the apostles ; but which, empirically apprehended and applied to practice, might lead to the overthrow of all social order ; the proposi- tion, namely, that all rightful holding of property, in the sight of God, was conditioned on the subjective worth of the owner ; that ownership could be predicated only of the righteous ; in support of which it was already customary among the ancients to quote Prov. 17: 6, according to the Septuagint version and the Vulgate. Now when this proposition was employed in justification of the act of depriving the unworthy of their property, the consequences, no doubt, would be very bad. Huss cites, in favor of it, 1 Cor. 3 : 21." To the same category be- longs, also, his defence of Wicklif's proposition that No man is lord over any possession, no man can be king, or bishop, if he is in mortal sin. Huss distinguished three kinds of property, that grounded in na- ture, that grounded in civil law, and that proceeding from grace and justice. It never entered his thoughts to make sovereignty and su- preme authority dependant on the personal worth of the incumbent, or to approve of rebellion against authority not so founded. The very dis- tinction just set forth stood opposed to any such mode of apprehending and applying the proposition. He affirms what, rightly understood, could not be denied, that mortal sin infected not the whole life only, but as well every single action of the man in detail ; that everything depended on the governing disposition, which gave to everything its moral character. But nothing could be gained by this ; nothing but mischief could ensue when a proposition, correct in itself, was so para- doxically expressed, and applied to questions of right, a province of life where it ought never to be applied. Had it not been for the barren, subtle method of scholasticism in which the fifteenth century was still entangled to a far greater degree than the flourishing period of scholas- ticism had been in the thirteenth century, Huss would not have ex- pended so much labor in demonstrating a point so unfruitful in its prac- tical application and so liable to be misapprehended. But Huss defends ' L. c. fol. 120, 2 : Rectificatio faoillima ' Temporalcs autem domini procedentes cleri ad vitam Cliristi et apostoloruin et secundum caritatis rcgulain juste possi- pertinentior laicis, ne ipsi clerici vivant dent ilia temporalia, cum justorum sunt Cliristo contrarie, videtur esse eleemosy- omnia. De ablat. bon., opp. I, fol. 119, 2 nurum subtractio et coUatarura ablatio. 23* 270 HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. himself against the reproach, that by his mode of representing oflSce as being conditioned on the personal worth of the holder, he destroyed its objective efficiency. He says, " we concede that a bad pope, bishop, or priest, is an unworthy minister of those sacraments by which God baptizes and consecrates, or in other ways operates for the advance- ment of his church. But in the same way he ordains much that is good through the instrumentality of the devil as his minister, being very mighty, glorious, and praiseworthy in this, that he effects such glorious ends by so reprobate a minister. But the minister effects it to his own condemnation." 1 We have already remarked that the adversaries of Huss, who would have been very glad to represent him as an opponent of the doctrine of transubstantiation, since this would have served beyond anything else to fix upon him the charge of heresy, availed themselves for this pur- pose (perverting his words) of that spiritual apprehension of this sacra- ment in its significance for the internal christian life, which was made specially prominent by Huss in his preaching. As Huss ever laid great stress on the expression that Christ is himself the bread of the soul, the provision for eternal hfe, his enemies seized on such expres- sions to create a suspicion that he did not really believe in the flesh and blood of Christ in the Lord's supper, as that into which the bread and wine had been transformed. It was the whispering about of such a suspicion which seems to have led Huss to compose his tract De Corpore Christi. In this treatise also, we see how he gives prominence only to the practical side of religion ; how very far he is from wishing to con- tend against the doctrine of transubstantiation. He portrays, in this tract, first the character of the gross Jews (grossi Judgei), who would not acknowledge Christ to be the bread of the soul, who said the body of Christ was broken, comminuted with the teeth, seen with the bodily eyes, and touched with the hands. We recognize here the same class of people that appeared first against Berenger, who, for the purpose of cutting off all possibility of a spiritual apprehension of the mystery, se- lected the most carefully-sought crass style of expression respecting the body of Christ in the supper, and who were ready to detect, in every more spiritual mode of expression, a denial of transubstantiation. He says of these people that in grossness of apprehension they were to be compared with those Jews who murmured against Christ in the syna- gogue of Capernaum (John vi). He joins those opponents of the crass phraseology respecting the body of Christ produced by the consecra- tion, Hugo de St. Victor, Hildebert of Mans, and even Innocent III, in saying that " Christ is manducated spiritually. "He abides in his di- vh)ity and his body wholly in heaven, and he abides in his divinity and his humanity wholly within the heart, so long as the sacrament is with thee. But when thou art not receiving the sacrament, and art without mortal sin, although he does not sacramentally and in his hu- manity abide in thee, he still, in his divinity and through grace, dwells n thy heart." He thinks it of importance to note, distinctly, that what ' Responsio ad seripta Paletz, opp. I, fol. 256 HUSS ON THE DOCTRINE OF TRANSUBSTANTIATION. 271 the senses perceive is one thing, and what the eye of faith discerns, quite another, a distinction which could be made without aiFecting the doctrine of transubstantiation. Meantime the cause of Huss assumed a much darker aspect in the Roman court. The report of Archbishop Zbynek relative to the Bohemian disturbances met with a far more cordial reception than the appeal of Huss, which was scarcely noticed. The pope committed the matter for investigation into the hands of Cardinal Otto of Colonna, the same who was afterwards chosen pope by the council of Constance. This cardinal confirmed the sentence passed by Archbishop Zbynek, and cited Huss to appear at Bologna, where tlie pope was then resid- ing. This mode of proceeding aroused the indignation of the impor- tant party of Huss in Bohemia. Huss and his friends could with justice affirm that, owing to the great number of his enemies in Ger- many it would not be safe for him to undertake such a journey ; that it would be sacrificing his life for nothing. In truth, the worst and nothing but the worst, was to be expected, even should Huss succeed in getting to the Roman court, where there were so many to whom he had made himself odious by attacking the corruptions that prevail- ed at that court.^ Queen Sophia used all her interest in behalf of her father confessor. Wenceslaus, who looked upon Archbishop Zby- nek as the author of all the disturbances, the man who had brought his kingdom under suspicion, wrote in favor of Huss to the pope in Bologna and to the college of Cardinals. He begged the pope to put a stop to the whole process, to impose silence on the enemies of Huss, to suppress the dispute concerning the books of Wicklif ; since it was evident, that in his kingdom no man had fallen into error or heresy by occasion of those writings. " It is our will too — he Avrote — that Bethlehem Chapel, which, for the glory of God and the saving good of the people, we have endowed with franchises for the preaching of the gospel, should stand, and should be confirmed in its privileges ; so that its patrons may not be deprived of their rights of patronage, and that Master Huss (whom he styles the loyal, devout, and beloved) may be established over this chapel and preach the word of God in peace." He demanded of the pope, moreover, that the personal cita- tion of Huss should be revoked ; and if any one had anything to object to him, that he should present his objections there within the realm and before the university of Prague, or some other competent tribu- nal.2 Kmg Wenzel sent, in company with this letter to the pope, ' The abbot of Dola, in his dialogue him as his judge, wliose sins he has reek- written in the year 1414, represents the lessly attacked, he manifestly gives him- " Goose," that is, Huss, liis name signifying self up to death." To this liis antagonist this in the Bohemian language, as saying, replied : " Huss, placing his confidence ia '• I have many reasons for not obeying the God, had nothing to fear, and, after tiie Station to Rome. It was my intention, example of Christ, ought to have appeared At first, to appear tlicre ; l)Ut my counsel even before an unjust judge. Steph. Uol. and the counsel of tlie other party wrote dialogus volatilis, Tez IV, 2, pag. 464 et me, that I should not come, because it 465 auca et passer. would be sacrificing my life to no purpose. "'' The letter, according to a manuscript I refused, then, because I did not wish to in the Imperial library at Vienna, in Pa- neglect the people in the word of God, nor lacky HI, 1, p. 258, and the letter to tha to expose my life when nothing was to bo cardinals, in Pelzel, Urkundenbuch Nr. gained by it ; for when a man stands before 221. 272 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Doctor Nas, and Master John Cardinalis of Reinstein, a man often employed in embassies, a friend of Huss, and one who afterwards took an important part in the Hussite movements ; and they were to re- quest the pope to send a legate to Bohemia at the king's expense. He also wrote to Cardinal Colonna ; and requested him to come to Prague himself, and inform himself of the actual state of things by personal observation. He directed that the pope should be informed by Doctor Nas, to whom the pope was a personal friend, that nothing but his respect for the pope prevented him from bringing the author of all these disturbances in his kingdom to condign punishment. Huss at the same time sent with these persons three procurators to Rome, as his representatives and advocates in the carrying on of the process, — his friend, Master Jesenic, a jurist, and two doctors of theology. Cardinal Colonna had already, in February, 1411, pronounced sen- tence of excommunication in contumaciam against Huss, for not obey- ing the citation. Still, however, the pope was moved by the interces- sion of the king to take the cause out of the hands of Colonna, and to appoint a new commission ; among the members of which we may mention Cardinal Francisco a Zabarellis, archbishop of Florence, as one who on account of his disposition to favor reform stood better affected towards Huss than many others. Meanwhile Archbishop Zbynek had made every exertion through his delegates at Bologna to prevent the course already taken against Huss, and his citation from being revoked. He is said to have been most lavish in his presents, sending horses, vases, and costly rings, to the pope, and other gifts of the same kind to the cardinals.* But, through some unknown in- fluence, the cause was afterwards transferred to Cardinal Brancas alone, who, in spite of all the remonstrances made by the procurators of Huss, kept the whole aflfair in suspense for a year and a half. In- asmuch, therefore, as the excommunication of Huss had not been revoked, the archbishop regarded it as valid, and had it published in all the churches except two, whose rectors declined to read it. As regards the procurators of Huss, since they persisted in demanding that his cause should undergo a new investigation, some of them were thrown into prison, the others returned back to Prague when they saw that nothing was to be done. At length. Cardinal Brancas brought up the process against Huss. The former sentence was confirmed with additional severity. The cardinal issued a public declaration, jtyling Huss a heresiarch, and laying the city where he resided under interdict.2 Archbishop Zbynek carried this measure into effect, and the interdict was imposed on Prague. But Huss and his friends did not consider themselves bound by these arbitrary sentences, passed without giving both parties a hearing. King Wenzel, whose remon- Btrances addressed to the archbishop had had so little effect, warmly espoused the side of Huss. The clergy, who were inclined to observe 1 Chronic, uiiivers. rray. Ms. in riihu-ky ' See the report given by Huss himself, III, 1, S. 264, and compare what Master which may serve as the authority for the Jfsenic says on the matter ot the bribes, facts related in the foregoing pages. 0pp. in his protest. Huss opp. I, fol. 332. I, fol. 86 sq. COMPROMISE IN THE YEAR 1411. 273 the interdict, had to endure violent persecutions ; their goods were confiscated ; many of them fled the country. Thus the contest be- tween the clergy and the secular power in Bohemia, seemed to have reached its acme ; when the whole affair took another turn, and a hope began to be cherished that the present commotions would yet be hush- ed to rest. Zbynek was forced to perceive that he was too weak to carry through his purpose in opposition to the king and the party of Huss. Keflecting that the schism in the church still continued to subsist, looking at the feebleness of Pope John, who made himself every day more odious by his abominable life, and his disgraceful administration, Zbynek could not hope for assistance from the Roman court ; and, besides, Pope John was too deeply involved in other affairs lying nearer iiis heart, to be able to bestow any particular at- tention on the disturbances in Bohemia. The archbishop was forced, therefore, to the conviction, that, if he pushed matters to the extreme, he would only run the risk of losing all his authority in Bohemia ; a result which would be inevitable, if sharper spiritual measures were continually resorted to, while yet every one of them was trifled with. Hence he was the rather inclined, for the sake of saving his authority, finally to give way to the efforts of the king and of the university for the restoration of peace, and to offer his hand for reconciliation. In the beginning of July, 1411, a committee was appoiuted, con- sisting of ten, — princes, notables of the secular and spiritual orders, — persons who had taken no part in the preceding controversies, to devise the best means for establishing peace in Bohemia. Wenzel, Archbishop Zbynek, and both parties, pledged themselves to submit to the decision of this committee.' They settled upon the following terms of agreement : King Wenceslaus and the archbishop should both write to the pope, and the latter report to him, that no heresies existed in Bohemia ; a new inquiry, however, should be made into this matter, and, if anything of a heretical character might still be found, it should be condignly punished. Zbynek should obtain the pope's consent, that if any person belonging to the Bohemian realm, of the secular or spiritual order, lay under the ban, this should be removed by the pope ; both parties should recal their procurators from Rome, and be satisfied with the decision of the king ; the archbishop should remove the ban and interdict ; and, on the other hand, the king should restore the salaries which had been withholden from the clergy, and release such as were under arrest. Zbynek actually drew up such a letter to the pope, reporting that no heresies were propagated in Bohemia, and requesting him to remove the excommunication which had been pro- nounced on Huss, and to revoke the citation which had been served on him.'-^ In connection with this compact, Huss laid before the Uni- versity of Prague, in oflicial form, near the beginning of January, in this year, 1411, a confession of faith designed to vindicate himself ' See the report of Telzel, with the doc- * See the letter in the WoAs of Boss, I nments in tlie historical work above cited, fol. 87, 2. and the narrative by Huss quoted ou the preceding page. 274 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. against those aspersions which had been cast upon his orthodoxy, which confession was to be transmitted to Rome. Huss declares in this paper, that, " to show due obedience to the church of Jesus Christ and to its supreme head, I am ready to give to every man an account of the faith that is in me, and confess with my whole heart that Jesus Christ is true God and true man, that his whole law is of such stable truth, that not one jot or tittle thereof can fail ; next, that his church is so firmly established on the firm rock, that the gates of hell can never prevail against it ; and I am ready, trusting on my Lord Jesus Christ, •to endure the punishment of a terrible death, sooner than consciously to say anything which would be contrary to the will of Christ and of Jiis church." And so he testified that he had been falsely accused before the apostolical see by his enemies. Among these false accusa- tions, he cites the following : that he had taught the people that the substance of the bread and wine still remained after the consecration ; that, at the elevation of the host, Christ's body was present, but not when it was set down again ; that a priest in mortal sin could not consecrate ; ' that the lords should deprive the clergy of their temporal goods ; that tithes ought not to be paid ; 2 that indulgences were no- thing ; 3 that he had advised to the employment of the secular sword against the clergy ; that he had taught some heresy or other, or drawn the people aside from the right faith ; that he had driven the Germans from the University of Prague, etc.4 We may observe it as a thing of no rare occurrence in great epochs of the history of the world, where one mode of thinking and feeling has been brought into direct conflict with its opposite, and by means of such conflict the way is preparing for new and important develop- ments, that when these antagonisms have arrived at their utmost ten- sion, a way of compromise or adjustment from some foreign quarter seems to be ready prepared for the occasion. A superficial view of history might lead one to suppose, that now, if some other disturbing cause had not interfered to prevent the adoption of this compromise, and if but this or that means had been added by a cunning policy, the whole course of events would have taken an altogether ditterent direc- tion. But, on the contrary, we should understand, that such a com- promise as would seem desirable by those who contemplate the case ' lluss in his work on Tithes has dis.- Comp. Uepos. test, in the Stud. u. Krit tinftly expressed this conviction of his 18.37, 1 p. 127. respecting the objective character of sacra- ^ Huss had not asserted this uncondi- inental acts independent of the subjective tionally; but only that if the clergy vio- character of the person administering lated their duty and abused their power, them : Cum non virtute propria, sed dei they might be deprived of the tithes, haec faciunt satis rite prosunt ecclesiae. ^ Huss had hitherto spoken only against De decimis, opp. I, fol. 134, 1. He was the abuse of indulgences by such as made actually accused of having asserted in his a trade of spiritual things; not against the sermons about the year 1399, that only a right of granting indulgences itself, with priest in the state of grace and not one regard to which right it was still under chargeable with mortal sin can truly con- controversy liow far it extended, secrate; but Huss was able to appeal to ■• This confession is in tiie Works of the fact, that, from the first year of his ac- Huss, but more coirectly printed in Pel- live labors as a preacher and onward, he zel, Urkundenbuch Nr. 230. had uniformly taught the opposite to this. COMPROMISE OF 1411. 275 only frum the outside, and are simply wishing for quiet and peace, without any sympathy for the internal struggle of the antagonistic forces, is a thing idle and nugatory in itself, bearing within it the causes of its failure, the seeds of its own frustration ; for it is utterly impossible to sever by outward interference the threads of history, to force back again by some diplomatic mediation or other, deep-grounded antagonisms taken in the midst of their development. The impelling principles and ideas, which constitute history, are of mightier force than the purposes and designs of men. This was seen in the present instance. The reform tendency which had begun with MiUtz, and had been continually developing itself, and which must, finally, come into inevitable conflict with the hierarchical system, — the antagonism between the two tendencies in the Bohemian church, which from this time became daily more distinctly pronounced, could not be suppressed by the momentary interest of the king and the archbishop, and by a compromise of their respective policies. Although, for the moment, the letter of the compact might actually be fulfilled by all the parties concerned, yet sooner or later would the more deep-grounded anta- gonism again come to an outbreak. Archbishop Zbynek, however, could hardly be quite in earnest about this compromise. He could not become reconciled with the anti-hierarchical party in Bohemia ; nor could they, any more, abandon their principles. In truth, Zby- nek afterwards expressly declared in his exculpatory letter to the king, that he could not report to the pope that priests who did not observe the interdict, should not be regarded as punishable. He must once more complain, that what he called heresy was preached by many clergymen, and that he was not permitted to apply his ecclesiastical power of punishing to those who set foi'th erroneous doctrines. It did not require, therefore, the dissatisfaction with King Wenzel who, as Zbynek pretended, had failed in fulfilling the conditions of the com- promise, to prevent the archbishop from complying with his part of the agreement. Since then he could not but foresee that under these circumstances it would be impossible for him to maintain his authority in Bohemia, or to carry out his measures by force, he resolved, in- stead of fulfilling the terms of the agreement, to quit Bohemia for the present, and to seek assistance from Wenzel's brother. King Sigis- mund, in Ofen.' In the beginning of September of the year 1411, he carried this resolution into etfect. But death surprised him before he could have an interview with King Sigismund.^ ' The abbot of Dola ri^L^iitly apprehend- tioii, however, not a trace is to be found ed the state of the case from his own point in the writings of Huss. The abbot views of view, as we see from what he says re- it rather in the light of a martyrdom, iu specting the flight of the archbisliop : Af- which the archbishop passes away in the fectus taedio (sciens. (juoil nietus pro tera- midst of contests to receive the crown of pore etiam in constautem virum cadere victory. He says : M Hus se et suam rebel- possit) paululum abscondit t-e, diun dimis- lionem justiticaus magna cum lactitia cum sa sui ei)iscopatuspontiticali catlicdra exi- suis omnilius vociferaiis affirinabat, cua- rit de terra et dioecesi propria Bohemia. dein antistitcm, tamiuani prinium et capi- " If we may credit the abbot of Dola, talem adversarium suum, in viudictam et this was represented by the Hussite party causae suae triumphum sic esse tanquam ds a divine judgment, of which interpreta- profugum exstinctum. On the contrary Z t HISTORY OP THEOLOGY A^TD DOCTRIXE. The successor of Zbvnek was not inclined to take a very lively inter- est in church controversies ; and if an event had not soon after hap- pened by which the opposite parties were necessarily thrown into a more violent and important contest with each other than any which had yet occurred, a temporary truce might have ensued. The individual who assumed the archiepiscopal dignity was a man on good terms -vvith King Wenceslaus, quite ignorant of theological matters and ecclesiasti- cal affairs, and who would have been glad to let everything go on qui- etly, a man who had been elevated to this post for reasons quite differ- ent from a spiritual call. This was Albic of Unitzow, the king's phy- sician, who, after obtaining some reputation as a medical author, had but recently passed through the inferior spiritual grades, and was al- ready at an advanced period of life. To him, peace was the most de- sirable of all things. But where so many combustible materials were present, it required but a small spark to set evervthing in flames. An occasion of this sort grew out of circumstances connected with the en- trance of the new archbishop upon his office, though without any fault of his own. The papal legate, who bore the pallium to the newly ap- pointed primate, was directed at the same time to publish the bull, put forth in a manner worthy of himself by Pope John XXIII, pronouncing in the most awfid forms the curse of the ban on the pope's enemy King Ladislaus of Naples, adherent of Gregory XII, as on a heretic, a schismatic, a man guilty of high treason against the majesty of God ; and proclaiming a crusade for the destruction of his party ; together with a bull granting fall indulgence to all who took part in this crusade. All who personally bore arms in this crusade were promised, if they truly repented and confessed themselves, (which, in this connection, surely could mean nothing but a mere form.) the forgiveness of their sins, as fuUy as in participating in any other crusade. Following the example of cupidity set up by Boniface IX, this bull offered the like indulgence to those also who would contribute as much in money as, in proportion to their means, they would have expended by actively en- gaging in this crusade for the space of a month. The papal legate, who from what he had heard about Huss might probably expect to meet with opposition on his part, requested archbishop Albic to summon Huss before him, and, in the archbishop's presence, demanded of him whether he would obey the apostoUcal mandates ? Huss declared that he was ready, with all his heart, to obey the apostolical mandates. Then said the legate to the archbishop : "Do you see ? the master is quite ready to obey the apostoUcal mandates ?" But Huss rejoined : •• My lord, inderstand me well. I said I am ready, with all my heart, to fulfil the apostolical mandates ; but I call apostoUcal mandates the doctrines of the apostles of Christ ; and so far as the papal mandates agree with these, so far I wiU obey them most willingly. But if I see anything in them at variance with these, I shall not obey, even though the stake were staring me in the face.'' i In fact he was too deeply imbued with gays he : at sol cenaminis opdmae retri- ' Reqaisiras coram Pragensi arctuepis- bationis reciperet praemia. Anrihusso-s copo Albico per legates Romani Pontidcu Fez IV, 2, pag. 418 et 419. HUSS AGAINST THE IXDULGENCE OF JOHX XXIII. 277 tbe spirit of the f]:;ospel not to turn with disgust from such papal bulla as these. He had the good of souls too near at heart not to feel con- strained, bv a sort of necessity, to prevent the corruption and ruin which must accrue to religion and morality, from the execution of such bulls. He had until now, as we have seen, simply attacked the abuses in the matter of indulgences, practised by the' wricked clerg3\ He was now led to enter, more deeply, into the whole subject ; and bv so do- ing would, of necessity, be led also to advance another stage in his at- tacks upon the pope. King Wenzel, who was incapable of calculating the consequences of this affair, was induced from motives of policv to grant his consent to the publication of the bull. The forms of absolu- tion, drawn up in accordance with this bull, were such that Stephen Pa- letz, thus far the friend of Huss, and then dean of the theological fac- ulty, himself first directed the attention of Huss to the objectionable features in them, and declared to him that such things ought not to be approved. Huss says of Paletz : " If he confesses the truth, he will own that, in relation to the articles of absolution which he was the first to make known to me, he declared them to contain palpable errors."* Huss, therefore, might still be hoping to stand united with his r^ld friends in this contest. But the contrary was soon manifest. The opposite tem- per of the men must needs come forth to the light, when the question to be decided was, as at present, whether the cause of evangelical truth should appear paramount to all temporal and churchly interests. And in the minds of Stephen Paletz and Stanislaus of Znaim the course to be taken in such a crisis seems to have been already decided by impres- sions left at an earlier date, and the force of which could never be lost on men of their stamp, who had no idea of becoming martyrs for the cause of gospel truth. Among the persons sent by King Wenceslaus, in the year 1408, as envoys to Pope John at Bologna, to treat for his vote in favor of that prince as a candidate for the imperial dignity, were these two individuals ; and the stand which they had taken until this time, amid the controversies in Bohemia, may have brought it about — unless, perhaps, it was brought about by the freedom of their remarks on the way — that they were cast into prison and deprived of all they possessed. It was only by the interposition of the college of cardinals that they recovered their liberty. Huss certainly had just reasons for suspecting that they were intimidated by this danger, into which they Joannis XXIII, an velim mandatis apos- mandata apostolica doctrinas apostoloruin tolicis obedire, respond!, quod affecto cor- Cliristi. et de quanto mandata Pontificis dialiter implere mandata apostolica. Le- concordaverint cum mandatis ct doctriuis gati vero hahentes pro convertibili man- apostolieis, secundum regulam legis Chris- data apostolica et mandata Romani Pen- ti, de tanto volo ipsis paratissime obedire. tificis, aestimabant, quod vellem erectio- Sed si quid adversi coneepero, non obe- nem crucis contra rejiem Apuliae Ladis- diam, etiamsi ignem pro combustione mei laum et contra omnem gentem sibi sub- corporis meis oculis praeponatis. Re- ditam et contra Gregorium XII populo sponsio ad scriptum octo doctorum, opp. oraedicare. Unde dicebant legati : Ecce I, fol. 293, 2. lomine archiepiscope ! ipse jam mandatis ' Si enim vult veritatem fateri. recog- lomini nostri vult parere. Quibus dixi: noscet, quod articulos absolutionum, quos Domini intelligatis me. Ego dixi, quod ipse mihi manu sua praesentaverat, dice- *ffecto cordialiter implere mandata apos- bat esse errores manu palpabiles. Resp. ^lica et ipsis omnino obedire sed voco ad script. Steph. Paletz, opp. I, fol. 264. 2. VOL. V. 24 278 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. had been brought by the free expression of their opinions, and that they meant to be more cautious for the future. He says of Stanislaus, he had boldly defended those forty-five articles in the convocation of the university, and continued to do so till he was forced to write the con- trary, till he was oppressed by the court of Rome, and robbed of his property by him whom he now calls Head of the holy Catholic church.^ And in replying to a statement of Stanislaus, that the pope was the safest refuge for all the faithful, Huss remarked that Christ, with infi- nitely more ease, could have prepared a safer place of refuge for Stan- islaus and Paletz, than in the Roman court, by enabling them to arrive at the certain truth in a doubtful matter without subjecting them to rob- bery and imprisonment.2 Intimidated in this way already, the two men were not disposed to resist the execution of a bull in Bohemia which met with the king's approbation, and to fall wholly out with the pope. They now appeared as defenders of the pope's authority against Huss, and stood up for obedience to superiors, whose commands no man should presume to examine into. Paletz, in the name of the theological faculty, offered a resolution of this sort : " We do not take it upon us to raise objections against the lord apostolical or his letters, to pass any judg- ment whatever upon them, or to determine anything with regard to them; as we ^ have no authority for it." 3 But Huss, in accordance with his principles, could not believe in any such blind obedience ; obedience to his Master Christ, the observance of Ids doctrine, and the copying of his example, stood first in importance with him. This was the rule by which everything was to be examined, by wbich the limit of all obedience was determined ; and this principle it was, by occasion of which it was laid to his charge that, by making the commands of the su- perior dependant on the criticising judgment of his subjects, he relaxed the bonds of all civil and ecclesiastical order ; and accordingly it was remarked, that by the course he pursued he would introduce the dan- gerous error that obedience might be refused to letters patent of popes, emperors, kings, and lords, if the truth and reasonableness of such let- ters could not be made clear to the understanding of the subjects. And who could calculate what disorders would spring up, all over the world, from this opinion ? * So he was called a revolutionist. His opponents believed, it is true, that men were bound to unconditional obedience to those in power only in that which was not absolutely wicked, or that which is in itself indifferent. ^ But to what extent was the phrase, " that which is in itself indifferent," to be stretched ? As for Huss, he could not look upon that which the bull required as a thin" indifferent, but only as a thing directly opposed to the law of Christ, ' Resp. ad script. Stanislai de Znoyma, * Resp. ad script, octo doct., opp. I, fol opp. I, fol. 288, 1. ■ 294, 1. * Ibid. fol. 284, 1. ^ Ipsi enim posuerunt, quod Papae sem- ' Noluimis nee attendimus attentare ali- per est obediendum, dum praecipit quod quid conti-a dominum apostolicum aut est puruin boiinm, et quod non est purum Buas literas, aut eas quovis mode judicare malum, sed medium. Resp. ad script. St vel deflnire, cum ad hoc nullum auctorita- Paletz, opp. I, fol. 263, 2. tern habeamus. Adv. indulgentias papales, '>pp. I, fol. 175, 1. HUSS AGAINST THE INDULGENCE OF JOHN XXIII. 279 and sinful. To obey, in this case, would be the same as to abandon his principle of obeying God rather than man. He then spoke for the last time, with his old friend Paletz, whom he next met as his fiercest ene- my, preparing destruction for him at Constance. His last words to him, the words with which he must sunder the tie of friendship that had so long united them, were an adaptation of Aristotle's remark in speaking of his relation to Socrates : " Paletz is my friend, truth is my friend ; and both being my friends, it is my sacred duty to give the first honor to truth." ' An important crisis for the fate of Huss and the reform movements in Bohemia, was the sundering of the bond which united the Bohemian party at Prague university, a party which had thus far been kept together by identity of philosophical and theo logical, as well as of national interests. In proportion to the cordiality of their earlier friendship, was now the virulence of the animosity be- tween these men, as generally happens in transitions from friendship to enmity. Neither his friend nor his teacher could ever forgive Huss for presuming to stand forth against their authority, as well as the au- thority of the whole theological faculty, composed of eight doctors,— for presuming to be more bold and more free minded than themselves. Huss himself marks the critical moment which separated him forever from his former associates : " The sale of indulgences and the lifting of the standard of the cross against Christians, first cut me off from my old friends."^ Compelled to stand forth as an opponent to his old teacher Stanislaus of Znaim, he still never forgot his obligations to him as an instructor ; as he says in the paper he wrote against him : — " Though Stanislaus was my teacher, from whom, in the discipline of the school, I learnt a great deal that is valuable, still I must answer him as the truth impels me to do, that the truth may be more appa- rent." 3 Huss felt himself called upon to lay a firm foundation for his convictions on these subjects. He resolved to hold a disputation on indulgences, before a numerous convocation of the university, where also his friend Jerome intended to appear, having first, by many posted bills, directed public attention to this disputation, which was to be held on the 7th of June. We learn in what way Huss attacked the papal bulls and the whole subject of indulgences, in this disputation, from the paper in which he drew out at length his remarks on that occasion ; 4 and for the purpose of getting a more exact knowledge of the christian position on which Huss planted himself, and of his activity at this par- ticular crisis, we propose to enter a little more minutely into the con- tents of this performance. Huss begins by explaining what had led him into the contest : " I was moved to engage in this affair — he says ' Amicus Faletz, arnica Veritas, utrisque men veritate instigante animuin meum, amicis existentibus, sanctum est praehon- cogor ad sua dicta, ut magis Veritas appa- orare veritatem. Ibid. fol. 264, 2. reat, utcunquc dahitur, respondere. Resp, ' Nam iudiilgeiuiaruin venditio et cmcis ad scr. Stanislai de Znoyma, opp. I, fol adversus Cliristianos ercctio me ab isto 265. 1. doctore ])rimum separavit. Ibid. * Quaestio de indulgentiis sive de cru- ' Et quainvis ipse Stanislaus magister ciata pa])ae Juannis XXIII fulminata con- meus exstitcrit. a quo in suis exercitis et tra Ladislauni Apuliae regeni. opp. I, fol Wtibus scliolasticis nmlia bona didici, ta- 174 seq. 280 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. — by a threefold interest ; the glory of God, the advancement of holy church, and my own conscience. Therefore in relation to all that is now to be said, I call God almighty and omniscient to witness, that I seek first of all things God's glory and the good of the church. For to these objects every mature Christian is strictly bound by the com- mandment of the Lord ; and for the good reason that every one should love Christ and his church infinitely more than his bodily parents, tem- poral goods, his own honor, or himself. It is moreover my opinion, that the glory of Christ, and of his bride the church, consist particularly in the practical imitation of the life of Christ himself in this, that a man lay aside all inordinate affections, and all human ordinances that w^ould hinder or obstruct him in the pursuit of his object." He protests that he will never affirm anything contrary to the holy Scriptures that con- tain Christ's law, or against his will. " And when I am taught, by any member of the church, or by any other creature whatsoever, that I have erred hi my speech, I will openly and humbly retract it." " Therefore — says he — in order that I may proceed more safely, I will place myself on the immovable foundation, the corner stone, which is the truth, the way, and the life, our Lord Jesus Christ ; and I hold it fast, as the faith of the church, that he who observes not the ordi nance and the law which Christ established, and which he also taught and observed by himself and by his apostles, does not follow the Lord Jesus Christ in the narrow way thatleadeth to life, but goes in the broad way which leads the members of the devil to perdition." Here Huss has laid down the principle by which he conceived himself bound to try all human ordinances, and the bulls of the popes as well. He maintains, on this prin- ciple, that it is not permitted the faithful to approve these bulls. Noth- ing but what proceeds from love can be approved by Christ ; but as- suredly neither the shedding of blood among Christians, nor the lay- ing waste and impoverishing of countries, can have proceeded from love to Christ ; nor could such an enterprise afford any opportunity for mar- tyrdom. He explains what is meant by " indulgence," holding to the term and sense in which it was no doubt understood in the papal bulls, and not going back to the original import of the old word indulgentia, viz. remission. Indulgence denotes the pardon of sin ; which, in his view, was the work of God alone ; but priestly absolution consisted in this, that the priest in the sacrament declared the person confessing to him to be in such a state of contrition as fitted him, if he died imme- diately, to enter, Avithout passing through the fires of purgatory, into the heavenly mansions. And the power of the priest, in the last ex- tremity, was not so restricted that he might not promise, so far as God who revealed it to him permitted, the pardon of sin ; but it would be too great presumption to suppose that any vicar of Christ could right- fully attribute to himself such power of absolution, if God had never given him a special revelation on the subject ; for otherwise he would be guilty of the sin of blasphemy. But how would it help the matter, supposing the subjects should clamorously demand such absolution ; for assuredly they must believe that Christ, the most righteous judge, would judge them according to the measure of their merit or demerit. QUAESTIO DE INDULGENTIIS. 281 But though Avith Christ, who is present everywhere, contrition suffices, still the sacrament of penance is very necessary, though it can avail nothing except on the presupposition of contrition. It was a foolish thing, therefore, for a priest not informed by divine revelation that penance or some other sacrament availed for the salvation of the indi- vidual to whom it was administered, to bestow on him unconditional absolution. " Hence the wise priests of Christ give only a conditional absolution, conditioned namely on the fact that the person confessing feels remorse for having sinned, is resolved to sin no more, trusts in God's mercy, and is determined for the future to obey God's command- ments." Hence he argues that every one who receives such indul- gence will actually enjoy it just so far as he is fitted to do so by his relation to God. He holds it to be the duty of prelates to instruct the people in this truth, so that the laity may not spend their time and la- bor on that which cannot profit them. He declares it to be allowable for a christian man to contribute in aid of a war carried on by the secu- lar power, if it be a christian power ; which implies that it be not waged for a mere earthly advantage, which the Christian should count as dross, but for the defence of the faith, to bring back to unity those with whom the war is carried on ; or if this end is frustrated on their part, that charity should ever hold the reins, and the force of arms be em- ployed only so long as might be necessary to open the way for reason- able negotiations. He next declares that it was neither permissible nor advantageous for a pope or for any bishop or clerk whatsoever, to fight for wordly dominion or worldly wealth. This might be under- stood from the example of Christ, whose vicar the pope was ; for Christ did not fight, nor did he command his disciples to fight, but forbade them. He here cites the words of Christ, Luke 22: 51. In the lan- guage of St. Bernard, he maintains that the pope ought not to contend for secular things. Without doubt he may exhort princes to protect the faithful, by force, against the invasions of infidels or barbarians ; but the secular sword belongs not to priests, but to the worldly profes- sion of arms, the special intention of which is to defend the law of Christ and of his church. But the safer way was to contend sj)intually, not with the secular sword, but with prayer to almighty God, to persuade the enemy to concord by negotiations, even though by such a course, which to men might seem like madness, one should in case of need suf- fer death. This rule St. Paul gives, in Rom. 12: 19 ; " would that the pope might humbly adopt this rule of St. Paul." He looked upon the pope's conduct as contrary to the example of Christ, who reprimanded his discii»les for desiring to call down fire from heaven upon his ene- mies, Luke 9: 54. " that the pope, then — he says — would, like the apostles, who desired to avenge their Lord, have addressed himself to the Lord, and with the cardinals said to him, Lord, if it be thy will, we would call upon all, of both sexes,' to coml)ine for the destruction Df Ladislaus and Gregory and their companions in guilt ; and perhaps ' Alluding to an expression in the bull to the pope for destroying Ladislaus, and in which all persons of both sexes and of are promised, on this condition, the par every rank, are called upon to furnish aid don of their sins. 282 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. the Lord would have answered, Ye know not what spirit ye are of when ye seek to ruin so many souls of men by ban, sentence of con- demnation, and destruction of life. Why do ye thus set at nought my example, I who forbade my disciples to be so cruelly zealous against those that crucified me, who prayed. Father ! forgive them, they know not what they do ? If the pope, then, would subdue his enemies, let him follow the example of Christ, whose vicar he styles himself, let him pray for his enemies and the church ; let him say. My kingdom is not of this world ; let him show them kindness ; let him bless those that curse him ; for then will the Lord, according to his promise, give him a power of utterance and wisdom, which ihey will never be able to gainsay." Next, Huss noticed the objection of those who said, in those days, Such literal imitation of Christ is confined to the " evangelical counsels," designed for those that strive after christian perfection,— for the monks. As we may conclude from several expressions of Huss already cited, he would doubtless have preferred to say that all Chris- tians were bound to strive after the same ; and instead of fighting with the secular sword, should contend only with the weapons of prayer and the word ; but he was sensible that, in the present state of things, this was not to be looked for. He distinguishes, as we have already ob- served, the three different ranks of society ; but he demands of the clergy that they at least should so deport themselves, as if they considered that to be a command for them which, to others, was only a counsel. All priests, he says, should aim at the highest perfection, because they are representatives of the apostles, and particularly the pope, who should exhibit, in his conduct, the highest degree of perfection, after the example of Christ and of Peter. " All priests are bound to the same rule of perfection ; certainly the priesthood is the summit of per- fection in the militant church. The precepts, therefore, that forbid contention for earthly things, concern all priests in general." The clergy, according to him, should literally observe the precepts of the sermon on the mount ; as, for example. Matt. 5: 40, " from which it is evident — he says — that, although not to go to law about earthly matters, is for Christians of a subordinate stage a counsel, yet as applied to priests it changes, according to place and time, into a command. Ignorance in these matters is no excuse for a priest ; because they are commanded, as persons ordained to act as presidents, judges, and teachers, to have knowledge of the law, and to explain it to those under them in all its several parts. This ignorance of holy Scripture, being a guilty igno- rance, renders the priests the more condemnable, as it is the mother of all other errors and vices among themselves and the people." He then passes to the laity, and endeavors to show that if they followed the invitation of the bull, and by their contributions upheld the pope in things at variance with his calling, they could not wliolly excuse them- selves by pleading ignorance, since it was ignorance which they might doubtless have avoided ; in fact it seemed that there was no such igno- rance, but on the contrary they had knowledge enough, only it was asleep ; for when they saw priests attending spectacles, putting them Belves on a par with the world, meddUng in secular business, they di QUAESTIO DE INDULGENTIIS. 283 rectly murmured against them, in accordance with the Catholic tra- dition, though these were trifles when compared with carrying on war and legal suits for earthly ends. After showing that the laitj^ were without excuse for their ignorance, which he ascribes, moreover, to the lack of a real interest in religion, he proceeds to speak of the absolute indifference which led many to obey the bull, who said, " What matters it to us, whether the bull is a good or a bad one ? We can eat and drink without disturbance, if we are left to our peace ; others may do what they please." He then comes to a third class, who obeyed from cow- ardice. And this reproach he casts particularly upon the theologians ; men conversant with the Scriptures, who obeyed, he says, in opposition to their own consciences, who thought of the bull in one way and spoke open- ly of it in another. " They tremble — he says — who should yield to no fear of the world ; tremble lest they should lose their temporal goods, the honor of this world, or their lives." He then attacks the unchris- tian expressions in the bull, where it spoke of destroying Ladislaus to the third generation, in contradiction to Ezek. 18: 20 ; where it calls Ladislaus and his adherents blasphemers and heretics, although this was not manifest from any trial to which he had been subjected, and although his subjects were included, poor weak people, men and women, acting under constraint Referring to the definition above given of indulgence, he says : " On this point, he who is blind may judge, whether pardon of sin is not bestowed for a consideration in money." Is not this true simony ? He then quotes some of the really scandalous language used by the papal commissioners for the sale of indulgences, — language well calculated to revolt every christian feeling, as it had at first revolted even the feelings of Paletz — such expressions as the following : " By the apostolical power entrusted to me, I absolve thee from all the sins which, to God and to me thou hast truly confessed, and f(ir which thou hast done penance. If, as thou art not able per- sonally to take part in this enterprise, thou wilt act according to my di- rection and that of the other commissioners, in furnishing means and helps for this cause, and if thou hast done all according to thy ability, I bestow on thee the most perfect forgiveness of all thy sins, both from the guilt and the punishment of them, in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost." Having first, not without reason, remarked that the words " as thou art not able," might probably contain a ftilsehood, Huss dwells more particularly on the blasphemous style in which absolution is declared. It was one and the same thing, he said, to bestow the forgiveness of all sins, and to impart the Holy Ghost. Both presup- posed divine power. And for a sinful man to pretend to impart the Holy Ghost, was too enormous a presumption ; for Christ alone, on whom the heavenly dove descended as a symbol of the Holy Ghost, could bestow the baptism of the Spirit. God grants the pardon of sin to none but those whom he has first rendered fit to receive it. Since then a Christian can render another person fit no otherwise than by la- boring for it by prayer or preaching, or by contributing to it through his own merits,^ it was evident that the being rendered fit for it by God, ' Orando, praedicando, raerendo. 284 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. must precede forgiveness. He then takes notice of a subterfuge : it might be said it was but a conditioned indulgence, given to the truly contrite, and therefore to the elect. This was sophistical. In this case there would be no need of indulgences. So, it might be said of any one that, on the supposition he was of the divine essence, he would be very God. He then takes notice of the sophistical pretence, that the pope's real object was neither more nor less than this, to rule the church of Christ in peace and tranquillity ; but to secure this object, he must re- sist his adversaries. The pope could not deceive God. God knew per- fectly on what the pope's heart was intent, his ruling aim impUcite or ex- plicite. And if he who should imitate the poverty of Christ fought for Avorldly rule, he committed a grievous sin, of which every man was an abet- tor who upheld him in so doing. He thinks that if the pope really pos- sessed a plenitude of power to bestow indulgence on all, christian char- ity required no less of him than that he should show this kindness to all alike. Huss portrays the injurious effects produced by these indul- gences. " The foolish man of wealth is betrayed into a false hope ; the law of God is set at nought ; the rude people give themselves up more freely to sin ; grievous sins are thought lightly of; and, in general, the people are robbed of their property. Far be it, therefore, from the faithful to have anything to do with such indulgences." With regard to those expressions which referred to the common fund of all the good works in the church, to be distributed by the pope, Huss remarks : in- dividuals share in this common fund only in proportion as they are qualified to share in it by their charity ; but it is not in the power of the pope ; it belongs to God alone to determine the greater or less degree of charity in individuals ; for to do this presupposes infinite power ; it depends on the good pleasure of God. Therefore it is not in the power of the pope to give any one a share in intercessions by the community of holy church ; and consequently it was absurd for him to attribute any such power to himself, since the pope himself should, with David, humbly say, ' Make me, God, a companion of all them that fear thee, and of them that keep thy precepts.' In place of such an im- parting of spiritual fellowship with all the good in the church, Huss would rather substitute this : Let the Christian live a righteous life, following Christ his head in all virtue, and especially in humility and patience ; and then let him rely on partaking of his merits, so far as God may grant it, and assuredly if he thus perseveres unto the end, he will attain to the most complete forgiveness of his sins ; and as his life grows conformed to the example of Christ, in the same proportion will he share of his mercy and of the glory of the blessed." He says that, from the proclamations of the commissioners for granting indul- gences, it was evident that their sole object was to extort money from the people. Not an instance was to be found in Scripture of a holy man saying to any one, I have forgiven thee thy sins ; I absolve thee. Nor were any to be found who had absolved from punishment or guilt for a certain number of days. The theological faculty, who said that, hundreds of years ago, the holy fathers instituted indulgences, had taken good care not to express themselves more definitelj', and to say QUAESTIO DE INDULGENTIIS. 285 a thousand years, two or three hundred, or any other particular num- ber of centuries ago. Nor had they ventured to name any of these holy fathers. He will not allow that the sentence of the pope is an ulti- mate and definitive one ; Christ is the highest expounder of his own law, as well by his words as by his deeds ; and he is ever with hia faithful, according to his promise that he would be with them even unto the end of the world. He then points to examples of uneducated and ignorant popes, not omitting to notice the fabulous pope Joan. He dis- putes the position, that wdien the great mass of the clergy, monks, and laity have approved of the papal bulls, it would be foolish to contradict so large a majority. By the same sort of reasoning, anything might be justified, however wicked and vile, provided only that it was approved by the majority ; and anything condemned, however true and good, if sanctioned only by a minority. He quotes, in illustration, Jer. 8: 10 ; according to the principle above stated, it was folly in the prophet to contradict so vast a multitude. "Therefore — says he — it is the custom of wise men, whenever difficulties occur with regard to any truth, laying it open for discussion, to consider, first of all, what the faith of holy iScripture teaches on the point in question ; and whatever can be so determined, that they hold fast as a matter of faith. But if holy Scripture decides neither on one sid'e nor the other, they let the sub- ject alone, as one wdiich does not concern them, and cease to dispute "whether the truth lies on this side or that." In resisting the authority of the pope, Huss was accused of having resisted the ordinance of God, according to Rom. xiii. To this he replies : The charge is true, if by the authority of the pope is meant his authority as ordained of God ; but it is false so far as it relates to the pretended and arrogated au thority of the pope.^ After Huss had thus attacked the papal bulls with arguments calcu- lated to impress every thinking mind that lay open to the truth, his friend Jerome came forward and delivered a glowing discourse, which kindled the greatest enthusiasm in the hearts of the youth. In the evening he was escorted home, in triumph, by large bodies of the stu- dents.2 The excitement produced by the transactions of this day, spread further ; and, as it usually happens when the impulse has been given to some great movement, however pure and unobjectionable at the outset, that it no longer stands in the power of those who began it to control and keep it within bounds, but violent passions soon enter in, ' The abbot of Dola, who accuses Huss indulgences. Being asked what he Iichl also as a contemner of indulgences, scru- concerning indulgences, he declared, The pies not to signalize these indulgences, indulgences of the ])ope and cardinals which, in the period of which we are writ- were legal, and such lould be bestowed — ing, were the occasion of so much mis- wherein it was still left doubtful what no- chief, as Romanae sedis consuetas et sa- tion he framed to himself of indulyences, lutares indulgentias, and he ascribes the and to what exti'Ut he would allow them — force supposed to reside in them to the but a purchaseil indulgence, an indulgence merit of Ciirist's passion. Dialog, vola- made a matter of barter and sale by sel tills, Pez thesaur. IV, 2, pag. 474. lers of indulgences (quaestuarii), was no - At the second hearing of Jerome of indulgence at all, but an abuse of indul- Prague at Constance, the subject was also gvnces. V. d. Ilardt. IV, 2, pag. 1^2 e! brcuglu up of his attack at this time on T;')."^ 286 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. and with their fierce burnings vitiate the puritv of the beginning, so it turned out on the present occasion. Jerome of Prague wanted the pru- dence and moderation of Huss. A mock procession was got up ; the papal bulls, suspended from the necks of certain indecent women, were carried, in the midst of a vast concourse of people, through the princi- pal quarters of the city. The chariot conveying the women was sur- rounded by armed men of the party, vociferating, " To the stake with the letters of a heretic and rogue ! " In this way the bulls were finally conveyed to the Pranger, where a pile of faggots had been erected, upon which they were laid and burned. It was intended as a parody on the burning of Wicklif's books two years before.' That every fool- ish proceeding ought not to be laid to the charge of Huss, which the passionate ardor of his adherents undertook, that he was far from ap- })roving of all that these persons either did or said, is evident from his own words in many of his letters, plainly intimating his dissatisfaction with many who professed to be of his party, but whose life did not cor- respond with the doctrines they supported, and his disapprobation of the violent language employed by many of his adherents. Thus in reply to Paletz, who had accused him of apostasy from the whole faith of Christendom, he says : " Verily, if I allowed this to be true of my- self and of my christian brethren, I should be as false as he is ; for I hope, by the grace of God, that I am a Christian, departing in no re- spect from the faith, and that I should prefer to suffer a horrible death rather than to affirm anything contrary to the faith, or to transgress the commandments of our Lord Jesus Christ. And the same I hope also of many of my adherents, though I observe with deep pain that some of them are blameworthy in their morals." 2 He also says, in this tract against Paletz, with regard to the abusive language which he used towards his adversaries, whom he styled heretics, " Hitherto I have used no such language as this against my adversaries ; and I should be sorry if any one of my party should brand his opponent as a heretic, or style him a Mohammedan, or ridicule or attack him in any other way that implied a disregard to the law of love." 3 Alluding to the same person, he says in another place : " He holds us all to be Wicklifites, and all therefore to be, in his opinion, reprobates ; but I hope there is much w^hich is good on both sides, and believe that there ' We join what we find stated in the Prague, but Woksa, of Waldstein, one of articles of complaint against Jerome of Wenzel's favorites, was the author of this Prague, in Constance (V. d. Hardt IV, 2, buffoonery, though Jerome may not have pag. 672), with Palacky's representation, been averse to it. Hence it is evident, who appeals to the manuscript report of a that Jerome said nothing untrue, when on student, who had himself borne a part in his second hearing at Constance he assert- the procession, (Palacky III, 1, p. 278). ed, that he did not bum the bull, (V. d. At the council of Constance (where, how- Hardt IV, 2, pag. 753). ever, the year 1411 is erroneously put ^ Quamvis dolenter percipio aliquos in down by V. d. Hardt, as it must have been more deviare. Resp. ad scr. Paletz, opp the year 1412) Jerome of Prague is desig- I, fol. 260, 1. nated as the getter up of this whole thing. ^ Et doleo, cum aliquis de parte nostra But, Palacky proves from the manuscript aliquem hacreticat vel appellat Mahomet articles of complaint laid before the coun- istam, vel aliter infamat aut impugnat ca- z\\ of Constance against King Wenceslaus, ritatis regnla praetermissa. Ibid. fol. 262 ;1II, 1, p. 2'7 note) that not Jerome of 2. ROYAL EDICT IN FAVOR OF THE POPE's BULL. 287 are sinners also on both sides ; and it never was, nor will it ever be, agreeable to me, to hear any should style the party opposed to them Mohammedans or seducers." ^ Great self-control and prudence were assuredly required to enable a man standing at the head of his party, in a time of such violent excitement, to judge so dispassionately of his opponents, including some who were once his friends, but who now in- dulged the most violent animosity towards him, and to pass so severe a criticism on the conduct of his own party. We cannot fail to recognize here the spirit of Him who knew how to distinguish blasphemers against the Son of man from blasphemers against the Holy Ghost. And tliis is one trait which distinguishes Huss from Wicklif. The co-political ecclesiastical motives Avhich governed King Wen- ceslaus did not leave him at liberty to contemplate these move- ments any longer without disquietude, though it was already too late to think of putting a stop to them by a single enactment. As the king had approved the papal bull, had ordered it to be proclaimed, and permitted the preaching of indulgences ; as he wished to maintain a good understanding with Pope John, he must look about for the means of asserting and carrying out what he had begun. He sum- moned around him the lords of counsel and the elders of the communi- ties of all the three towns, out of which the great capital had arisen, and directed them to forbid for the future all public insult of the pope, as well as all public resistance of the papal bulls, on pain of death, and to be vigilantly careful that all occasions of excitement on both sides should be avoided. This royal edict was proclaimed by a herald through the whole city as a warning to all.2 It is probable, however, that the king after all was not so very solicitous that these measures should be rigorously executed in their whole extent ; nor is it clear that he had power enough to enforce them. The getter up of the mock procession against the bull of which we have just spoken still retained his relations with the king.3 Huss could not be prevented by any power on earth from fulfilling his vocation as a preacher of the gospel, and from saying to his congregation whatever his duty as a preacher and curer of souls made it incumbent on him to say. He could not keep silent concerning the errors connected with the subject of indulgences ; he must point out the great peril to which a reliance on indulgences, as he had already demonstrated in his public disputa- tion, exposed the souls of the people. And yet Queen Sophia did not cease her attendance at the chapel of Huss ; and this new contest could only serve to increase the number of his hearers and their en- thusiasm. The large concourse of noblemen, knights, men and women of all ranks and conditions, who assembled around Huss, is described ' Ego autemex utraque parte speroesse ceslaus regio suae potestatis impeiio con- muUos bonos, et ex utraque etiam parte stituisset etiam voce praeconis per civita- aestimo esse peccatores, nee unquam inihi tern Pragenscin decreio piililico, ut ne(jua- placuit, imo nee placehit, quod quidain quam aliquis audeat rebellare et contradi- voeant doctoris partem Mahometistas vel cere occultc vel publice sub capital! poena seductores. Ibid. fol. 2f)-t, 1. indulgentiis papalibus caet. Pez, IV, 2, * Palacky, III. 1, p. 278, and Stcpli. Do- pag. 380. lanus in his Antihussus: Dum eniin Wen- " Palacky, III. 1, p. 278. tiOS HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. by his opponents ; especially, among these, the pious women who were denominated Beguines — a nick-name hke the term Pietists in later times ; and one which had been applied already to the followers of Mihtz.' Now, when the hearts of the laity, of men who belonged to the class of industrious artisans, among whom Huss had manj"- ad- herents, were seized by the power of truth in his sermons, and then going into the churches heard the sellers of indulgences preaching up with shameless effrontery the value of their spiritual merchandize, in direct outrage to the gospel truth they had listened to in Bethlehem chapel, nothing else was to be expected, especially in a state of so much excitement among the youth, than that violent scenes should ensue. A number of priests, distributed among the several parish churches, were engaged, on the 10th of July, in publishing the papal bulls and inviting the people to purchase indulgences. On this occasion three young men belonging to the class of common artisans, by the name of John, Martin, and Stasek, stepping forward, cried out to one of these preachers, "Thou liest ! Master Huss has taught us better than that. We know it is all false." After a while they were seized, conducted to the council-house, and, on the ne:!Jt day, in pursuance of the royal edict,2 condemned to death. Huss, on being informed of this, felt it to be his duty to interpose and endeavor to save these young men, doomed to fall victims to the gospel truth which they had heard from his lips, and which burned in their hearts. Accompanied by 2000 students he repaired to the counsel house. He demanded a hearing for himself and some of his attendants. At length he was permitted to appear before the senate. He declared that he looked upon the fault of those young men as his own, and that he, therefore, much more than they, deserved to die. They promised him that no blood should be shed, and bade him tranquillize the excited feelings of the others. Hoping that they would keep their word, he left the coun- sel house together with his followers.3 But some hours afterwards, ' See above, p. 182. The words of the God in his own church. Ibid. p. 146. abbot of Dola in Antihussus : Nobilibus, ' It is noticeable that when Dr. Nas of miiitaribus, plebeiis, mulieribus, taorum Prague had testified against Huss at his tibi conceptuum cumulum multiplicas. trial in Constance, that he himself was Fez, IV, 2, pag. 390. The Beguines are present cum rex mandasset, blasphemos mentioned, as followers of Huss, in Anti- ultimo supplicio affici. Huss directly de- hussus, Fez, IV, 2, p. .381, and in Dial, vo- clared this to be false. Yet, after what lat., ibid. pag. 492. In the trial at Prague, has been said, it cannot be doubted, that we learn that over 3000 persons met the king did issue such an edict against around Huss in the Bethlehem chapel, the disputers of indulgences. There was Vid. Depos. test, in the Stud. u. Krit. something then, we know not what, per- 1837, 1, p. 147. It was thrown out as a haps, in the form of that testimony, which reproach against Huss, that he had no con- led Huss to express himself in this way. gregation of his own, but drew hearers to Third hearing of Huss in Constance, V. him from other parishes, and away from d. Hardt IV, 2, p. 327. other parish priests. But to this 'he re- ' The abbot of Dola relates the tran- plied: No man was bound to listen to saction as follows: Facto siquidem prae- God's word nowhere else except in his dictorum rebellium justo animadversionia own parish-church ; for else no monk excidio, accessisti vel misisti pluribus val- could ever preach, and no parish priest or latHS sociis ad maturum et discretum mag- parish vicar could allow persons belong- nae civilis prudentiae Pragensium consu- 'n^ to other parishes to hear the word of lura concilium, et praedicatione pompatica EXECUTION OF THE THREE YOUNG MEN. 289 when the multitude had, for the most part, dispersed, they ventured to proceed to the execution of the sentence. Resistance being appre- hended from the Hussite party, the prisoners were conducted under a large escort of soldiers to the place of death, and, as in the meantime, the concourse of spectators running together in the highest state of excitement, increased every moment, they hurried the execution, and finished it even before arriving at the destined spot. But the adhe- rents of Huss had no intention of resorting to violence. When the headsman, after his work was done, cried out, " Let him who does tiie like expect to suffer the same fate," many among the multitude ex- claimed at once : " We are all ready to do the like and to suffer the same." This execution could have no other effect than to increase the excitement of feeling and the enthusiasm of the people for ihe cause of Huss. Those three young men would of course be regarded by the party they belonged to, as martyrs for the truth. It would be impossible to devise anything better calculated to promote any cause, bad or good, than to give it martyrs. Several, and in particular the sc called Beguines of this party, of whom we have spoken above, dipped their handkerchiefs in the blood of the victims, and treasured them up as precious relics.' A woman who witnessed the execution offered white linen to enshroud the dead bodies ; and another in time in dtv silio pactum fecerunt invicom, ut articulos fence of some of these articles often alludes 292 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. the pope may not, where it becomes necessary, call upon the faithful or demand contributions of them for the defence of the Apostolical See, of the Roman church and city, and for the coercion and sub- jection of opponents and enemies among Christians, while he bestowa on the faithful who loyally come to the rescue, show true penitence, have confessed and are mortified, the full forgiveness of all sins, is an error." ' Huss represents it as a piece of arrogance in those eight doctors to think themselves entitled to act in the name of the entire faculty, and to put forth their condemnation as a condemnation by the whole faculty .2 Now, as this party could not reckon, as appears evident from what has teen said, on the concurrence of the whole university, and therefore could not take any open step in common, they, as the theological faculty, applied to the magistracy of Prague, and petition- ed them to obtain the king's consent, that the teaching and spreading abroad of those articles should be forbidden by a royal edict. This theological faculty had, moreover, declared that certain preachers, on whose account violent insurrections, strifes, and divisions had sprung up among the people, ought to be silenced. And they stated, as their last reason, that this was the way to restore peace among the people.^ A cunningly devised means, to be sure, for putting an end to all stnfe, to allow only one party to speak, and enjoin absolute silence on the other. Such an edict was now to be procured from the king.4 The king granted but a part of the demand. He actually issued an edict, forbidding the preaching of those doctrines on penalty of banishment from the land ; at the same time, however, he caused the faculty to be told, that they had better employ themselves in refuting those doctrines, than in trying to effect the suppression of them by an edict of prohibition. But an edict of prohibition against the preaching of this or that individual, was a thing he would never consent to. As the faculty could not fail to see the reproach implied in this language of the king, they sought to justify what they had done, affirming, that for them to refute those doctrines was impossible, as long as Huss refused to lay before them in a written form, as they had requested him to do, what he had to object against the two bulls.s When Huss ' We cite the imprinted articles from of the faculty : "Behold a design of these the Latin original published by Palacky. doctors similar to that of those priests and Palacky III, 1, p. 282. Pharisees; and both cases resulted in the ^ He protests against their arrogance in same way. For neither did the former calling themselves the alma et venerabilis nor the latter secure the peace which they facultas theologica. and prefers to desig- sought, but were in more trouble than nate them as the octo doctores, remarking before. And, rightly ; for the Truth did in his tract against Stanislaus : Est autem not come to bring peace upon the earth ilia facultas theologica, quae aciem contra but a sword : and never ought we to be nos dirigit, magistiorum theologiae octo- frightened away from the truth by fear of narius. llesp. ad .scr. Stanisl. a Znoyma, rejjroach from the world or from the doc- opp. I, fol 265, 1. tors." Ibid. •* Quod certi praedicatores, propter quos, ° Quod non stat per raagistros theolo- ut timetur, insultus et discordiae et dissen- giae, quod nihil scribitur et .non est scrip siones sunt exortae in po])ulo, cessent a tum contra dicta M. Joannis Hus de bullis praedicatione. Et adducunt in line pro papae, quia saejiius requisitus, dictorum causa: Et speratur, quod per hoc fiet pax suorum non dedit copiam, nee hucusque in populo et insultus conquiescent. Resp. dare voluit niagistris supradictis. — >So the »d scr. Stanislai, opp. I, fol. 266, 2. words run in a manuscript copy cited by * Huss remarks concerning this design Palacky, III, 1, p. 281. MICHAEL DE CAUSIS. 293 was now summoned to appear with his opponents before the king's privy council, in Zebrak, he first appealed to the words of Christ before the High Priest, (John 18 : 20,) and applying them to his case, remarked : " I have spoken openly, and taught in the schools, and in the temple in Bethlehem, where masters, bachelors, students, and multitudes of the common people congregate, and nothing have I spoken in secret, by which I could be seeking to draw men away from the truth." At the same time he declared that he was ready to comply with the demand of those doctors, provided that, as he bound himself to suffer at the stake, in case he could be convicted of holding any erroneous doctrine, the eight doctors would also on their part collectively bind themselves to suffer in the same way on the same condition. They requested time for deliberation and with- drew ; then they came forward and said, that one of them would bind himself by this pledge for all. To this, however, Huss would not consent, but declared, as they were all combined together against him, and he stood opposed to them without associates, this would not be fair.i Finding that the two parties would never be able to agree in settling the preliminary arrangements, the privy council dissolved the meeting, having first admonished both that they should try to make up the matter between themselves^ — an admonition which, in their present state of exasperated feeling, would pass unheeded, and which wa^ .ntended, perhaps, simply to intimate tha-t the council would l>ave nothing more to do with the business. The consequences which had followed in the train of the dispute about indulgences, could easily be taken advantage of to represent Huss, in Rome, as a dangerous man, hostile to the papacy. His enemies at home found a worthy instrument to play their first cards at the Roman court, in Michael of Deutschbrod, formerly a parish priest, commonly known as Michael de Causis, parochial priest to St. Adalbert's church in the New City in Prague. This man, more interested about reforms in mining than reforms in the church, had left his charge and entered the service of the king to carry out a project for the improvement of mining by some new method of exploring veins of gold. The king, induced by certain representations he had laid before him, gave him a sum of money to be expended on this object. But failing to accomplish what he had prom- ised about improvements in mining, he absconded with a part of the money, getting still more fi/om the enemies of Huss, to assist them in carrying out their designs against the latter by bribery, an all-powerful agent with the creatures of that monster Pope John, though hardly needed to secure the ruin of a man who had shown himself so hostile as Huss had done to the Roman papacy. Before the pope was yet informed of all that had transpired in Prague, he had taken the case of Huss out of the hands of Cardinal Brancas, to whom it had last been committed, and given it over to another cardinal, Peter de St. Angelo, charging him to employ the severest measures against the recusant. Upon this, the * Refm. scripti octo doct., opp. I, fol. * Concordetis pulchre invicem. Ibid. {92, 2. 25* 294 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY ANT) LOCTRIXE. procurators of Huss appealed to a future general council, and were ira mediately placed under arrest. The friend of Huss, Master Jesenic, made his escape and got back to Prague. The Cardinal now pro- nounced sentence of excommunication on Huss, in the most terrible formulas. If he persisted twentv davs in his disobedience to the pope, the ban -was to be proclaimed against him in all the churches, on Sun- days and festival days, with the ringing of all the bells and the extin- guishing of all the tapers, and the same punishment should be ex- tended to all who kept company with him. The interdict should be laid on every place that harbored him. By a second ordinance of the pope, the people of Prague were called upon to seize the person of Huss, and deliver him up to the archbishop of Prague, or to the bishop of Lei- tomysl, or to condemn and bum him according to the laws. Beth- lehem chapel was to be destroyed from its foundation, that the heretics might no longer nestle there. i King Wenceslaus offered no resistance to the proclamation of these papal ordinances ; at the same time he did nothing to promote their execution. The party opposed to Huss would have been eager therefore to carry the whole into effect, had they been powerful enough to do so. With the concurrence of the senators in the Old City of Prague, the majority of whom were still Germans and therefore opponents of Huss, many citizens, who were also Germans, assembled at the consecration festival of the church of Prague, Oct. 2, under Bemhard Chotek a Bohemian as their leader, for the purpose of dispersing the congregation in Bethlehem chapel and getting possession of the person of Huss. But the firm resolution with which they were met by the congregation who gathered around Huss induced them to abandon their plan. They returned back to the senate house, where it was resolved at least to carry into execution the pope's command to destroy Bethlehem chapel. But when this resolution came to be known, such violent commotions arose, that it was found necessary to abandon this project also. The party of Huss did not allow itself to be intimi- dated by the pope's bull of excommunication. His procurator, Master Jesenic, to whom the pope's bull was extended, published on the 18th of December of this year, at the university of Prague, an argument which is still preserved, in which he undertook to demonstrate the in- validity of everything that had been done in the process against Huss. Huss himself could not, consistently with his own principles as they have been explained, attribute any significance to an unjust excommu- nication. He caused to be engraved on the walls of Bethlehem chapel a few words, showing the invalidity of such an excommunication, to which he several times refers ; and finally, since no other earthly remedy was left him, he appealed from the venality of the court of Rome to the one incorruptible, just, and infallible judge, Jesus Christ. Already, in his tract against Stephen Paletz, he expresses himself on this subject in the following language. After describing what pains he had taken to obtain justice at the Roman chancery, he says : " But the Roman court, which cares not for the sheep without the wool, would never ' See the Chron. univ. Prag_ cited from the manuscript in Palacky, III, 1, p. 286. HUSS PLACED UNDER THE BAN AND INTERDICT. 29o cease asking for money, therefore have I finally appealed from it to the most just Judge and High Priest over all." ' This appeal he published to his congregation from the pulpit of Bethlehem chapel. It is charac teristic of the times that this act should also be objected to him as a contemptuous trifling vnth the jurisdiction of the church, as an inso- lent act of disobedience to the pope, and an overleaping of the regular order of ecclesiastical tribunals. The abbot of Dola says, in his invec tive against Huss, " Tell me, then, who accepted your appeal ? From whom did you obtain a release from the jurisdiction of the subordinate authorities t You would not say from the laity, and your daughters the Beguines."^ The parish priests of Prague, however, paid no re- gard to all this, but only obeyed the pope ; a course, too, which per- fectly fell in with their own passions and interests. From all the pulpits they published the ban against Huss ; they strictly observed the in- terdict ; no sacraments were administered ; no ecclesiastical burial was permitted. Such a state of things would, as ever, provoke the most violent disturbances among the people. The king himself, therefore, was urgent with Huss that, to preserve peace, he should leave Prague for a time. Archbishop Albic did not feel able to sustain the conflicts at Prague ; nor did such kind of activity suit his love of repose. At the close of the year 1412 he laid down his office, and Conrad of Vechta, bishop of Olmutz, a WestphaUan, a zealous advocate of the hierarchy, and more inclined to severe measures in support of it than his prede- cessor, obtained, first under the name of mlnistrator, the administra- tion of the archbishopric of Prague, till finally, after long protracted ne- gotiations with the Roman court, he became, in July, 1413, archbishop in the full sense. By the removal of Huss from Prague, quiet was by no means re- stored inB(jhemia. His principles still continued to operate among his important party at Prague. There w^as a sharp opposition between the two parties, the Hussites and the church party. King Wenzel thought it wrong to allow the matter, which continually grew more serious, and involved in its train important political consequences, to go on thus any longer. The college of the ancient nobles of the land had already assembled before the Christmas of 1412, for the purpose of advising about the restoration of peace and the rescue of the good name of the Bohemian people in foreign lands. The assembling of a national synod for this purpose, before which the leaders of the two parties should appear, was resolved upon. At first the little city Bohmisch-Brod, which belonged to the archbishop of Prague, was selected for the place of meeting, since it was thought that the appearance of Huss in this small city, notwithstanding the ban under which he lay and the inter- dict on his place of residence, would create little or no disturbance. Here the proposals of the two parties were to be investigated. On the one side were the Prague theological faculty of the eight doctors, at whose head were Stephen of Paletz and Stanislaus of Znaim, with .' Opp. I. fol. 256. 1. ras sive apostolo? ? Nonne a laicis et filia * Die ergo quaeso, quis detulit taae ap- bus tuis beginis 1 Dial, volat. Pez, IV. 2 oellationi ? a quo petiisti dimissorias lite- pag. 492. 296 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. archbishop John the Iron of Leitomvsl ; on the other side, John Huss But in the memorials drawn up bv the two parties, nothing appeared but the most diametrical opposition of princij^les. The theological faculty traced all the schism to the defending of the forty-five erroneous doctrines of Wicklif, and insisted that the condemnation of them should be rigorously observed, and that the decision of the church of Rome should be submit- ted to in everv point. The chm-ch in their view was the pope as head, and the college of cardinals as the bod v. Errors they found, especially in the widely-spread doctrines about the power of the keys being vested in the church ; errors concerning the hierarchy ; concerning the seven sacraments ; concerning the veneration of relics ; and concerning in- dulgence. They traced all these errors to one cause, that the party admitted no other authority than the sacred Scriptures, explained in their own sense and in contrariety with the doctrine of the church and of entire Christendom. They regarded themselves, on the other hand, as the people, who alone were in possession of the truth, inasmuch as they agreed with the doctrine of the Roman church and of entire Chris- tendom. They required in all matters in themselves indifferent, among which wer.e to be reckoned the late ordinances of the pope and the process against Huss. unconditional submission to the Roman church. The disobedience of Huss and his party to the commands of their supe- riors passed, with them, for the greatest crime. The interdict should be strictly observed ; the order forbidding Huss to preach, should re- main in full force. They maintained that, since the proceedings against Huss had been accepted by the collective body of the clergy of Prague, and they had submitted to them, therefore all should do the same, especially as they related only to things in themselves indifferent, for- bade nothing good, and commanded nothing wrong ; and it was not the business of the clergy of Prague to judge whether the ban pro- nounced on John Huss was a just or an unjust one. Severe punish- ment for publicly holding forth any of those things which they from their particular point of view called heresy was required by them. Their proposals for peace, therefore, looked to nothing else than a total suppression of the other party and the triumph of their own. Huss, on the other hand, began by laying down the principle, that the sacred Scrip- tures alone should pass as a final authority ; no obedience could be re- quired to that which was at variance with their teaching. He said, in answer to the challenge of obedience to the interdict and ban : '• It were the same as to argue that, because the judgment pronouncing Christ a seducer, an e\al doer, and worthy of death, was approved bj the collective body of the priests in Jerusalem, therefore that judgment must be acquiesced in.''i Looking at the matter from this point of new, he was conscious of no heresy himself, nor could he see any ground for asserting that heresies existed in Bohemia. He demanded, therefore, that they should return back to the earlier compact concluded under archbishop Zbynek. He declared that he was ready to clear him- self from the charge of heresy against any man, or else suffer at the • 0pp. I, fol. 247, 2. SYNOD OF PRAGUE, A. D. 1413. 297 stake, provided his accusers would also bind themselves under the same conditions. Every man who took it upon himself to accuse another of heresy, should be required to come forward and take this pledge. But if none could be found that were able to do so, then it should be proclaimed anew that heresy did not exist in Bohemia. The hierar- chical party would naturally look upon all this as a mere shift to avoid the necessity of submitting to the church, and of giving up the defence of heresy. Archbishop John the Iron, of Leitomysl, approved the propositions of the other party, and declared strongly against those of the party of Huss. He advised tiiat all writings in the vulgar language of Bohemia, relating to religious subjects, writings that had contributed in a sjiecial manner to the spread of heresy, should be condemned, and the reading of them forbidden. ^ Where there was such contrariety in principles, as we here se^ manifested, it is evident that all attempts at compromise would necessarily prove idle, or only terminate in making the breach still wider. These transactions affu-ded Huss a good op- portunity for more fully ex|H)unding and defending, in the tracts which he wrote in confutation of the projtositions above stated, of the arrogant pretensions clearly avowed therein by the other party, and of the accu- sations brought against him and his friends, the principles which had guided him in these disputes, and which by occasion of these disputes became more distinctly evolved to his own consciousness. We shall state them more fully in the next section, where we shall recur to them for the purpose of a more distinct exposition of the doctrines and prin- ciples of Huss, and of their bearing on the aims and tendencies of the dominant party. The synod above mentioned was not held, as at first intended, at Bohmisch-Brod, but in Prague itself, on the 6th of Febru- ary, 1413. Huss therefore could not be present. His place was represented by his advocate. Master John of Jesenic. Before thia synod were laid the propositions of the two parties. And here it should be mentioned, that v>ne of the most zealous friends of Huss, Master Jacobellus of Mies, submitted a resolution to this effect : that if the matter now in question I'elated to the restoration of peace, it should first be settled ichat peace was meant, whether peace with the zvorld, or with God; the latter depended on keeping the divine command- ments. The origin of the strife was this : that the attempts of some to bring back that peace of God met with such unholy and violent re- sistance on the part of others. Yet the peace of the world without christian and divine peace, Avould be as unstable as it was worthless. Let the king but give his thoughts to the latter first, and the other would follow of itself.8 The result of this synod was such as might be expected in a case where the direct contrariety of the propositions offered rendered compromise impossible. It broke up without having accomplished anything. But the king, who looked at nothing but tho interests of his government, and therefore desired nothing but a peace- ful compromise, tried yet another expedient. He appointed a committee ' See the documents in CocliliBus, p. * Palacky, III, 1, p. 293. 39 sq., and Palacky, III, 1, p. 289 tf. 298 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE, composed of four members : the archbishop Albic, the Wysehrad dear Jacob, the provost of All-Saints Master Zdenek of Labaun, and the rector of the university Master Christann of PrachaticJ This commit- tee Avas empowered to take every measure necessary for the restoration of concord and tranquillity. They carried it so far as to oblige the two parties to bind themselves under the penalty of a pecuniary forfeit and of banishment from the country, to abide by the decision of this com- mittee. But the same reasons which had operated to defeat the pur- pose of the synod, would operate with equal force against Uiis experi- ment also. No sooner did they proceed to reduce to form the first proposition, expressing the agreement of the two parties with the faith of the church on the matter of the holy sacraments and the authority of the church, than a dispute arose out of this, namely, that Paletz, who with his friends did not consider themselves as a party standing over against the others, but as defending the cause of the church against a party standing opposed to that cause, thought he could not concede, that he and his were also to be called a pars^ a mere party. He then directly proceeded to lay down his definition of the church, a de- finition Avhichthe other party would not admit; against which indeed they had always protested, as is evident from the writings of Huss ; a defi- nition by admitting which the party of Huss would have surrendered all their principles ; namely, that by the church is to be understood the body of cardinals under the pope as their head. Master John of Jesenic, who represented the party of Huss, finally yielded, but with the qualifying clause that he and his party accepted the decisions of the church as every faithful Christian ought to accept and understand them. Now by this clause the definition, chosen with a purpose by the other party, was indeed, of itself, rendered impotent ; for, under the phrase, ' such acceptation as every believing Christian is bound to give,' was meant to be understood, by those from whom this clause proceeded, that everything was excluded thereby which might stand at variance with their principle that the sacred Scriptures are the sole determining rule of faith. The commission, who had no other interest in view than that of securing an agreement, and who were ready to welcome any terms of agreement however ambiguously expressed, would be satisfied with this. But looking upon the thing from their own point of view, the other party could not be blamed when they were led, by the same in- terest which had induced them to propose their narrow definition of the church, to protest against a clause by which their whole object would be defeated. Stanislaus of Znaim and Stephen Paletz declared that this was only a shift, a pretext, under which to conceal discord and disobedience. And in this, judged according to their own point of view, they were right. For two days they vainly disputed on this point. On the third, Paletz and the other doctors who had protested wholly absented themselves, accusing the Commission of weakness and partiality. King Wenceslaus now looked upon the four members of the theological faculty, who by their protest had hindered the compromise; * The same, p. 294. COMMITTEE FOR SETTLEMENT OF TERMS OF AGREEMENT. 29S as the promoters of schism, being unfaithful to the pledge under which they had engaged to submit to the decision of the committee ; and he deprived them of their places and banished them from the country. Thua fell the party which regarded itself as exclusively the party of the church. Another defeat awaited it. In the senate of Prague the Ger- man element had hitherto had the ascendancy ; and it was in fact this element chiefly which resisted, in a decided manner, every tendency to reform ; and hence those measures adopted by the senate against the cause of Huss, of which we have spoken before. But King Wenzel was now induced so to alter the relation, that out of the two races, Bo- hemians and Germans, all the nine members should be chosen into the senate by the king. At the same time a German, who had hitherto been a leader among the opponents of Huss, the senator John Oei-tel was, for some unknown reason, executed. Thus another victory, if it might be called such, was gained by the Hussite party. But the hatred of the hierarchical party in Bohemia towards the Hussites would only be famied, by such events, to more violent flame, and its organs subsequently obtained, by the concatenation of greater events in the progress of church development, an opportunity to exercise their re- venge. Stanislaus of Znaim died, it is true, soon afterwards ; but Pa- letz had the satisfaction to appear as the fiercest accuser of Huss at the council of Constance. We now return back to the personal history of Huss. He had in the meantime retreated to castles belonging to his friends ; and, while the seed scattered by him in Prague was pro- ducing its fruits, he was enabled to prosecute at greater leisure the defence of his principles by writings. He spent the first part of the time chiefly at the castle, Kozi-hradek, which belonged to the lords of Austie. Here he wrote the most important of all his works, — the one chiefly appealed to in conducting the process against him which brought him to the stake. This was his book De ecdesia, and the controversial writings therewith connected, tracts directed against the theological faculty in Prague, against Stephen Paletz, and against Sttmislaus of Znaim, — writings, of which we have already availed ourselves in tracing the thread of the author's history, in explaining his principles and describing his laboi-s, although in point of chrono- log}' they presuppose the work I>e eccleda. It is characteristic of ^Huss, that precisely at this critical juncture, where the contest threat- ened to be most dangerous, he should unfold in this work De ecclesia, without regard to consequences, those doctrines which would inevit- ably most contribute to fix upon him the stigma of heresy. Accord- ingly, Cardinal D'Ailly remarked of this work, before the council of Constance, that through an endless multitude of arguments it attacked the papal authority and the plenitude of the papal power, as much aa the Koran did the Catholic faith. ^ Huss in this work traces the origin ' Qui quiilem lilier per infinita ar^- Alcoranus impufrnat catholicam fidem. menta ita iinpufj:nat auctoritatem papa- D'Ailly, de necessitate reformationis, in lem et ejus plenitudinem potestatis, sieut* Works of Gersou, Tom. II, p. 901. 800 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. of the whole dispute to his attacks of the secularized clergy. He distributes the entire body of the clergy into two classes : tJie clerus Christi and the clerus Antiehristi. " We must regard the clerical body — he says — as made up of two sects : the clergy of Christ and those of Antichrist. The Christian clergy lean on Christ as their leader, and on his laws. The clergy of Antichrist lean for the most part or wholly on human laws and the laws of Antichrist ; and yet pretend to be the clergy of Christ and of the church, so as to seduce the people by a more cunning hypocrisy. And two sects which are so directly opposed, must necessarily be governed by two opposite heads with their corresponding laws." ^ He says : " The priests of Christ preach- ed against the vices of a corrupt clergy. Hence arose the schism, and hence that clergy sought to suppress such preaching." He says, " how can there be anything more senseless than a clergy giving them- selves up to the dross of this world, and making a mockery of the hfe and teaching of Christ ? For, so exceedingly corrupt are the clergy already, that they hate those who frequently preach, and frequently mention the Lord Jesus Christ ; and, if a man ventures to quote Christ for himself, they say with scorn and bitterness, Art thou Christ ? And, after the manner of the Pharisees, they trouble and excommuni- cate those who acknowledge Christ. It was because I preached Christ and the gospel, and exposed Antichrist, anxious that the clergy should live according to the law of Christ, that the prelates first, with Arch- bishop Zbynek, contrived to get a bull from Pope Alexander V, to prohibit preaching in the chapels before the people, from which bull I have appealed: but I was never able to get a hearing. Therefore, on on good and reasonable grounds, I did not appear when I was cited. Therefore, by the instrumentality of Michael de Causis, they got me placed under the ban, when a compromise had already been effected ; and, finally, they contrived to obtain an interdict, by which they op- press the Christian people for no fiult of their own." In accounting for his non-appearance in Rome he explains himself further, as fol- lows : " What reason had I for obedience — a man summoned from a distance of 1200 miles? What reason that I, a man unknown to the pope, informed against by my enemies, should be so very solicitous and put myself to such extraordinary pains, to pass through the midst of my enemies, and place myself before judges and witnesses, who are my enemies, that I should use up the property of the poor to defray the enormous expenses, or if I could not meet the expenses, miserably perish from hunger and thirst ? And what was to be gained by my appearance ? One consequence certainly would be neglect of the work which God gave me to do, for my own salvation and that of others. There I should be learning, not how to believe, but how to conduct a process, a thing not permitted to a servant of God. There I should be robbed by the consistory of cardinals ; made luke- warm in holy living ; be betrayed into impatience by oppression ; and, if I had nothuig to give, must be condemned, let my cause be ever so ' De ecclesia, opp. I, fol. 226, 1. THE WORK OF HUSS ENTITLED " BE ECCLESIA." 301 good ; and, what is still worse, I should be compelled to worship the pope on my bended knees." Appealing to the words inscribed on the walls at Bethlehem,! he mentions, as a reason why the pretended ban could not affect him, that his judges and witnesses at Rome were his enemies, and, in particular, that his judge was a party concerned in the cause. 2 "It is — says he — a great distance ; — everywhere on this journey I should be surrounded by my enemies the Germans.3 I see no advantage to be gained by my appearance ; but the contrary ; — I must neglect my people in the word of God. I hope Christ has warned against any such peril, when he says : Lo, I send you as sheep in the midst of wolves ; be ye, therefore, wise as serpents and harmless as doves, (Matt. 10 : IG). With regard to the interdict, he speaks of that as an unchristian thing in itself. He traces its origin to the twelfth century, under Pope Hadrian IV, who, for some ill- treatment or other of a cardinal, laid an interdict on the place where Arnold of Brescia resided — which, to be sure, is not strictly correct — and he remarks : " 0, how patient was that pope ; but yet not like Christ, and the apostles Peter, Paul, and Andrew." " Perhaps — says he afterwards — that language of the Roman court is founded upon the exhortation : We ought always to pray and not faint, (Luke 18 : 1) ; or, on the words : Praise the Lord, all ye people, (Ps. 117 : 1). But what would the people say who hold such language, should it happen that John Huss arrives at the city of the heavenly Jerusalem, where cherubim and seraphim cease not daily to cry with one voice : " Holy is our God ? Will these on account of the papal bull cease to praise God, so that Christ, the true intercessor with God, must cease to intercede in behalf of the faithful his members ? " Though Huss was very far from harboring any intention to found a new church, or to renounce the church of that time, yet the principle from which such a renunciation would necessarily follow, was, it must be owned, sharply expressed and clearly unfolded in this book and the controversial tracts which, as we have said, were connected with it. ' Et si non vis credere, disce in Bethle- tate exponenda (quae Veritas Christus est), hem in pariete, ibi reperies. quomodo justo qui etiam, ubi non est timor, times mor- non nocet excommunicatio, sed proticit, tern ? Nuinquid commortiuis fuit in to et quare debet etiani Justus timere excora- sermo dominieus ; Nolite tiniere eos, qui municationein injustam praelaticara vel corpus occidunt ; animain autem non pos- Pilaticain. Fol. 249, 2. sunt oecidere ^ Numquid le<^isti : Quis '■^ Judicem principaliter tangit causa, accusabit adversus electos dei 1 Deus, Fol. 244, 2. qui justificat; quis est qui condcmnct ? ^ Tiie naive manner in which the abbot Ad curiam citatus debuisti potius humili- of Dola labors to refute these arguments, ter parere et cum apostolo dicere : Si deus reproaching iluss with cowardice, exhort- pro nobis, quis contra nos ? Eccc deus ing him to trust in God and fear nothing, proprio tilio suo non pepercit, sed pro no- and holding up to him the example of bis omnibus tradidit ilium, etiam judican- Christ when he appeared before Pilate, is dum irajjio judici Pilato, numcpiid tu ma- quite characteristic. We will quote a spe- jor es Clhristo '. Cbristus pro nobis non cimen of his tine logic : Ecce cum nee- refugit judicari al) iniquo judice : et tu dum audieris proclia et seditiones, jam contcmhis, imo condemnas pro expurgan- eontra Christi exhortationem stolide ter- dis tuis propriis peccatis judicium summi reris. Et ubi sermo sapicntiac : Pro jus- pontificis, vicarii Jesu Christi ? Dial, vo litia certa usque ad mortem t Et tu dices lat. Pez, IV, 2, pag. 465 et 466. ts intrepidum praedicatorem esse pro veri- VOL. V. 26 302 HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. From the direct unmediated reference of the Christian consciousnesa to the Saviour, such as we find in these works, results already a new and more spiritual conception of the church, another conception of the necessity of the church unity, opposed to the theory of a necessary visible head. Already, we find, in its germ, the distinction of visible and invisible church. In reference to this last, it is only necessary to remark, that Huss, taking his start from the strict Augustinian system — though his predominant practical bent prevents him from using such hard expressions, amounting to a denial of all freedom, as are to be found in Wicklif — must nevertheless define the church, so far as it corresponds to its true idea, as the community of the elect ; and, though with Augustin, he gives prominence to the notion of a living faith, yet he also, with Augustin and the entire western church, ap- prehended the notion of justification after a wholly subjective manner ; and hence by him, too, it was argued, that no man could without a special revelation, have any certainty on the point, whether or not, he belonged to the number of the predestinated or the elect. Thus in adverting, to Christ's words : " Where two or three are gathered together in my name, I am in the midst of them," he says : There^ then, would be a true particular church ; and, accordingly, where three or four are assembled, up to the whole number of the elect ; and, in this sense, the term church was often used in the New Testa- ment. " And thus — says he — all the righteous who now, in the archbishopric of Prague, live under the reign of Christ, and in parti- cular the elect, are the true church of Prague." But, the one Cath- olic Church is the universitas p7'aedestinatorum, i. e., the praedesti- nate of all times. He then distinguishes the church in the proper and in the improper sense, ve7'e et nuncupative. The former is the community of the elect, in the second sense also, the congregatio prae- scito^^um. Then the church is denominated, in a mixed sense, the community of the j??-ae8C^7^andof the praedestmati at once ; so that, in this case, one part is the church in the proper, the other in the impro- per sense. That would be the visible church, therefore, in which, as vve should say, those who partake of the essence of the invisible church, and those who belong merely to the visible, are commingled. But, then, according to his above described doctrine, no one can have any certainty on the point, whether he belongs or not to the number of the elect ; and hence neither can any one be certain that he is a member of the true church. " It would — says he — be the height of arro- gance for any man fearlessly to assert, without a special revelation, that he is a member of that holy church ; for none but the praedesti- nate is a member without spot or wrinkle of that church. Therefore — says he — we may well be amazed to see with what effrontery those who are most devoted to the world, who live most worldly and abom- inable lives, most distant from the walk with Christ, and who are most unfruitful in performing the counsels and commandments of Christ, with what fearless effrontery such persons assert, that they are heads, or eminent members of the church, which is His bride." When he wrote this, Huss may have had in his thoughts Pope John XXIII, of THE won:; of iiuss entitled de ecclesia. o03 whose vices he had doubtless already heard. Ilenco, too, he distin- guishes those who may at a certain time, by the indications of their life in righteousness, seem to be members of the church, and Avho yet, as they do not belong to the number of the praedestinate, are not members of the mystical body of Christ.' Paletz had offered it as an objection to the party of Huss, that they talked of four parties in the church, the parties of the three popes, and a fourth neutral party. This led Huss to remark : Paletz did not understand, then, that the universal church of the faithful, which is in the whole world where believers are to be found, the church which is engaged in the warfare and scattered, is divided not merely into three parts, but into very many parts, all which went to constitute the entirety of the church. Had not, then, this church its members, and its sons in Spain under Benedict, and in Apulia and on the Rhine under Gregory, and in Bohemia under John XXHI ? God forbid that the Christian faith should be extinguished in the simple faithful, and that the grace of baptism should be annihilated in baptized children on account of the three beasts that are quarrelling with one another for their dignity, their pomp, and their avarice.^ — " Let him retreat within himself — says he of Paletz — and sing that song of the church: The holy church, throughout all the world, doth acknowledge thee." And pray in the song of the mass : " To thee we offer the gifts for thy holy Catholic church which thou wilt preserve and guide, scattered through- out all the world. When he sings and prays thus, and meditates on Christ's gospel with the sayings of Augustin, Jerome, and other saints, he would no longer be surprised to learn that the church of Christ is divided into three parts." He adverts here also to the words of Christ, that where two or three were assembled in his name, he was in the midst of them. — He gives special prominence to the truth that Christ alone is the all-sufficient head of the church ; that the church needs no other, and that therein consists its unity. After having cited Ephesians 1 : 21, to show that Christ is the sole head, he argues that if a Christian in connection with Christ were the head of the universal church, we should have to concede, that such a Christian was Christ himself, or that Christ was subordinate to him, and only a member of the church. Therefore the apostles had never thought of being aught else than servants of that head, and humble ministers of the church his bride ; but no one of them had ever thought of excepting himself and asserting that he was head or bridegroom of the church. " Christ ' Qui nude secundum praesentera justi- Numquid non habet sua membra et suo3 liain ct tiiliter sunt praesciti de ccclesia filios in Hispania sub Benedicto, et in pro tempore quo sunt in gratia. Ilia au- Apulia et in Rheno sub Gregorio, et in tem ecclesia non est corpus Christi mysti- Bohemia sub Joanne XXIU 1 Absit. cum. See the passages cited thus far in quod sit exstincta Christi tides in simpli- De ecclesia, opp. I, fol. 196-206. cihus Christi tidelibus ct in bajuisatis ])ar- '^ Non cognoscit iste tictor, quod univer- vulis sit exstincta ])apalis (doubtless we salis ecclesia Christi lidelium, militans per should read haptismalis) gratia propter tres totum orbem, ubi sunt Cliristi tiddes, est bestias, pro dignitate et fasiu et avaritia diffusa, quae non solum tripartitur, imo contendentes. Resp. ad scr. Paletz, opp multipliciter, ultra dividitur in partes ip- I fol. 260. 2. gam universalem ccclcsiam integrantes. 804 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. — says he — is the all-sufficient head of the church ; as he proved^ during 300 years of the existence of the church and still longer, in which time the church was most prosperous and happy," And the law of Christ was the most effectual to decide and determine ecclesiastical affairs, since God himself had given it for this purpose. " For Christ never allows the case to occur in which the church can fail to be governed by his law, since pious priests bring that law before the people to be applied according to the rules of holy teachers, — rules which they have made known under the guidance of the Holy Ghost, as is evident from the examples of an Augustin, a Gregory, an Am- brosius, who, after the apostles, were given to the church to be her teachers." Hence it was manifest, that an Augustin had benefited the church more than many popes had done ; and in instruction had done more perhaps than all the cardinals from their first creation down to the present.' Following out certain maxims of Augustin,2 he declares that Christ himself was the rock which Peter professed, and on which Christ founded the church, who would therefore come forth triumph- ant out of all her conflicts.^ He says, the pope and the cardinals might be the most eminent portion of the church in respect of dignity, yet only in case they followed more carefully the pattern of Christ, and laying aside pomp and the ambition of the primacy, served in a more active and humble manner, their mother the church. But pro- ceeding in the opposite way, they became the abomination of desola- tion, a college opposed to the humble college of the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ.4 Why should not Christ, who, in the holy supper, grants to believers the privilege of participating in a sacramental and spiritual manner of himself; why should not he be more present to the church, than the pope, who, living at a distance of more than 800 miles from Bohemia, could not by himself act directly on the feelings and the movements of the faithful in Bohemia, as it was incumbent on the head to do ! It would be enough, then, to say that the pope is a representative of Christ ; and it would be well for him, if he were a faithful servant, predestinated to a participation in the glory of his head — Jesus Christ. Huss asserts that the papacy, by which a visi- ble head was given to the church, derived its origin from the Emperor Constantino ; for, until the gift of Constantino, the pope was but a colleague of the other bishops.^ If the Almighty God could not give other true successors of the apostles than the pope and the cardinals, it would follow, that the power of the emperor, a mere man, by whom the pope and the cardinals were instituted, had set limits to the power of God.6 Speaking of the sovereignty of Rome conferred on the pope by Louis the pious, he says : " The Apostle Peter, if God pleased, might surely have said to Louis, I accept not what thou offerest me ; 'or, when I was bishop of Rome, I forsook all, and desired not to re- ceive the sovereignty of Rome from Nero ; neither did I need it, and ' De ecclesia, oop. I. fol. 202, 2, and fol. ^ De ecclesia, opp. I, fol. 210, 1. 224, 2. « Ibid. fol. 207, 2. ' Which we have cited in Charch His- * Ibid. fol. 224, 2. tory, Vol. n, p. 201. « Ibid. THE WORK OF HUSS DE ECCLESIA. 306 I see that it is a great injury to my successors ; for it is a hindrance to them, this same honor, in the preaching of the gospel, in wholesome prayer, in fulfilling the divine commandments and counsels ; and the greater part of them are betrayed by it into pride. Since, then, the Almighty God is able to take away the prerogatives of all those emperors, and to bring back his church once more to the condition in which all the bishops shall be on the same level, as it was before the gift of Constantino, it is evident that he can give others besides the pope and the cardinals to be true successors of the apostles, so as to serve the chm'ch as the apostles served it."i He cannot agree with those who required an unconditional obedience to the popes and pre- lates, in relation to things hidifferent. " Reason — he says — must be man's guide not only in regard to that which is good in itself^ but likewise to things indifferent. As regards that which is good in itself, should a prelate bid his subject give alms while he left his sons to furnish, or impose a fast on him which he could not endure, or bid him make many prayers, for confessors are wont to prescribe such oppres- sive things — certainly in such matters not even the pope is to be obeyed ; since a father is more bound to support his sons than to give alms to others ; and he is not bound to take upon himself an in- tolerable burden. And the same holds good also of things indifferent. For, should a pope command me to play on a flute, to build towers, to cut out clothes, or to weave, must not my reason decide for me, that the pope lays on me a senseless command ? Wherefore should I not place my own thought before the pope's dictum ? Nay, should he with all the doctors lay on me any such command, reason would still decide, that their command was a senseless one. If the pope of his own motion determined to confer a bishopric on one whose vicious lift^ and ignorance in the language of the community whom he had to guide, disqualified him for the duty, even with the command that he should accept of such a charge, would the man be obliged to obey him in this 'i It is clear that he is by no means obliged to do so. Neitlier would the people be obliged to accept such a person ; for they would not even make one a tender of swine or of goats, who was not quali- fied to take charge of such animals." And he lays it down as a i)ni> ciple, that the true disciples of Christ must look at the primitive pattern of Christ himself, and so far hearken to the prelates, as he prescribed to his flock the law of Christ, that which was contormable to reason and tended to edification. In relation to things indifferent he remarks : to what a condition of slavish servility would Christians be degraded by such a principle ; to what abuse, intolerable to Christ- ian men. would such a principle be liable. The pope in such case might order that no Christian should do anything in the whole range of things indifferent, which he might not approve ; and so he might commission his satraps to cite any man whom they pleased and make him responsible to his tribunal ; and thus might they torment the people after their own good pleasure, and practise extortions upon 1 Ibid. fol. 224, 2 et 225. 26* 30u HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. them, as they have done by their absolutions, reservations, and dis pensations. And it may be believed they would do it more, did they not fear that the people, seeing through their trick, would rise up in rebellion against them, " For — says he — already God gives light to the people, that they mag 7iot be led astray from the ways of Christ.''' '^ The pain which Huss felt in contemplating the worldliness of the church, his earnest longing for its purification, express them- selves in these words of a prayer to Christ : " Almighty Lord, thou who art the way, the truth and the life, thou knowest how few, in these times, walk in thee, how few follow after thee, as the head, in humility, poverty, chastity, labor, and patience I Broad and open hes the way of Satan, and many walk therein. Help thy little flock, that they may never forsake thee, but follow on through the narrow path, even unto thyself." 2 To this worldly spirit, Huss, too, with others, attributes the long, wearisome schism of the church in those days. "As to the question — says he — whence this devilish schism has arisen, the very bhnd may know, that it sprung out of the worldly dowry of the church."^ Conceiving the unity of the church in the more free and spiritual manner we have described, Huss was pre- pared also to understand more clearly the multifarious ways of appro- priating Christianity, determined by the various peculiarities of indivi- dual character, and it is a fine remark which he makes on this subject when he says : " Some love Christ more in reference to his divinity, as we suppose to be the case with the evangelist John ; others, more in reference to his humanity, as is thought to be true of Philip ; others, more in reference to his body which is the church, and so in many other relations." < Here, then, we find characterized three rpoiroL TraiSeia^i three diflFerent bents of Christian experience ; — the predomi- nant tendency to the godlike in Christ, the predominant bent to the human, and to his revelation in the church. Huss, in a conference with Paletz, had required a proof from Holy Scripture in support of some- thing the latter had asserted. Paletz and his associates seized upon this to bring home against him the charge, that he recognized merely the Holy Scriptures, but not God, nor the apostles, nor holy teachers, nor the universal church, as judge in the final appeal. To this accu- sation Huss replies : " One thing Paletz must assuredly know, that in the matter of faith we agree neither with him, nor with any of his adherents, except so far as they can sustain themselves on the founda- tion of Sacred Scripture or on reason." ^ Huss, who showed his Christian freedom in this, that he felt bound to follow the Divine Word and reason independent of all other authority, and in opposition to all other, and who for this reason was accused of pride by those who stood up for a servile obedience to church authority, was, however, very ' Jam enim deus populum illuminat, ne ta est via Satanae, multi vadunt per earn, eeducatur a viis Christi. Ibid. fol. 245, 2. adjuva pusillum gregem tuum, ut non ta * Omnipoteiis domiiie, qui es via, veri- deserat, sed per viam angustiae finaiitei tas et vita, tu nosti, quara pauci in te am- te sequatur. Ibid. fol. 206 bnlant istis temporibus, pauci te caput ^ Ibid. fol. 230, 2. iuum in humilitate, paupertate, castitate, * Il)id. fol. 212, 2. laboriositate et patieutia imitantur. Aper- * Ibid. fol. 227, 1. HUSS AGAINST STANISLAUS OP ZNAIM. 307 far from being inclined to persist obstinately in holding an opinion which he had once expressed. He says : " Often have I allowed myself to be set right even by one of my own scholars, when I saw that the reasou-s were good, and I felt bound to thank him for the correction." ^ In this work we find laid down the four principles of reform which constitute the soul of the whole movement that proceeded from Huss ; the germ and beginning of the four articles subsequently held fast by the more moderate portion of the Hussite party. To wit : in opposition to the charge that the people were led astray by his party, he says — 1. It was their endeavor rather to make the christian people one; to bring them into a harmonious unity by the law of Christ ; 2. That anti- christian ordinances should not delude the people, — these could not di- vide them from Christ ; but that the law of Christ in its purity should rule, together with the customs of the people which harmonized with the law of the Lord ; 3. That the clergy should live pure, according to the law of Christ ; should banish pomp, cupidity, and luxury ; 4. That the militant church should consist of the orders instituted by our Lord, namely, the priests of Christ, who faithfully fulfilled his law, the secu- lar nobles, who should compel the rest to observe christian ordinances, and the lower class of people, who should serve both orders according to the law of Christ.^ We would join, with what we have taken from the book of Huss on the church, what he said akin to this in the tract already mentioned as having been composed about this time and directed against Stanislaus of Znaim. Had he affirmed that a bad pope, who was a reprobate, could not be head of the church, his adversaries who were glad of a chance to carry spiritual matters over into politics, hoping thus to make the doctrines of Huss appear the more dangerous to secular authority, would have argued from it that the king of Bohemia then, if he were a praescitus, could not be king. And so Huss would have been held up to view as the representative of a radical and revolutionary party. But Huss uniformly declared himself opposed to this method of carrying the subject over into a wholly different province. Christ, he said, was the head in spiritual things, and governed the church in a far more neces- sary way than the emperor who was head in temporal things. For Christ, who is seated at the right hand of the Father, must necessarily govern the militant church as its head.^ Against the necessity of a visible head, Huss cited the papal female reign of the tenth century, the time of the vacancy in the papal chair.4 Christ can better govern his church, says he, by his true disciples scattered through all the world, without such monsters of supreme heads.^ The theological faculty had called the pope the secure, never-failing and all-sufficient refuge for his church. Against this Huss says : No created being can hold this place. This language can be applied only to Christ. He alone is the ' Sicut mihi frequentius accidcr.it, dum ^ Kesp. ad scr. StanisUu, opp I. fol mandavi ct doctus de meliori etiam gra 277, 1. tanter informationem suscipiens discipulo * Ibid, obedivi. Ibid. fol. 247, 1. * Ibid. fol. 277, 2. » Ibid. fol. 231, 1. 80b HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. secure, unfailing, and all-sufficient refuge for his church, to guide and enlighten it. And he appeals to the words of Christ, Without me ye can do nothing (John 15: 5).' What sound views he entertained of the progressive advance of the church as a necessarily free progression, is evidenced by these words : " It injures not the church, but benefits it, that Christ is no longer present to it after a visible manner ; since he himself says to his disciples and therefore to all their successors (John 16: 7), It is good for you that I go away, for if I went not away, the Comforter would not come to you ; but if I go, I will send him unto you." It is evident from this, as the truth itself testifies, that it was a salutary thing for the church militant that Christ should ascend from it to heaven, that so his longer protracted bodily and visible presence on earth might not be prejudicial to her.2 Accordingly he concludes that the church is sufficiently provided for in the invisible guidance, and should need no visible one by which she might be made dependant. Suppose then that the pope who walks visibly among men, were as good a teacher as that promised Spirit of truth, for which one need not to run to Rome or Jerusalem, since he is everywhere present, in that he fills the world. Suppose also that the pope were as secure, unfailing, and all-sufficient a refuge for all the sous of the church as that Holy Spirit, it would follow that you supposed a fourth person in the divine Trinity .3 Huss sees clearly how the mistaken endeavor to secure unity to the church by externalization, by making it dependant on a visible head, instead of operating as was intended to prevent heresies and di- visions, provoked, on the contrary, and multiplied them. " For — says he — it is evident that tlie gi'eatest errors and the greatest divisions have arisen by occasion of this head of the church, and that they have gone on multiplying to this day. For before such a head had been instituted by the emperor, the church was constantly adding to her virtues ; but after the appointment of such a head, the evils have continually mount- ed higher ; and there will be no end to all this, until this head, with its body, be brought back to the rule of the apostles." It was not Sara- cens, Greeks, and Jews alone that took umbrage at this ; but since the schism between the popes, there had sprung up such divisions among the people, that few were to be found who agreed together in their walk according to the law of Christ. All true unity must have its foundation in Christ."* When the opponents of Huss, following the fashion of their age, resorted to a very arbitrary system of so- called philosophy and false analogies drawn from the organism of the body, to demonstrate the necessity of such an organism as that of the existing hierarchy, confounding together, as was so common in those ' Ibid. et indcficiens. sed omnino sufficiens, refu- ^ Ibid. fol. 269, 1. gium omnibus filiis ecclesiae, sicut est iste ^ Tonat eryjo doctor papam conversan- spiritus isanctns, et dicam, quod posuit tern in liumanis ita bonum doctorem, sicut quartam personam in divinis. Iliid. fol bonus doctor est iste promissus spiritus 283, 1. veritatis. ad (iiiem non est necesse Hieru- ■* Omnem vero concordiam veram et salem vel Romam currere, cum sit ubique sanctam in militante ecclesia oportet esse praesens, replcns orbem terrarum. Ponat in Christo domino stabilitam. Ibid, fol etiani doctor papam ita securum, certum 279, 1. HUSS AGAINST STANISLAUS OF ZNAIM. 309 times, philosophy and theoloi:;y in a way equally injurious to both, Ilusa might justly accuse them of unwarrantably mixing up wordly wisdom with revealed ti'uth, and substituting the water of a cistern for that of the living spring.' Of the only necessary and tridy uninterrupted agency, in the church, of the Holy Spirit, Huss says : " This Spirit, in the absence of a visible pope, inspired prophets to predict the future bridegroom of the church, strengthened the apostles to spread the gos- pel of Christ through all the world, led idolaters to the worship of one only God, and ceases not, even until now, to instruct the bride and all her sons, to make them certain of all things and guide them in all things that are necessary for salvation." '-^ To show that the church may be governed best by organs ordained and guided by Christ, he says : " As the apostles and the priests of Christ ably conducted the affairs of the church in all things necessary to salvation, before the office of pope had yet been introduced, so they will do it again if it shoidd happen, as it is quite possible it may, that no pope should exist, until the day of judg- ment ; for Christ is able to govern his church, after the best manner, by his faithful presbyters, without a pope." 3 So in pointing out the con- trast between pious priests and the cardinals, he says : " The cardinals, occupied with worldly business, cannot teach and guide, by sermons, in the articles of faith and the precepts of the Lord, the members of the universal church and of our Lord Jesus Christ. But the poor and lowly priests of Christ, who have put away out of their hearts all ambition, and all ungodliness of the world, being themselves guided by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, teach and guide the sons of the church, quickened by the grace of the Holy Spirit, and give them certainty in the articles of faith and the precepts necessary to salvation." 4 He shows how the church has all that it needs in the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and ought to require nothing else ; nothing else can be a sub- stitute for that. Stanislaus of Znaim had affirmed that the church could not have been left by Christ without a visible head, for it would be leaving her in a condition of too great embarrassment. Huss re- plies : " Far be it from our hearts ever to utter a sentiment so hereti- cal as this. For it directly contradicts the declarations of the gospels. How can the church be embarrassed, when she has the bridegroom with her to the end of the world ; when she has a sure consolation and an infallible promise, the promise of Christ's own word, that if we ask the Father anything in Jus name, he will give it us ? And, Whatever ye ask of the Bridegroom, he will do. From no pope can she obtain this." 5 ' Quis non conciperet ratione discutiens, ejus filios inforniare, certiticare ac dirijrere quod lioc est cisteniam extraneam, prae- in necessariis ad salutem. Il)id. tbl. 283, 1. ter a(iuain Christi fodere, pliilosophiam ' Sicut apostoli et tideles sacerdotes fallacitcr cum scriptura sacra commiscere? domini streuue in necessariis ad salutem Ibid. fol. 279, 2. regularunt ecck'siam, antcquam papae of- * lUe er<;o spiritus, nuUo papa conver- ticium fucrat inrroduetum, sic tacereiit, de- Bantc in hunianis visiliiliter, prophctas hciente per suinmo possilnle jiapa, usque aspiravii, ut sponsum futurum ecclesiae ad diem judicii ; cum ipse Christus potest praecinerent, apostolos confortavit, ut suam eeclesiam optime ]ier suos fideles Christi cvant^elium per muudum vehe- presbyteros regere sine papa. Ibid, fol rent, idolatras ad cultuni rcvocavit, et 283, 2, nunc non dedcit ipsam sponsam et omnes * Ibid. * Ibid. 310 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Huss says of himself : " Relying on Christ, that Witness whom no mul titude of witnesses can draw away from the truth, whom the Roman court cannot terrify, whom no gift can corrupt and no power overcome, I will confess the gospel truth, so long as he himself gives me grace to do so." ' In the time of those earlier proceedings for the restoration of concord, Huss expressed, in letters addressed to his friends in Prague, his high assurance of faith, his firm resolution never to give up a par- ticle of the truth, never to purchase peace and quiet by any denial of the truth. We find him already with a mind fully made up to die rather than to swerve from strict integrity and an honest avowal of his convictions. So he writes to a friend, Master Christann of Prachatic, rec- tor of Prague university : "As to the advice of the faculty, with Christ's help, I would not receive it, if I stood before a stake, which was ready prepared for my execution ; and I hope that death will sooner remove me or the two who have deserted the truth (Stephen Paletz and Stan- islaus of Znaim), either to heaven or to hell, than I shall be induced to adopt their opinions. For I knew them both as men who, in earlier times, truly confessed the truth as it is in Christ ; but, overcome by fear, they have turned to flattering the pope, and to lies." " If — he writes — I cannot make the truth free in all, I will at least not be an enemy to the truth, and will resist to the death all agreement with falsehood. Let the world flow on as the Lord permits it to flow ! A good death is better than a bad life. One ought never to sin through fear of death. To end this life, by God's grace, is to pass out of misery. The more knowledge of truth one gains, the harder he has to work. He who speaks the truth, breaks his own neck. He who fears death, loses the joy of living. Truth triumphs over all ; he triumphs who dies for the truth ; for no calamity can touch him, if no sin has dominion over him ! Blessed are ye when men curse you, says the Truth. This is the foundation on which I build ; this is the food for my spirit, recruiting it with fresh vigor to contend against all adversaries of the truth." Alluding to the deliberations then in progress about the course which ought to be pursued in order to clear the kingdom from the reproach of heresy, Huss in a letter to the same person re- marks : " As to the disgrace of the king and the realm, what harm is it, if the king is good, and some at least of the inhabitants of the realm are good ? Christ passed through the greatest reproach together with his chosen, to whom he said (John 16: 2. Matt. 10: 21, 22), Ye shall be delivered up by your parents and kinsmen ; which is more than to be reproached by Stanislaus or Paletz." - With this rector of Prague university, Huss kept up a correspond- ence from Kozi. The same person had written him a letter of consola- tion, placing before him several passages of Scripture which speak of the suiFerings of the righteous, such as 2 Tim. 3: 12, and reasoning from ' Unde de isto teste confidens, quem diu ipse donaverit, confitebor. Ibid foi. ituUa multitudo testium potest a veritate 287, 2. flectere, nee Romaiia curia exterrere, nee ^ Extracts from these as yet unpublish- aliquod munus curvare, nee aliqua poten- ed letters in Falacky, III, 1, p. 297 and 'tia vineere, veritatem evangelicam, quam- 298, note. LETTERS OF HUSS IN EXILE. 311 lliem that he should not allow himself to be troubled by his temporal afflictions and separation from his friends, but rejoice over all. '• Very thankfully, answers Huss, do I accept this consolation, while I fasten on those passages of Scripture and rely on this, that if I am a righteous man, nothing can trouble me or induce me to swerve from the truth. And if I live and will Hve devoutly in Christ, then in the name of Christ must I suffer persecutions ; for if it became Christ to suffer and so enter into his glory, it surely becomes us, poor creatures, to take up the cross and so follow him in liis sufferings. And I assure you that persecution •would never trouble me, if my sins and the corruption of christian peo- ple did not trouble me. For what harm could it do me to lose the riches of this world, which are but dross ? What harm, to lose the favor of the world, which might lead me astray from the way of Christ ? What harm, to suffer reproach, which, if borne with patience, purifies and transfigures the children of God, so that they shine like the sun, in the kingdom of their Father ? And finally, what harm, to have my poor life taken from me, which is death ; if he who loses this, lays death aside, and finds the true life ? But this is what they cannot compre- hend, who are blinded by pomp, honor, and avarice, and by whom some have been seduced from the truth through fear, where nothing Avas to be feared." " As to my body — says he — that I hope, by the Lord Jesus Christ, if mercy bestow the strength on me, to offer up, since I desire not to hve longer in this miserable world, if I cannot stir up myself and others, according to the will of God, to repentance. This I wish for you also ; and I exhort you, in the Lord Jesus Christ, with all the companions of your board, that you be ready for the trial; for the prelude of Antichrist must begin first, and then the contest will go on in right good earnest. And the goose must flap her wings against the wings of behemoth, and against the tail which always conceals the abominations of Antichrist. The Lord will reduce the tail and his prophets to nothing, i. e. the pope and his prophets, the masters, teachers, and ju- rists, who, under the hypocritical name of holiness, conceal the abomi- nations of the beast." He then adverts to it, that the papacy is the abomination of self -deification in the holy place, as the papacy made traffic of spiritual things. " Wo then is me — he writes — if I do not preach of that abomination, if I do not weep over it, write about it." ^ It was a great grief to Huss to be obhged to leave the scene of the con- flict, and suspend his labors for his beloved community in Bethlehem chapel. He had a severe struggle with himself, his most earnest wishes calling him back to his flock, while on the other hand imperative rea- sons bade him to remain concealed a while, that the best interests of thi8 community might be promoted. He considered it of prime importance here to make the words and the example of Christ his rule of action. To this a great deal relates, in the letters which he wrote to his com- munity or to his fellow combatants among the clergy, whose opinion he jjonsults on this subject. In a letter to two clergymen, he writes i^ ' Hus opp. I, fol. 94, 1 et 2. de Miliczin, opp. I. fol 93, 2 and fol. 94, 1. * Ep ad Mag. Martinum et Mag. Nicol. 312 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. ■' Having an earnest desire to preach the gospel, I am troubled, since I know not what I ought to do. I have, indeed, pondered in my Boul those words of our Lord (John 10: 11, 12), A good shepherd giveth his life for tlie sheep. But he that is an hireling, and not the shep- herd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep and fleeth, and the wolf catcheth them and scattereth the sheep." And then he says : " But I have thought also of the words of our Lord (Matt. 10: 23), But when they persecute you in one city, flee ye into another. Behold the precept or promise of Christ : I know not which of these two opposite things I ought to do." He then cites a letter of Augustin, written during the persecutions of the Vandals, and addressed to Honoratus, a clergyman, who had asked his advice as to the course of duty. " Give me, then, your opinion. Could you rest satisfied with the advice of Augustin ? For my conscience troubles me. I know not but my absence may give scandal, though the sheep do not want for needful nourishment from the divine word. On the other hand, I encounter the fear lest my presence should, through that execrable device of an interdict, be laid hold of as a pretext for de- priving them of their nourishment, namely the communion, and other things ministrant to salvation. Therefore let us humbly beg that the Almignty God would teach us what I, a poor creature, ought to do in this present case, so as not to swerve from the path of uprightness." Accordingly he writes, just before the Christmas festival of 1413, to his Bethlehem congregation : " Dearly beloved — the day of our Lord's nativity draws near ; therefore make clean the inner house, thatf it be pure from all sin. So far as 3'ou are able, hear diligently and devoutly the word of God. Care not for those enemies who would keep you from hearing the sermons in Bethlehem chapel. Once I myself was the reason why they endeavored to draw you away from that house. Now they have no such reason. But if they say, I have run away and left you ; be assured that I did it voluntarily, to fulfil the word of Christ and in imitation of his example, who says. Whosoever shall not receive you, nor hear your words, when ye depart out of that house or city, shake off the dust of your feet (Matt. 10: 14 and 10: 23)," and he adverts to the fact that Christ often, when the Jews would have killed him, escaped from their hands (John 10: 39. 11: 54 ff.). " It is no wonder therefore — he proceeds — that, in imitation of his example, I have withdrawn myself, for the present ; and that the priests seek for me and ask where I am. Know then that I, led by this exhorta- tion of Christ and by his example, have Avithdrawn myself, that I may not prove to the wicked an occasion of everlasting damnation ; and to the good, cause of oppression and trouble : and then again, that the godless priests may not wholly prevent the preaching of the divine word. I have not yielded, therefore, with any intention that divine truth should be denied, through me, for which truth I hope, with God's help, to die. In the next place, you know that it became Christ, as he him- self says, to sutfer until the time appointed by the Father. Of this, then, be well assured, that whatever God has determined to do with me, will be done. And if I am worthy to die for his name, he will call me to LETTERS OF HUSS IN EXILE. 313 suffering. But if it be his pleasure to draw me forth, once more, to the preaching of his word, this depends upon his own will." He then ob- serves that " it was no doubt the wish of many priests in Prague that he should return thither ; for the interdict would then supply them with an excuse for their indoletice : no masses would have to be read, no hours to be sung ; but all such were enemies to the preaching of the gospel, because their vices were exposed thereby to the light. Never- theless you," he adds," who love God's word and strive to become one with it, would be glad to see me because you love me as your neighbor. I too would be glad once more to see you, that I might preach to you God's word ; for this must ever be the great and especial concern of the ministers of the church, to preach to the people the gospel of Christ in its purity and with fruit, so that the people may know God's will, avoid the bad and be led in the good way of a just and virtuous life. Wo therefore to the priests who neglect God's word, who lead lives of indolent repose when they might be preaching it. And avo to those who hinder the preaching and the hearing of the divine word. But blessed are they who hear it and treasure it up in their hearts, and by good works observe it."^ On the festival of Christmas, he wrote to that community : " Though I am at present separated from you in the body, because perhaps I am not worthy to preach to you an}' longer the word of God ; yet the love with which I infold you, impels me to come, in the way at least of addressing you a few words." The few words were to this effect : that what, in other circumstances, he would have said to them from the pulpit, was briefly summed up in this let- ter ; that they should lay to heart the significance of the festival ; that he wished them the heavenly blessings secured to the faithful by the event which this festival commemorated.^ In another letter to the same community, he applies to himself the words of Paul in the epistle to the Philippians (1: 23) : " I say to you, ray beloved, though I am not in prison, yet I would gladly, for Christ's sake, die and be with him ; and yet I would gladly too, for your good, preach to you God's word ; but I am in a strait betwixt two, and know not which to choose. For I await God's mercy, and I fear again lest something bad be done among you, so as to expose the faithful to persecution and the unbe- lieving to eternal death." He says of his enemies : " Tiiey at present rejoice, and wish that not only in me the word of God may perish, but also that Bethlehem church, where T preached to you the gospel of Christ, may be closed. But without God's permission they will ac comphsh nothing ; if however he permits it, it will be done on account of the sins of unthankful men ; as Bethlehem wher3 he was born, and Jerusalem where he redeemed us, were utterly destroyed." 3 Although a presentiment of the death which might befall him in contending for the truth had long been on his mind, yet he had at the same time a prophetic consciousness that, though his person might perish, the truth would come forth triumphant out of the contest, and would by other instrumentalities be still more powerfully attested. We may look upon such utterances of ' Il)id. fol. 98, 2 and fol. 99, 1. ^ Ibid. fol. 97 1. * Ibid. fol. 99. I and 2. VOL. V. 27 314 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Huss, which we shall occasionally come across, as a prophecy of the Ger- man Reformation, though Huss was really thinking of that which was pres- ently to take place on the theatre of his own past labors. Thus he writes a letter to the Bethlehem community, at the time when various attempts were made to break it up : " They hav.e directed their attacks against many churches and chapels, that the word of God might not be preached in them. Yet Christ has not permitted them to accomplish their pur- pose. Already, as I hear, they are seeking the destruction of Bethle- hem chapel, and in other chapels they forbid the preaching of God's word. Yet I trust in God that they will accomplish nothing. At firet they prepared snares, citations, and ban for the " goose," and already they are lying in wait for some of you. But since the goose, a fame ani- mal, a domestic animal, with no wings to soar aloft, has broken through their snares, ive may the more confidently expect that other birds who, hy the word of God and their lives do soar aloft, ivill turn their toils and plottings to nought. And after having remarked how, by the interdict, they were seeking to suppress the worship and word of God in Prague, he adds : " But the more they seek to conceal their own real character, the more openly it betrays itself ; and the more they seek to sp)read oid their decrees like a net, the more they are rent in pieces ; and in seeking to have the peace of the world, they lose that and spiritual peace at the same time ; in seeking to injure others, they injure themselves most. It happened to them as to the priests of the Jews ; they lost that which they were endeavoring to secure, and fell into the evil they were aim- ing to avoid, in fancying that they could overcome and suppress the truth, which always conquers ; since this is its habit and 7iature, that the more it is obscured the more it shines out, and the more it is beat down the higher it rises. Priests, scribes, and pjharisees, Herod, Pi- late and the other dwellers in Jerusalem., condemned trui\ and gave it over to death and the grave ; but it arose again, all- conquering, ayid suhstitnted in place of itself twelve other heralds. And this same Truth has sent to Prague instead of one feeble goose, many falcons and eagles, which excel in sharpness of vision all other birds. These, by the grace of God, soar upward, high upward, and swoop away other birds to Jesus Christ, who will strengthen them, and confirm all his faithful ones. For he declares I am with you always, unto the end of the world. \1 He then be with us, the true God and mightiest, best defender, who, in his malice, shall be against us ? What fear or what death shall se{)arate us from Him ? What do we lose when, for his sake, we lose earthly goods, friends, honors, and this wretched life ? Surely we shall then first be delivered from this wretchedness, and" obtain a hundred-fold greater possessions, dearer friends, and a more perfect joy. Death shall not deprive us of these things. For he who dies for Christ conquers, and will be delivered from all sorrows and attain to that eternal joy to which may our Saviour Jesus Christ bring us all. This letter — he concludes — dearest brethren and beloved sisters, I have written to the end that you might stand fast in the truth you have known, fear no cita- tions, and attend not a whit less than you ever did, on account of their cruel threats, to the preaching of God's word. For God is faithful, who LETTERS OP HUSS IN EXILE. 315 will establish you and preserve you from evil." Then follows a postscript of requests, hinting at the labors to which Huss was then devoting him- self in his retirement. " Pray for those who preach God's truth with grace, and pray also for me, that I may more richly write and preach against Antichrist, and that God may lead me in the battle, when I am driven to the greatest strait, that so I may be able to maintain Ids oivn truth. For know, that I shrink not from giving up this poor body for God's truth, when I feel assured there is no want of the preaching of God's word, but that daily the truth of the gospel is more widely spread. But I desire to live for their sakes to whom violence is done, and who need the preaching of God's word, that in this way the malice of Anti- christ may be discovered as a warning to the pious. I preach there- fore in other places, ministering to whoever may be found there ; since I know that God's will is fulfilled in me, whether it be by a death hung over me by Antichrist, or whether I die in sickness. And if I come to Prague, I am certain that my enemies will lie in wait for me and per- secute you, they who do not serve God themselves and hinder others from serving him. But let us pray God for them, if peradventure there may be some elect ones among them, that they may be turned to the knowledge of the truth." ^ Respecting the attempts to shut up or destroy Bethlehem chapel, he says : " They would suppress God's holy word, tear down a chapel erected for its service, and hinder the people in their salvation." He calls upon them to ponder well the disgrace which would be brought upon their country, their nation, their race ; the calumny and shame which would fall upon themselves without any fault of their own. Antichrist and the devil could do them no harm, if they remained faithful to divine truth. They had now, for some years, been lying in wait for himself, and had not (as he hoped in God) hurt a hair of his head, but only occasioned him greater cheerfulness and hilarity. Great pains would be taken to induce them to abjure the er- rors imputed to them. Huss warns them that, by so doing, they would either deny the truth, or wrongly accuse themselves of errors which they were far from cherishing. He exhorts them to trust in Christ the Almighty .2 He reminds the Bethlehem congregation of his many years of labor among them and of its fruits, and says : " For the sake of this, as God is my witness, I have labored more than twelve years in preaching among you the divine word ; and in this my greatest conso- lation was to observe your earnest diligence in hearing God's word and to witness the true and sincere repentance of many." He warns them against the fickleness of those who once fought by him and then went over to the other side. " Have no regard for those persotis walking a crooked path, who have turned about and are now the most violent ene- mies of (roti, and our enemies." He reminds them that, even among the disciples of Christ, were those who once walked with him and then fell away from him. Exhorting them not to follow such examples, but faithfully lo per^vere in the confession of the truth and in attachment ' Ibid. foL 96, 2 and fol. 97, 1. published in the original Bohemian. Leips '^ See Ferd.B.Mikowec, Letters of John 1849. Let. 4 IIiiss, written at Constance 1414-1415, 316 HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. to those whom the Lord had sent to preach it to them, he requests theui to pray for himself, that God would give him good success in preach- ing his word. "In all the places — says he — where a need exists, in cities, in villages, in castles, in the fields, in forests, wherever I can be of any use, pray for me, that the word of God may not be kept back in me." ^ Sympathy Avith the cause of Huss, we perceive, had spread into other cities of Bohemia. Thus we find a letter of his to a foreign community, exhorting them to concord and warning them against inter- nal dissensions.2 To a parish priest in Prachatic, one who had been concerned in passing the sentence of condemnation against the forty-five propositions of Wicklif and in burning his writings, and who persisted in clamorino; aaiainst Huss himself as a heretic, he wrote a letter chal- lenging the man to convict him of a single heresy, but upbraiding him with the fact that, with all his pretended zeal for orthodoxy, he had constantly neglected the duties of the pastoral office, for which he had been thirty years responsible. " You might yourself call to mind how, for about thirty years, you have sheared the sheep in Prachatic. And where is your residence, your work ; where the pasturage of youi sheep ? " He reminds him of what Christ, to whom he must render an account of his doings, says against unfaithful shepherds (John x.), and adds : " This you should have thought of before you denounced your neighbor as a heretic." 3 . From expressions which drop from him in several of these letters, it is evident that his separation from his beloved flock bore heavily upon his spirits. There may be some ground, therefore, for the report that Huss in the course of this year, 1413, went privately several times to Prague, and resided there ; leaving the city, as soon as his presence became known, and began to make a stir." ^ Some time afterwards, to be nearer to his church, he changed his residence and accepted the invitation of a friend, belonging to the knightly order, Henry of Lazan, who offered him, as a place of refuge, his castle, the strong-hold of Cracowec. From this spot, too, he labored for the spread of evangelical truth, visiting those places where large multi- tudes were wont to gather, and preaching before them. From all quarters, it is said, the people flocked together in crowds to hear him. Meanwhile the time drew near for the assembling of the general council at Constance. To the objects of this council, the reformation of the church in its head and members, the restoration of concord, tran- quillity, and peace in the church, necessarily belonged the adjust- ment of the controversies in Bohemia and Moravia, which threatened to spread wider every day, and which had already attracted universal attention. Chancellor Gerson had at an earlier period already ap- prized Archbishop Conrad, of Vechta, of the danger which threatened the church of a revolution growing out of the commotions in Bohemia, and exhorted him to apply strenuous measures for the suppression of " 0pp. I, fol. 99, 2 and 100, 1. ' Ibid. fol. 93, 2. • Ibid. fol. 100, 2. ♦ Palacky, III, 1, p. 304. HUSS IN CRACOWEC. 31T heresies. Nor could it fail to happen that the Emperor Sigismund would be urged to bring this matter also within the circle of business to be ti-ansacted at the council. He invited his brotlier, King Wen- ceslaus, to send Huss to Constance, and promised to furnish the latter with a safe conduct. He caused Huss to be informed by Lefl, of Lazan, one of the two knights employed to negotiate this affair between him and the emperor, that he would make sufficient provision for his being heard before the council, and that if he did not submic to the decision of the council, he would send him back unharmed to Bohe- mia.' Huss needed no such invitation either from the emperor or the king. An opportunity to defend himself from the charge of heresy, to give an account of his faith in presence of the representatives of all Western Christendom, and to testify against the corruptions of the church, was what he most earnestly desired. But, before he set out on his journey to Constance, he appeared once more, in the August of 1414, in Prague. Here, by a public notice posted on all the church doors, he invited any man who pleased, under the condition that if he could not make good his case he would agree to suffer the same punishment which Huss would be liable to if convicted, to con- vict him before the archbishop, or a synod to be convoked by him, of any heresy. Huss could not get permission, it is true, either for Jam- self or for his advocate Jesenic, to appear before the synod. He was put aside with the declaration, that they were too busily occupied with other affairs of the kingdom, to be able to attend to his matter. He got a certificate drawn up to that effect. He had an interview, more- over, with the archbishop, 2 after which the latter made out for him a declaration, stating that he found him guilty of no heresy ; that he had nothing to lay against him, save this only that he had remained so long under the ban, and nothing to advise, save only that he should get it removed as soon as possible.^ He also submitted to a special examination of the charges brought against him, and undertook to demonstrate their futility.'* He procured an investigation of his creed under the direction of the pope's inquisitor, the bishop of Naza- ' Ep. 34, opp. I, fol. 69, 1. The instru- in the districts throufrh which Huss would ment reUiting to this matter drawn up hy lie obliged to travel : but as Huss was the emperor, whereby Huss is taken under taken unconditionally under the protec- the protection of the emperor and the em- tion of the emperor and the empire, as it pire, speaks expressly not only of the jour- speaks not barely of his journey to Con- ney of Huss to Constance, but also of liis stance but also of liis return home, it is return home: Ut ei transire, stare, morari, implied that he should have it in his power redire libere permittatis. Opp. I, fol. 1,2. to return home unharmed from Constance. We notice this on account of the sophisti- ' [There was . proliably no personal in- cal interpretations of that document in terview. 'iTie statement is simply (fol. 3, modern times, as though it were merely a 2): Supplex petebat a dominis baronihus, passport given to Huss for his journey to ut suo nomine agcrent cum domino arch- Constance, and as though the emperor, iepiscopo. Neither does Palacky know of therefore, had not bound hinxself by his any sucli interview. Editor.] word to secure safety to Huss in Con- ^ 0|)p. I. fol. 3, 2. stance itself. To be sure, there is no ex- * Tlie report of this trial from a copy press mention of this, nor ought there to made by Peter of Mladenowic, secretary be any if we consider the nature of the to that zealous friend of Huss, the Knighl document, which is addressed not to tiie John of Chlum, is printed in the Stud, u council but to the lords and magistrates Kritik. 1837, 1, Heft. 2V 318 HISTOKY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE, reth, and he too drew up a testimonial, certifying that he found no thing heretical in him. But, though many false accusations had been brought against Huss, and his expressions often perverted by his ene- mies, yet it is evident from the expositions we have already given, that outwardly devoted as Huss at that time really was to the dominant church system, the principles expressed by him did, in fact, contain within them germs of doctrine which would lead to an overthrow of that system. But it depended entirely upon the fact, how far, how sharply and profoundly, the individual who conducted his examination was capable of seeing, whether or not that individual would be able to ■detect in the obedience, which appeared so obvious as a matter of fact, the germ of resistance which lay concealed at bottom. And we cer- tainly should not omit to notice, that the advocates of the church party in Prague at that time might be deternlined in some measure, by a regard to the party opposed to them, to act otherwise than they would have done in different circumstances. • Huss before his depar- ture wrote to the Emperor Sigismand, thanking him for the trouble he took on his account. He says : " I will humbly trust my life on it, and under the safe-conduct of your protection shall, with the permission of the Highest, appear at the next council at Constance." He begs the emperor to provide for it ; that, coming in peace to Constance, he might there have an opportunity publicly to confess his faith. " For, as I have taught nothing in secret, so I wish to be heard, to be exam- ined, to preach, and, under help of the Divine Spirit, to answer all who are disposed to accuse me, not in secret but pubUcly. And I hope I shall not be afraid to confess the Lord Christ, and, if it must be, to die for his law, which is the most true." The emperor, as we find from this letter, had promised Huss that his cause should be ■conducted to a happy issue,a whence it is evident, how far the em- peror was from wishing or anticipating any such result as that which actually came about. Huss thanked the emperor for his kind inten- tions, and in allusion to his promise, said " Which, too, your Majesty will perform to the honor of the King of kings." It is evident from many things which he says, in his farewell letter, that Huss by no means set out on his journey to Constafcce with a feeling of pei-fect con- fidence in the emperor's word, and the letter of safe-conduct, which was promised, though not yet put into his hands. Several of liis friends cautioned him against trusting too much in the emperor's word, — he could deliver him over to his enemies.^ Afterwards, in the midst of his trials at Constance, the words of one of his congregation, Andrew, a P )lish tailor, recurred to his thoughts, who, in taking leave said to ' As Paletz expresses himself: No one in Bohemia had said to him on this sub ventured to call the followers of Huss by ject : Quod cavere deberem a suo con cheir proper name, quia rerum et corporum ducto, et : Ipse te dabit inimicis, and tb< periculum immineret. Opp. I, fol. 255, 2. words addressed to him by a certain ^ Volens ad finem laudabilem deducere. knight : He might be sure that he would .See this letter in Palacky, III, 1, p. 312 be condemned. He supposes this person iuid 313 note. must have known the purpose of the em ^ Huss himself called to mind, when his peror. Ep. 34, opp. I, fol. 68, 2. -de-fttb was near at hand, what his friends DEPARTURE OF HDSS FROM PRAGUE. 319 him : " God be with thee ; for hardlj, think I, wilt thou get back again unharmed, dearest Master John, and most steadfast in the truth ! Not the king of Hungary but the King of Heaven reward thee with all good for the good and true instruction that I have received from thee." ^ It was the consciousness of following a divine call, which animated Huss in directing his steps to Constance, though the presen- timent of death was not absent from his mind. He was resigned to the will of God, let his cause issue as it might, the glory and triumph of divine truth, the weal of the souls for whom he had labored, being his sole wish. So he expresses himself in his last letter, taking leave of his congregation, written the day before his departure, October 10th, 1414. "You know — he begins — my brethren, that I have now long instructed you in good faith, setting before you Crod's word, not things remote from the faith in Christ, not false doctrines. For I have always sought and will ever seek, so long as I live, your wel- fare." He then says, that he had intended, before leaving, to preach before them, and defend himself from the false accusations against his faith, but had been prevented by want of time, and reserved it for a future opportunity. He tells them, that he is going into the midst of his worst enemies. " There will be more against me — he says — in the council of my enemies, than there were against our Saviour : first, of the number of bishops and masters ; next, of the princes of this world and pharisees. But I hope in God, my Almighty Saviour, that, on the ground of his own promise and in answer to your fervent pray- ers, he will bestow on me wisdom, and a skilful tongue, so as to be able to stand up against them. He will, too, bestow on me a spirit to despise persecutions, imprisonment, and death ; for we see that Christ himself suffered for the sake of his chosen, giving us an example, that we should suffer all things for Him and for our salvation. He cer- tainly cannot perish, who believes on him and perseveres in Ms truth." " If my death — says he — can glorify his name, then may he hasten it, and give me grace to endure with good courage whatever evil may befal me. But, if it is better for me that I should return to you, then let us beseech God for this, that I may come back to you from the council without wrong ; that is, without detriment to his truth, so that we may from thenceforth be able to come to a purer knowledge of it, to destroy the doctrines of Antichrist, and leave behind us a good example for our brethren." "Perhaps — says he — you will never see me again in Prague; but, if God should, in his mercy, bring me back to you again, I will with a more cheerful courage go on in the law of the Lord ; but especially when we shall meet to- gether in eternal glory. God is merciful and just, and gives peace to his own here, and beyond death. May He watch over you, who has cleansed us, his sheep, through his own holy and precious blood, which blood is the everlasting pledge of our salvation. And may He grant, that you may be enabled to fulfil his will, and having fulfilled it, attain to peace and eternal glory through our Lord Jesus Christ, ' Ibid. ep. 33. 320 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. with all who abide in his truth." i He sent back also a letter to his disciple, Martin, a young man who had been trained up from child- hood under his care, superscribed with the injunction that he was not to open it, till he received certain intelligence of his death. It con- tained touching exhortations to purity of morals, warned him against extravagance in dress, a foible which still clung to the v^oung candi- date, and enjoined it upon him never to seek a parish for any earthly advantage, but only from a desire to promote the welfare of souls.9 He cautions him against imitating what was faulty in his own exam- ple, mentioning, among other things, his passionate fondness, before he entered the priesthood, for the game of chess, in pursuing which amuse- ment he had allowed himself to grow excited even to anger against others. Such was the delicate sensibility of his conscience.3 He de- parted from Prague, on the 11th of October, 1414, in company with four others — the two knights, who had it in charge to protect him from all injury, Wenzel, of Duba, and John, of Chlum, that zealous, noble friend of Huss, whom we shall often have occasion to mention hereafter; Chlum's secretary, the Bachelor Peter of jNIladenowic, who also was sincerely attached to Huss, and his friend, the delegate from Prague University, Priest John Cardinalis, of Reinstein. Though it Avas more particularly with the party of the German theologians, that Huss had thus far had to contend, yet the reception he met with in his journey through Germany, was by no means such as he might have been led to expect in a country where the report uf his heresies had been so industriously circulated by his enemies. A great longing for the reformation of the church had already spread wide among the German people ; and this perhaps inclined many to look favorably on a man who had distinguished himself, as they may have heard in various ways, by his zeal against the corruption of the spiritual orders, and for the purification of the church. Their person- al intercourse with Huss, the impression conveyed by his looks and his discourse, would tend to strengthen this inclination to regard him with favor. He nowhere avoided notice : in every town he showed himself openly in his carriage, travelling in the dress of a priest.4 In all the places through which he passed, he posted up public notices in Bohemian, Latin, and German, offering to give any one who wished to speak with him, on the matter of his faith, an account of his reli- gious convictions, and to prove, that he was very far from cherishing anything like heresy. In the little town of Pernau, the parish priest with his vicars waited upon him in person at his quarters, drank to his health from a large tankard of wine, conversed with him on matters of christian faith, avowed that he fully agreed with him, and declared that he had always been his friend.* In Nuremburg, the ancient seat • 0pp. I, fol. 57, ep. 2, and Mikowec, 1, turn meum libenter et saepe schacos lusi, Letter. tempiis neglexi et saepe alios et me ad * Si vocatus fueris ad plebaniam, honor iraciindiam per ilium ludum infelicitei dei, salus animarum et labor te moveat, provocavi. non habitio scropharim vel praedioium * Mikowec, 2, Letter, of the 16th. of Nor. Ofip. I, fol. 57, l;ep. 1. 1414. ^ Scis, quia (proh d>)lor) ante sacerdo- * Opp. I, fol. 57, 2; ep. 3. ARRIVAL OF HUSS IN CONSTANCE. 321 of the Friends of God, merchants, who arrived earlier than himself, had already spread the news that he was on his way and might soon be expected, and large bodies of the people came out to meet him. Before dinner he received a letter, from a parish priest of the church of St. Sebaldus, requesting an interview with him, to which he cheer- fully consented. During dinner a note was handed to him by one of his attendants, Wenzel, of Duba, purporting that, in consequence of the notice he had posted up, many citizens and masters wished to speak with him. This, too, was welcome tidings. He left his table for the purpose of conversing with them. The masters were for hav- ing a private interview, because they had scruples about the propriety of speaking on such matters before laymen. But Huss would listen to no such proposal of discussing matters of faith privateh^ declaring that he had always testified of gospel truth openly, and meant to do so still. In presence of the burgomaster and many citizens, he con- versed about his doctrine till night-fall, and his hearers professed to be satisfied with him. If PIuss sought to approve himself as a genuine witness of gospel truth, before all the world, we surely ought not to look upon this as an ambitious effort on his part to court the approba- tion of the many ; unless we are disposed to raise the same objection) against every zealous preacher of evangelical truth ; which, to be sure^ is often done. While Huss was disputing with certain persons in the little Suabian town of Bibrach, the noble Knight John, of Chlum, took so lively an interest in this disputation, and spoke with so much warmth in favor of the doctrines of Huss, that he was taken for a doctor of theology ; hence Huss was wont, afterwards in his letters, playfully to call him the Doctor of Bibrach.^ Well aware of the great ignorance of the people in the things of religion, Huss was accustomed wherever he lodged to leave for his hosts on departing a copy of the Ten Com- mandments, or even to write them in the meal, as he had written them on the walls of Bethlehem Chapel. He reached Constance, on the third of November, some days after the arrival of Pope John, whom he met on the way. During the first four weeks, which Huss spent at Constance, nothing was proposed or said with regard to his affair. He would have found no friends, he writes, in Constance, if his adversaries from Bohemia had not taken pains to make him hated. ^ Meantime his most violent enemies, the already mentioned Michael de Causis, Paletz, and the prime author of all the last commotions in Prague, the man who as papal legate had brought to Bohemia the bull of indulgence and cru- sade, Wenzel Tiem, formerly dean, then provost of Passau, had also arrived."^ These persons set everything in motion against him. Mich- ael de Causis, on the next day after his arrival, caused a notice to be posted on all the churches, accusing him as the vilest heretic. His op- ponents brought with them the writings which he had composed during ' Ibid. fol. 71,1; ep. 45 in the marginal fortes insurgunt contra me, quos praeser- note. tini concitat venditor indulgentiaram, Pa^ • Mikowec, 2, Letter. thaviensis decanus. 0pp. I, fol. 58, 9 * Words of Huss : Multi adversarii et ep. 6. 322 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. the last disputes and attempts at compromise ; writings in which he had most freely expressed his opinions ; and these they now put in circulation. These were especially to be used against him. The form of accusation, drawn up by Michael de Causis, was well calcula- ted to arouse against Huss the anxious suspicions of the hierarchy. Assertions ascribed wrongly to Huss, and assertions which had really been made by him, were lumped together ; and his accuser declares, that if he should be acquitted, the clergy in Bohemia must suffer griev- ous persecutions in their property and persons ; everything would be turned to confusion, and the evil would spread through all Germany ; and such a persecution of the clergy and the faithful would ensue, as had never been known since the days of Constantino. If he should in any way get safely out of the hands of the council, he and his adher- ents would have it to say, that his doctrines must have been approved by the council. The princes and laity generally would fall upon the clergy, as they had already done in Bohemia, and as they were gene- rally inclined to do.' The pope sent as his delegate, to Huss, the bishop of Constance, accompanied by his officials, and the Auditor sacri palatii, a high officer of the papal court. They informed him it had been with the pope a matter of much deliberation how to dispose of the interdict pronounced on the place where he resided. Finally, the pope had concluded to resort to the pope's plenitude of power, and to suspend the interdict and the ban for the present. It was only requested that, in order to avoid giving scandal, he would keep away from mass and other church solemnities ; in all other respects, he should have liberty to go wherever he pleased. But Huss had never relinquished his right, as a priest, to hold mass ; nor did he mean to do it now ; — a pertinacity, which could not fail to give great offence to the hierarchical party. 2 When many of the friends of Huss, pro- testing to his innocence, urged the pope to retract all that had hither- to been done in the matter, he gave an evasive answer, laying all the blame on the enemies of Huss in Bohemia, who refused to take back anything, but warmly persisted in their accusations against him.^ Yet many no doubt were anxious that the whole affair should be settled before it was brought up as a matter for public deliberation. And perhaps Huss, if he could have been prevailed upon to humble him- self before the papal authority, and to give in a recantation of the heresies of which he had been accused, might have secured to himself this advantage. Two bishops and a doctor of theology actually made to him a proposition of this sort.* But Huss would consent to nothing like it. He wanted a public hearing before the assembled council; before that council he felt impelled to give in the account of his faith, and bear witness of the truth, for which he contended. He hoped that nothing would be done in his affair until the Emperor Sigismund ' Hist. Hussi, opp. I, fol. 6 sq. it : Quid ego possum tamen ? vestri fa ^ Words of the Magister Joh. Oardinalis ciunt. Ibid. fol. 58, 2 ; ep. 6. of Reinstein : Magister quotidie divina ■• Sed locuti sunt duo episcopi et unus peragit et in tota via peregit hucusque. doctor cum Jo. Lepka, quod ego sub si- 0pp. I, fol. 58, 1 ; ep. 4. lentio concordarem. Ibid. * Papa non vult tollere processus et dix- HUSS BEFORE HIS IMPRISONMENT IN CONSTANCE. 323 should arrive, who had already caused him to be informed of his satis- faction at learning that he had started on his journey without waiting for the letter of safe-conduct, which had first reached him in Con- stance. When the emperor arrived he hoped by his intercession to obtain a public hearing.^ Though he could not foresee what was to be the issue, and was far from amusing himself with any false hopes, yet trust in God and in his truth raised him even now above all fear, and regarding himself simply as an instrument of that truth, he confi- dently expected that it would come forth triumphant out of every con- flict. " Assuredly — says he in a letter to Prague — Christ is with me as a strong champion ; therefore fear I not what the enemy may do to me." He says, speaking of the plots of his enemies : " I fear nothing ; for I hope that, after a great conflict, will ensue a great victory, and after the victory a still greater reward, and a still greater discomfiture of my enemies." ^ Relying upon the expectation that he would be permitted to speak before the assembled council, he availed himself of his leisure at Con- stance in preparing several discourses which he meant to deliver on that occasion. Accordingly we find a discourse in which he designed to give an account of his faith. ^ He testified in it his assent to the church- confession of faith ; appealing to the fact that the Apostles' Creed had been inscribed by him on the walls of Bethlehem chapel.* He declares too, that it was not his design to teach anything contrary to the deci- sions of the general councils, or contrary to the ancient canon and the authority of the approved church teachers ; always presupposing, how- ever, that they asserted nothing but what was contained, implicite or exjjlicite, in the sacred Scriptures.^ And since his disputes on the matter of indulgence had given occasion to the charge brought against him by some, that he did not acknowledge the common fund of the merits of the saints ; since he was accused of contending against the veneration of the saints, their intercession, the veneration of Mary, he vindicates himself, as he could with truth and propriety do, against all such accusations. With regard to several of these doctrines, he was not conscious as yet of the contradiction in which they stood with his biblical principles. All this would, in time, have more clearly devel- oped itself to his understanding if he had been permitted to continue his labors for a longer period ; and as to that matter, his opponents may doubtless have seen, more distinctly than he himself did, to what his principles were leading. With regard to several other points, which also had something to rest upon in the purely christian consciousness, he never perhaps would have been led to oppose the doctrine of the ' Huss remarks of one of the knights: ^ De fidei suae elucidatione. D. Latzembock injunxit mihi, quod ante * Symboluin plebem docui, et ipsum in ftdventum regis nihil attentem quoad act- pariete capellae, in qua praedicavi, de- us. Et spero, quod respondebo in publica scribere praecepi vulgariter. Opp- I^ fol- ftudientia. Ibid. ep. 5. Observing that 51, 2. men feared his public answer, he adds : * Veneror etiam omnia concilia gene Quam spcro de dei gratia, quod sim earn ralia et specialia, decreta et decretales, et consecuturus, dum rex Sigismundus ad- omnes leges, canones et constitutioncs : de fuerit. Ibid. ep. 6. quanto consonant ex;"ilicitc vel iraplicit*" * Ibid. legi dei. Ibid. fol. 48, 2. 324 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. church even by a still further development of his principles ; for, in defining the doctrine of the community of saints, a doctrine which he also believed was taught in the New Testament (Eph. 4: 3,15. 1 Cor. 3, 4 ff.), he says : " This communion of the saints is a participation in all the good which belongs to all the members of the mystical body of Christ, so long as they are found in a state of grace." From this he argues that the glorified saints assist and sustain the elect on the earth, take joy in their repentance and their progress, just as the saints on earth assist those who are passing through the refining process of the purgatorial fire, with their prayers, their good Avorks, their fasts and alQis, so that they are more speedily delivered out of this state and brought up to their heavenly home. '" And as I heartily believe — he goes on to say — in this community of saints, and have now pub- licly avowed it with my lips, so I entreat the most gracious Lord Je- sus Christ, who never refuses his grace to the truly penitent, that he would forgive the sin of those who, privately or publicly, have said of me that I denied the doctrine of the intercession of saints, whether in relation to those who go on pilgrimages, or those who have died in grace." He argues this from the fellowship of all the members of the body of Christ with one another, where one sustains the other ; adducing as proof those cases in Scripture, where the centurion's intercession with Christ had benefited his servant, and where the Syrophenician woman had helped her daughter, and then goes on to argue : " If a saint on earth, still aifected with sin, can benefit another believer and the whole church by his intercession, how foolish it would be to say that one who is pres- ent with Chi'ist in glory could not do the same." The second discourse relates to the restoration of peace. He distinguishes three kinds of peace, — peace with God, with ourselves, and with our neighbor. The first he considers to be the foundation of all other peace. He then makes a like three-fold distinction in speaking of the assembly which had been convoked for the restoration of peace, describing peace with God as having its foundation in supreme love to God in the church ; peace with ourselves as consisting in this, that the church should gov- ern itself in holiness ; peace with our neighbor, that it should satisfy every neighbor in all that is requisite for his eternal welfare. To defi- ciency in the first, he traces all failure in respect to the last. The worldliness of the church he designates as the ground of corruption and schism ; giving special prominence to the corruption of the clergy. The evil was bad enough already, when they failed in that which con- stitutes the chief end of their vocation, to hold forth the word of God to the laity. When priests neglected this, they were already angels of darkness, clothing themselves like angels of light; servants of Antichrist, not servants of Christ ; and their neglect to study the divine word, their want of fidelity to that word was the source of all the other corruptions, which he then goes on to portray.' Again, as Huss had been accused of rejecting the authority of church traditions and of the ecclesiastical laws, of disturbing the foundations of ecclesiastical and civil order, it was his ' De pace, opp. I, fol. 52 sq. HUSS BEFORE HIS IMPRISONMENT IN CONSTANCE. 325 wish to explain, in a discourse before tlie council, the sense of the propositions really expressed by him and perverted by his opponents, — by his discourse, namely, on the sufficiency of the law of Chi-ist for the guidance of the church,' where we shall recognize a great deal that corresponds with the doctrines of Matthias of Janow. He begins with saying : " I, an ignorant man, being about to speak before the wise of all the world, entreat you by the mercy of Jesus Christ, true God and true man, that you would cahnly listen to me. For I know from the words of Nicode'mus (John 7: 51) that the law judgeth no man before it hear him and know what he doeth. I, the poorest of priests, will however endeavor, as I have aforetime endeavored, to carry out the law of Christ in myself, by taking heed, so far as the grace of God en- ables me, against revenge, envy, and vain-glory ; since from my heart I strive only for the glory of God, the confession of his truth, the ban- ishment of all evil thoughts against my neighbor, and the defence of the law of Christ. For I am bound carefully, humbly, and patiently to defend the most excellent law of Christ, as Christ himself and his disciples did the same." " As I have often said before — he adds — so now too I solemnly protest, that I never have and never will perti- naciously affirm anything which is contrary to a truth of faith. I hold firmly all the truths of faith, as I have ever firmly held them and am resolved that I will ever firmly hold them ; so that, rather than defend an error opposed to them, I would prefer, hoping in the Lord and with his help, to suffer a terrible punishment of death ; nay, sustained by the grace of God, I am ready to give up this poor life for the law of Christ. As I have in my academical answer and acts and in my public preaching often submitted, so now too I submit and will in the future humbly sub- mit myself to the order of this most holy law, to the atonement by the 8ame,'^and to obedience to it ; ready to retract anything whatever that I have said, when I am taught that it is contrary to truth." In the prosecution of his theme he takes notice of an objection, namely that, according to the above supposition of the sufficiency of the law of Christ, all other laws would be superfluous, and ought therefore to be done away with. He disposes of this objection by referring all other laws to this one law, by holding that they are to be regarded only as de- pendant on the latter, their force consisting in their harmony and cor- respondence with the same. All other laws were, in their principle, contained implicite in this law, were only the evolution of this law, or simply designed to establish and promote its claims in all circumstances and relations : therefore, subservient to it. " Human laws — says he — are included in the divine law ; nay, they are themselves the law of Christ in so far as they are subservient to this law." Of the " canon law," he remarks that it was partly derived from the divine law, and [tartly akin to the civil law, and included in both these parts. Civil laws had been created by occasion of the sins of mankind, for the purpose of securing forcibly the state of justice in the commonwealth, BO far as it concerned earthly goods ; while the evangelical law waa ' De sufficientia legis Christi ad regendam ecclesiam. VOL. V. 28 826 HISTORY OF THEOLOaY AND DOCTRINE. designed for the preservation of goods in the kingdom of grace. Ac- cordingly he is of the opinion that everything else should be made sub- servient to Christianity ; because the trades, professions, and liberal arts should all be regulated with reference to the law of Christ as the highest end, should be subservient to that law ; the trades and professions, in preparing what is requisite for the supply of bodily wants ; the liberal arts, in promoting the understanding of the Holy Scriptures. i But the expectation of Huss, that he would have liberty to speak freely before the assembled council, was not fulfilled. The intrigues of his enemies ; the tickets sent about, by his friends or his enemies, announcing that he would appear and preach in public on a certain Sunday ; 2 the fear that Huss might escape from Constance, a rumor to this effect having already got abroad ; ^ the uncompromising zeal with which he unfolded and explained his principles before all who visited him in his place of abode ; all these things cooperated to bring it about that, on the 28tb of November, 1414, Huss was deprived of his liberty. On that day, towards noon, an embassy from the pope and cardinals, consisting of the bishops of Augsburg and Trent, the burgomaster of Constance, and the lord Hans of Baden, visited Huss, with whom his ' De sufEc. leg. Christi, opp. I, fol. 44, 2 sq. ' It was an announcement of this sort, that whoever would come to churcli to hear him on this particular Sunday, should have a ducat. Master Cardinalis of Kein- stein, who reports the fact, does not him- self decide, whether this was done by a friend or an enemy : Alias nescitur, an amicus vel inimicus heri iutimavit in ec- clesia, quia Ilus dominica proxima prae- dicabit ad clerum in ecclesia Constantien- si, et cuilibet praesenti dal)it unum duca- tum. Opp. I, fol. 58, 1 ; ep. 4. And among the articles of complaint afterwards brouglit against Huss, one was that he liad preach- ed openly. V. d. Hardt, IV, p. 213. •* It is plain how this rumor arose, when we compare what Falacky (III, 1, p. 321 note) has communicated from the manu- script report of Peter of Mhulenowic, the freshest and most trustworthy witness, who was at that time in the vicinity of Huss. A hay-wagon covered with canvas had left the city, and afterwards returned with- out the covering. Hence it was subse- quently noised abroad that Huss had been concealed under the canvas. The canon- ical Ulrich Reicheathal, and the court- marslial Dacher, in their histories of the vouncil of Constance, are cited as witness- t s of the flight of Huss. To say nothing of the confusion of dates in the former, it is easy to see how he may have been de- ceived by the rumor; and their histories, haviiiLi' been drawn up lonii' after the time of the events, are on this account the less worthy to be relied on as vouch- ers fur facts. The silence of accusers and jrdi;>.s wiih regard to any such event is assuredly the most certain testimony of Huss' innocence. As everything was raked up which could possibly be made use of against him, as there was so great a desire especially to smooth over tlie affair of his imprisonment, they certainly would not liave neglected to mention any such attempt of Huss to escape, if such a thing had in any way been possible. In jjarti- cular, his violent enemy, the already men- tioned bishop John of Leitomysl, who spared no pains in bringing togethei* facts to justify his conduct towards Huss would never have omitted to take notice of this flight. But all he has to say against Huss in this regard, is that he preached publicly at Constance. But even this could be disputed by the knight of Clilum, who so- lemnly affirmed that Huss had never left his quarters during the whole time of his abode in Constance. He denies, quod ipse Hus a tempore adventus sui ad banc civitatem usque ad diem et tern pus capti- vitatis suae uimm passum extra domum hospitii exiisset (V. d. Hardt, IV, 2n). It is plain, tiierefore, — and the same th'v\^ has been already shown by Falacky in thi ' passages cited on a former page — hot facta con ' Chlum say.s in this declaration: Qiin- tra it-.;!- onniiinoda ii voluntatom, cum sit propter ego regio nomine manifesto, (juoil in ci.ui.iii.Jtii n -u )nini salvi conductua et chlum's protest agaixst the imprisonment op huss. 329 declarations it may well be asked, what did the emperor really mean by all this ? How far was he in earnest ; and how far merely acting a part and pretending anger from motives of policy ? That he had an interest in representing himself to be more annoyed and angry than he really was, and in uttering threats which he never meant to fulfil, is evident. For it behooved him to do all he could to remove from himself the reproach gf a want of good faith,' and to soothe the highly irritated temper of the important party of Huss in Bohemia, and of the knights, who espoused his cause most decidedly. But still there is no evidence from facts to justify any such supposition. For, if the emperor took no further steps to procure the release of Huss, still this would not amount to a proof of his insincerity. It was one thing that he should have an honest intention to abide by his imperial word, — should be at first really annoyed, that it had been presumed so grievously to violate it : and quite another, that he should have suf- ficient freedom of mind and firmness of character to defy the spirit of the times, so far as to carry through what he had considered to be just and right, in spite of the authority which was held to be the most sacred in the church. Indeed, Pope John afterwards particularly brought it forward, as we have mentioned on a former page, in complaint of the emperor, and in exculpation of his own flight from Constance, that the emperor restrained the liberty of the council in transacting busi- ness relative to the faith, and would not let justice have its course. But, leaving the emperor's declarations entirely out of view, we should certainly take into account the great influence which the power of the church exercised over him. When, on the 1st of January, 1415, a deputation of the council appeared before the eni[)eror, and declared to him that he ought not to interfere in transactions relative to matters of faith, that the council must have its full liberty in the investigation of heresies, and in its proceedings against heretics, Sigismund no longer ventured to resist, and promised the council that he would allow them all liberty and never interpose his authority in these matters. In truth, had the emperor been disposed to insist farther on the liber- ation of Huss, it might easily have led to consequences most perilous to the future proceedings of the council. The pope might have taken advantage of this to gain over a large party to his interests, and the seeds of schism, which, as we have before seen, were already present in the council, would doubtless have gone on to multiply, till they brought on an open breach, and, perhaps, a breaking up of the coun- cil. There is certainly much that is true in the vindication of himself by the Emperor Sigismund against the Bohemian estates, who espoused the cause of Huss, when, in the year 14:17, he writes : " If Huss had, protectionis imperii facta, eo quod pro ' If the imperial salvus coTiductus had tunc dietus domiiuis meus a Constantia been nothing hut a pass made out by the longc distabat, et si imerfuissct, nunquara emperor, as modern historical sopliists as- hoc pcrmisisset. Cum autem venerit, ([ui- sert, there would, indt;ed, have been uo libet sentiredebebit, ipsum de vilipensione, need of all this, sibi et suae et imperii protectionis ac salvo ' V. d. Hardt, IV, pag. 32 illata conductui, dolorosius molestari. V. d. Hardt, IV, p. 'iS. 28* 330 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. in the first instance, come to him, and had gone with him to Con- stance, his affair would perhaps have had a quite different turn. And, God knows, that we experienced on his account and at his fall, a sorrow and pain too great to be expressed by words. And all the Bohemians that were then with us certainly knew, how we interceded for him, and that several times, seized with indignation, we left the council. Nay, on his account, we went away from Constance, till they declared to us. If we would not allow justice to be executed at the council, they knew not what business they had to be there. Thus we verily thought that we could do nothing further in this affair. Nor could we even speak about it, for had we done so, the council would have entirely broken up." * The preliminary examinations of the process against Huss were now to begin, in the order in which the complaints had been brought against him by Paletz, Michael de Causis, and others ; and for this purpose, on the 1st December, a committee was nominated, which consisted of the patriarch John, of Constantinople, the bishop John, of Lubeck,^ and Bernhard, of Citta di Castello. To these men the pope commit- ted the affair by a constitution in which he already names Huss as a dangerous heretic, who was spreading abroad mischievous errors, and had seduced many ; and charged them to report the result of their examination to the council, that the latter might pass a definitive sen- tence on Huss, in conformity thereto.^ The agreement of these two testimonies is decisive against the statement of Hermann v. d. Hardt, who, following the report of Cerretanus, describes the commission dif- ferently. Huss demanded of the committee a solicitor ; but to a here- tic no such privilege could be granted ; and it was refused him. Huss thereupon said to his judges : " Well, then, let the Lord Jesus be my advocate, who also will soon be your judge." "* A severe taunt on the council, was an expression afterwards uttered by a Parisian deputy in connection with another affair, which was to this effect, that if Huss had been allowed an advocate, they would never have been able to convict him of heresy .^ The unhealthy locality of his prison brought upon Huss a severe fit of sickness, fever connected with an affection of the bladder, which it was feared he could not survive. The pope sent him his own body physician ; for it was not desired that he should die a natural death. Through the intercession of his friends he was permitted to exchange his cell for more airy rooms in the ' Cochlaens, pag. 157. carcere pctivi commissarios, ut mihi dcpu- ' Palacky, p. 330 has, after Mladenowic, tarent procuratorem et advocatum, qui bishop of Lebus. promiserunt et postea dare nohierunt, ^ Kaynaldi annales vol. 1. 1414, s. 10 ff. Ego coramisi me domino Jesii Chiisto, ut * We taice this from the words of Huss ipse procuret et advocet et judicet causam himself: Cogitationem de ohjiciendis com- meam. Ibid. fol. 72, 2 ; ep. 49. misi domino deo, ad quem appeliavi, quem ^ Joannes Hus haereticus declaratus et judicem, procuratorem et advocatum mihi condemnatus per sacrum concilium gene- elegi coram commissariis, expresse dicens: rale si liabuisset advocatum, nunquam Dominus Jesus mens advocatus sit et pro- fuisset convictus. Acta in cone. Const curator, qui vos omnes brevi judicabit. circa damnat. Joann. Parvi. Gerson, opp 0{p. I, fol. 71. 2: ep. 46. Further: Item V, pag. 444. ciatis. quod coram testibus et notariis in SICKNESS OF HUSS IN PRISON. 331 same convent, whicli was now assigned to him as his prison. Here he was attacked with a new access of that severe distemper, after having spent eight weeks in his prison, as appears from his own words : " I have been a second time dreadfully tormented with an aflfection of my bladder, which I never had before, and with severe vomiting and fever ; my keepers feared I should die ; and they have led me out of my prison, (probably only for a few moments to enjoy the fresh air)." ' His keepers were, for the most part, very kind to him ; 3 hence, to show his gratitude, he afterwards composed for them a few papers on practical Christianity. In fetters, and amidst these severe sufferings, he was obliged to draw up his answers to the com- plaints brought against him by Michael de Causis and Paletz. It was not without deep pain he found out that they used against him pas- sages from intercepted letters, in part distorted, and familiar expres- sions which he had dropped in conversation with theologians, who had formerly been his friends, and afterwards deserted him.^ Huss, to whom, as we shall presently see, it was a source of great disappoint- ment and mortification, that he could not succeed in obtaining a hear- ing from the council, had complained of this in a letter to Jacobellus, of Misa, and told him that he had learned from the mouth of his ene- mies that he could not obtain a public hearing, except by paying 2000 ducats to the people of the Roman court, whom he styled servants of Antichrist. This letter his enemies' spies contrived to get into their hands, as well as a letter by Jacobellus, who reflected severely on the conduct of the council. Both were to be used against him ; and both were laid before him. This system of espionage and the indiscretion of his friends bore heavily on the spirits of Huss, and he writes that this Jacobellus, who was the loudest to warn against hypocrites, was the man who suffered himself to be most deceived by them. Paletz visited him during his first illness as an accuser ; the sufferings of his old friend could not move him to relent. He never spoke to him, in the presence of the commission, but in the harshest language — language calculated to arouse prejudice and suspicion — such as that, since the time of Christ, more dangerous heretics than Wicklif and Huss had not appeared : all that ever attended his preaching were infected with the disposition to deny the doctrine of transubstantiation. Said Huss to him : Sad greeting do you give me, and sadly do you sin against your own soul ! Look ; perhaps, I am to die ; or, should I recover my health, to be burned ; what return will you then get for all this in Bohemia ? " ^ He speaks of Paletz, generally, as his fiercest ' Words of Huss : Cras octo hebdomae rat, et Paletz ilia antiqua, quae locuti su eraiit. i|Uod Hus posita est ad refectorium. '"^us ante multos annos, articulat. Ibid. — Nam itcrum horribiliter fui vexatus per fol. 72, 2; c\>. 48. nalculuin, quem nunquam prius passus * In the tirst letter in wliich Huss says Bura, et graven! vomitum et febrcs. Jam anything- about this, the one written during custodes timebant, ne morerer, qui eduxe- his sickness, he writes concerninLC Paletz: rant me de carcere. 0pp. 1, fol. 74, 1 et Qui me jacentem in infirmitate corato 73, 2; ep. 51. multis salutavit salutatione liorribilissima, * So says Huss himself: Omnes clerici quam postea dicam vobis, si dec placuerit tamerae domini papae et omnes custodes Ibid. fol. 71, 2; ep. 46. He quotes his verj /aide pie me tractant. Ibid. fol. 74, 1 ; ep. 52. language, ibid. fol. 68, 2 ; ep. 33. * .Nam Michael et literas et alia expio- 332 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. enemy, who did him the most injurv. He had, for example, strenu ouslj urged that all the adherents of Huss should be cited and forced to an abjuration of heresy. Huss, adverting to this, says : " May God Almighty pardon him ! " i The profound impression which the treatment experienced from his former friend made on the tender sen- sibilities of Huss, appears from several of his letters. " Never in my whole hfe — says he — did I receive from any man harsher words of comfort than from Paletz."2 And, in words of St. Jerome, he de- scribes how beyond all other wrong it must needs wound the heart, to see love converted into hate in one who has the wrong all on his own side.3 In a letter of the 20th of January, 1415, he says : " God has appointed me those for my inflexible enemies, to whom I have shown much kindness, and whom I loved from my very heart." * He found himself situated like the Apostle Paul, when he wrote the epis- tle to the Philippians, partly filled with forebodings of death, partly cherishing the expectation that God would by his own almightv power deliver him from the prison, and bring him back again to his flock. However it might turn, he was resigned to the divine will ; as he says in a letter written on the 20th of January, 1415 : " His will be done, whether it please him to take me to himself, or to bring me back to you." 5 "At one time God comforts, at another afflicts me — he writes to John of Chlum — but I hope that he is ever with me in my sufferings." 6 " The Lord delivered Jonas out of the belly of the whale — he says in another letter — Daniel from the lion's den, the three men from the fiery furnace, Susanna from the court of the false witnesses ; and he can deliver me, too, if it please him, for the glory of his name and for the preaching of the word. But, if the death comes, which is precious in the eyes of the Lord, then let the name of the Lord be praised ! " '' To Peter of Mladenowic he writes : " And by the grace of God, ray return to Prague is not a thing impossible ; still I have no desire for it, unless it be according to the will of the Lord in heaven." ^ He was filled constantly with a prophetic con- sciousness, that whatever might be the issue of his own case, truth would triumph, and go on to reveal itself more gloriously and mightily ; as he says : " I hope that what I have spoken in secret will be proclaim- ed on the housetops." ^ It is remarkable that this prophetic con- sciousness was reflected also in his dreams so as to react cheerfully upon his feelings. He told the following dream which he had in the earlier times of his imprisonment to the knight of Chlum. He dreamt that certain persons resolved to destroy all the pictures of Christ on the walls of Bethlehem chapel : and they did it. On arising next ' Ibid. fol. 75, 1 ; ep. 54. * See Mikowee, 1. c, Letter 3. In the ' Ibid. fol. 74, 1 ; ep. 52. Latin edition, — opp. 1. fol. 59, 2: ep. 10 ' He quotes the language of Jerome: — this passage is wanting Plus vero in nol)is ea tormenta saeviunt, * MikoweCj Letter 3. Opp. I, fol. 60, 1 quae ab illis patimur, de quorum mentibus ep. 10. praesumebamus. quia cum damno corporis * OpP- I- fo'- "3, 2 ; ep. 51 mala nos cruciant amissae caritatis. Et ' Ibid. fol. 74, 1 ; ep. 52. patet dolor mens ex parte Paletz. Ibid. " Ibid. fol. 66, 2 ; ep. 29. fol. 71, 2 ; ep. 46. » Ibid. fol. 72, 2 ; ep. 48. DREAM OF HUSS. 333 day he beheld many painters, who had drawn more pictures and more beautiful ones than there were before, which he gazed on with rapture. And said the painters to the concourse of people : Now, let the bishops and priests come and destroy these pictures ! And a great multitude ot people in Bethlehem joyed over it, and he rejoiced with them, and amidst the laughter he woke up. And they had indeed already scat- tered it about among many, that they meant to destroy the inscrip- tions on the walls. The knight of Chlum, in his answer to this letter, exhorted him, first of all, to dismiss all these fancies for the present, and whatever else might occupy his mind, and confine his attention simply to one object, namely, how he might best reply to the articles of complaint. But, he added, " The truth, which cannot deceive, for- bids that you should feel any sohcitude about this ; " and he refers to Matthew 10 : 19. Then, in compliance with the invitation of Huss, he expounds his dream, as follows : " The picture of Christ painted on the wall of Bethlehem chapel is the life of Christ which we are to imitate ; the immovable words of Holy Scripture, which are there in- scribed, are his words which we are to follow. The enemies of the cross of Christ seek to destroy both in the night, because the Sun of E-ighteousness has gone down to them by reason of their wicked lives ; and they seek to bring both into obhvion among men. But, at the morning dawn, when the Sun of Righteousness arises, the preachers restore both after a more glorious manner, proclaiming that which had been said in the ear, and was nearly forgotten, from the housetops. And fi-om all this will proceed great joy to Christendom. And though the " goose " is now brought down by sickness, and may next be laid a sacrifice on the altar,i yet will she hereafter, awaking as it were from the sleep of this life, with Him who dwells in Heaven, laugh and hold them in derision, who are the destroyers at once of Christ's image and of Scripture. Nay, even in this present life, she will, with God'a help, still restore those pictures and those words of Scripture to the flock and her friends with glowing zeal." Huss, in his answer assures the knight of Chlum, of his agreement with this explanation, and goes on to say : " Though Cato tells us, that we ought not to care for dreams, and though God's commandment settles it fast, that we ought not to pry into the interpretation of dreams, yet I hope that the life of Christ, which, by ray preaching in Bethlehem, has been transcribed upon the hearts of men, and which they meant to destroy there, first, by forbidding preaching in the chapels and in Bethlehem ; next, by tearing down Bethlehem itself, — that this life of Christ will be better transcribed by a greater number of better preachers than I am, to the joy of the people who love the life of Christ, over which I shall, as the Doctor of Bibrach says, rejoice when I awake, that is rise, from the dead." 2 As we may conjecture from Pope John's letter to the ' Wc have thus endeavored to make perhaps be rendered ; " And though the out the sense of the words which were pro- goose, offered upon the altar, is at present bably badly transUued i»to Latin. depressed on account of the laying ott' ho.' [The Latin words are : Et auca licet in frail flesh, yet hereafter, etc. Editor.] ara posita, nunc posita infiiTna carne tris- * Ibid. tbl. 71 ; ep 44, 45, 46 tabitur, in futuro tamen etc., and might 334 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. commission appointed to inquire into the affair of Huss, it probably had not been intended at the outset to grant him a public hearing, but they would have preferred to dispose of the matter bj private manage- ment ; the council was to give the final decision according to the report of the committee. The proposition was made to Huss, that he should submit to the decision of twelve or thirteen masters. Accord- ing to the prevailing church theory which taught that the individual must renounce his own will, and submit to an authority without him- self, it might be expected that a man would readily consent to fulfil this duty of subordination, in respect also to matters of conviction. But Huss, of course, with the views which he entertained of the rela- tion of every individual to Christ, and of the rights of reason ground- ed in that relation, could never accept such a proposition as that; and he submitted a protest, demanding leave to render an account of his faith before the whole council.^ This was the point to secure which the efforts of his friends were ever most earnestly solicited, and it was one which he hoped, through the support of these friends among the Bohemian knights, he should succeed in securing. He wished, as he expressed it in a petition addressed to the council through the presi- dent of the committee, to have the liberty either to defend his doctrine after the scholastic fashion before the council, or else to preach before them. But he did not expect that the president of that committee would actually present his petition to the council.s When, after he had submitted his explanations on the several articles, he was asked whether he would defend them, he threw himself in reference to the whole on the decision of the council ; but, without doubt, on the pre- supposition that the council would decide according to the word of God, and in whatever respects he erred, — for, that he had erred in some respects he ever thought to be possible, — would point out his error by that word. So he declared, defending himself, perhaps, against the reproaches of friends, who may have expressed their dis- satisfaction with a submission so liable to misinterpretation.3 " Behold, I call God to witness, that no other answer seemed to me at that time more suitable ; for, I had written it down with my own hand, that I would defend nothing, pertinaciously, but was ready to be taught by any man."^ He expresses it as his wish, if he should appear before the council, that he might be allowed to have his station near the emperor, so that he could hear and understand him well ; and also near to the knight of Chlum and his other friends, " In order — he writes — that you may hear what the Lord Jesus Christ, my advocate, counsellor, and most gracious judge, will inspire me to speak, and thus whether I am suffered to live, or must die, you may be true and well-informed witnesses, and liars may not have it to say that I deviated in the least from the truth which I preached." 5 He requests ' Ibid. fol. 74, 1 ; ep. 52. in your cell. But what has been done ■•' Ibid. fol. 74, 2 ; ep. 54. cannot be altered.. Ibid, fol 72, J ; ep. 47. ^ Chlum had written to him : " Your '^ Ibid. fol. 72, 2 ; ep. 48. friends, especially Jesenic, are troubled * Ibid. ep. 49. >n account of the answer which you gave HUSS DEMANDS A PUBLIC TRIA!,. 335 the knight of Chlum, to ask the emperor that he might be released from his close confinement, so as to be at liberty to make suitable pre- paration for his public trial. " Pray the emperor — he writes — that for my sake, and for the vindication of the cause of justice and truth to the glorji of God and the advancement of the church, he would take me from pi'ison, so that I may have liberty to prepare myself for my public hearing." ^ Huss says, it was particularly urged against him, that he had hindered the announcement of the crusade-bull ; that he had continued for so long a time under the ban, and still per- sisted in saying mass ; that he had appealed from the pope to Christ. This appeal, as he writes, they read out before him ; and with joy and a smile on his lips he acknowledged it to be his.^ When they, further- more, declared that the opinions which he had advanced, and of which we have already spoken, concerning the right of princes to deprive the clergy of property which they abused, were heretical, Huss de- sired an opportunity of speaking on this particular point with the em- peror. He might be indulging the erroneous idea that he coultl come to an understanding with him on these points ; that he could satisfy him that he was here defending the interest of the state against the claims of the hierarchy. The knights, says he, have only to represent to the emperor, that if this article should be condemned as heretical, the(|f would be obliged to condemn his acts, those of his father, Charles IV, and of his brother, Wenceslaus, who had taken away temporal goods from the bishops.^ He wished that his wi-itings in relation to these points might be communicated to the emperor, all that he had said concerning the dotation of Constantino, and on the argument to prove that tithes were nothing but alms ;'^ and he was anxious also that the emperor should read his answers to the 45 articles of Wicklif.^ He would be glad to have just a single interview with the emperor before he should be condemned ; since he had come there *jy his will and under the promise of a safe-conduct,^ glad if the emperor could be induced to show pity to his own birth-right, and not suffer it to be in- vaded with impunity by a malignant foe, (by which he may have meant Paletz or Michael de Causis). In another letter he expresses the same wish, that, in case he obtained a public hearing, the emperor would not suffer him to be remanded to prison, but allow him liberty to consult with his friends, and say something to the emperor which might be of benefit to Christendom, and to the emperor himself.^ But it must be evident that these hopes and wishes rested on a slender foundation, when we fairly consider the emperor's relation to the church. And Huss himself, too, sometimes perceived, no doubt, that after what had transpired he had nothing to expect from the emperor in relation to these matters ; for he thus writes, in one of his letters, " I am surprised that the emperor has forgotten me, and that he does not ' Ibid. fol. 74, 2 ; ep. 53. ^ Sab sua promissione, ut salvus ad Bo- * Ibid. fol. 73, 1 ; ep. 49. hemiara veilircin ; ibid. cp. .54, fol. 75, 1 — •■ Ibid. fol. 74, 2 ; ep. 54. a proof bow far men were from supposing * See above, the document cited on this at that tiine that the emperors instrument point. was a mere passport. » Ibid. fol. 74, 1 ; ep, 51. ' Ibid. fol. 73, 1 ; ep. 49. 836 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. speak a word for me ; and, perhaps, I shall bo condemned before I can have a word with him. Let him look to it himself whether this is to his honor." In the midst of his own trials, Huss was still tenderly ilive to the interests of his friends. He besought the knight of Chlum CO use his influence with the Bohemian knights to bring it about, that a citation to the adherents of Huss, which had been issued at the in- stigation of Paletz, should be revoked. He expressed the solicitude which he felt for his friends in Constance, particularly for the master of Reinstein; fearing that, by their too free language, they might bring themselves into difficulty. Reinstein should be cautious, he wrote to his friends : for those whom he considered to be his friends were more probably spies. He had heard it remarked by the commission, that John Cardinalis wanted to defame the pope and the cardinals, by in- sinuating that they were all guilty of simony. It would be his advice that he should keep himself as closely as possible attached to the em- peror's court, lest they might get possession of his person as they had done of himself.i To the knight of Chlum he wrote, entreating liim not to be disheartened at the great expenses which he was obliged to incur at Constance. " If God delivers the goose from her con- finement, rely upon it, that you shall never have cause to regret the expense you have been at." ^ In his confinement, Huss composed several small treatises of doctrine and ethics ; either for immediate practical use, as the little tracts which he wrote at the request of his keepers for their special benefit, and that of others in like circumstan- ces ; 3 or, for the purpose of testifying his faith in opposition to prevail- ing suspicions : his short tracts on the Ten Commandments ; on the Lord's Prayer ; on mortal sin ; on marriage ; on the knowledge and love of God ; on the seven mortal sins ; on penance ; on the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ."^ In all his writings, Huss was accus- tomed to make great use of the church fathers, and displays extensive reading in that field. The Avritings just mentioned abound in this sort '^f learning, and yet he was totally in want of books. At first he had not even a Bible ; and was obliged to ask his friends to procure him one." He says, indeed, that he had brought with him the Sentences of the Lombard and a Bible ; but he could not have taken them with him into his'prison.^ Yet his citations from these books are so minute- ly correct, that we can hardly suppose Huss depended wholly upon his memory. It is probable, therefore, that he always had by him a collection of excerpts, made in the time of his earUer studies. In his ( xposition of the Ten Commandments, we may notice as one thing erving to mark the peculiarity of his theological point of view, that he applied the command to keep holy the Sabbath-day, literallj^ to Sunday. Worthy of notice, too, is his spiritual conception of hoHness, which he represents as consisting in the perfect knowledge of the Tri- ane God and of Christ as man, from which knowledge proceeds love ; ' Ibid, fol, 75, 1 ; ep. 54. Christi, de Matriinonio, copwd by Petei ' Ibid. fol. 74, 1 ; cp. 51. of Mladenowio. •> He requests the Knight of Chlum to * Ibid fol fol. 29. 2—44, 1. have his tracts de Mandatis, de corpore * Ib;d. tbl. 74 ; ep. 52 and 53. ^ Ibid. fol. 64, 2 ; cp. 37. HUSS COMPOSES TRACTS IN PRISON. 337 whence tlie stunts love God supremely ; and from love proceeds joy ; and from knowledge, love, and joy, proceeds perfect satisfaction.^ As the four princii)al mysteries of the Christian faith he designates in his tract on the Lord's supper : the mystery of the trinity ; the doctrine of divine foreknowledge and predestination, (whence it is evident what importance was attached by Huss to the doctrine of ab- solute predestination) ; the doctrine of the incarnation of the divine Word ; the doctrine of the body and blood of Christ in the holy supper.^ The devout remembrance of the sufferings of Christ constitutes, ac- cording to the view which he here expresses, the spiritual participa- tion of the Lord's supper. He declares it to be sufficient for the faith of the simple, to believe that the true body and the true blood of Christ are in the holy supper — the body in which he was born, in which he suffered, rose from the dead, and ascended to heaven. He expressly testifies here his belief in transubstantiation, which term he employs. He asserts that, from the beginning, he had taught in his sermons the transformation of the bread, and never the opposite. He compares the perversion of his language by his enemies with the per- version of Christ's words by the Pharisees. Only the crass exjires- sions relating to certain sensuous affections to which the body of Christ was supposed to be subject in the Lord's supper, he rejects ; declaring that all such affections related only to the species of the bread and wine, — where the doctrine de aceidentibus sine suljecto evidently lay at bottom — that doctrine which, as we have seen, Wicklif, from his; own particular theological arjd philosophical position, condemned with peculiar abhorrence. It is to be remarked that Huss considers the passage in John vi, as also referring to the outward participation of the Lord's supper ; on the ground of which interpretation the Hussitea afterwards restored, as the ancient church had instituted, the commu- nion of infants. Like Matthias of Janow, Huss, too, encouraged the frequent participation of the Lord's supper among the laity ; and he found occasion to complain tliat even the rule prescribing the act of communion once a year was not observed ; that many received the Lord's supper only at the last extremity, and several not at all. He says of such : " How shall these people be ready to die for Christ, ■who have no pleasure in the food which is best for them, and which has been provided for them by infinite grace and love, to enable their to overcome all evil ? " Meantime, after Huss had left Prague, another controversy arose, by occasion of which the antagonism to the dominant church could not fail to be still more decidedly expressed. This controversy related to a point which Huss had never as yet made a subject of particular in- quiry. After his own removal, the most important theologian of his party was his friend Jacob of Misa, or Mies, a parish priest attached to the church of St. Michaels, commonly called, on account of his di- minutive stature, Jacobellus. This person came out openly in opposi- ^ Et cognitioneni, dilectioiieiu et gaudium cousoquitur (juietatio. Ibid. fol. 31, 1. 2 Ibid. fol. 38, 2. 338 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRIXE. tion to the withholding of the cup from the laity ; and insisted that, bji thp institution, the holy supper in both forms should be extended to the laity also. It was for a long time currently reported that a certain Pe- ter, originally from Dresden, who had been driven, as an adherent ic Waldensian doctrines, from his native country and come to Prague, was the original means of leading Jacobellus to introduce this point also among the matters requiring reform. This story is, in itself, ex- tremely improbable. If we consider that, in the writings of Matthias of Janow, the necessity to the laity of a complete participation of the Lord's supper is assumed ; and if we consider the great influence Mat- thias had on the whole movement, we shall find it impossible to believe that a man who might be a personal disciple of Matthias of Janow,' who at any rate must have been, in spirit and bent, one of his disciple?., that such a man could need the influence of an unknown Waldensian to direct his attention to a subject which had already been deemed of so much importance by his own master. In contemporaneous writings not a word is to be found concerning this Peter of Dresden ; in the con- troversial tracts on this subject no mention is made of him ; and yet it would from the first have been hailed as a very welcome fact, by the defenders of the withdrawal of the cup, if they had the least reason whatever to trace the first attacks of this practice to the influence of a man who belonged to a sect so decried. This story is found for the first time in writings of opponents to the Hussite party some score of years later.^ Whether such a person as Peter of Dresden ever existed or not, his history at all events lies altogether in the dark, and we have nothing to do with him here ; but it does not admit of a question that the influence proceeded from Matthias of Janow by which Jacobellus was led, first in disputations, to come out openly, somewhere near the close of the year 1414, against the withholding of the cup. His argu- ments convinced many ; and he began to reduce his theory to practice as a parish priest, and to distribute the holy supper once more, in both forms, to the laity. Among the adherents of Huss, a controversy arose on this point ; for the more practical bent of his disposition had always kept him from entering into this quegtio"^. His opinion was now re- quested. The principle on which ha uniformly went, of deciding every question by the law of Christ as laid down in Holy Writ, would soon bring him to a decision of this question after his attention had once been directed to it, and also to a declara»tion of his views ; nor did he hesitate to declare them openly, though he could not but foresee that, by so doing he would probably injure his own cause. 3 Even before his imprisonment, Huss had composed a small tract on the question then ' As Palacky, p. 332 note — remarks, the people that the Lord's Supper should Jacobellus, a year before the death of be received in both the forms. The fact, Matthias of Janow, in the year 1393, was indeed, brought forward to prove this, a Bachelor in Prague University. could prove nothing of the sort. It waa ' Thus it occurs in Aeneas Sylvius Hist, that his disciples in Prague distributed tlie Bohemia, cap. 35, pag. 52. elements thus : Patet iste articulus, quia ^ So already, among the articles of com- jam in Praga sui discipuli ministrant illud plaint set forth by Michael de Causis, one sub utraque specie. Hist. Hussi, opp. 1, was. that at Prague he had preached to fol. 6, 1. HUS3 AND THE FLIGHT OF JOHN XXIII. 33S in dispute ; and from tlie collected declarations of the New Testament and of the ancient church teachers he came to the conclusion that, al- though both the body and blood of Christ were present under each form, yet, because Christ would not without special reasons have directed that each kind should be taken separatel//, it was permitted and would be profitable to the laity, to take the blood of Christ under the form of the wine.^ Meantime, on the 21st of March, occurred that event of which we have already spoken, the flight of Pope John, the immediate instru- ment by whom Huss had been deprived of his liberty. This event led to an important change in the situation of the prisoner. Huss perceived from what transpired immediately about him, that something of this sort had occurred. He managed to get information of the movements pro- duced by this event in the council. He ascribed them all to one cause, that men were attempting to eflfect an innovation in the kingdom of God by measures of human policy. " The council — he . writes — is dis- turbed on account of the flight of the pope, as I believe. The reason is this : I have learned that, in whatever we undertake, God should ever be placed before human reason — a lesson which they have not learned." 2 The pope sent for all his officers and servants to meet him at Schafl'hausen. In consequence of this, Huss was deserted by hia keepers. No one was left to provide for his daily wants. He was de- prived of the means of subsistence. He was in constant fear lest the marshal of the pope's court, who was intending to follow his master, would secretly take him away with himself. Late in the evening of Palm Sunday, March 24th, he communicated his fears to the knight of Chlum, and begged him, in conjunction with the Bohemian knights, to take measures to prevent this by requesting the emperor either to send him new keepers, or to set him at liberty, lest he might be to him the occasion both of sin and of shame.3 The Bohemian knights, who, previous to these events had never ceased pressing the emperor to set Huss at hberty, sought to take advantage also of the present juncture.'* But the advocates of the hierarchical system exerted themselves to de- feat this purpose ; and after consultation with the council, the emperor delivered Huss over to the surveillance of the bishop of Constance, who at four o'clock the next morning had him removed, in chains, to the cas- ' Licet et expedit laicis fldelibus sumere nant church — a portion of which has been sanguinem Christi sub specie vini. Nam cited from the manuscript by Palacky — licet corpus et sanguis Christi sit sub utra- shows tluit the hierarchical party did at que specie sacramentali, tamcn Christus the beginning undoubtedly fear that these non sine ratione nee gratis instituit utrum- circumstances might be taken advantage que raodum sacramentalem suis tidelibus, of to set Huss at liberty. Tlie words are sed ad magnum profectum. De sanguine as follows : De Hus fuit periculum, no Christi, opp. I, fol. 43, 2. eriperetur de carceribus ordinis Praedica- ^ Ratio, quia didici, quod omnibus in torum. situati ultra muros civitatis, (juia factis peragendis sive peractis debet prae- custodes jam erant pauci et rcinissi ; sed poni deus humanae rationi. Ibid. fol. 75, ex diligentia facta et clamore zelatorura 1 ; ep. 55. fidei, ex decreto concilii, pracsentatus esl ' Ne habeat et peccatum et confusioa- ad quoddam castrum et ad carccres domi- em de me. Ibid. ep. 56. ni episcopi Constantiensis. Palacky, III * A letter Avi-itten from Constance by 1, p. 339, note 448. one of the zealous followers of the domi- (340 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AXD DOCTlU.NE. tie of Gottleben.i In the castle of Gottleben the situation of IIuss was changed much for the worse. His prison was a tower. In the day- time he was chained, yet so as to be able to move about ; at night, on his bed, he was chained by the hand to a post. Here he no longer experienced that mild treatment from his keepers, which miti- gated the severity of his former imprisonment. His friends were not allowed to visit him. New attacks of disease, violent headaches, he- morrhage, colic, followed in consequence of this severe confinement. Speaking of this in one of his later letters, he says : " These are punishments brought on me by my sins, and proofs of God's love to me." 2 In the midst of these severe trials he wrote, shortly before Easter, which in this year fell on the 31st of March, to his Bohemian friends at Con- stance : " May the God of mercy keep and confirm you in his grace and give you constancy in Constance ; ^ for if we are constant we shall witness God's protection over us." " Now for the first time — he writes — I learn rightly to understand the Psalter, rightly to pra}'', and rightly to represent to myself the sufferings of Christ and of the martyrs. For Isaiah says (28: 19), When brought into straits, ^\e learn to liear — ; or, What does he know who has never struggled with temptation ? Rejoice, all of you who are together in the Lord ; greet one another, and seasonably prepare yourselves to partake wor- thily, before the passover, of the Lord's body ; of which privilege, so far as it regards the sacramental participation, I am for the present deprived, and so shall continue to be as long as it is God's will. Nor ought 1 to wonder at this, when the apostles of Christ and many other saints, in prisons and deserts, have in like manner been deprived of the same. I am well, as I hope in Jesus Christ, and shall find myself still better after death, if I keep the commandments of God to the end."^ Since the council no longer recognized as pope Balthazar Cossa, the committee nominated under his administration had no further authority to examine into the affair of Huss, and it was necessary to appoint a new one. This was done on the 6th of April, 1415, and the new com- missioners were Cardinal d'Ailly, Cardinal St. Marci, the bishop of Dola, and the abbot of the Cistercian order. Meantime the cause of Huss assumed a worse aspect on account of the distribution of the sacra- ment under both forms, which now commenced in Prague. This gave rise to the most injurious reports, and the whole blame had to fall upon Huss. The bishop John of Leitomysl, had made great use of these ru- mors to confirm the prejudice against Huss, in his report to the council — had stated that the blood of Christ was carried about by the laity in flasks, and that they gave the Qommunion to each other. Upon this, the Bohemian knights present at Constance handed in to the council, on the 13th of May, a paper complaining in the most violent language that, contrary to all justice and in violation of the emperor's word Huss, * When Huss in the letter cited says conceal the purpose which he had in view, the bishop of Constance wrote him, that * 0pp. I, i'ol. 69, 2 ; ep 37. he would have nothing to do with him, ^ A play on words : Det vobis constau- (ither this must have occurred before the tiam in Constantia. agreement entered into with the emperor, * Ibid. fol. 73 ; ep. 50. or the bishop must have been seeking to INTERPOSITION OF THE BOHEMIAN KNIGHTS FOR HUSS. 341 without being heard, though he had ever dechircd liimself ready to an- swer to the charge of heresy, had been harshly shut up in pinson, where he was compelled to He in fetters and suppHed with the most wretched fare, where he had to suffer from hunger and thirst, and it was to be feared must in consequence of tliis liarsh treatment become disordered in mind. They compLained, at the same time, of the cahim- nious charges set afloat against the Bohemians to the dislionor of their nation, alluding particularly to the statements made by bishop John of Leitoraysl. The 16 th of May was fixed upon as the time for acting on this matter ; on which occasion bishop John of Leitomysl defended himself against this accusation, and endeavored to prove that he was right in proceeding as he had done against the propagators of the er- roneous doctrines of Wicklif in Bohemia. The Bohemians did not suffer the remarks of the bishop to go unanswered, and once more urged it upon the council and the emperor that a free hearing should be granted to Huss. Finally they succeeded in obtaining the promise that Huss should be transferred to another prison in Constance, and that he should be allowed to speak for himself before the council on the 5th of June. The knight of Chlum announced the decree of the council to his friend on the day it was passed, the 18th of May. " This is to inform you — he wrote — that the emperor with the deputies of all the nations of the council was this day assembled, that he spoke with them about your affairs, and in particular about granting you a hearing ; and they at last declared themselves of one mind that you should ob- tain a public hearing ; your friends moreover urged that you ought to be in a more pleasant situation, so as to be able to collect and refresh yourself." He then adds, with reference to the impending trial : " Therefore for God's sake, and for the sake of your own salvation, and for the advancement of the truth, may you never be led to swerve from that truth by any fear of losing this poor life. For it is only to promote your own true good that God has visited you with this trial." He then calls upon him, on account of the excitement which the con- troversy on the withdrawal of the cup had created in Bohemia, to ex- press his opinion with regard to that matter on the same sheet, so that in due time what he had written might be shown to his friends in Bo- hemia. There was a difference among them on this point,, and they had agreed to submit the whole to his decision. Huss replied : " As it regards collecting myself, I know not for what purpose I am to collect myself, nor what other condition of mind I should be in ; for I know not to what end the hearing is to be granted me." Doubtless he had his misgivings whether he should obtain, after all, the free heai'ing which he demanded ; such a hearing as would allow him to express his views before the council in a sermon, or to defend himself, in the way of disputation, against the several charges, — liberties which he had applied for in a petition. It was only in such case that he could need, befoi'ehand, any special collection of mind. " I hope — says he — by the grace of God, that I shall never swerve from the truth of which I have obtained the knowledge." The impending decision of his fate hv the trial before the council could not induce him to express Inmself 29* 342 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND I>OcTRIXE. otherwise than he had already done on the question respecting the withdrawal of the cup. He referred to the paper he had before drawn up, and added : " I know of nothing else to say, than that the gospels and the epistles of Paul speak decidedly for the distribution of the Lord's supper under both the forms, and that it was so held in the pi'imitive church. If it can be done, endeavor to bring it about, that the administration of the cup should be granted by a bull, at least to those who require it from motives of devotion, regard being had to circumstances." ^ It was not until the beginning of the month of June, that Huss was liberated from his oppressive dungeon at Gottleben, where directly afterwards his place was taken by that Balthazar Cossa, who had first deprived him of his liberty. He was next conveyed to Constance, and a prison assigned to him in a Franciscan convent. Here the council assembled on the 5th of June to investigate his affair, and to hear the man himself, according as it had been promised him. Before Huss was produced, the proceedings were commenced by listening to the articles extracted by his adversaries from his writings ; and they were upon the point of making a beginning with the condemnation of these articles. But Peter of Mladenowio, secretary to the knight of Chlum, a man enthusiastically devoted to Huss, hastened to give information of it to the knight his master, and to Wenceslaus of Duba. They speedily reported the case to the Emperor, who at once sent the Pals- grave Louis and the Burgrave Frederic of Nuremberg to the council, directing them to tell the prelates, that before the appearance of Huss they should not take a step in his affair, and that they should in the first place lay all the erroneous articles which they found reason to charge against him before the emperor, who would take pains to have them carefully and minutely examined by pious and learned men. The two knights presented to the council the writings, from which the erroneous articles imputed to Huss were said to have been extracted,, that the prelates might have it in their power to satisfy themselves whether those articles were really contained, as expressed in the charges, in his writings ; requiring, however, that the same should be returned again into their hands, lest, perchance, it might be deemed right to destroy them as heretical. In fact, it was afterwards reported in many quarters that they were burned.2 When Huss appeared before the- council, these writings were placed before him, and he was asked whether he acknowledged them to be his. He said yes ; and declared himself ready to retract every expression in them in which it could be shown that he was in error. A single article was then read. Huss began to defend it, cited many passages from scripture, and referred to- the doctrine of the church ; but they exclaimed that all this was noth- ing to the point. Whenever he began to speak he was interrupted,. and not allowed to utter a syllable. A savage outcry rose against him ' 0pp. I, fol. 72, 1 ; ep. 47 et 48. meus restitueretur. Nam aliqui clama- ' So Huss himself praises his friends bant : Comburatur, et praesertim Micliael for having made this condition : Bene fac- de Causis, quem audivi. Ibid. fol. 69, 1 ; tum est, quod postulaveruut, ut eis liber ep. 36. SECOND AUDIENCE OF HUSS BEFORE THE COUNCIL. C43 on all sides. At length, when Huss saw that it was of no use, that he could not be heard, he determined to remain silent. This silence was now interpreted as a confession that he was convicted. Finally, it grew to be too bad ; the moderate men in the assembly could stand it no longer, and as it was impossible to restore order, it was thought best to dissolve the assembly ; the 7th of June having been fixed upon as the time when Huss should have his second hearing. On the 6th of June Huss wrote to his friends : " To-morrow, at noon, I am to answer ; first, whether any one of the articles extracted from my writ- ings is erroneous, and whether I will pledge myself to abjure it, and henceforth teach the contrary : secondly, whether I will confess that I have preached those articles which it shall be proved on good testimony that I have preached : thirdly, whether I will abjure these. May God in his mercy so order it, that the emperor may be present to hear the words that my gracious Saviour shall be pleased to put in my mouth." He wished to have the privilege of stating his answers in writing. Had this been allowed, he would have expressed himself thus : " I, John, servant of Christ, will not declare that all of the articles extracted from my writings are false, lest I condemn the declarations of holy teachers, and particularly of St. Augustine. Secondly, I will not confess that I have asserted, preached and believed the articles of which I am accused by false witnesses. Thirdly, I will not abjure, lest by so doing, I subject myself to the guilt of perjury." ^ On the 7th of June then, at one o'clock, Huss appeared for the second time before the council. On this occasion, the emperor Sigismund was pre- sent, as Huss had ever desired that he should be ; and owing to the hearty sympathy the}' took in the cause of Huss, the proceedings were also attended by the two above mentioned Bohemian knights, and Peter of Mladenowic. The first accusation, confirmed by many wit- nesses was, that Huss denied the doctrine of transubstantiation. This he could declare with truth, to be a false charge. Cardinal d'Ailly, however, who was a zealous nominalist, engaged in an argument to show that Huss ought, according to his principles, to deny that doc- trine ; for as he held to the objective reality of general conceptions,"'^ and therefore also to the paneitas a parte rei, he could not suppose an annihilation of the same in any one case. But Huss would not allow that there was any force whatever in this reasoning, for he was of the opinion, that though the general conception might no longer be really present in a particular substance, still it did not cease on that account to retain its reality in itself, and to be actualized in other particular substances. 3 Out of this grew a violent dispute, in which several Englishmen took part, as zealous opponents of the doctrines of Wick- lif. It was insinuated that the phraseology of Huss was suspicious. ' Ibid. fol. 65, 2 ; ep. 27. ^ His words : Desinit quidem esse in * Huss himself explained this in the hoc sinfrulari pane materiali, stante tali §ense that general conceptions were the transsubstantiatione, cum ille tunc mnta* original forms, first created by God . Dixi tur, vel transit in corpus Christi, vel trans- de essentia communi creata, quae est pri- substantiatur. sed nihilominus in aliis sin- tnum esse creatura communicatum singu- gularibus subjectatur. Ibid. fol. 12. 2. lis creatnris. Ibid, fol 62, 2 ; ep. 15. 344 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTKTISE. It was said t'.at like Wicklif, he was seeking to deceive bv his language Whatever he taught must he heresy. The same wild outcries com- menced which had interrupted the first hearing. But the emperor, who was present, commanded silence ; and during the stillness which succeeded, Huss took the opportunity to exclaim with a loud voice so that all could hear : " I sliould have expected to find more sobriety, order and decency prevailing in such an assembly," Said the president of the council, the cardinal archbishop .Jean de Brogny of Ostia ad- dressing Huss, "At thy trial in the castle, thou showedst thyself more humble." Huss replied : " Neither was there there any such out- cry." ) Still one of the Englishmen had the justice and good sense to declare, " that it was better to drop these wranglings about realism and nominalism, since they did not belong to the place, these disputes having nothing to do with the faith ; and the word of Huss ought to be believed, when he said that he acknowledged transubstantiation."'^ .Huss moreover perceived what had given occasion to the perversion of his language by his opponents regarding the doctrine of transubstanti- ation, when following the words of Christ he simph^ spoke of the fact, that Christ himself is the soul's ti-ue bread. 3 The dispute on the doc- trine of transubstantiation having come to an end, Cardinal Francis Zabarella took up the word and said to Huss, " Thou knowest, master Huss, that by the mouth of two or three witnesses every word shouM be established ; but now as thou seest thou hast against thee the testi- mony of twenty men or thereabouts, men who ought to be believed, and of the highest consideration, some of whom have themselves heard thee teach, while others testify to what they have heard and to the ' On comparing the Historia Hussi and is singular that the same thing should be the several statements in the letters of done also liy Palacky, who is generally' so Huss, regarding his trials, there is some exact, unless he found reason for so doing difficulty in determining whether this oc- in the original record of Mladenowic, and curred on his first or his second hearing, in the Bohemian original text of the let- For, we can hardly suppose that what ters of Huss, which we can know nothing Huss here says, and what the president about. To l)e sure, Huss, in his letter in of the council replies to him, occurred Mikowec's collection, (p. 22), remarks that twice. But the account of the eye-witness this took place at the first hearing. Bat in the Historia Hussi, who makes no m»)i- we must necessarily correct this statement, tion of it at all, leaves no room for us to to avoid a contradiction wliich would oth- suppose, that the above declaration of erwise occur in the letters of Huss himself, Huss was made at the first hearing; for by the earlier and more exact account; for h'.reit is said expressly that Huss at length this last letter was written on the 26tli of i-emained silent. And, in the letter of June. Huss, (ep. 15; fol. 62, 2) where everything ^ The words of the Englishman are : is exactly related, and in all probability Quorsum haec de universalibus disputa- immediately after the hearing, what is said tio, quae ad fidem nihil facit ? Ipse, qua-.i- of the dispute concerning the doctrine of tum audio, recte seniit de sacramento al transubstantiation, can have occurred, as is taris. Opp I, fol. 12, 2. evident from comparing the Hist. H., only ^ Huss himself says at his trial: Caete- during the second hearing. But this is so rum hoc se fatcri. cum archiepiscopus Pra- nearly connected with the narrative of gensis omnino proliibuisset uti illo termi- what Huss said, and what the president no panis, tunc se hoc edictum episcopi replied, that we cannot but regard it as u non potuisse probare, quia Christus ipse very arl)itrary procedure, to separate the in VI, cap. Joann. undccies se nominave- two remarks as to the time when they Were rit panem angelorum, qui de coclo desccn made, and place one in the first, and the disset, ut toti mumlo vitani darct. sed da other in the second hearing, as has been pane materiali se nun((uam dixi.-jsc. Ibid, done by V. d. Hardt, (IV, pag. 307). It SECOND APPEARANCE OF HUSS BEFORE THE COUNCIL. 345 common report. And all furnish the strongest grounds of evidence for their statements. We must therefore believe them. I see not ho^v thou canst still maintain thy cause against so many distinguished men." To this Huss replied : " But I call God and my conscience to witness that I have not so taught, and that it never entered my mind so tc teach as these persons have the hardihood to say that I have, testify- :ng against me what they never heard. Were there a great many more still, I esteem the testimony of my God and of my conscience, higher than the judgments of all my adversaries, about v/hich I do not trouble myself." The cardinal answered : i " We cannot judge by thy conscience, but must be content with the very firm and confident testimony of these men. For not from any hatred or enmity to thee, as thou affirmest, do they offer this testimony, but they give such rea- sons as betray no sign of hatred, and leave us no room- to doubt." 3 So strongly biassed is the cardinal, that he cannot or will not see the trace of a spiteful distortion of the words of Huss, even in Paletz, but believes that Huss wrongs him altogether, and that if Paletz had altered the words of Huss, he had altered them into a still milder sense than they had in their original connection. Besides, he felt par- ticularly annoyed that Huss should presume to cast suspicion on Chan- cellor Gerson, than whom a more excellent man was not to be found in all Christendom. The next accusation was that Huss had obstinately defended the heretical doctrines of Wicklif. Huss replied, that he had taught neither the errors of Wicklif, nor those of any other man. If Wicklif had taught errors in England, this was the concern of the English. But his resistance to the condemnation of the forty-five ar- ticles of Wicklif was adduced in proof of the charge that he defend- ed his doctrines, to which he rephed : The form in which those ar- ticles were all unconditionally condemned was one to wliich his conscience would not permit him to assent ; but in particular he could not consent to the condemnation of the article, that Constantino had erred in making that dotation, and Sylvester in accepting it. The ar- ticle and also the proposition of which we have spoken on a former page, that a priest chargeable with mortal sin, could not baptize nor consecrate the Lord's supper, he modified by saying that such an one did it in an unworthy manner, and was but an unworthy minister of the sacraments ; and in spite of all the contradictions of his opjjonents, he asserted that in no other sense was the article to be found in his writ- ings ; and he proved this against Paletz to ocular inspection by com- paring the propositions ascribed to him with his book which was pro- duced. Furthermore he frankly acknowledged that he had not dared to agree in condemning the article which affirmed that tithes were tc be considered as alms. Cardinal Zabarella now argued to refute him. He said that " it belonged to the nature of an alms that it should be given voluntarily, and not by obligation ; but the paying of tithes was ' [According to the ninrLcitial note in the lows, is not Zaliarolla tlie Carrlinalio FIo- Historia Joann. Hus fol. 13. 1. and per- rentinus, hut Peter d' Ailly ilie Cardinalis haps also aceordiiiix to the words tlieni- Cameracensis. YA.\ selves, the cardinal here, and in what fol- '■* Ibid. fol. 13. 1. 346 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY A?iD DOCTRINE. founded on an obligation. Zabarella ^^ent on the principles of ecclesias- tical law ; but Huss proceeded only on ethical principles ; hence he could not admit the premises in Zarabella's argument, for he maintained that alms-giving too was a matter of moral obligation. Men were bound, on pain of damnation, to observe those six works of mercy which Christ mentions in Matt. 25: 35, 36 ; and yet these are alms. It was a part of the scholastic sophistry of those times, for parties to engage in dis- pute without taking any pains first to settle with each other the differ- ent meaning of terms. Next an English archbishop displayed the sub- tlety of his logic by the following argument against Huss : From this it would follow that the poor, who cannot give alms for want of means, must be damned. Huss replied : That he spoke only of those that had the means. And he went on to assert that the tenths had, in the be- ginning, been an entirely voluntary thing ; and were not made obliga- tory until a long time afterwards. This he proposed to show more at large, but was not permitted. Huss then said that, in general, all he had ever demanded was, that proofs should be drawn from holy Scrip- ture to justify the condemnation of the propositions of Wicklif which were to be condemned. He entered into a full, calm, and sober ac- count of the whole course of the disputes on the writings of Wicklif and of his own personal concern in the matter,' until the time of his appeal to Christ. The question was then put to him whether the pope, then, had given him leave to break away from his own jurisdiction and appeal to another tribunal; 2 and whether it was permitted to appeal to Christ ? To this Huss rephed : " This I openly maintain, before you all, that there is not a more just nor a more eifectual appeal than the ap- peal to Christ ; for to appeal means, according to law, nothing but this : in a case of oppression, from an inferior judge to invoke the aid of a higher one. And now what higher judge is there than Christ ? Who can get at the truth of a cause in a more righteous and truthful man- ner than he ? for he cannot be deceived, neither can he err ? Who can more easily afford help to the poor and oppressed ?" But this was language which the council could not understand ; and it was received with laughter and scorn. Furthermore, it was charged against him, that to introduce his heresies among the unlearned and simple, he had given an exaggerated account of the doings at that notorious earthquake- council,' and represented it as a judgment of God in favor of Wicklif; 4 that he had said, as we have observed on a former page, he wished his soul to be where Wicklif's soul was. In reply to the first, Huss said ' Which account we have ah-eady avail- •'' See above, page 162. ed ourselves of in the preceding narrative. ■* Illico ostium ecclesiae fulmine rup- ' The words : Habueritne absolution- turn est, ita ut adversarii WicletF ae^re em ? These words may indeed also mean : sine incommodo evaserint. 0pp. I, fol. Has been absolved by the pope ? Yet the 14, 1. As such facts, especially in the connection is in favor of the interpretation contests between parties, are very apt to which I have given in the text; so that be represented in an exaggerated manner the question relates to an uttoKvtikov on in tradition according to the passions of the part of the pope, or of the so-called the particular individuals, so it is quite ■postoli ; and this besides is altogether possible that the story in the present case characteristic of the positive spirit of his was somewhat exaggerated as it was told judges. among tlie Wicklitites. SECOND APPEAKANCE OF HUSS BEFORE THE COUNCIL. 347 nothing, and it may perhaps have been true ; nor would it be anything strange that one so favorably inclined to Wicklif and so biassed against his opponents should hold such a story to be true, and look upon the whole thing as a judgment of God. With regard to the second, Huss said he did not deny that, twelve yeai-s^ before the theological writings of Wicklif were known in Bohemia, he had made himself familiar with some of that writer's philosophical writings which greatly pleased him , and as he had been informed on good authority of the uprightness of Wicklif s life, so he had let fall the words : " I hope John Wicklif is in heaven. But although I did entertain the fear that he might be damned, yet I could still express the hope that my soul might be where the soul of Wicklif was." x\gain, these words of Huss, uttered with his peculiar conscientiousness, and in entire consistency with his views of the doctrines of absolute predestination and subjective justifi- cation, were received with derision. It was objected to him, again, that he had invited the people by the posting up of public notices, to resort to the sword against their adversaries. But he could appeal to it as a fact, that he had spoken in his sermons only of spiritual weapons ; and, aware of the disposition among some to pervert his words, had taken special pains to point out that he was not speaking of a fleshly but of the spiritual sword. He was, moreover, accused of having fo- mented schism in Bohemia between the spiritual and the secular power, and caused the expulsion of the Germans from the university of Prague. He vindicated himself from this charge, by giving the true account of the whole coui'se of the affiiir, as we have stated it on a former page. Paletz alleged against Huss, that not only Germans but Bohemians were banished. But Huss could prove that this had occurred during his absence. For as we have seen before, he certainly was not present at Prague when those men of the theological faculty were banished. One thing characteristic of these disputes was the pains taken to raise sus- picions against the sayings and doctrines of Huss in a political point of view, and thus to excite against him the prejudices of the ruling pow- ers. So we may interpret d'Ailly when, speaking loud enough to be heard by the emperor, he said to Huss : " When you were first brought before us, I heard you say^ that if you had not proposed of your own accord to come to Constance, neither the emperor nor the king of Bo- hemia could have compelled you to come." Thereupon Huss said his language had been this : " If he had not been disposed to come there of his own accord, so many of the knights in Bohemia were his friend? that he might easily have remained at home in some safe place of conceal- ment, so that he never could have been forced to come there by the will of those two princes. At this. Cardinal d'Ailly exclaimed, in an angry tone : "Mark the impudence of the man ! " And a murmur of disapprobation arising, the noble knight of Chlum spoke out in con- ' We have already on a former pnge nalists. But in respect to the exact num- found it probable, that Huss had first been ber of years Huss might easily be mis- led to think favorably of Wicklif by his taken at such a trial. intimacy with the philosophical writings * Which may have probably occurred of the latter relating to the general con- when Huss first appeared before the pop« troversy between the realists and nomi- and the cardinals. 348 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. firmation of -what Huss had said : " Compared with other knights — said he — I have but little power in Bohemia ; jet I could protect him, for a whole year, against all the power of these two sovereigns. How much more could be done by others, who are more powerful than I, and hold the stronger castles ! " After these words of the knight, d'Ailly was not disposed to go any farther into this matter, but said to Husa : " I advise you to submit, according to your promise while in prison,' to the sentence of the council. By so doing you will provide best both for your welfare and your honor." Taking up the remark of d'Ailly, the emperor said : Though it was reported that Huss had not received his safe-conduct from the emperor till fourteen days after his imprisonment,^ the emperor could prove, by the testimony of many princes and persons of rank, that he had received the safe-conduct be- fore leaving Prague, from the hands of the knights Wenceslaus of Duba and John of Chlum,^ and full liberty was secured to him of defending himself and giving an account of his faith before the council ; and this promise had been well fulfilled by the prelates, for which the emperor had all reason to thank them ; although many said the emperor did wrong in granting protection to a man who was a heretic, or suspected of heresy. The emperor, therefore, would now give Huss the same ad- vice with Cardinal d'Ailly. Let him defend nothing obstinately ; but with regard to all that was brought against him and had been confirmed by credible witnesses, let him submit, with becoming obedience, to the authority of the council. If he did this, the emperor would see to it that, for his own sake and for the sake of his brother Wenceslaus and of the whole Bohemian empire, he should be dealt with hy the council in a lenient manner, and let off with a slight penance and satisfaction ; if not, the leaders of the council would know what they had to do with him ; the emperor would never undertake to protect his errors ; he would sooner prepare the faggots for him with this his own hands than suffer him to go on any longer with the same obstinacy as before. To this Huss replied : " In the first place I thank your majesty for the safe- conduct." And as he was now invited and charged by the knight of Chlum to defend himself against the reproach of obstinacy, which had been cast upon him, he said : " I call God himself to witness that it never entei'ed my thoughts to defend anything obstinately, and that I came here voluntarily and of my own accord with the purpose of changing my opinion without any hesitation, if I should be taught better." Huss was then pilaced under the care of the bishop of Riga and con- ducted back to his prison. The same day Huss wrote to his friends in Constance, respecting this examination : " The Almighty God gave me today a strong and courageous heart. Two of the articles of complaint against me have been abandoned. I now hope, by the grace of God, ' Witliout doulit in retVrence to that arrive till after that had taktii place, comlitioiially understood submission; the ^ Wiiich, to he sure, is at variance with implied condition, however, beint;: iijnored. the statement of Huss himself, (see above), * It appears, acconlinuly. that many tiiat he set out on his journey icil'o-it a sought to excuse ti)e iuipri ounient of Huss safe-conduct. I»y asserting- that his saie-iouduct did not SECOND APPEARANCE OF HUSS BEFORE THE COUNCIL. 349 that several others besides will be abandoned. They cry out, nearly all of them, like the Jews against our Master Christ." He says that, among the whole multitude of the clergy he had not a single friend ex- cept one Pole whom he knew, and the father. By the father is prob- ably meant that remarkable secret friend of Huss, who subsequently was so active in endeavoring to bring about a compromise between him and the council, and of whom we shall have occasion to say mor hereafter. " — he wrote — if a hearing were granted me, in which I could reply to such arguments as they might bring against the arti- cles contained in my treatises ; then, believe I, would many of those who cry out, be comitcUcd to be dumb. As God in heaven wills, so let it be."i Again Huss wrote : Let all the Bohemian knights apply to the emperor and council and demand that as the emperor and council had promised that he should, in the next audience, be told briefly what he had to retract,"^ and might explain himself regarding it, so the em- peror and council would fulfil this promise, as they might be forced to do if held to their own words. '' I will then speak out — he writes — the truth without reserve ; for rather would I be consumed by the fag- gots, than kept so miserably concealed by them ; for then all Christen- dom would learn what I finally said." To Chlum, whom he called his most trusty patron, he wrote : " May God be your re warder. I desire that you would not leave the council till you have seen the end." "0 — says he — much would I prefer that you should see me led to the stake, than that I should be so treacherously kept in the dark. I still have hopes that Almighty God, through the merit of the saints, may dehver me out of their hands." He begged his friends to let him know when, on the next morning, he should be led forth to trial. He desired them all to pray for him that if he must await death in prison, he might be endued with patience. He lamented that he had not been able to repay many of them for their services, and sent to I'equest that they would be content, and excuse him on the ground of his want of ability. He knew not who was to repay those who had lent him money in Bohemia, unless it were the Master Christ, on whose account they had lent it to him. Still he expresses the wish that some of the more wealthy would settle up his aifairs and pay his poorer creditors. On the 8th of June, Huss was conducted to his third examination. The articles of charge were read over in their regular order, together with the answers which he had given to them at his private examina- tions in prison. They were more particularly articles said to have been extracted from his book De Ecclesia. With regard to some of them Huss acknowledged that the assertions imputed to him were his, and added a few words, either to establish them, or to guard them against misapprehension ; but with regard to the majority of them, he did nothing of the sort, being confident of proving either that they were not contained in his writings, or that they were altered by being rent from their connection or purposely misconstrued. We may notice ' 0pp. I, fol. 69, 2 ; ep. 36. occurred in this second hearing, and seems * We should from these words of Huss to luive been left out in the report of MUi* complete, therefore, the account of what denowic. VOL. V. 30 S50 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. in particular the fifth article, relative to his doctrine concerning the •church, which we have already explained, and which stood closely connected with his doctrine of predestination. He was reported to say, that dignity, choice of man, visible signs, made no one a member of the church. Huss while in prison had acknowledged this assertion to be one contained in his book ; and in confirmation of its truth had added : All depends here on defining what is meant by being in the church and a member of the church ; and this depends on predestina- tion. Predestination was the divine counsel, whereby grace was pre- pared for men in this life, and glory in the future life. Distinctions of rank, human choice, visible signs, did nothing of this kind. Judas Iscariot, notwithstanding he was chosen by Christ, notwitiistanding the temporal gifts of grace which he received, and notwithstanding the 'Opinion which the multitude had of him, was no true disciple of Christ, but a wolf in sheep's-clothing. His assertion that no " praescitus " was a member of the church, he proved by many authorities from Ber- nard and Augustin. Furthermore, the tenth article : " If he who is called the vicar of Christ copies after his life, he is his vicar ; but, if he takes the opposite course, he is a messenger of Antichrist, stands in contradiction with Peter and Christ, and is a vicar of Judas Isca- riot." Huss confirmed this proposition, citing it as it really stood in his books, and in confirming it, referred to a passage from Bernard's work De Consideratione. When this was read, the prelates looked at each other, shook their heads, and laughed. The twelfth article was : that the papal dignity took its origin from the Roman emperors. Huss added in confirmation of this, that the Emperor Constantino conferred this dignity on the bishop of Rome, and it was afterwards confirmed by the other emperors ; that, as the emperor was the first among princes, the pope was the first among bishops, in reference, namely, to earthly honor and earthly goods. Yet the papal dignity had its origin direct- ly from Christ, so far as it regarded the spiritual dignity, and the call to the spiritual guidance of the church. Cardinal d'Ailly, in oppos- ing this, appealed to the sixth canon of the council of Nice, according to the common interpretation ; and asked Huss why he had not de- rived this rather from the decree of the council than from the empe- ror ? But Huss stood firm to his assertion, that the dignity was first derived from the gift of Constantino. The 22nd article related to the important principle, important in reference to ethics laid down by Au- gustin in opposition to Pelagianism, that in moral judgments every- thing depends on the intention, the intcntio oculus animi; hence the opposition generally between the godhke and the ungodlike life : — the state of grace where everything is determined by the same funda- mental relation to the temper ; the general bent of the life is one well- pleasing to God ; every natural aifection is ennobled, and the man whether he eat or drink does everything to the glory of God ; or the opposite temper of alienation from God, — the ground-tone of the life IS either love or selfishness. Now, while Huss had, with Augustin and Jovinian, given prominence to the unmediated antithesis alone, aa grounded in the idea or the principle, d'Ailly, on the other hand, THIRD APPEARANCE OF HUSS BEFORE THE COUXCIL. 85i held to the empirical view, and considered the Christian as he actually appears, with the sinful element still cleaving to him ; and in opposition to Huss he remarked : " Yet holy Scripture says we all sin ;'' and ad- verting to the words, 1 John 1: 8, he said : " so then it would follow from this, that we sin continually ^ To this Huss replied: " Holy Scrip- ture speaks, in such places, of remissible sins, which the moral temper at bottom does not quite exclude from the man,' but which may per- haps exist along with it." The article was read of which we have already spoken on a former page, that whenever a king, pope, bishop lay under a mortal sin, he was neither king,^ pope, nor bishop. Huss fiad, in his answer, explained this as meaning that such a person wa3 not so in a worthy manner, in the sight of God. But in so doing, he had expressly taken care not to deny the objective validity of any sacra- mental act performed by such a prelate ; such a person was only an unworthy minister of the sacraments, through whom Christ Jdmself bap- tized and consecrated. At the time this was read, the emperor stood by a window, and by him the Palsgrave Louis and the Burgrave Frede- ric of Nuremberg ; and, after much conversation about Huss, he said ; ^' There never was a more mischievous heretic." On these words be- ing read, which torn from their connection might be interpreted as tend- ing to the overthrow of all civil power and order, the emperor's atten- tion was called to them, and he caused them to be repeated. And this too doubtless made an impression on the emperor. He said : " Yet no man living is without sin." But Cardinal d'Ailly exclaimed indig- nantly to Huss : " Did it not satisfy thee that thou soughtest by thy writings and discourses to bring into contempt and to overthrow the spiritual order ; wilt thou now seek also to push kings from their thrones ?" Then a disputation arose between Paletz and Huss, turning on this : that in the exphcation of conceptions objective and subjective, worthi- ness conditioned on moral qualities, and lawfully-existing orders inde- pendent of these qualities, were not duly distinguished ; for which Husa had really given occasion enough in the way in which he had stated the distinction. If Huss, instead of merely holding fast to what he had paradoxically expressed, had in his answer explained the matter with more clearness and precision, he would thereby have guarded against many a falsely reasoned conclusion, which proved injurious to his cause. Paletz, for example, observed with regard to a case cited by Huss, that Saul was nevertheless king, though he had heard those words of Sam- uel ; and David too had prevented the slaying of Saul, not on account of the holiness of Saul's life, a quality in which he was utterly deficient, but on account of the holiness that proceeded from his anointing. And when Huss cited a passage from Cyprian to the effect that he was falsely called a Christian who did not follow Christ in his daily walk, Paletz replied : " Mark the simplicity of the man, who quotes what has no- thing to do with the subject. For suppose one not to be truly a Chris- tian ; is he therefore not truly a pope, bishop, or king ? for these lat* ' Quae non expellunt habitum virtutis ^ In reference to this he appeals to 1 ab homine. Tol. 18, 1. Sam. 15: 11. 352 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. ter are names of office, but the term Christian is a designation of char- acter. And accordingly one may be truly a pope, bishop, or king without being a true Christian." Thereupon Huss answered : " Then if John was a true pope, why have you deposed him from his office ?" Here the emperor struck in : " The council has lately declared that John was a true pope ; but on account of the crimes by which he soiled the papal dignity, and on account of his squandering away the property of the church, they have deposed him." A passage being now cited which was pointed directly against the lawfulness of the condemnation of the forty-five propositions of Wicklif, Cardinal d'Ailly exclaimed : " But thou hast said thou wouldst not defend any of the propositions of Wick- lif; yet it now appe'ars from thy writings thou hast openly defended his propositions." Huss replied : " I say the same that I said before, that I will defend the errors neither of Wicklif nor of any other man. But because it seemed contrary to my conscience to consent uncondi- tionally to their condemnation, where no reason was produced for it from Scripture, I was unwilling to join in condemning them ; and be- cause the different qualifications introduced would not suit all the dif- ferent propositions." When the article was read which denied the ne- cessity of a visible head to the church, where the words occurred that Christ would guide the church better without such monsters of supreme heads, by means of his true disciples scattered through all the w^orld, the prelates said : " Mark, he now puts on the prophet !" In confirma- tion of what he had said, Huss now added : " Yes, I say it, that the church under the apostles was infinitely better governed than it is at the present time. And what hinders that Christ should not better gov- ern by his t7'ue disciples, without such monsters of supreme heads as they now are ? And mark, we have no such supreme head at present, and yet Christ does not cease to govern his church." This remark also excited a laugh. Again, among the articles was one in which, in certain cases, the right was conceded to laymen of passing judgment on the acts of prelates. Next came the article which accused Huss of having said that he was going to Constance, and if for any cause what- ever he should recant anything he had previously taught, he thought he never could do it from honest conviction, because all he had taught was in conformity with the true and sound doctrine of Christ. Huss could only declare that all this was pure fabrication ; and doubtless he intimated that a letter which he had written to his community at Prague probably gave occasion to the calumny.^ Among the articles now brought forward against Huss, were to be found those also which originated with Chancellor Gerson, and which had already been laid before Huss ' in prison. To Gerson, Huss could not appear otherwise than as a here- tic, since he refused to acknowledge the immutable and divine right of the hierarchy, and since to him he seemed to invite the people to rebel- lion against the church. He had already, in the year 1414, called upon Conrad of Vechta to see to it that the heresies of Huss should be ' Thus he complains above, that this mies, and that many statements in it hai Utter had fallen into tlie hands of his ene- been falsified 'and distorted. THIRD APPEARANCE OF HUSS BEFORE THE COUNCIL. 353 punished by the secuhir power. He was still wholly entangled in the old ecclesiastical law. The civil magistracy seemed to him called and bound to punish heretics like other transgressors, and so render them harmless. "Miracles — so Gerson th(jiight — ought not to be required for the confirmation of the ancient church doctrines ; the authority of councils, the utterances of all the church teachers, were sufficient. To these common authorities every individual should submit his private judgment. He who hears not this voice, would not hear though one should rise from the dead." So he interprets Christ's Avords in the parable of Lazarus. " It only remains, then — he pro- ceeds — to employ the secular sword against those who will not hear the voice of the church." i Gerson's articles against Huss related to the notion of the church, the definition of it as the community of the elect, the denial of the necessity of a visible head, the way in which Huss seemed to have made the dignity of the pope, the king, etc., de- pend on the subjective worth of the individual. In what sense Huss; intended this to be understood, Gerson does not stop to inquire. Such propositions, without further explanation, were easily liable, as we have seen, to be interpreted as countenancing revolution ; for example, the proposition that no praescitas belonged to the church, no man who did not follow the life of Christ ; that whoever led a good life, after the pattern of Christ, should publicly teach and preach, even though not empowered so to do by his ecclesiastical superiors ; nay, even though he were prohibited by them, or though they pronounced him under the ban ; just as he could and must give alms ; because that calling which is founded on a good life and knowledge was sufficient. In reference to the assertion that no 'praescitas was a true pope, bishop, king, etc., Gerson remarked : " To maintain such an error is madness ; it is in- surrectionary, leading to tlie overthrow of every civil constitution ; because no one knows whether he belongs to the number of the elect or the reprobate (a doctrine in which, as we have seen, Huss agreed with Gerson), and because we all offend in many parts of our duty. All government would be an unsettled, uncertain thing, were it made to depend on the fact that he who exercised it belonged among the elect and had attained to the position of Christian love. And Peter must have been wrong in enjoining it on servants to be obedient even to bad masters. The university of Paris, in their declaration drawn up by Gerson, where they invite the council to the extirpation of mischievous errors, added : "• Though in these propositions, we may recognize a cer- tain zeal against the vices of the clergy, which to our sorrow we must confess have gotten too much the upper hand, yet it is not a zeal joined with knowledge. A prudent zeal tolerates, while it siglis over. the sins which it observes iu the house of God but cannot destroy. The evil spirits, however, will not be driven out by Beelzebub, but only by the finger of God, which is the Holy Ghost." The want of Christian prudence is objected to Huss. 2 When now all the charges had been ' Extracts from the letter of Gerson, in ^ The pain and indignation manifested Du Boulay Hist. Univ. Paris V, 269. by Huss at these particular articles of Uer 30* 354 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. brought forward, Cardinal d'Aillj said to Huss : " Thou hast heard how many and what abominable charges are brought against thee. Therefore it is thy duty to consider what thou intendest to do. Two waya are proposed to thee by the council, of which thou must needs choose one. First, that thou shouldest submit thyself suppliantly to the jud"-- ment of the council, and bear without murmuring whatever it may please to ordain. If that is done, we shall, out of regard to the two ■sovereigns and from our desire for thy welfare, proceed against thee with all gentleness and humanity. But if thou still proposest to defend isome of the articles which have now been laid before us, and demand- est to be heard still further, we shall not deny thee this privilege. But thou must bear in mind that there are here men of so much wei'i^ht and so much knowledge, that have so well settled and strong reasons against thy articles, that I fear it will redound to thy great injury, to thy great danger if thou undertakest to defend them yet longer. I speak this in the way of exhortation, and not as thy judge." Others, taking up these words of d'Ailly, exhorted Huss, each after his own fashion. He answered, with a profound expression of humility : " Reve- rend fathers ! I have already often said that I came here voluntarily, not for the purpose of defending anything obstinately, but of cheerfully submitting to be taught better if in anything I have erred. I beg, therefore that opportunity may be allowed me to explain my opinions further. And if I do not adduce good and true reasons for them, then I will gladly, as you require, submit to be instructed by you." Here some one said aloud : " Mark, how cunningly he speaks ! He says ' instructed,' not ' corrected,' not ' decided.' " " Nay, as you please — rejoined Huss — let it be instruction, correction, or decision ; for I call God to witness, that I speak nothing but from the heart." Then, said d'Ailly, taking Huss at his word, yet overlooking the condition which was ever present to his mind : " Since thou dost submit thyself to the instruction and mercy of the council, know that this has been resolved upon by near sixty doctors, of whom some have already gone away, Avhose places have been taken by the Parisians ; and it has been confirmed unanimously by the council : First, that thou humbly de- clarest that thou didst err in those articles that have been produced against thee ; next, that thou promisest, on thy oath, neither to hold son. wliich were laid before him while in lead to the consequences which had been prison, are well worthy of remark. It may, drawn from them. In the letter already perhaps, be accounted for from the fact, quoted, written before Easter, he remarks that he was conscious of being so very far in reference to the articles of complaint from intending any of those practically brought against him l)y Gerson : that mischievous consequences which Gerson God would grant me time to write against deduced from his doctrines, and yet must the falsehoods of the Parisian chancellor, see that there might be some reason for ap- who was not afraid to accuse his neighbor I^reiiending them in the form in which he of error so insolently and so unjustly be- had expressed these propositions. Hence fore so vast a multitude. But, perhaps, may have arisen in him the wish to have God will interrupt the writing by his death an opportunity of replying to Gerson in or my own, and better decide the causa writing, so as to present his doctrines in before his tribunal than I could do by any their true sense, to contirm them by tlieir writings of mine. 0pp. fol. 73, 2; cp. 50 agreement with Angustin, and to guard Compare also the passages quotcil on pr* them against being so understood as to ceding pages. THIRD APPEARANCE OF HUSS BEFORE THE COUNCIL. 355 nor to teach such opinions any longer ; thirdly, that thou dost publicly recant all those articles." When many had spoken much to the same purport, Huas finally said : " I repeat, that I am ready to be instructed by the council ; but I beseech and conjure you by him who is the God of us all, that you do not force me to what I can- not do without contradicting my conscience, and without danger of eter- nal damnation, that you do not force me to renounce, upon my oath, all the articles which have been brought against me. Fori know that to abjure means to renounce a previously cherished error. As now manv articles have been imputed to me, which to hold or to teach never entered my thoughts, how can I renounce them by an oath ? But as regards those articles which really belong to me, I will cheer- fully do Avhat you require, if any one can persuade me to another opin- ion." Upon this, the emperor said : " Why mayest thou not, with good conscience, renounce all that has been charged upon thee by false witnesses ? I do not hesitate to abjure all possible errors ; yet from this it by no means follows that I have ever taught such errors." Huss replied: "Most gracious emperor! the word abjure means some- thing .different from that which your majesty expresses by it." And Cardinal Zabarella here remarked : " There will be handed thee a tolerably mild form of abjuration ; and then thou canst easily make up thy mind, whether thou wilt make it or not." We shall be able, per- haps, hereafter to find some clue to the form of recantation Avhich the cardinal had in mind ; and this will lead us to divine a remarkable secret connection in the train of events. The emperor then spoke again, repeating the language of d'Ailly : " Thou hast heard that two waj^s are proposed to thee, — first, that thou shouldest publicly renounce those doctrines which have now been pubUcly condemned, and submit thyself to the judgment of the council ; which if thou doest, thou wilt experience the mercy of the council. But if thou dost persist in de- fending thy opinions, the council will no doubt understand how to deal with thee according to the laws." Huss now said to the emperor : " Most gracious emperor, I make no resistance to anything the council may decide with regard to me. I except but one thing — doing wrong to God and to my own conscience, and saying that I have taught er- rors which never entered into my thoughts. But I entreat that liberty may be granted me from you to explain my opinions still farther, so as to give a sufficient answer to some things objected to me ; namely, concerning the offices of the church." But the same that had al- ready been said was repeated by others and by the emperor. " Thou art old enough — said the emperor — and canst not fail to understand what I said to thee yesterday and today. We cannot do otherwise than believe trustworthy witnesses. If, according to Scripture, by two or three witnesses every word shall be established, how much more shall this hold good where the witnesses are so many and so great men. If then thou art reasonable, thou wilt accept with contrite heart the penance appointed thee by the council, and renounce manifest errors, and promise on thy oath never to hold forth the like for the future ; if not, there are laws according to which thou wilt be judged by thp 356 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. council." One of the prelates now spoke and said, We ought net tc believe even the recantation of Huss, since he has written that though he recanted he would reserve his private conviction.' Huss stood firnilj to his earlier declaration. Paletz was for showing that Huss contra- dicted himself, in protesting that he defended no error, and no error of Wicklif, while however in his discourses and writings he defended errors of Wicklif ; if he denied this, such writings of his could be laid before the council. The same was said by the emperor ; and to this Huss repUed : " Gladly would I have it done ; and could wish that not these merely, but other books of mine might be laid before the council." Several other charges connected with the Hussite move- ments in Prague, were then laid against Huss. We will repeat none of these, as we have already spoken of the same matters in narrating the events themselves. One thing only needs to be mentioned, as serv- ing to give us a clearer insight into the character of the proceedings against Huss, to show how no means were left untried to procure his condemnation, and what presence of mind, what power of faith the man must have possessed ; what resolution, what summoning of every en- ergy was required on his part when, after having suffered so long and BO severe an imprisonment, where he had passed through so much sick- ness and experienced so much that must have grieved and depressed his spirit, and after having been kept awake through the whole preced- ing night by tooth-ache, he was compelled, in that -long trial, to reply to such an unimaginable variety of attacks and surmizes from so many different quarters. At this time, after all the charges had been brought against Huss, Paletz had the eflrontery to step forward and say : " I call God to witness, in presence of the emperor and of all the prelates here assembled, that in these complaints against Huss I have been ac- tuated by no hatred, no ill will towards him ; I have only felt bound to the due discharge of my doctor's oath." The same said Michael de Causis. Hereupon Huss declared : " But I commend all this to our Father in heaven, who will righteously judge the cause of both parties." And Cardinal d'Ailly was biassed enough by the interests of the church party to express, as he had before done, his admiration of the mildness of Paletz, who he said might have cited things a great deal worse than he had done from the writings of Huss. But when Huss, worn down and completely exhausted, was led back to his prison, the noble-hearted knight of Chlum hastened to visit him, under the full in- fluence of the impression made by his appearance and defence of him- self", and seizing his hand pressed it in a way which must have told more than words. Huss himself describes the effect which this testi- mony of friendship made at such a time, produced on his mind : " 0, what joy did I feel — he writes — from the pressure of my lord John's hand, which he was not ashamed to give me, the wretched outcast here- tic, in my chains." - As regards the further proceedings of the council in this affair of ' See what Huss says in the letter al- * 0pp. I, fol 68, 2; ep. 33. ready quoted eonceniing this perversion of his laiif^uaj^o ACTION OF THE COUNCIL AFTER THE TRIAL OF HUS3. 357 Huss, it remains for us to say, that the emperor, after the defendant had been removed, made a proposition to tlie council, declaring to them, that Huss, as had been clearly proved by many witnesses, had taught so many pernicious heresies, that he deserved, in his judgment, and for some of them singly, to perish at the stake ; but though he should recant, he never should be allowed to preach or to teach again, nor permitted to return to Bohemia ; for, owing to the great number of his adherents in that country, it would be easy for him to excite anew still more violent commotions, and the evil would only grow worse. The emperor, furthermore, advised that those doctrines of of Huss, on which the council had pronounced sentence of con- demnation, should be made known throughout Bohemia, Poland, and other countries, where those heresies had found admittance ; and that the spiritual and secular powers in those lands should be called upon to cooperate in bringing to punishment those who taught such doctrines. Severe measures, also, should be taken against the adher- ents to the Hussite doctrines who were to be found in Constance. As we have already said, several persons in the council, seizing upon those words of Huss, in which he humbly professed himself ready to be instructed and to recant, without taking them in his own sense with the condition which he presupposed, were led to entertain the hope, that Huss might yet be persuaded to recant ; and for this reason the final decision of his fate was put off, and several attempts were made to persuade him to recantation. But even in this case it was thought not advisable, and the emperor himself had expressed the same opin- ion, that he should be restored to full liberty. Not without reason, it ■was supposed that Huss would still never deviate from the main direc- tion which he had always taken. The council had drawn up a resolu- tion with regard to Huss in case he should recant, by which little more ■was granted him than barely permission to live. It ran as follows : Since it is evident on the ground of certain conjectures and outward signs, that Huss repents of the sins he has committed, and is disjDOsed to return with upright heart to the truth of the church, therefore the •council grants with pleasure, that he may abjure and recant his heresies, and the heresies of Wicklif, as he voluntary offers to do, and as he himself begs the council to lylease him from the ban which had been pronounced on him ; so he is hereby released. But inasmuch as many distui'bances and much scandal among the people have arisen from these heresies, and inasmuch as great danger has accrued to the church by reason of his contempt of the power of the keys, therefore the council decrees, that he must be deposed from the pi-iestly office, and from all other offices. The care of seeing to the execution of this decree is assigned to several bishops at the council, and Huss was to be con- demned to imprisonment during life in some place appointed for that purpose.' Huss himself was entirely ignorant of these transactions within the eouncil ; and being resolved not to recant till convinced of his errors, ' V. d. Hardt, IV, pag. 432 and 433. 358 HISTORY OP THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. he had, after what he had heard expressed at the council, nothing else in prospect bat the stake, and nothing to wait for but the decision of his fate. Accordingly, with these expectations, he wrote, on the 10th of June, a letter to Bohemia, which he addressed to persons of all conditions, rich and poor, men and women. He exhorts them in the first place, faithfully to adhere to the truth which he had always set before them from the law of God ; but, if anything had ever been uttered or written by him contrary to divine truth, he entreated them not to follow him in that thing. Furthermore, if any person had ever observed any lightness in his words or his actions, he begged such per- son not to lay it up, but pray God the Lord, that he would forgive him for it. He gives them admonitions suited to every condition ; to the knights, burgher, and artisans ; to masters and students. He recom- mends to them the knights who had so faithfully stood by him at the council of Constance : who had spoken with such boldness and energy for his cause and for his liberation, and particularly Wenzel of Duba, and John of Chlum. These would furnish them the most reliable information with regard to all the proceedings. He ends and subscribes the letter as follows : " I write this letter in prison and in chains, expecting on the morrow to receive my sentence of death, full of hope in God, that I shall not swerve from the truth, nor abjure errors im- puted to me by false witnesses. What a gracious God has wrought in me, and how he stands by me in wonderful trials, all this you will first understand when we shall again meet together, with our Lord God, through his grace, in eternal joy." He moreover commends to the people of Prague the care of Bethlehem Church, against which the fury of Satan had been particularly directed, because from it especially had gone both the destruction of his kingdom, and the building up of the kingdom of God. He expresses the wish that God would send them a man as his successor, who would be a still more powerful preacher of gospel truth. 1 As there was now some delay in bringing the affair to a conclusion, new hopes might spring up in the mind of Huss ; ac- cordingly he wrote in one of his letters : " Our Saviour called to life Lazarus, after he had lain four days in the grave, and had on him the smell of corruption ; preserved Jonah three days in the belly of the fish and sent him back again to preach ; galled forth Daniel from the den of lions to record the prophecies ; kept from the flames the three men in the fiery furnace ; liberated Susannah, when already condemned to death : therefore he could easily dehver me too, poor mortal, if it served to promote Ids oivn glory, the advancement of the faithful, and my own best good, for this time, from prison and from death. For las hand is not shortened, who by his angel led Peter, the chains falling from his hands, from the dungeon, when condemned already to die at Jerusalem. But ever let the will of the Lord be done, which I desire may be fulfilled in me to his glory and to my own purification from sin. "2 He concludes a letter written on the 2(3th of June, with the following words : " This letter is written in prison and in chains, while ' Mikowcc, Letter 8 ^ 0pp. I, fol. 68, 1 ; ep. 32. LAST DAYS OF HUSS IN PRISON. 359 I am expecting death. Yet in view of the unsearchable ways of God, I dare not say that this letter is my last. The almighty God still lives ; he can deliver me."i Of course his trial before the council had not answered his wishes nor his expectations. It was not the saving of? his life about which he was chiefly anxious, but his most ardent desire was to have a trial from the council, with liberty to express himself freely and without being disturbed, on his doctrines and principles. This he still continually sought to obtain from the emperor, through the medium of his Bohemian friends. Accordingly he writes to his friends, " I still beg for God's sake, that all the nobles would unite in peti- tioning the emperor to allow me a final hearing." He interpreted that such a trial should be granted him, from the words addressed to him by the emperor at the second hearing, and added : " It must redound greatly to the emperor's dishonor, if those words shall not be fulfilled. But I think his words are about as much to be relied on as his safe conduct."^ Finding himself disappointed in this hope, he wrote to the Bohemian Knights : " Trust not in princes, and the sons of men with whom there is no salvation, because the sons of men are false and deceitful. Today they are, tomorrow they shall perish ; but God abides forever, who has his servants not for Ids oivn need, but for the advantage of his servants themselves, to whom he observes what he has promised, fulfils what he has engaged to do for them, never re- pelling from him any faithful servant, for he says, ' Where I am, there also shall my servant be.' Every servant that master makes lord over all he possesseth, for he gives him himself, and with himself all things, that he may without care, without fear, nay without any cessation, possess all things, sharing with all the saints in endless joy. "3 Also in another letter Huss writes : " This I have constantly borne on mj heart, ' trust not in princes ; ' and the word Cursed is the man who trusts in men, and makes an arm of flesh his confidence ! " He there- fore counsels his friends to prudence.'* Thus he writes to a friend near the em^ieror : " I thought that the emperor had some regard for the law of God and the truth ; now I perceive that these weigh but little with him. He condemned me before my enemies did. Would that he could have shown but as much moderation as the heathen Pilate, who, after hearing the accusation, said, ' I find no fault in this man,' or would that he had said, at the least, I have given him a safe conduct, and if he refuses to submit to the decision of the council, I will send him back with your sentence and the evidence against him to the king of Bohemia, to be finally dealt with by him and his clergy."^ In gen- eral it was a great mistake in Huss if he supposed that he should find in the princes of his time, who really had nothing but their own political interests in view, allies with himself against the hierarchy and for the reformation of the church. He sees a fulfilment of the prophecy of Revelation, that the kings would commit fornication with ' Mikowec, Letter 7. * Ibid. fol. 64, 2; ep. 21. « Ibid. fol. 68, 2 ; ep. 34. Compare what * Ibid. fol. 68, 2 ; ep. 33. uas been quoted iK'fore from this letter. * Ibid. fol. 69, 1 ; ep. 34. 360 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. the great whore of Babylon, the corrupt church ; for they had fallen away from Christ's truth, and embraced the lies of Antichrist, yielding to seduction, or to fear, or induced by the hope of an alliance, and of obtaining the power of this world. ^ Among the steps which were now taken with a view to persuade Husa to recant, the most Avorthy of notice are those of an unknown friend, perhaps the person referred to by Huss as one of the only two indi- viduals favorably disposed to him at the council." We may conjecture that he was one of those monks, who, like Tauler, Staupitz, the so- called Friends of God, had in the solitude of their convents been led, through many conflicts of soul and inward experiences, to the knowledge of the great cardinal truth of the gospel, and to repose their trust in Christ alone as their Saviour ; although at the same time they still clung fast, as did Luther also at the beginning, to the whole ancient church system, which itself became transfigured to their eyes, as viewed from that central point of their whole christian life. It was a principle with these men, never to assume the position of polemics, but rather to work positively in preparing the way for the regeneration of the church, whose corruptions they deeply felt, by beginning at the very centre of Christianity. A person of this character Avould be a close and atten- tive observer of Huss, and would recognize in him a kindred spirit. He would only be inclined to disapprove of his too polemical and vio- lent bent to reform, and lament that he should sacrifice himself by giving way to this, instead of preserving his life for the kingdom of God by accommodating himself to things as they were, and remaining with- in the church as salt wherewith it might be seasoned. Conformably to the principle, so often to be met with amongst the mystics, the principle of monkish obedience, this pious man may have thought that Huss would do well to submit to the decision of his superiors at the council, as the organs of God, thus sacrificing his own self-will and recognizing a les- son from God, teaching him to observe greater moderation and pru- dence in his future labors for the promotion of reform. The great con- fidence with which he seems to have reckoned that if Huss would accept the form of recantation which he proposed to him, his affair might still be adjusted, would perhaps warrant us to conclude that he did not act solely on his own responsibility, but could rely on the concurrence of more powerful individuals. Now if we place this in connection with the fact that Cardinal Zabarella had promised Huss a form of recanta- tion by which his conscience would be left undisturbed, it will appear not at all improbable, that the person of whom we are speaking stood ' II)id. fol. 64, 2 ; ep. 22. John Cardinalis, of Reinstein, of whom ^ It was formerly supposed that the per- we liave so often spoken, were led into the son here mentioned was a cardinal, though error of supposintj that a cardinal liy the the way in which he speaks to Huss, would name of Jolm was here intended ; and thus by no means favor any such conjecture, concluded, that Cardinal John, of Brogny, Some readers finding in the letters of Huss, bisliop of Ostia. commonly called Johan- which we have already quoted, a person nes Ostiensis, was the individual referred mentioned by the name of John Cardi- to. Lenfant, in the History of the council nalis, whom Huss warned against speak- of Constance, was the first to correct this ing so freely, and not recollecting that mistake. LAST DAYS OF HUSS IN PRISON. 361 somehow connected with this cardinal, and had arranged the whole mat ter with him. Perhaps, as we might conjecture from the tone in which he speaks, he was himself the abbot of some convent. The recantation which this unknown individual proposed to Huss was to this effect : '' Besides the protestations made before by me, and which I hereby re- aew, I protest moreover that though a great deal has been charged against me which never entered my thoughts, yet I submit in all thai has been charged against me, or objected to me, or extracted from my books, or even uttered against me by witnesses, humbly to the merci- ful direction, determination, and correction of the council, and agree to abjure, to recant, to submit to such merciful penance as may be im- posed upon me, and to do all that the council may, in its goodness, see fit to determine for my salvation, commending myself with all submis- sion to its mercy." This recantation being laid before him, Huss re- plied : " May the Almighty Father, the most wise and gracious God, bestow on my father who is so kind to me, for Christ's sake, the eter- nal life of glory ! I am very grateful — he wTites — most reverend father, for your paternal goodness. 1 do not venture to submit to the council, in the form which has been laid before me ; first, because I should have to condemn many truths which they, as I have heard from themselves, call scandalous ; next, because I should perjure myself by such abjuration, since I should have to declare myself guilty of those errors, and thus give great scandal to the people of God, Arho have heard the contrary from me in my preaching. If then that Eleazar, of whom it is written in the Books of the Maccabees that he would not falsely confess that he had eaten flesh forbidden by the law, lest he might act against God and leave a bad example to those who should come af- ter him, how should I, though an unworthy priest of the yiew law, through fear of a punishment which will soon be over, think of trans- gressing the law of God with a more grievous sin, first by departing from the truth ; secondly, by incurring tlie guilt of perjury ; and thirdly by giving scandal to my neighbor ? It would be far better for me to die than, in seeking to escape a momentary punishment, to fall into the hands of God, and perhaps afterwards into eternal fire and eternal shame. And since I have appealed to the Lord Jesus Christ, the al- mighty and most wise judge, committing into his hands hin own cause, I therefore abide his sentence and his most holy decision, knowing that he will not judge by false evidence and fallible councils, but according to the truth, and to every man's just deserts." His unknown friend, however, was not to be repelled by this language, but replied to the letter of Huss, bringing the matter once more directly home to his heart. '■''First — he writes to him — let it not trouble you, my dearest brother^ that you condemn truths, since it is not you that condemn them, but those who are your superiors, and for the present also mine. Give heed to that word, Lean not to thine own understanding (Prov. 3: 5). For there are many persons of knowledge and conscience at the coun- cil. My son, receive the law of thy mother. This, in relation to the first point. Next, as regards the second, the breaking of your oath ; even if that perjury were really a perjury, still the guilt of it would uot VOL. V. 31 362 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. fall on you, but on those who require the oath. Next, there are no heresies, so far as you are concerned, when the obstinacy is removed. Augustin, Origen, and the Master of Sentences, committed errors and rejoiced to be set right again, I have often supposed that I under- stood a thing accurately, and yet was mistaken ; when corrected, I have turned about cheerfully. I write with brevity, because I write to one who understands. You will not depart from the truth, but coine nearer to the truth. You will not commit a perjury, but better the matter ; you will occasion no scandal, but edify. Eleazar was a glo- rious Jew ; still more glorious was the Jewess with the seven sons and eight martyrs (2 Mace. vii). Paul was let down in a basket, that he might advance the better cause. The judge to whom you appeal, the Lord Jesus, will release you from your a])peal in consideration that contentions are still due from you for the faith of Christ.'" To these representations Huss replied : " All this the council has often re- quired of me. But as 2 it is impHed in it all that I recant, abjure, and submit to a penance, which would oblige me to deny many truths ; next, as it would be a perjury to abjure errors falsely imputed to me ; then, as I should by so doing give occasion of offence to many of God's people to whom I have preached ; therefore it were better for me that a millstone were hung about my neck and that I should be cast into the midst of the sea ; and fourthly, if I complied to escape a brief pun- ishment and shame, I should fall into the greatest punishment and shame, if I did not, before my death, feel the most poignant remorse for what I had done. The seven martyrs, therefore, belonging to the times of the Maccabees, come up before me to confirm me, who chose rather to be cut in pieces than to eat flesh contrary to the word of God. That Eleazar, too, comes up before me, who would not even say that he had eaten that which was forbidden by the law, lest he should leave a bad example to those who came after him, but chose rather to perish as a martyr. How should I then, who have before my eyes all those examples, and many holy men and women of the new covenant, who have surrendered themselves to martyrdom rather than consent to sin, I who have for so many years preached of patience and fortitude, how should I fall into many falsehoods, and perjury, and give scandal to many sons of God ? Far, very far, be it from me to do any such thing ; because the Lord Jesus Christ will most abundantly reward me, since he now gives me the help of patience." 3 ' Judex appellationis vestrae dominus as tliat of the faith, and placed hopes u|)on Jesus det vobis apostolos, et sunt ii : Ad- him, in case he should preserve^ his life, hue debentur tibi pro tide Christi certami- that he would still tuithLT promote tlie 11a. The term "apostolis" is here used in cause of the faitli in tigiiting against thf the sense of the later judical Greek and corruptions of the world. Latin — a document by which a court dis- ^ [In the Latin text which, as we have Diissed a person from its own jurisdiction, often seen, is extremely incoi"rect, (juia and granted him liberty to betake himself stands here, whicii Neander translates to another, allowed him a release from his without taking care to get rid of tiie re- appeal. Now, this document is represent- suiting anacoluthon. But, perliaps, it ed as implied in the cited words : lluss is would be better read prima, and tiicn let reserved for further contests in behalf of secundo, tertio, quarto, follow in their or- the faith. The writer, therefore, recog- der. Editor.] nized the cause for which Huss contended •* Opp. I, fol. 70; ep. 38, 39, 40 and 41 LAST DATS OP HUSS IN PRISON. 368" Huss was visited in his prison by several members of the council, both strangers and acquaintances, who sought to persuade him to re cant in order to save his life. A doctor who visited him labored to convince him that he would be innocent of all guilt if he submitted blindly to the decision of the council. He added : " If the council de- clared that thou hadst but one eye, when thou hast two eyes, thou wouldest still be bound to submit to their decision." Huss replied : " Though the whole world should tell me this, yet I could not admit it BO long as I have my reason, as I now exercise it, without gainsaying my conscience." After many words the doctor finally gave up the point, saying: "It is true, I have not chosen a good example."' Paletz himself 2 said to Huss that he ought not to di-ead the shame of recantation, but to look simply at the good which would come out of it. Huss replied : " It is a greater shame to be condemned and to be burned, than to recant ; how should I, then, dread the shame ? But give me your opinion : what would you do, if errors were ascribed to you which you had never taught ? Would you consent to abjure them ? " Paletz replied : " It is an awkward thing." And he began to weep.^ Several who visited Huss endeavored to convince him also on the ground of that monkish notion of humility, that he ought to feel no scruples about abjuring even what he had never taught, when it was required of him by the council ; by so doing he would not be guilty of a lie ^ it would be but an act of submission to higher authority, an act of hu- mility. Examples were cited of persons who, from humility, confessed themselves guilty of crimes they had never committed ; such cases occurring in the histories of the ancient monks. An Englishman men- tioned the example of persons in England suspected of Wicklifitism, among whom were several very worthy men, who all at the command of the bishop of Canterbury abjured the Wicklifite errors. But all this was qviite at variance with that strict regard to truth which was a rul- ing principle with Huss.** From his cell, Huss had contemplated the course of action pursued, by the council. It could scarcely fail to make a great impression ort his mind to see the pope, for whose authority men were so zealous, the man Avho had occasioned his imprisonment, afterwards deposed himself by the council, charged with the most atrocious crimes, and closely confined in the castle of Gottleben, which Huss had left. He recog- nized in all this a judgment of God, and could bring it in evidence- against those advocates of papal absolutism, who accused him of high, treason against the pope's authority. He writes : * " They have con- demned their own head ; what now can those men have to say, who hold the pope to be God on earth, and maintain that he cannot sin,. cannot practise simony ? that he is the head of the collective holy- church, which he governs extraordinarily well ? Avho say, he is the head of the holy church, which he spiritually nourishes ; he is the ' Ibid. fol. 68, 1 ; ep. 32. ' Ibid. fol. 67, 1 ; cp. 30. ' Huss relates this in a letter of the 23d * Ibid. fol. 67, 2; cp. 31. of June. * Ou the 24th June, Mikowec, Letter 6. 364 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCfTRINE. fountain out of which flows all power and goodness ; he is the sun of the church ; he is the spotless asylum, and that to him every Christian must betake himself for lefuge? Now — says he — this head is cut off, the earthly god is in chains, accused of sin, the fountain is dried up, the sun is eclipsed, the heart torn out, the asylum has fled from Constance, so that nobody can take refuge in him. His own council has accused him of heresy, because he made sale of indulgences, bishoprics, and other benefices ; and those very persons have con- demned him, of whom many bought their places of him, while many others push the same trade among themselves. He expresses his in- dignation that the pope should be condemned on account of simony by prelates, who, after their own fashion, practised the same iniquity. If Christ should address this council as he did those who asked him to condemn the woman taken in adultery, — he that is without sin among you let him cast the first stone at the pope, they would go out one after another. Wherefore did they kneel before the pope^ — kiss his feet, and call him most holy father, when they knew him to be guilty of the most atrocious crimes ? Wherefore did the cardinals choose for a pope, one who was the murderer of his predecessor?" Thus he writes in another letter : " Now you may understand what the Hfe of the clergy is who say they are true representatives of Christ and his apostles, who call themselves the most holy church, the most infallible council ; and yet this same council has been in error ; it has first honored Ji^hn the TAventy-third with bowed knee, and called him Most Holy, while yet they knew that he was a shameful murderer, and guilty of uther crimes besides, as they themselves afterwards declared when they con- demned him ? "I In the abominations of the secularized church, Huss sees fulfilled already, as Janow had done, the predictions of Christ regarding the abomination in the holy place, according to Daniel. [le writes to the Bohemians, that they should not allow themselves to be terrified by the council of Constance ; they would never go to Bohe- mia ; many of the council would die before they could force the de- livering up of the books of Huss in Bohemia. These books, like storks, would fly in all directions, from the council, dispersing into all quar- ters of the world ; and when winter came, they would perceive what they had effected in the summer. Huss supposed that he had re- ceived many prophetic intimations in his dreams. " Know — he writes to his friends — that I have had great conflicts in my dreams. I dreamed beforehand of the flight of the pope. And after relating it, Chlura said to me in my dream, ' The po[)e will also return.' Then I dreamed of the imprisonment of Jerome, though not literally accord- ing to the fact. All the different prisons to which I have been con- veyed have been represented beforehand to me in my dreams. There have often appeared to me serpents, with heads also on their tails ; but they have never been able to bite me. I do not write this because I beheve myself a prophet, or wish to exalt myself, but to let you know that I have had temptations both of body and soul, and the greatest lOpp. I, fol 63, 2;ep. 19. LAST DAYS OF HUSS IN PRISON. 365 fear lest I might transgress the commandment of our Lord Jesus Christ." ' Huss proved himself to be a genuine christian martyr in the succession of Christ ; for it was not with stoical apathy, not in the intoxication of fanaticism that renders obtuse the natural feelings of humanity, but with entire self-possession, in the undisturbed and full feeling of human weaknesses, contending with and conquering them by the power of faith, that he gave his life as an offering to God. This picture Huss exhibits to us in that noble letter which he wrote on holy eve before the festival of John the Baptist, when he says : " Much consoles me that word of our Saviour, ' Blessed be ye when men shall hate you, and when they shall separate you from their com- pany, and shall reproach you, and cast out jo\ir name as evil, for the Son of man's sake. Rejoice ye in that day, and leap for joy ; for behold your reward is great in heaven,' Luke 6 : 22, 23. A good consolation ; nay, the best consolation ; difficult, however, if not to un- derstand, yet perfectly to fulfil, to rejoice amid those sufferings. Thig rule James observes, who says, My beloved brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations, knowing this, that the trying of your faith, if it is good, worketh patience, James 1 : 2, 3. Assuredly is it a hard thing to rejoice Avitliout perturbation, and in all these manifold temj)tations to find nothing but pure joy. Easy it is to say this, and to expound it, but hard to fulfil it in very deed. For even the most patient and steadfast warrior, who knew that he should rise on the third day, who by his death conquered his enemies, and re- deemed his chosen from perdition, was after the Last Supper troubled in spirit, and said. My soul is troubled even unto death ; as also the Gospel relates, that he began to tremble and was troubled ; nay, in his conflict he had to be supported by an angel, and he sweat as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground ; but he who was in such trouble said to his disciples, Let not your heart be troubled, and fear not the cruelty of those that rage against you, because ye shall ever have me with you to enable you to overcome the cruelty of your tormentors. Hence his soldiers, looking to him as their king and leader, endured great conflicts, went through fire and water, and were delivered. And they received from the Lord the crown of which James speaks, 1 : 12. That crown will God bestow on me and you, as I confidently hope, ye zealous combatants for the tiiith, with all who truly and perseveringly love our Lord Christ, who suflered for us, leaving behind an example that we should follow in his steps. It was necessary that he should suffer, as he tells us himself ; and we must suffer, that so the members may suffer with the head ; for so he says. Whoever would follow me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. most faithful Christ, draw us weak onts after thee ; for we cannot follow thee, if thou dost not draw us. Give us a strong mind, that it may be prepared and ready. And if the flesh is weak, let thy grace succor us beforehand, and accompany us, for without thee we can do nothing ; and least of all can we face a cruel death. » Ibid. Jol. 68, -2 ; ep. 33. 3r 366 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Give US a ready and willing spirit, an undaunted heart, the right faith_ a firm hope, and perfect love, that patiently and witli joy we inay fof thy sake give up our life." He subscribes this letter as follows : " Written in chains, on the vigils of St. John, who, because he rebuked wickedness, was beheaded in prison. May he pray for us to the Lord Jesus Christ! " ' Huss requested permission before his death to con- fess himself, and at first chose his most violent opponent Paletz. He had so far overcome every feeling of indignation and revenge, as to be willing to confess to him. He begged the commissioners to grant him Paletz, or some other one. They sent him a doctor of theology, who was a monk. This person heard the confession of Huss, and spoke to him kindly and piously, as Huss relates. He counselled him as the others had done, to recant ; he did not make it however a condition of absolution, but gave him the latter without it. This is worthy of notice, since Huss, if he did not recant, if the ban under which he had lain was not removed, being still an obstinate heretic, could not properly obtain absolution. We may conclude therefore, with some probabilitv, that this monk too, like the above mentioned unknown friend, belonged to the number of those Avhose judgment of Huss differed from that of the council.2 In the prospect of death Huss expressed the pain he felt at not having succeeded in bringing together his beloved Bohemian nation under a common christian and national interest, at being forced into a controversy on that subject with those who were his dearest friends. Accordingly he writes 3 to the masters and bachelors and students of the Prague university : " I admonish you in the most gracious Jesus, that you mutually love one another, lay aside divisions and seek before all things the glory of God, remembering me, how I ever had in view the advancement of the university for the glory of God, how much I was troubled at your dissensions and your false steps, how I strove to knit together our excellent nation in unity. And behold how this nation in some of those who were dearest to me, for Avhom I would willingly have sacrificed my hfe, has become bitter to me by the shame it has brought on me and by their calumnies, and at length they bring me to a bitter death. May the Almighty God forgive them, because they knew not what they did. For the rest, stand fast in the truth }-e have known, which will triumph over all and is mighty through eternity." -i When Paletz last visited Huss, and the latter besought his forgiveness for any abusive or scornful language which he might have used towards him, particularly for his language in the tract written against him, where he had styled him the " Fictor," the hardened man was moved to tears ; but he always firmly held that much evil had been wrought in Bohemia by Huss and his adherents. s It characterizes Huss that in si)ite of the weighty cares and interests of a general nature that occupied his mind, and in the midst of hia own personal sufferings and conflicts, he still preserved in his heart the » Ibid. fol. 67, 1 et 2; ep. 30. * Ibid. fol. 63, 1 ; ep. 18. • Ibid. fol. 67, 2 ; ep. 31. » Ibid. fol. 67, 2 ; ep. 31. ' On the 27 th June. LAST DAYS OF HUS3 IN PRISON. 367 cenderest regard for his friends who were to survive him. following in this respect also the pattern of his Saviour, who showed forth his love tn his own even unto death. In one of his last letters, ' he expresses to the knight of Chlum his delight at learning that he meant to renounce the vanities and toilsome service of the world, and retiring to his estate, devote himself wholly to the service of the Lord Jesus Christ, whose service was perfect freedom. In like manner he expresses joy at learn- ing that the knight Wenceslaus of Duba had resolved to retire from the world and to marry. " It is even time for him," he writes, '' to take a new course ; for he has already made journeys enough through this kingdom and that, jousting in tournaments, wearing out his body, squandering his money, and doing injury to his soul. It only remains for him therefore to renounce all these things, and remaining quietly at home with his wife, serve God, with his own domestics around him. Far better will it be thus to serve God, without cares, without partici- pation in the sins of the world, in good peace and with a tranquil heart, than to be distracted Avith cares in the service of others, and that too at the imminent risk of his salvation." He wrote as a postscript : " This is to be placed in the hands of my most trusty friend, that he may read it." ^ He writes to his friend Christann : ^ " My friend and special benefactor, stand fast in the truth of Christ, and embrace the cause of the faithful. Fear not, because the Lord will shortly bestow his protection and increase the number of his faithful. Be gentle to the poor as thou ever wast. Chastity, I hope, thou hast preserved ; covetousness thou hast avoided, and continue to avoid it ; and for thy own sake do not hold several benefices at once ; ever retain thy own church, that the faithful may resort for help to thee, as to an affection- ate father." He salutes Jacobellus and all the friends of the truth. The letter is subscribed : " Written in prison, awaiting my execution at the stake." ^ Last of all, he addressed, while still in the immediate expectation of death, a letter to his friends in Prague, with his farewell salutations and commissions. He besought them that for his sake, who would be already dead as to the body, they would do all that lay in their power to prevent the knight of Chlum from coming into any danger. " I entreat you," he writes, " that you would live by the word of God, that you would obey God and his commandments as I have taught you. Express to the king my thanks for all the kindnesses he has shown me. Greet in my name your families and your friends, each and all of whom I cannot enumerate. I pray to God for you ; do you pray for me ? To Him we shall all come, since he gives us help." Thus wrote Huss, probably on the 4th of July, when he was expecting his martyrdom on the next day. He added, "Already I trust I shall suffer for the sake of the word of God." He begged his friends for God's sake not to suffer that any cruelty whatever should be practised against the servants and the saints of God. In a postscript, he sent his fur cloak as a token of remembrance to Peter of Mladenowic.^ ' On the 29th June, ibid. fol. 64, 2 ; ep. ' See above, pa>re 310. M. * Ibid. fol. 63, I; ep. 17. * Ibid. fol. 65, 1 ; ep. 23. * Ibid. fol. 65, 1 ; ep. 24. 868 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Thus wrote Huss in the [ rospect of death : for already was his fate decided by his constant refusal to recant. On the 1st of Ju-ly, an offi- cial deputation of the council led by John of Wallenrod, Bishop of Riga, appeared before Huss and invited him once more to recantation ; when he declared his resolution in writing, as he had already declared it by word of mouth to individuals. The document concluded with these words : " Were it possible that my voice could now reach to the whole world, as each one of my sins and every falsehood I have uttered will, on the day of judgment, be made known before all, I would most joyfully before the whole world recant everything false and erroneous which I have ever had it in my thoughts to say, or have ever said. This I say and write of my own free will." On the 5th of July, appeared a deputation from the emperor, consisting of four prelates, among whom were the cardinals d'Ailly and Zabarella, accompanied by the two Bohemian knights so often mentioned ; and Huss was led out from his cell. Chlum addressed Huss in these words : " I am an unlettered man, and know not how to advise you, who are a learned man. Yet I beseech you, if you are conscious of any error in that which has been publicly brought against you by the council, do not shrink from altering your opinion according to their will ; but if you are not, I shall not lead you to the false step of doing aught contrary to your conscience ; I much rather advise you to suffer any punishment sooner than deny the truth of which you are well assured." Huss answered weeping: " I call God the Almighty, as I have often done. to witness, that from my heart I am ready, whenever the council teaches me anything better by testimonies from Holy Scripture, to change my opinion at once, and to confess publicly under oath, that I was pre- viously in an error." Thereupon one of the bishops standing by remarked in a bitter tone, " He would never be so arrogant as to set his own judgment above the decision of the whole council." To this Huss replied, " Nor am I of any other mind ; for if he who is least in the council can convict me of an* error, I w^ill gladly do all that the council requires of me." " Mark," said the bishops a-t this, " how obstinately he clings to his errors ! " And so they returned back to the emperor with this final declaration of Huss. On the 6th of July, Huss appeared before the assembled council, at which the emperor also was present, seated upon his throne, surrounded by the princes, and with the insignia of the empire. In the middle of the hall where the council met, stood a sort of table, and near it a wooden frame or stand, upon which were hung the priestly vestments which Huss was to put on previous to his degradation. After an intro- ductory discourse the process was read, together with all the articles of complaint, and from the whole the conclusion was drawn that Huss was a follower of Wicklif, and had disseminated Wicklifite doctrines. Various errors and heresies were ascribed also to Huss himself, with various qualifications, and he was pronounced an obstinate, incorrigible heretic. One of the points here specified was the appeal of Huss to Jesus Christ, which was characterized as an overleaping of the constituted instances of ecclesiastical courts, as an act of infatuation, and a con- DEGRADATION OF HUSS. ?.(iO tempt of church jurisdiction.' Huss attempted, more than once, to in terpose a Avord in defence of himself against the allegations ; but he was not permitted to proceed. He plead once more for liberty to vin- dicate himself, lest those present might suppose that the things al- leged against him were true. But when he found that all was of no avail, falling upon his knees, he commended in prajer his whole cause to God and to Christ. Though commanded to be silent, he fvlt im polled, during the reading of the process against him and the pronounc ing of his sentence, occasionally to utter a word in vindication of him- self. He expressed himself with great presence of mind, uniting confi- dence with humility. When his appeal to Christ was, for the reasons above stated, condemned as heretical, he said : ".O Christ! whose word is, by this council, publicly condemned, I appeal to thee anew, thou who, when thou wast ill intreated by thine enemies, didst appeal to thy Father, thy cause thou didst commit to that most righteous judge, that Ave, following thy example, might,when oppressed by injustice, take refuge in thee." When it Avas objected to Huss that he had remained for so long a time under the ban, and yet held mass, he told Avhiit he had done to obtain his acquittal and the removal of the ban, and con- cluded by stating how he had come to the council of his OAvn accord with a safe-conduct from the emperor. In saying this, he turned and looked the emperor full in the face. The latter is said to have blushed.a When Huss was pronounced an obstinate heretic, he said : " I never was obstinate ; but as I have ahvays demanded, up to this hour, so now I ask only to be informed of Avhat is better from holy Scripture ; and I confess that so earnestly do I strive after the truth, that if Avith a Avord I could destroy the errors of all heretics, there is no perill avouM not will- ingly incur for that end." When his books were condemned, he said : " Wherefore condemn ye them, when you have not offered a single ar- gument to prove that they are at variance Avith the holy Scriptures and Avith the articles of faith ? And Avhat injustice is this, that ye con- demn, with the rest of my books, those written in the Bohemian tongue ? books that ye have never seen, much less read ! " At times he prayed with his eyes fixed heavenAA^ard. When his sentence had been read to the end, falling upon his knees, he said : " Lord Jesus I forgive my enemies ; as thou knowest that I have been falsely accused by them, and that they have used against me false testimony and calumnies. Forgive them for the sake of thy great mercy ! " These Avords were received with laughter by many. Next followed his degradation from the spiritual order, which Avas performed by seven bishops selected for this purpose. First, he Avas clad Avith the priestly vestments. Through the Avhole of this transaction, the example of Christ stood distinctlv be- fore Huss, whose steps he Aras conscious of following in all the insults he had to endure. In this sense he interpreted many parts of the pro- ' Cum appellationem ad dominum Je- pajr. 393 : Haec cum loqucretur, oculos in Biun Christum, tanquam supremum judi- impcratofL'm detixos lialuiit. Illc veic cem omissis ecclesiasticis mediis iriterpo- statim vcliementt-r erulmit. attiuc ejus rti- Boit Histor. Hussi, opp. I, fol. 27, 2. reeuiidus tiiixerat ora rulior. * This is so stated by V. d. Hardt. IV. 370 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. ceeding. Invested with the priestly robes, he was called upon once more by the bishops to show some regard for his honor and his soul's salva- tion, and recant. Addressing himself with tears to the people who Btood around, he said : " These worshipful bishops require it of me to confess before you all that I have erred. If this thing were of such a nature that it could be done so as to involve only the disgrace of a sin- gle individual, they would more easily persuade me to it. But I now stand before the eyes of my God, without dishonoring whom, as well aa meeting the condemnation of my own conscience, I cannot do this. For I know that I have never taught anything of the kind that I have been falsely accused of teaching ; but have always thought, written, and taught the contrary. With what face could I look to heaven, with what brow could I meet those who have heard my teaching, of whom the number is great, if by my fault it should hai)pen that what hitherto they were most certainly assured of through me, should be made un- certain to them ? Should I by my example destroy the peace of so many souls whom I have made familiar with the most settled testimo- nies of Scripture, and with the purest doctrines of the gospel, and thereby fortified against all the assaults of Satan ? Far be it from me that I should value this my mortal body more highly than the salvation of those souls." This too, which was now spoken by hini, was con- strued as a proof of his obstinacy in his heresies. The several articles of his dress were then removed, piece by piece, with set forms of ex- pression. When the cup of the eucharist was taken from his hands, with the words : " We take from thee, condemned Judas, the cup of salvation," he answered : " But I trust in God, my Father, the Al- mighty, and my Lord Jesus Christ, for whose name I bear this, that he will not take from me the cup of his salvation ; and I have a firm hope that I shall yet drink of it today in his kingdom." A dispute having arisen about the mode of removing his tonsure, Huss said to the empe- ror : "I am surprised when all are alike cruel, they cannot agree among themselves about the viode of cruelty." A cap painted ovei with devils was then placed on his head, with the inscription : "■ x\rch- heretic." But he said : " My Lord Jesus Christ wore, on my account, a crown of thorns ; why should not I be willing, for his sake, to \\eai this easier though shameful badge. I will do it, and gladly." When this was done, the bishops said : " Now we give over thy soul to the devil." " But I — said Huss, raising his eyes to heaven — commend into thy hands, Jesus Christ, my soul, by thee redeemed." Huss, cast forth from the church, was now delivered over to the secular arm. The emperor then commanded Duke Louis of Bavaria to consign Huss to the executioners of justice. When, on being led away by them, he beheld his books burning before the doors of the church, he smiled. He bade all whom he passed not to believe that he was about to die for the sake of some erroneous doctrine, but that it was only through the hatred and malice of his adversaries, wdio had brought against him false accusations. On arriving at the place of execution, Huss fell upon his knees and prayed, in the words of a few psalms, particularly the fifty-first and thirty-first. He was heard often to repeat the words : JEROME OF PRAGUE. 871 " Into thy hands, Lord, I commit my spirit." When laymen, stand- ing by, heard this, they said : " What he may have done before, we know not ; but now we see and hear him pray and speak most de- voutly ! " When compelled to rise from his knees, he said : " Lord Je- sus Christ ! stand by me, that by thy help I may be enabled, with a strong and steadfast soul, to endure this cruel and shameful death, to which I have been condemned on account of the preaching of the holy gospel and thy word." Huss then permitted his first prison-keepers to come near him, and said to them in the German language : " I thank you, my dearest brethren, for all the kind attentions you have shown me, for you waited upon me like dearest brothers, to say nothing of your being my keepers. And be assured that I have a firm trust in ray Saviour, in whose name I will, with good courage, suffer this kind of death, believing that I shall today reign with him." ' He then explained, as he had done before, the cause of his death to the people. When he was placed upon the faggots, bound fast to the stake, and chained to it by the neck, he said : " I willingly wear these chains for Christ's sake, who wore still more grievous ones." Before the pile was lighted, the marshal of the empire. Von Pappenheim, rode up to him and called upon him once more to recant. But he said : " What error should I recant, when I am conscious of no error ? for I know that what has been falsely brought against me, I never thought, much less have I ever preached. But the chief aim of my preaching was to teach men repentance and the forgiveness of sins according to the truth of the gosj'el of Jesus Christ and the expositions of the holy fathers ; there- fore am I prepared to die with a joyful soul." The fire being kindled, Huss commenced singing, with a loud voice : " Jesus, Son of the liv- ing God, have mercy upon me." As he was beginning to repeat this for the third time, his voice was stifled by the flames, which the wind drove towards him ; yet his lips were seen for a long time to move, as in prayer. The ashes of his body when burned, were cast into the Rhine, so that nothing might remain of him to pollute the earth, pre- cisely as the ashes of Polycarp were disposed of by the pagans. We have still to speak of the fellow combatant of Huss, Jerome of Prague. This person, who appeared sometimes in the character of a philosopher and theologian, sometimes in that of a knight and man of the world, had created a still greater and more general stir than Huss. He had labored in countries the most diverse to promote the cause of reform, and had displayed far greater zeal than the more practical Huss in diifusing the doctrines of Wicklif. In Bohemia and Moravia, he had extended his influence among all classes.^ Then ' V. d. Hardt, IV, pao;. 447. pie of both sexes, and amonfr students at * To this there is doubtless special allu- the universities: Quidani insani matristri sion in what the abbot of Dola says, when Wiclerttici ordinis et schismatis non so- speakiiig of jjersons, who, after wanderinj^ luni post discnrsuin peruLcrinarum nobis tliroug'li many countries, lal)ored to disse- terraruni et districtuum etiani in terris nos minate Wieklitite doctrines in i5ohemia tris, Boheniiae et Moraviae, aulas jiiinci- and Moravia, at the courts of princes, in puin, coUeiria et cathedras .sacerdoium, cathedral cliurches, in convents, even scholas studentiuin. proniiscui sexus po- among the Carthusians, and among peo- pularem tumultum tideliuni, antra deserti 372 HISTOKY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. again he had produced great commotions at several universities by his zeal in defending the doctrines of Wicklif, for example in Paris and Heidelberg. In Paris he had more opposition to encounter from the fact that this university was a seat of nominalism. Wicklif's doctrine concerning God's almighty power, which he there set forth, would in particular arouse the suspicion of one so zealously devoted to uniform- ity of doctrine and so prejudiced against everything of an abnormal and eccentric nature as Chancellor Gerson. The latter was prepared to bring him to trial, where he was to be forced to a recantation ; but he was informed of it in time to make his escape. i Next we find him in Vienna, where also he excited disturbances. The magistrates caused him to be arrested, but afterwards set him at liberty. And he was still later accused at Constance of having brought this about by deceiving the magistrate, promising that he would make up his mind to recant, and that he would not leave Vienna until the end of his trial. "^ From the castle of Wietowhe addressed to the official a letter, excus- ing his flight on the ground that his promise had been given under constraint. " You are to know," he wrote, " that I am at the castle of Wietow, sound and hearty, with many friends ever ready to serve you and yours. And I pray you excuse me with regard to the jjromise you forced from me, as you will do, if you weigh well the import of such a promise. For we by no means intend to evade the law, but are always ready to hold ourselves responsible to it if a suitable guaranty of just treatment is given us. Yet to stand alone amidst so many hundred enemies is what you would not advise me to do yourself if you truly loved me. But my soul has escaped like a sparrow from the net of the fowlers ; the snare is broken, and we are free. Still I thank you, and shall always thank you. Do but send me all my adversaries with the witnesses to Prague ; there I will meet them in fair debate. Or, if it should be more convenient for them, let us together go to the court (probably of Rome,) where they will have quite as many ac- quaintances as I have." 3 In his defence of himself at Constance, Jerome justifies his conduct on the ground, that the proceedings of the official against him were wholly irregular, since he had no lawful authority over him, belonging, as he did, to another diocese. ^ Accord- claustralium, sed etiam segregatas in par- bitus suspectus, iidem magistri ct praeser- tem et pacem silentii Cartusiensinm eel- tim Joann. de Gersone ipsum ad revocan- lulas cum terrore valido (repleverunt) ve- dum hujusniodi errores compiilisset. Sed liementer. AntiwiklefFus, in Fez, IV, 2, Hioronymus. nescitur per cjiicm avisatus, pag. 157 et 158. occulte civitate et studio recessit. V. d. ' "We take this from the trial of Jerome Hardt, IV, pag. 680 et 681. at Constance, where he is reproached with "^ (Viennae) jiropter intaniiain haerese- the fact : Cum Hieronymus saepius de ar- os per officialem curiae fuii arrcstatus, ct ticnlis Wicletf incepisset conferrc, alios- juravit et sub poena excommuiiicationis que ad conferendum induxisset, laudasset promisit, de oppido Viennensi nullatenus et commendasset Joannem Wicleff et ejus recedere, neque se absentare, caet. Ibid, perversam doctrinam, tandem in quadam pag. 638. disputatione publica dictos errores publice ^ Ibid. pag. 683. tenuit, et praesertim, quod deus nihil pes- '' Violentcr arrestatus fui, nee quicquam sit annihilare. Tandem quum esset per mecum juridice, sed violenter actum est, plures magistros Parisienses graviter no- nee hal)cl)ai)t quicquam jurisdictionis su- tatus et vehement'.r de haeresi per eos ha- per me, quia de alia eram dioecesx. JEROME OF PRAGUE. 373 ingly he looked upon the whole proceeding as an exercise of arbitrary power, and thought himself fully justified in making his escape from it. It could not justly be exacted of him to stay and await his own death at the stake, which was inevitable.^ We next find him, in the year 1410 in Ofen, where he appeared before the emperor Sigismund and many bishops. It was not till the archbishop Zbynek had entered a com- plaint against him in a letter to the emperor, that he was arrested by the latter, and handed over to the archbishop of Gran. This archbishop kept him under arrest only five days, and treated him with kindness. It was owing perhaps to the mediation of this prelate that the king dismissed him without demanding further security .^ Next, having left Prague immediately after those commotions in 1413, of which we have given an account, Jerome visited King Wladislaw of Poland, and Duke Witold of Lithuania. He appeared in Cracow, and there excited great commotions. Albert, bishop of Cracow, who stood forth as his opponent, supposes it is true that he found no acceptance there, and no susceptible soil for his opinions amongst that simple people. But he contradicts himself, when he says at the same time, that such violent commotions had never been produced there by any individual since the memory of man. If the soil had been so unsusceptible, such effects could not have been produced. The truth may be, that the great mass of the simple people were offended at him, and would not hear him ; but he must have found adherents among others.3 He was accused at Constance of having shown a disposition to favor the Greek Church in Lithuania. Thus he is said to have made his appearance in the cities of Witepsk and Plescow, and to have participated there with- out scruple in the communion of the Greek Church which was devoted to the Russians. He is said to have endeavored to persuade Duke Witold to apostatize from the Latin Church. Jerome could say in de- fence of himself, that in the case of Duke Witold the only question debated by him was, whether baptism, pei^formed according to the rites of the Greek Church on a great number of people who were dis- posed to come over to the Latin Church, was to be recognized as valid, or whether it was necessary that they should be rebaptized, and he maintained the validity of such a baptism, holding it only to be necessary ' Nee furtive nee contumaciter reeessi, ' The bishop writes: Venit liiu- person- sed violentiam mihi al> iis iiitiigeiidaiii ex- aliter, et prima die barbatus ajijiaruit, se- spectare non volui, prout nee tenebar, nee cunda vero imberbis stolatus, tunica rubra debui. Ibid pag. 638. et caputio foderato, pellibus griscis, se glo- '^ In the complaints laid against Jerome riosum ostendebat, coram ipso rege, regi- at Constance, the affair is represented as na. principum, baronum ae procerum fre- if Jerome had been arrested and imprison- quentia. Qui tamen licet hie paueis dic- ed and then banished from Hungary by bus moraretur, majores in elero et populo the Emperor Sigismund on account of the fecit commotiones, quam fuere factae a Wieklilite errors disseminated by him. memoria hominum in diocesi ista. — Ter- But the report of Jerome is certainly, in ra nostra ad semen suum videtur esse ari- itself, the more probable one ; for, if Je- da capiendum et fruetum atferendum, eo rome was arrested on account of Wicklif- quod simplex plebicula tanti pbilosophi ite heresies, and subjected to an examin- dogmata comprehendere non valet, et mut- ation, his judges would not have been con- to minus terrae Lituanorum et Russiae tent with merelv banishing him from Run- caet. According to a citation in Palacky jary. ' III. I p. 301, note 412. VOL. V 32 374 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. that such persons should be more exactly instructed in the doctrines of the Latin Church.^ We may well suppose that those persons, who were seeking every way to stigmatize Jerome and Huss as heretics, and whose sayings, as is apparent from the facts already exhibited, were little worthy of credence ; that such persons, by means of their sophis- tical reasonings from facts as simple as the above described, might seize upon and pervert such cases so as to answer their own ends. At the same time it may be true also, that Jerome had given some occasion for such accusations, by his rather liberal conversations on the subject of the relation of the Greek to the Latin Church. Proceeding as he doubtless did on the same fundamental idea of the church with Huss, and so apprehending this idea after a more spiritual and inward manner, approaching more nearly to the idea of the invisible church, he may perhaps from this point of view have risen superior to the points of opposition between the two cliurches, recognized genuine members of the church even amongst the Russians, and sought to encourage efforts to bring about a union between the two churches. If even such a man as Chancellor Gerson, distinguishing the more essential from the more unessential, expressed himself with mildness on the relation of the Greek Church to the Latin, and sought to prepare the way for negotia- tions of union, how much more might this be done by Jerome, who rose far above the narrow limits of Parisian theology. Jerome had, in the mean time, returned to Prague. The imprisonment of Huss had taken place. He could not bear to leave his friend and fellow combatant alone in this crisis. He appeared at first incognito and secretly at Constance, on the 4th of April, 1415. But as he must soon ascertain that he would not be heard, and could not be safe there, he left Con- stance again, and repaired the next day to the small town of Ueberlin- gen four miles distant. From thence he wrote to the emperor 2 and cardi- nals, and offered, if a safe conduct were granted him, publicly to answer before any one to every charge of heresy that might be brought against him. Not being able to obtain such a safe conduct, he caused to be affixed the next day, on the gates of the emperor's palace, on the doors of the principal churches, the residences of the cardinals, and other eminent prelates, a notice in the Bohemian, Latin, and German lan- guages, wherein he declared himself ready, provided only he should have full hberty and security to come to Constance and to leave it again, to defend himself in public before the council against every accusation made against his faith. Not obtaining what he demanded, he procured a certificate to be drawn up to that effect by the Bohemian knights resident in Constance and sealed with their seals, and with this to serve as a vindication of himself to his friends, he turned his face towards Bohemia. But as he travelled slowly, at conflict with himself, his enemies succeeded in waylaying him, and getting possession of his person. He was arrested near Hirschau, a small town in Suabia. Meantime, as an answer to the notices posted up by Jerome at Con- ' V. d. HarJt, IV, pag. 643. the expression: Scripsit per me literas ' It is liis secretary, whose report is our Cfr. Joana. Hus opp. II, fol. 349 seq. authority for these statements : for he uses TRIAL OF JEROME OF PRAGUE. o . 3 Stance, followed a citation of the council, calling upon him to defend himself before a public session of that body. A safe conduct was granted him, in terms implying that he was to have no security for his person, it being promised him that he should suffer no violence, so far as this could be allowed without detriment to justice.' At the request of the council and by the emperor's command, Jerome was now con- ducted in chains to the council on the 23d of May, and he appeared before a public convocation of the same body in the Franciscan con- vent. In this assembly, ho encountered a number of eminent men from the universities of Paris, Heidelberg, and Cologne, who recollected him, and triumphed over the man who had once given them so much alarm. Accordingly one after another addressed him, and reminded him of the propositions which he had set forth. The first among these was Chancellor Gerson, who captiously charged him with wanting to set himself up as an angel of eloquence, and with exciting great com- motions at Paris by maintaining the reality of genei-al conceptions. We may observe here, as well as in other like examples, the strong ])ropensity which now prevailed to mix up together philosophical and theological disputes. But Jerome distinguished one from the other, and declared that he, as a university master, had maintained such philo- sophical doctrines as had no concern with faith. In reference to all that had been objected to him by diflferent parties, he held himself ready to recant as soon as he was taught anything better. Amid the the noisy shouts was heard the cry, " Jerome must be burnt." He answered with coolness, " Well, if you wish my death, let it come in God's name ! " But the archbishop of Salzburg said, " Not that ; for God has said ' He wills not the death of the sinner, but that he should turn." Meanwhile, after the prelates had retired, Peter of Mladeno- wic, sent by Huss, came to the window of the room in which Jerome was to be found, and exhorted him to stand fast by the truth, and not to shrink even from dying for that truth for which he had so stoutly spoken. Jerome replied that he hoped, with the grace of God, to remain faithful to the truth even unto death ; they had talked a good- deal about death, now they were to learn what it was. He was now delivered over by the archbishop of Riga, in the night time, to a guard, who led him prisoner into a tower, Avhere he was bound, to a stake, with his hands, feet, and neck, so that he could scarcely move his head. Thus he lay two days with nothing to eat but bread and water. Then for the first time he obtained, through the mediation of Peter of Mladenowic, who had been told of his situation by his keepers, other means of subsistence. This severe imprisonment threw him into a violent fit of sickness. He demanded a confessor, which was at first refused, then granted with great difficulty. After he had already spent several months in this severe confinement, he heard of the mar- tyrdom of his friend. His death and the imprisonment of Jerome Droduced the greatest exasperation of feeling among the knights in ' Ad quod a violentia. justitia semper orthodoxa, tenore praesentiuin otferiinus salva, omnera tibi salvum eonductuin nos- 0pp. II, fol. 350, 1. trum quautuiii in nobis est et tides exiyit 37G HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Bohemia and Moravia. On the 2d of September they put forth a letter to the council, in which they expressed their indignation, declared that they had known Huss but as a pious man, zealous for the doctrines of the gospel ; and that he had fallen a victim only to his enemies and the enemies of his country. They entered a bitter complaint against the captivity of the innocent Jerome, who had made himself famous by his brilliant gifts; perhaps he -too had already been murdered like Huss. They declared themselves resolved to contend even to the shedding of their blood, in defence of the law of Christ and of his faithful servants.! The council now had to fear, that should Jerome experience the like fate with Huss, new oil would be added to the flames already kindled among the Bohemians, and violent agitations would begin from that quarter in the church. Hence they must use every effort to induce Jerome to recant. And hence he was caused repeatedly to appear before the council, where they hoped he might yield. The tedious length of his close confinement, which had now lasted near half a year, and his longing desire for liberty, at length brought Jerome to a point where he gave in, and consented to offer a recantation. This was in the month of September. But it was deemed important by the council that the recantation should be made in the most public manner possible ; and a general assembly of the council was therefore appointed for this purpose. Accoi'dingly Jerome appeared in the 19th session, on the 23d of September, 1415, and read a prescribed form of recantation, abjuring all the heresies of which he was accused, namely, all the heresies of Wicklif and Huss, acquiescing in the sentence passed by the council upon them both, and making several other declarations, such as the council required of him. One of these particularly deserving of notice, was his retractation of the assertion, that without the doctrine of the reality of general con- ceptions (de universalibus realibus) the christian faith could not be defended. Here we have another example of the close connection which then prevailed between philosophical and theological polemics. After this Jerome was conducted back to his prison, but no longer closely fettered. Having now done all that was required of him, he had a right to claim his liberty. This was even acknowledged by the commission appointed to conduct his trial, at the head of whom stood cardinal d'Ailly. But Paletz and Michael de Causis and monks who came from Prague endeavored to raise suspicions against Jerome's j-ecantation, and hinted at the disastrous consequences which would result from his being set at large. And there was, indeed, every reason to fear, that Jerome, as soon as he got back to Bohemia, would once more place himself at the head of the reform movement. Be- sides, Chancellor Gerson added weight to the current suspicions against Jerome by a tract of his, " On protestations in matters of faith." Remarks, too, may have dropped from his own lips, betraying the true temper of his mind, and which would be made the most of by his ene- mies. But his judges, who confined themselves to the simple facts of ' V. d. Hardt, IV, pag. 495. TRIAL OF JEROME OF PRAGUE. 377 the case, insisted on Jerome's liberation. The above mentioned Bo- hemians zealously opposed them and hinted at bribery. The membera of the commission finally threw up their office ; a new commission was appointed ; and Jerome was subjected to new examinations. At length he refused to submit to any more private examinations, and demanded a public trial, Avhere he Avould express himself freely. On the twenty-third of May, Jenome finally obtained the desired public hearing before the assembled council. New articles of com- plaint were to be brought against him. He demanded liberty to speak first of himself. This was not granted him. He should answer first to the articles of complaint. He was required to bind himself by oath to speak the truth ; but he declined taking an oath, as he did not ac- knowledge the competency of the new tribunal, nor the regularity of the new examination. On the twenty-third and the twenty-sixth of May he defended himself, from seven o'clock in the morning till one in the afternoon, against all the accusations, one by one ; unravelled in a connected discourse all the events in Prague in which he had taken a part, with such presence of mind, such eloquence, so much wit, aa to excite universal admiration. Then, finally, he was allowed to speak of himself; and it was expected that he would only complain of the injustice of the new examination, appealing to the fact that he had done all that could be required of him, and close with demanding that the acquittal which had been put off so long should now be granted him. He actually commenced with something of this sort, describing the injustice of renewing the process against him, complaining of his new judges, and protesting against the competency of this new tribu- nal. But soon his discourse took a new turn altogether. In a dazzling strain of eloquence he brought up, one after another, those men who among pagans, Jews, and Christians had fallen victims to false accusa- tions, and particularly to priestly hatred. He spoke of Socrates, Seneca, Boethius, John the Baptist, Stephen, and, last of all, John Huss ; enthusiastically dilating on the latter, as a man known to him only by his zeal for piety and truth ; one who had drawn down upon himself the persecutions of a worldly-minded clergy only by the faith- fulness with which he rebuked their corruption. He ended by declar- ing that there was no one of his sins he more painfully rued, than that of having suffered himself to be moved by the fear of death to acqui- esce in the condemnation of that saintly confessor of the truth. He took back all he had said concerning Wicklif and Huss. He declared that he assuredly should not be the last of those who would fall victims to the cunning malignity of bad priests ; and turning round to his judges he exclaimed : " I trust in God, my Creator, that one day, after this life, you shall see Jerome preceding you and summoning you all to Judgment, and then you must render your account to God and to me, if you have proceeded against me wrongfully.' This last de- ' V. d. Hardt IV, 757. In the Hist. Hardt. In that account the chronological Jieronym. opp. II, fol. 352, 2, the ac- order of events seems not to have been re- count does not seem to be so exact as in garded. According to the acts, Jerome the copy of tlie acts of the council in V. d. spoke these words at the conclusion of hij 373 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. claration of Jerome was his death-warrant. But partly by his elo- quence and presence of mind, contrasted with his emaciated looks, in which were depicted the marks of his long and severe imprisonment, he had excited so deep a sympathy in many, that they were anxioua to save him ; and partly, they were loath to excite to a still higher degree, by this new martyrdom, the angry feelings of the Bohemians. A respite of forty days was therefore given him for reflection.' Let us hear how an eye-witness, a man quite destitute of susceptibility to religious impressions, one of the restorers of ancient literature, Pog- gio of Florence, the chosen orator of the council of Constance, ex- presses himself when speaking of the impression which this discourse of Jerome could not fail to make on all that heard it. He says, in a letter to his friend Aretino, or Leonard Bruno of Arezzo : " He had for three hundred and forty days^ been pining away in a dark tower full of offensive effluvia. He had himself complained of the harsh severity of such confinement, saying that he, as became a steadfast man, did not murmur at being forced to endure such unworthy treat- ment, but that he could not help being astonished at the cruelty of men towards him. It was a place where he could not even see, much less I'ead or write. I pass over the mental anguish which must have daily tortured him, and which was enough to destroy the power of memory itself within him. He cited so many learned and wise men as witnesses in behalf of his opinions, so many teachers of the gpeech. on the 26th of May, and thus the beginning and the conclusion of this speech agree very well togetlier. According to the report in the Hist. Hieronyra., Jerome, on tlie contrary, did not spealc tliese words nntil tlie 3()th of JSIay. after the speech in- troducing tiic motion for his trial. More- over, tiic style of language in tlie acts wears more the impress of oriuiiiality. We find, as in the other review of facts in the Hist. Hier., vague or indefinite statements exchanged for others more definite. For example, in the acts, the words run : Quod ■inia vice ])OSt luinc vitam haberent videre Hieronymum eos praecedere et eos omnes ad judicium vocare. In tiie Hist. Hier., on the other hand, the indefinite expression una vice is converted into "a hundred years after this life." for which we can see no reason whatever, even though we suppose a reference to the German reformation, whicli, however, would not be suitable in this connection even if considered as a pro- phecy. The passage in the Hist. Hier. is as follows : Cito vos omnes, ut respondi- catis milii coram altissimo et justissimo ju- dice itij'.a centum aunos. We see how these words, by graduifl changes, and by being transferred from Jerome to Huss, gave oc- casion to that prophecy of Luther wliich was ascribed to Huss. and which has been handed down to posterity by the medals commemorative of the ju!)i]ee of the re- formation • Centunr '-evolutis annis deo et mihi reddetis rationem, which had some connection also with the really prophetic utterances which we meet witii in Huss. But, in Huss, we find a prophetic con- sciousness, such as is ever wont to be pos- sessed by the witnesses of evangelical truth in contending against Anticliristian errors, — the consciousness that the truth, of which they serve as the organs, will not succumb in the contest, but come forth out of it triumpliant and more resplendent than licfore. Huss was fully convinced and assured, as we have seen, that al- though he iiimself must perish in this con- test, yet still more powerful preachers of the truth and champions for it tlian he was, would be raised up after him by the Spirit of God. But, Huss had no distinct individual, as Lutiier, before his mind, and his thouglits were rather upon Boliemia than upon Germany. We can only say : What the spirit of propiiecy insjiired in the mind of Huss went into fulfilment, but in a different way from what lie su]iposed. What began in Bohemia, and perislied after the stormy scenes that followed, was carried triumphantly through in Germany by the more mighty refoimer. ' ' It is singular" that Poggio meiition.s only a two days' respite. ■•^ [We ought doubtless to read CCCLX for CCCXL, though certainly it stands thus written in V. d. Hardt, HI, 69. Ed.1 TRIAL OF JEROME OF PRAGUE. o~9 church, that they would have sufficed, if he had passed the whole of this time in all quietness in the study of wisdom. His voice was pleasant, clear, full-sounding, accompanied with a certain dignity ; hia gestures adapted to excite indignation or pity, which, however, he neither asked for, nor sought to obtain. He stood up fearlessly, un- daunted, not merely contemning death, but even demanding it, so that one might look upon him as a second Cato. 0, what a man, a man worthy of everlasting remembrance ! " ^ Meantime, he was visited in his prison by several of the most considerable men of the council, who hoped that he might be prevailed on to recant. Among these was Cardinal Francis Zabarella. But Jerome continued steadfast to the end. The thirtieth of May was now appointed as the day for passing and executing the sentence on Jerome. After the bishop on whom this office was devolved by the council, had made his discourse introducing the motion to pass sentence on Jerome, the latter began with a loud voice to address those who were present. He refuted what the bishop had said : protested his innocence ; complained of the perversion of his language, and inveighed against the corruption of a clergy aban- doned to luxury and self-enjoyment, rioting in pleasures at the expense of the poor. The sentence of the council having been pronounced on him, he was delivered over to the secular arm. He then commended himself to God, and singing psalms and hymns allowed himself to be led to the place of execution. On arriving at the spot where Huss had suffered martyrdom, and where he hnnself was to follow him, he fell on his knees and offered up a long and fervent prayer, so that the executioner growing impatient, he had to be lifted up from the earth. Whilst they were fastening him with a chain to the stake, and arrang- ing the faggots around him, he sang a spiritual song in praise of the day that brought him martyrdom. The fire being lighted behind his back, lest he might see it and be terrified, he called to the executioner to light it before his eyes, " For — said he — if I had been afraid of this fire, I should not have come here ! "^ And then addressing the assembled crowd in the German language he said : " My beloved chil dren, as I have sung, so and no otherwise do I believe. But the cause for which I now die is this, that I would not agree with the council in affirming that Master Huss was justly condemned by them. For I had truly known him, as a genuine preacher of the Gospel of Jesus Christ." When the fire was kindled, he repeated in a loud voice, " Into thy hands, God, I commit my spirit " And afterwards, when already suftering the deadly torture of the flames, he said, in the Bo- hemian language : " Lord God, have pity on me, forgive me my sins, for thou knowest I have sincerely loved thy truth." His voice could no longer be heard, but his lips appeared amidst the flames as if moving in prayer. The eye-witness, Poggio, then describes the im- pression which the martyrdom of Jerome made on him, though he found it impossible to comprehend what gave him the power so to > V. d. Hardt III, pag. 69. * Poggio, in V. d. Hardt, III pag. 71 380 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. die. " With cheerful looks he went readily and willingly to his death ; he feared neither death, nor the fire and its torture. No stoic ever suffered death with so firm a soul, as that with which he seemed to de- mand it. Jerome endured the torments of the fire with more tran- quillity than Socrates displayed in drinking his cup of hemlock." ' III. The Friends of God in Germany. While the contests between the popes, since the time of John the Twenty Second and the emperor Louis the Fourth, were important on account of their influence on the advancement of the church by pro- moting greater freedom of inquiry into ecclesiastical law and reactions against the absolute power of the popes, there were, resulting from the same causes, other important influences also on the movements of the rehgious spirit. In i)articular, there was partly called forth and partly promoted by these contests a religious fermentation among the German people, of which the after consequences lasted for a long time. These influences, however, we must contemplate in their connection with other disturbances in the world, and other significant appearances. Great physical and mental suffering grew out of these contests ; many minds were profoundly disquieted by the interdict, the suspension of divine worship, the absence of church blessings, where the need of them was most deeply felt. Add to this the desolating effects pro- duced by one of those pestilences often witnessed, among the signs of a time preparing by the dissolution of the old for a new creation, by virtue of an inscrutable connection between physical and spiritual development on this earth ; between history and nature, under the guiding hand of that wise providence which makes all power sub- servient to one highest end. And such pestilences serve the double purpose of arousing slumbering minds to thought, and of making them conscious of their true condition. At the time of which we are speak- ing, all the causes above mentioned conspired together to bring the church to a consciousness of her deep corruption, to point her away from the physical to the spiritual distress, to awaken in her a remem- brance of God's judgments, to direct her eye to the hidden future, leading men, with the Prophets and the Apocalypse for their guides, to study the signs of the last times. And so in fact it came about that many thought they saw very near at hand the coming of anti- christ and the second advent of Christ, or a new spiritual revelation of Christ to execute judgment on a corrupt cliurch, and prepare the way for restoring it to greater glory. Out of all this proceeded, on the one hand, divers moven.ents of a fanatical spirit, and on the ■ y d. Hardt, III, pag. 70. We may says: Pertulerunt ambo constanti aniino ttlso compare here the words \v th which necem, et quasi ad epulas invitati ad inf another man of this period, who likewise cendium properaruni, nullam emittentei was incajjahle of understaiulin;; tlie >|)iiit vocem, quae miseri animi facero posset whicii aiiimaicd these men. Aeneas ^n\io indicium. Nemo pliilosophorum tam forti Piccoldumii, expresses lii> ailinir:iii( n, animo mortem ])ertulisse traditur, (|ii,i / wiieii, sj jaknij; of Huss aiui jcione, l.e iHti incendium. Histor. bohemica, pa^. .^-i FRIENDS OF GOD IN GERMANY. 381 other, contei,iplations of a more sober and profound christian serious- ness. We are speaking of movements which continued long to propa- gate themselves, reaching into the fifteenth century. The prophecies of a Hildegard ; the writings, genuine and spurious, of an al)bot Joa- chim, supplied nutriment to such tendencies. The physical and spiritual sufferings of that distressful period awakened a more pro- found sense of religious need. In the common church theology such a need conld find no satisfiiction ; from the common clergy, the indi- viduals in whom this sense of need had been awakened could expect no assistance. One peculiar characteristic for which the German race has ever been distinguished is their profound sense of the religious element, seated in the inmost depths of the soul ; their readiness to be impelled by the discordant strifes of the external world, and unfruitful human ordinances, to seek and find God in the deep recesses of their own hearts, and to experience a hidden life in God springing forth in opposition to barren conceptions of the abstract intellect that leave the heart cold and dead, a mechanism that converts religion into a mere round of outward ceremonies. John Nieder, a dominican of the fif- teenth century, relates in a book of his containing many remarkable passages regarding the internal religious hfe in this and the next fol- lowing times, 1 that in Germany it was a custom with men and women, not only of the lower orders but in noble families, to set apart one hour at least of every day to meditation on the benefits they owed to the sufferings of Christ, that they might be the better prepared for the patient endurance of trials and the exercise of all the virtues.2 Thus arose among clergymen, monks, and laymen, of both sexes, the ten- dency to a mysticism that gave depth to the religious element. This tendency, which at first had developed itself in conflict with the be- ginnings of the scholastic theology, afterwards fell in with it, and was now beginning to shape itself in a more independent way and to gain greater influence, especially upon the popular life, in Germany. As early as the close of the thirteenth century, the way for this had already been prepared ; but by the causes above mentioned it was still further promoted. Thus in the midst of this general distress and these dis- cords of the times, we see that affiliated societies, growing out of one spirit, were formed in south and west Germany and spread as far as the Netherlands, or from the Netherlands back to Germany, having their principal seats in Strasburg, Basle, Cologne, and Nuremberg, whose members were called, both by themselves and others. Friends of Crod. Not that it was intended thereby to designate an exclusive party or sect, but simply to denote a certain stage of spiritual life, the stage of disinterested love to God ; a love free from all desire of re- Avard as the predominating affection, and opposed to a state of the affections still under bondage, where the man seeks in God something ' Forniicarius ed. V. d. Hardt. Hlerast. hora aliqui, summum humano generi im- 696. pensum beneticiuin, Cliristi passionem, ine- ' Est consuetudo laudahilis multorum, ditari ac repetere, ut exinde, dco }^rati, ina- ne dieam plebeorum utriusque sexus in la miindi ferant patientius et virtutes oj)e- Aleiiuuinia, vi-nun etiara magnatum et rentur facilius. Pag. 133. noliiliuni, ad minus seniel die natural!. 382 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. other than God himself. The scripture which seemed to autliorize this distinction and opposition between servants and friends of God, were our Saviour's words in John 15 : 15, which are thus explained by one of these Friends of God, the dominican John Tauler : " Therefore did our Lord say to his disciples, ' Henceforth I call you not servants, but friends.' The ' henceforth' was from the time they forsook all and fol- lowed him ; then they were his friends and no longer servants." ' The same opposition is expressed again by this writer, where he distinguishes between those that carried within them the false gi'ound, those under bondage to the world, and the true friends of God, who, without any separate will of their own, referred all things to God.2 Men were to be found among them, who had carefully studied the scholastic the- ology, who occasionally display a certain refinement and subtlety of conceptual distinction, and make some use of an exact classification of the mental faculties. Such men were Tauler and Ruysbroch. But still the theology growing out of a living intercourse with God, and grounded in the internal experiences of the spiritual life, was opposed to the former and considered far superior to it. They pointed away from the strifes and contests of the scholastic theologians, which served to bewilder the mind, to those fountains of knowledge within. Thus Tauler warns against the propensity to pry into the mystery of trinity, "holding that such matters should be left to the great masters at the ■universities ; and even their disputations on these subjects he consid- ers simply as make-shifts to dispose of the objections of heretics ; not .as though they could fathom the incomprehensible. " Let the great teachers study and dispute upon these matters. Yet in awkwardness «of art they must still (with permission) stammer for the sake of Holy Church, looking about to see if they can possibly so express them- selves as that she may not come into difficulty on account of heresy.""^ Tauler inveighs against those, " who spoil that which should be born in the spirit, by boasting of reason, whether it be doctrine, or truth, or whatever else it may be, — by pretending that they understand it, and ican talk of it, and so seem to be, and are, somewhat puifed up, though they bring the matter neither into life nor practice." He says : " Natural light, compared with the divine light, is less than a lighted taper to the noon-day sun."'* Accordingly, he says of the true inward man, to which our Saviour's words, ' the kingdom of God is within you,' applies, that "here, these friends of God find truly and clearly the truth, which is unknown to all who do not dwell in this ground, nor keep themselves free and empty with regard to all creatures. Wherefore, beloved children, the masters of Paris diligently read the books, and turn over the leaves ; this is something ; this is pretty well; but these men read the true living book, where all is life."5 ' See Schmidt, in his work. "Johannes and in the Frankfort edition of the year Tauler von Strasburg," which contains so 1826. Vol. I, p. 263. many richly instructive remarks, explana- •'' Tauler's Sermons, Bas. ed. fol. 57 b tory of the a))pearances we are considering. Fr. ed. II. p. 167. Hamburg, 1841. P. 165. " Bas. ed. fol. 42 a ; Fr. ed. II, p. lOl. ^ See the words in the Basel edition of * Bas. ed. fol. 135 a; Fr. ed. Ill, p. 220 (his Sermons, of the year 1522, fol. 27 b; FRIENDS OF GOD IN GERMANY. 383 From the number of these Friends of God came those monks and ec- clesiastics who took the livehest interest in the spiritual guidance of the laity, preached in the German language, and labored not merely to educate the laitj to orthodox thinking, to the devotional exercises of the church, to mortifications, and to various kinds of good works, but to lead them forward to a deeper experience of Christianity, to a truly divine life according to their own understanding of it. Great and striking was the difference between the common preachers who were eager to display their own acuteness and learning, who amused the people with tales and legends, warned them only against the grosser sins, and recommended almsgiving and donations to the church, and these preachers belonging to the Friends of God, who entered profoundly into the internal religious life, and sought to trace sanctificatiou back to a hidden life in God as its inmost ground. Great and striking the difference between those who had no other object in view than to work on the imagination by descriptions of hell and of purgatory, and thus to frighten men from sin or drive them to purchase indulgences, and those men who pointed beyond fear and the hope of reward, to the love of God which could desire no higher por- tion than Himself! From the number of these Friends of God came those priests, who, scorning to be troubled by the common scruples during the time of the papal interdict and amidst the ravages of the Black Death, bestowed the consolations of religion on the forsaken people. They put forth from Strasburg, a letter addressed to the collective body of the clergy, arguing to show the injustice and wrong of leaving the poor, ignorant people to die under the ban.i Thus Tauler in Strasburg, without fear of the black vomit, which carried off many of the clergy, labored incessantly during the interdict for the welfare of the people.^ These Friends of God could pursue their work with the less opposition, because they recognized in all the stand- ing regulations of the church the divine appointment ; because they followed the principle of passive obedience, where it did not directly contradict the demands of their own consciences, and strictly submitted to their ecclesiastical superiors. They recommended the conscientious discharge of all duties required by the church laws, looked upon every outward exercise of religion prescribed by the church as a pre- paration for a higher stage of spiritual perfection ; and yet they knew how to warn men at the same time against all externalization of re- ' 1 Schmidt, p. 52. longer have any safe residence in this * So the Dominican, Heinrich von Nord- country." Ibid. pag. 381. Margaretha lingen, expresses his joy over the great Ebnerin, of Altorf, who stood on terms of work which the Lord wrought through intimate connection with the ITriends of hin; in the hearts of men in the midst of God, obtained the assurance by a vision, wretchedness ; and he remarks, that he that she should have enough in the invisi- woukl prefer to die by the black vomit ble communion with Christ, even while rather to do anything"against the Lord, the participation of the holy supper was Hcumanui opuscula, Norimb. 1747, pag. denied to her tiirough the interdict. It 393. This person experienced persecu- was said to her: Christ would comfort her tion from the power of the emperor. He with his words ; and with these she should Writes : " I have been before the princes give strength to the people. Ibid, pag of this world, who treat me so, that I no 340 884 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. ligion and supposed meritoriousness of good -works. They pointed constantly from external things to the more hidden depths of the religious life. Thus Tauler, in a sermon where he compares many prelates of his time with blind leaders of the blind, after having spoken of the sevei-al gradations of spiritual superiors, from the pope down- wards, remarks : " Were they all disposed to treat me ill, to be wolves to me, and snap at me, I am still to lay myself in true resignation and submissiveness humbly at their feet, and to do it without murmur or gainsaying." i The same preacher says : " Behold, for this, have all works been invented and devised, with good exercises of virtue, such as prayer, reading, singing, fasting, watching and kneeling, and whatever other virtuous exercises there may be, that the man may be occupied therewith and kept a.v,a.j from foreign, unsuitable, ungodly things."* Know, that shouldst thou let thyself be stabbed a thousand times a day, and come to life again ; shouldst thou let thyself be strung to a wheel, and eat thorns and stones ; with all this, thou couldst not over- come sin of thyself. But sink thyself into the deep, unfathomable mercy of God, with a humble, submissive will, under God and all creatures, and know that then alone Christ would give it thee, out of his great kindness, and free goodness, and love, and compas- sion." 3 We may quote the beautiful words where he describes love as a power mightier than all outward discipline to overcome the obstinate strivings of sin and sense in man. He says : " Now mark, all penance-life has been devised for this purpose among other things, whether it be vigils, fasting, weeping, praying, taking discipline, hair- shirts, hard .beds, and whatever else, it is all for this — that body and flesh being at all times against the spirit, they are much too strong for it." These outward disciplines, therefore, he regards as a means of giving preponderance to the spirit by weakening the flesh, as he says, " and for this, that we may come to the help of the spirit in these straits, may somewhat cripple the flesh in this conflict by putting upon it the curb of penitence, and so bringing it down that the spirit may have a chance to recover itself." Then speaking of love, as a much higher power to subdue the flesh, he says : " Wouldst thou master and break it in a thousand times better way ? then lay upon it the curb and fet- ters of love ; with that thou wilt overcome it easiest of all, and with love thou wilt load it heaviest of all." * He characterizes reliance on one's own good works as a thing more Jewish than Christian, and says : " This Jewish Avay many people have ; they stand upon their own ways and works ; they would verily have these for their foundation ; and when they have done their work, the whole is lost ; yet they can neither believe God, nor any one else who tells them they are se- cretly building on their works and upon their own doings." And he proceeds to say, " I do not mean that we ought to omit good discipline ; we should be ever exercising ourselves in it ; but we should not build on it, nor rely on it." And he spoke against those who were looking ' Bas. ed. fol. 6 b; ¥r. ed. I, p. 134. ^ Bas. ed. fol. 34 a ; Fr. ed. I. p. 280 « Bfts. ed. fol. 17 a; Fr. ed. I, p. 127. * Bas. ed. fol. 14 a; Fr. ed. I, p. 159 FRIENDS OF GOD IN GEIIMANY. 'SSi? for access to God by such ways as the following, " thai che^ .vore hair- shirts, and hair-neckcloths, that they fasted, and watched, and prayed ; that they had for forty years been poor men." And, he adds : " If you have done all the human works that have ever been done, 3"et of all this you shall be bare and empty in your ground as those that have done no good work, small or great, other than grace for grace and what has come from the great mercy of God, without any reservation of confidence in your own preparation." ^ Ruysbroch, speaking of the outward expression of christian love, says : "In the showing forth of this love thou wilt observe thy good customs, at the same time also the rules of thy monastic order, good manners, good works, and all ap- pointed and regular outward discipline, according to the command- ments of God and the rules and regulations of Holy Church." " If — says he — thou rightly understandest the nature of love, thoa wilt govern thyself, and be able easily to overcome the world, and wilt daily die to sin, and lead a life of striving after virtue." Only he re- quires that the soul should free itself entirely from all outward and creaturely objects, cling to them in no way ;that it should freely enter into its own deepest recesses, so as to rise upward from this centre to God, in a total estrangement of this inmost centre from the world. From this centre of its being the soul should sink and lose itself in God. Strive after this alone, that thou become free from form and image, become master of thyself ; so thou wilt be able as often as thou choosest to turn thy heart and eye upward, where thy treasure and tliy heart are ; and thou wilt preserve one life with Him. Nor wilt thou suffer the grace of God within thee to be idle, but from true love wilt exercise thyself heavenward, in praising God ; below, in all forms of virtue and good actions. And, in whatever outward acts thou art employed, let thy heart be free and disengaged from all, so that as oft as thou choosest, thou mayest be able, through all and above all, to contemplate him whom thou lovest."2 "Obedience — he says — makes men submissive to the commands, precepts, and will of God ; subjects sense and the power of sense to the higher reason, so that the man lives becomingly and in conformity to reason. It makes him sub- missive also to the church, and its sacraments ; to its superiors, and to all the doctrines and rules of the church. "3 Again, he says : " Show thyself willing and obedient not only to God, but also to the prelates in all good rules and exercises, which are commonly observed in holy church ; and this according to the measure of thy powers and with true sobriety, as well as according to the manners and cus- toms of the men with whom thou livest, and also of the country and district where thou dwellest."* He represents, it is true, the outward exercises of penance as a subordinate thing, and makes internal peni- tence the essential matter ; but yet he holds the former to be good in its proper place, and remarks, " that we m?j find many, who seem ' Bas. cd. fol. 33 b ; Fr. ed. II, pp. 59, 60. ' De r.iccipuis quibiisdani virtutibus, * Rusbroch, speculum aeternae sa utis, ibid. pag. 170. opp. Colon. Agripp. 1692, pag. 11 (ed.ann. * De septem amoris gradibus, pag. 2"'1 1609, pag. 21). VOL. V. 33 386 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. to themselves accomplishing much in the way of penance, when they practise many great, severe, and outward forms of discipline, as for in stance, fastings, watchings, and other like works of penitence i which, indeed, are without doubt well-pleasing to God, and necessary for him who does the penance ; yet, the truest and best penance, and that by which one gets nearest to God, is to turn, truly and from the heart, to Him, and to every virtue, for God's sake ; at the same time, turning entirely away from everything known to be at variance with God, so as to feel a firm assurance in one's self that one cannot be moved, by anything that may happen, to do anything of the kind, and then to have a firm confidence in the goodness of God that He will never cease to supply all needful aid." ' Respecting fasts, he says : " Ra- tional or spiritual works are to be preferred before barely outward works, and to be held of more account than the latter. Yet to the utmost extent of our capability, love must be maintained by good works. Christ fasted forty days. Imitate him in this, and fast in a spiritual manner, keeping thyself from all sin ; and, also, to the ex- tent of thy ability, in a bodily manner." But although these friends of God conscientiously adhered to the forms of the church, and by their silent, unobtrusive piety, and their active charity, could hardly fail to secure the confidence and respect of the people, whose contempt the common ecclesiastics had drawn down upon themselves, still they had their op]X)nents ; partly those who were zealous to maintain the common position of the church, and whose suspicions were excited by that more liberal spirit of the Friends of God which shone so conspicuously through their conscientious at- tachment to the church ; partly the advocates of a secularized Chris- tianity, who felt themselves annoyed by the more serious christian life of the Friends of God. Accordingly they Avere nick-named after the common fashion in that age of applying some opprobrious epithet to those who, for one reason or another, were looked upon as entliusiasts or pietists; as by the name Beghards — people who prayed much. John Ruysbroch says : " Though the servant of the Lord shows himself faithful in outward exercises and Avorks, yet he has no experience of that which the secret friends of God feel. And this is the reason why such inexperienced and outward men find fault with those who apply them- selves to the internal exercises. They suppose that such persons are wholly idle ; like Martha, who complained to the Lord of her sister, that she gave her no assistance." 2 And Tauler, speaking of those among the Jews who were hostile to Christ as if tliey had hearts of stone, says : " Alas ! why should it be, that we still find christian men who, when they see God's friends in good ways, in good works, im- mediately harbor ill will towards them, become at heart bitterly opposed to them, count as nothing their works which they do, and their waya and their life, and invent such glosses about them or against them as to prove themselves to be just like those bad Jews." ^ In a noticeable ' De praec. quibusd. virt., pag. 185 ' Bas. ed. fol. 32 b; Fr. ed. II, p 57. • De calculo, pag. 825. FRIENDS OF GOD IX GERMANY. • 387 passage Tauler speaks against a certain class, whom be thus character- izes : " the poor blind people think that the precious sufferings of our Lord Christ were to pass off in sport and without fruit. Their reliance is this, that thev stand in fraternity with some spiritual order (the fratres adscripti), that they pray and read ; nay — says he — thoa doest all this without love and without devotion, with a distracted heart, so blindlv and coldly, that it is a wonder to think of it." He then says : Thev confessed in words, but not with a whole will and from the bottom of the heart : they received the Lord's body ; bat it was very much as if one should invito a king into his house and then place him in an un- clean, offensive stall among the swine. It were a thousand times bet ter for them, if they never received it. And if any one took pains to warn them of the danger of their position, they laughed at him and said : " It is all Beghards' talk, or nun's twaddle." ' These Friend:* of God exercised a great influence over the laity, not only by their preaching and attention to common pastoral duties, but it was a part of the system for those among the laity who longed after that higher stage of christian Ufe set forth by the Friends of God in their sermons, to surrender themselves entirely up to some individual as their confes- sor and guide in the spiritual life, and follow his instructions as if it were a voice from heaven. This was simply carrying out the doctrine of those mystics who taught that it was a duty to follow implicitly the guidance of those who were recognized as organs of God. And un- questionably in these times, when the deep-felt and often times wrongly interpreted sense of religious need, the high state of religious excite- ment in connection with the low state of christian knowledge, exposed men to dangerous temptations, and the more as their aspirations rosi higher ; when, by abandoning themselves to their feelings, they would be very hkely to fall into dangerous extravagances ; earnest, inquiring, but ignorant minds did greatly need the guidance of some prudent in- dividual, experienced in the trials and conflicts of the spiritual life. Well then might Tauler, after describing the dangers which beset him who strove after such an object, add : " Therefore the safer course for thos/^ who would fain live for the truth, is to have a friend of God, and submit to be guided by him according to God's Spirit, iiiighty miles or more would not be too far to go in search of a friend of God who knew the right way and could direct them in it." 2 And in another sermon, where he labors to show how difficult it is to attain true renun- ciation of one's self and of natural things,and to betake one's self solely to God in the inmost depths of the spirit, he says : " Therefore entreat the beloved friends of God that they would assist you in it, and then give your whole self simply and solely to God. and to the chosen friends of God, that they may carry you along to God with themselves." ? In some such relation to Tauler stood a remarkable man, afterward a zealous member of the party of the Friends of God, Rulmann Merswin ' Bas. ed. fol. 77 a; Fr. ed. II, p. 235. * Bas. ed. fol. 146 b; Fr. ed. Ill, p 122 [The Francf. ed. which in general id quite * Bas. ed. fol. 28 b ; Fr. ed. I, p 265. incorrect in its text, has, instead of Beg- hardem, " Bejahrte." Ed.] 388 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. of Strasburg. This person, who l)elonii;erl to one of the most respecta- ble families of that city, was a rich broker and merchant. In his for- tieth year (1347), after losing his first wife, he contracted a second marriage, and having no issue by either, he Avith the concurrence of his second wife resolved to retire wholly from the world. He applied his great wealth to no other purpose than that of founding institution? of christian charity. He had much to struggle with in endeavoring to attain to a godly life, being too much governed by his momentary feel- ings. The natural and the divine element were strangely mixed up to- gether in his character. He easily brought himself to believe that cer- tain visions, the product of his own highly excited feelings and heated im- agination were divine revelations. The excessive mortifications which he imposed on himself impaired his health, and the morbid affections which he thus contracted may perhaps have exerted some disturbing influence both on his feelings and on his intellect. Tauler, who, as we have seen, dis- approved of this mode of crucifying the flesh, being chosen by this man as his guide, bade him, as a friend of God, to desist from these im- moderate self-tortures, and not destroy his health ; for he was ex- tremely anxious lest, by the course he was now pursuing he might sud- denly become insane. Merswin, as he informs us himself, thought it his duty to obey.' In the year 13-53 he composed, in the German language, a widely circulated eccentric mystical work, under the im- pulse, as he beheved, of a divine call, containing many strange and fanciful notions mixed up with a good deal that is true. It was en- titled the Book of the Nine Rocks. This work was included, though not m its complete form, among the works of Henry Suso, and ascribed to him as the author.^ With great freedom he here describes the corrup- tion of the church through all its orders, from highest to lowest. He says of the popes : " Look around and mark how the popes in these times live and have lived, whether they have not had more regard for themselves, more concern to know how they shall maintain their own state, than how the glory of God may be promoted ? And look around and see whether they do not court temporal possessions with a view to advance the interests of their temporal friends, and help on their pro- motion to temporal honors." ^ It is deserving of notice that this man was led, by the more liberal character of his mysticism, to question in this book the doctrine that all unbelievers are lost ; mantaining that, among the Jews, Turks, and pagans, were many men of good life, who would, before their end, be led by a particular inward revelation to the knowledge of a Saviour and to faith in him ; and that we shall ' We quote from the above mentioned unci p:ehot mir bi <,rchorsamme das icli excellent work of Prof. Schmidt, of Stras- niich in keinre uebuni;en soke me ueltcii, burg, to whom we are indebted for an ac- und mahte mir daran ein zil, unci icli mus- count of tiiis man, eminently characteristic te gehorsam sin. Schmidt, p. 178 note, of the time.s in which he lived, Merswin's ^ That the work, however, is not to be own words on the subject: Und in densel- ascril)ed to him, but to Merswin, has been ben ziten was bruoder Johans tauweler der proved on documentary evidence by Prof brediger min bichter. Uer befant ettewas Schmidt, in his work above cited, p. 180 minre uebungcn. wanne er nam es ware Compare also lUgen's Zeitschrirt tiir his das ich gar krang in der natuoren geriet torische Theologie. 1839, Heft. 2, p 61. werden. Und er vorhte mins houbetes * Schmidt, p. 216. FRIENDS OF GOD IX GERMANY. 889 meet many such in the Avorld to come.' We see by the example of tliis individual, hovr laymen as well as clergymen might be enrolled among the Friends of God ; and in the case of the former, who were not so strictly educated in the theology of the schools, we see how it might fiometimes happen that they would be led, by this freer tendency of the religious spirit, without being conscious of it or intending it, into many unchurchly convictions, and how this might become a channel through which the influence of unchurchly tendencies might be introduced among the Friends of God generally. We cannot be surprized at the fact, therefore, that among the Friends of God there were many sec- tional differences, from a more strict churchly direction to a tendency bordering on the heretical, or entirely heretical. The position maintained by those friends of God, whose inward Chris- tianity made them more free from the influence of the hierarchical spirit, is characteristically presented before us, when we see a priest of the Dominican order, and a famous preacher, placing himself in the relation we have described to a layman who appeared to him more ad- vanced than himself in holy living, and making that layman his guide in the spiritual life. We meet with an ancient account 2 of a layman living 120 miles from the city of Strasburg, who, by a divine call in a thrice repeated vision, was conducted, in the year 1340, to Tauler, then already a preacher of note. In his first interview he requested the latter to preach before him a discourse on the way to christian per- fection. The sermon did not produce the effect which Tauler expected ; and the stranger afterwards explained to him that he had not come to learn from him how to attain to the most perfect life, but with the in- tention and hope of doing him some good. He then proceeded to speak of that internal master, respecting whom Tauler himself had spoken in his sermon. " Know," said he, " that when this same master comes to me, he teaches me more in an hour, than you, and all the teachers Avho are of time, could teach me if they went on to the last day." And he assured Tauler to his great amazement, that he must consider him a mere man of books and a pharisee. The pious gentle preacher did not let himself grow angry at such language from a layman addressed to a priest and doctor of theologj^, but instead of disdainfully turning away from him, calmly listened to all he had to say. The layman went on to distinguish two different sorts of phar- isees, the malignant and the well intcntioned ; those whose doctrines and life, though they were unconscious of it themselves, did not per- fectly harmonize ; whose preaching consisted more of the letter and of rational knowledge, than of the truth contained in the life and in- ternal experience of the heart ; who, though they knew how to discourse finely of pure love to God, and of communion with him, were still en- tangled in creaturely love, without any true experience as yet of vital communion of the heart with God. Tauler felt himself touched to the ' The same, p. 219. This portion is not ' In the Hist. Tauleri in the Bas. edi- included in the writings published under tion, before the Sermons, iho name of Suso. 33* 390 HISTORY OF TnEOLOGY AND DOCTRI.VE. quick by many things which the stranger said. He cliose liiin as t!ie friend of God -who was to be his gu'uh ; got him to prescribe the way to a new spiritual development ; retired for a season from his labors in the pulpit ; but on returning to his duties found himself so overcome and unmanned by his feelings, as to be unable to utter a ^^■ord. The preacher who was before so famous, was now laughed at. But after- wards, when he had fully recovered himself, he stood forth with fresh energy and labored more abundantly than ever. This story, no better authenticated, might be regarded by many as a figment of legendary tradition, a pure fabrication or an intermixture of poetry and historical truth. ^ But we have, in this case, at least one example which might teach a lesson of caution to those who would banish from history every- thing that looks like poetry, and retain the trivial only as matter of historical fact. This story has very recently become established as matter of history on the ground of authentic record. 2 And we obtain a more familiar acquaintance with the man as an historical personage, who came, according to the legend, from a town 120 miles from Stras- burg. He was a person of great influence in that period, named JVieh- olas of Bade. He then belonged to the Waldensian sect, the members of which would, for the reasons already hinted at, be very likely to find in the more liberal christian tendences of the Friends of God scat- tered about in that district, many points of mutual agreement. But it may be commonly remarked that when a determinate sjjiritual tendency becomes predominant in any period or district, it is wont to impart some- thing of its own peculiar stamp to other spiritual appearances that may happen to possess anything in common with itself, though the two may in other respects differ entirely in character, just as in the physical world a prevailing epidemic will make other forms of disease run into its own form. Thus the Waldensians in the district of the Rhine, did not at that time remain wholly true to their original direction, since this at the outset was a more simply practical one. The predominant spirit of mysticism communicated itself also to them ; and there grew up a section of Waldensian Friends of God, which, paying less homage than the others did to the church spirit, developed itself with greater freedom of doctrine in opposition to the dominant church. To this party belonged Nicholas, a man who by oral discourses and writings m the Latin and German languages labored to introduce a more experi- mental Christianity, and exerted a great and widely extended influence At Basle he had heard much about the piety and influence of Tauler.-* But from his Waldensian point of view he might probably be led to conjecture that this famous preacher was after all wanting in true freedom of christian spirit ; and from what he had heard of his jiious,. humble character, he might periiaps hope to succeed in exercising a ' This story, as is well known, has been ' We sec from Schmidt's quotation p. worked up into a book of great poetic 29 note, that in a Munich manuscript i» beauty, by Tieck, in his novel " der Schutz- the accuunt of Tauler, the words of thi» geist." unknown layman are found, which are * By the investigations of Schmidt, in wanting in the printed editions : " Wan his work before cited, p. 25, note 5. mir vil von cuer ler daheim ist gcsagt." FRIENDS OP GOD IN GERMANY. 391 wholesome influence on the christian knowledge and the christian life of the man. It may well be doubted, indeed, wliether Nicholas, who, with a view to extend the sphere of his usefulness in promoting the religious life, rarely mentioned his own anti-churchly tendencies, would say anything to Tauler about his connection with the Waldensians ; still it is impossible to know how much confidential intercommunication may have taken place between the two men. And Tauler as long as he lived continued to maintain the most intimate and friendly relations with this layman. This Nicholas of Basle was, as we have said, ex- tremely cautious in disseminating his principles. He laid himself out to work on the minds of the people more particularly by writings in the German language. In a tract composed in the year 1356, he defended the circulation of German writings among the laity against the doubts entertained by many of its expediency. He speaks on this matter also with great moderation. He allows that such doubts were, in some respects, well founded ; in respect to writings, namely, which required many explanations in order to be rightly understood, and which there- fore by being misapprehended might easily lead to error. Such writ- ing belonged exclusively to the priests, and should not be translated into German. But the case stood otherwise with simple, practical, and plainly composed christian writings, suited to the understanding and wants of the laity. He says " those book-learned men, who would keep the laity from reading these, sought their own glory more than the glory of God." " But," he adds, " where you find teachers, who have no eye to themselves, jon should gladly hear them ; for whatever Buch teachers counsel, comes from the Holy Spirit." He says chris- tian order can never be restored, till men follow the counsel wiiich comes from the Holy Spirit ; and such cannot be at variance with Holy Scripture, for Holy Scripture and the Holy Spirit are one. " If, he adds, "• a great lord of this world, or a w^hole district or city should ask me how, as things now stand, men may return to God, and find reconciliation with him, I would advise that they should seek that counsel which comes from the Holy Spirit, whether such counsel pro- ceed from priest or layman. " ' In all this we may easily recognize the general drift and tendency above described, though there is an at- tempt to conceal it. We recognize a man who estimated the inward voice of the spirit above all outward authoritj^, and who certainly there- fore could not be inclined to pay that authority the same submissive homage with other Friends of God. The mystical bent may un- doubtedly have led many to entertain very free opinions respecting the apostles, whose characters they Avould estimate according to their own peculiar principles of christian perfection. It would not be strange in such persons to accuse an apostle Paul of boasting too much of his own labors. But Nicholas was widely removed from all this. He says of such, " Mark, my beloved brethren, how some men are scandalized at the words of holy Paul, Avho was a bright shining light, a full vessel over- flowing with lovely humility." All that he said to his brethren, or ' Schmidt, p. 231. 892 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AXD DOCTRIXE. wrote to them, was suited to the times when Christianity be_:^an ; aiv\ there was need of it too. He wrote from divine love, and never had an eye to himself ; in all things he had a single eye to the glory of God. And I believe if the words addressed to John the Baptist, had been spoken to the apostle Paul, he would in like manner have answered, " I am not worthy to unloose his shoe's lachet." ^ This Nicholas directly or indirectly exerted a great influence, as a guide and counsellor in the spiritual hfe, on many who never had the remotest suspicion of his heretical tendencies. But he could not always succeed in escaping the suspicion of the head of the church ; and from some hints which he drops we may understand the perilous situation in which these more free-minded Friends of God sometimes found themselves placed. He writes : "Ah, beloved brethren, may God in his infinite goodness, in this present time of Christianity, have pity. For know, the Friends of God are in a great strait. But what is to come of it, they know not, God only knows." a Having succeeded through a long life in escaping the snares of the inquisition ,3 he undertook when very old, in company with two of his disciples, to make a journey to France, where probably he was in the habit of going to disseminate his doctrines. At Vieime, he was arrested by the inquisition, together with his disciples ; and as nothing could induce him to consent to a recantation, he was liandtMl over, as an heretical Beghard, to the civil authorities, and died at the stake. The highest regions of the interior hfe in souls where impure elements rule, are exposed to the most dangerous perturbations ; the deepest truths of religion, when they are not purely apprehended, may intermingle indistinguishably with the most dangerous misconceptions. It is often but a very thin and subtle line, which separates truth from error. Thus the doctrine of these Friends of God respecting man's ability and duty to go back to the deepest grounds of his being ; respecting an inward concentration of the mind withdrawn from every thing creaturely ; utter renunciation of self, and absorption in God, was liable to pass over into very serious errors. Where the longing for union with God was not ever accompanied side by side with a consciousness of the self- subsistence of the creaturely spirit, and the infinite exaltation of God above the world, with a consciousness of sin standing in contrariety with the holiness of God, with a humility never forgetting for a moment the strict line that separates the creature from the Creator, the sobrietv and modesty of true humility ; where an unbridled imagination, a specu lative spirit ignorant of its proper limits, where the intoxication of a soul governed entirely by its feelings, intermingled with the natural and the divine, and took complete possession of the man; in a word, where the mind, instead of holding fast to God revealed in Christ, would sink itself, without any mediation, in the unfathomable abyss of ' In a letter to the Strasburg Johan- tioncd, Formicarius, pag. 304 : Auuti.ssi- uites, in the year 1377, Schmidt, p. 234. nius enim erat et verbis errores coloiatissi- " The same, p. 235. me vehire noverat. Idcirco etiam manus ' The Dominican John Nicder, of Sua- inquisitorum diu evaserat et multo tern bia, says of him in his book, ah-eady men- pore. FRIENDS OF GOD IN GERMANY. 393 God unrevealed : in all these cases and the like, they who knew not how to <^uard against such dangers by strict watcldulness over themselves plunged into the gulf of pantheistic self-deification. Thus arose that wildly fanatical pantheistic mysticism, which was for get- ting beyond Christ, beyond all positive revelation, all humanization of the divine, as we see it exemplified particularly among a portion of the so-called Beghards, of whom we shall say more hereafter, as well as among the so-called Brothers and Sisters of the Free Spirit, — a community already characterized by their name, the advocates of that false liberty, grounded in pantheism, which scorned all the set- tled landmarks of holy order. The opposition is strongly marked be- tween the theistic Friends of God of whom we have thus far been speak- ing, and the pantheistic class. While in the former we may sec fore- tokens of a direction which led to the Reformation ; in the latter we see, no less clearly, the foretokens of a thoroughly antichristian ten- dency, hostile to everything supernatural, every intimation of a God above the world ; a tendency which contained, first in the form of mys- ticism, the germ of absolute Rationalism and the deification of reason, — a tendency which, after many attempts, often repelled and continu- ally renewed, was eventually to appear in a contest for life and death with Christianity itself. As the theistic element distinguished the first class of the Friends of God from the second, so was it also a distin- o-uishing mark between the two classes, that by the first it was held necessary to unite the contemplative with the practical life, the intui- tive absorption in God with active love ; while by the others, oh the contrary, a pantheistic quietism that despised all active labor, was ex- tolled as the highest perfection. A sharply defined boundary may, in- deed, be observed between these two ground-tendencies, wherever they are fully and consciously expressed ; but these tendencies did not al- ways so exhibit themselves as to be easily distinguished. Many, by pushing the above mentioned ground-intuitions and tendencies of the re- ligious life into an extreme; by running into a sort of speculation which was mixed up with the feelings, and failed of paying due respect to the proper limits of all speculation ; by a certain intoxication of self-forget- ting love that discarded calm reflection, — were unconsciously betrayed into effusions and expressions upon which that wild fanatical pantheism might afterwards seize and fasten itself. We reckon among such that Master Eckhart, of the Dominican order, whom Tauler mentions as his teacher. This person, a Saxon by origin, stood in high estimation with his order, having been made first provincial of the Dominican order for Saxony, in the year 1304, when it was found expedient, on account of the extent of territory, to separate this part of the order from that be- longing to the rest of Germany and constitute it a province by itself.' We may mention in particular, for an example, that passage of Eck- hart, where he describes God's essence as being the darkness from which all things sprung, and to which they are to return : " Verily God himself rests not there where he is the first beginning ; he rests there ' Quetif et Echard script, ord. praedic, Paris 1719. torn. I, fol. 507, VI. 394 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. where he is an end and a rest of all being. Not that this being comes to nothing, but it is there completed in its ultimate end according to its highest perfection. What is this ultimate end ? It is the hidden dark- ness of the eternal Godhead, and is unknown, and will never be known. God there remains unknown to himself ; and the light of the Eternal Fa- ther, this has eternally shone in there, and the darkness comprehend- eth not the light," ' For another example, take his words on the Lo- gos : " That is no longer an essence, then, which gives all things an essence and life, when the Son is generated from the heart of the Father, eternally to bring in again all things which in him have gone forth." He cites, as referring to this, the words of Christ : " And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me," and then adds : " The Holy Spirit proceeds forth as a love to make our spirit one with him. Therefore the Son brings in again with him all things which in him have gone forth. And therefore the Holy Spirit comes in again with all that which he has spiritualized." "2 Eckhart defines as true righteousness those works only which proceed, without reflection, from the inward constraining influence of the divine life. " The just man — he says — searches not into his own works. For they who seek for anything in their own works, are all servants and hirelings ; or they who work for some wherefore, whether it be blessedness, or eternal life, or the kingdom of heaven, or whatever else in time or in eternity, all such are not righteous. For righteousness consists in this, that a man "work without respect to a wherefore. And hence if thou wouldst be f/«formed or ODer-formed in righteousness, think not of thy works, nor image to thyself any wherefore, either in time or in eternity, either re- ward or blessedness, either this thing or that thing. For all the works thou performest from the movement of the imagination, or out of the imagination, verily these works are all dead. Nay, may I say it ? but I will say it, and it is this : that if thou dost image to thyself even God, "whatever thou doest from respect to this, I speak truly, thy works are all dead ; they are faults, they are nothing, and they are not barely no- thing, but thou destroy est by them even the works that are good." ^ We may mention, furthermore, that proposition, so variously abused by the fanatical pantheism of the Beghards, that all which God works, man works with him. Thus he asserts that the good works which a man per- forms while in mortal sin, are not therefore lost ; evil and good works, in themselves considered^ and the time in which they are done, are all lost; they have no abiding permanence except on the ground of the spirit from which they proceed, and from this ground come the good works also which may be done in mortal sin, and not from the man who is in this mortal sin.^ There were extracted from Eckhart's writings and ' Eckhart's Sermons, in an appendix to place in tliemselves. If tlie man docs the Hamburg edition (1621) of Tauler's good works, whilst he is in mortal sin, vet he Sermons, p. 23. does not the works of mortal sin ; if the * The same, p. 10. works are good, the mortal sins arc evil. ' The same, p. 4. He works them out of the ground of his * His own words are : So then labor spirit, which, in itself, is naturally good • and time are lost together; bad and good but ^e is not in grace. " In a Sermon in thcv arc all lost at once, if they have no Mone's '• Anzcigcr fiir Kuiidc iter ti-ut- abiding in the Kiiirit, av'' no being nor schen Vorzeit." Jalugung V>.37, p. 72. FRIENDS OF GOD IX GERMANY. sermons twentj-six propositions connected with a pantheistic mode of thinking, or verging upon such a mode of thinking, which found their common point of union in assertions similar to those above quoted ; and these were formally condemned. But as Eckhart gave up to this de- cision, retracting those propositions in every sense in which they were found heretical or scandalous, and in general submitted himself to be corrected by the pope and the church, no further steps were tak^n against him personally, and he was permitted to end his days in peace. But when it was found that similar doctrines were widely disseminated among mystical societies, pope John XXII. put forth, in the year 1329, a bull, complaining with justice that such doctrines were held forth in sermons to the simple people.' Yet in vindication of the memory of the departed Eckhart, he immediately subjoined what has been stated above. We may here quote a few of the most remarkable of these propositions. It was asserted that God and the world are correlative conceptions, and that it may be said God created the world from eter- nity ;2 that in all works, good as well as evil, in their guilt and their punishment, God is in like manner manifested and glorified ; that he who prays for this or that particular thing, prays for what is bad in a bad way, because he prays for a negation of the good and a negation of God, and prays that God may be denied to him. In those who seek for nothing, neither honor, nor profit, nor devotion, nor holiness, nor re- ward, nor kingdom of heaven, but have renounced all, even that which is their own, in such God is glorified. We are transformed wholly into God, and transformed into him in the same way as, in the sacrament, the bread is transformed into the body of Christ. I become thus trans formed into him because it is he himself who brings it about that I am his. All that the Father gave to his Son when born into human nature, all this he has given to me ; I except nothing here, neither unity nor holiness ; but he has given all to me as to himself. All that the holy Scriptures say of Christ, is true also of every good and godlike man. Everything that belongs to the divine essence, belongs also to the godly and righteous man ; therefore such a person does all that God does, and with God created the heavens and the earth, and is a begetter of the eternal Word, and God can do nothing without such a person. The good man must make his own will so identical with God's will as to will all that God wills ; because God, in a certain sense, wills that I should have sinned, I ought not to wish that I had not sinned. God has not, strictly speaking, laid down rules for outward action. All crea- tures are purely nothing ; I say not that they are something, but purely nothing. There is in the soul something uncreated, and exalted above all that is created ; if the whole soul were this, it would be itself un- created and exalted above all that is created ; and this is spirit. ' Quae docuit quam maxime coram tunc, siiut nunc, quod daus non poiuit vulgo simplici in suis praedicationibus. primo producere mundum, quia res noa Comp. Raynaldi Ann. at the year 1329, potest agere autequam sit, unde quam cito no. 70 and 71. deus fuit, tam cito mundum creavit ; item * Interrogatus quandoque. quare deus concedi potest, mundum fuisse ab aetenio mundum non prius produxerit, respondit Ibid. S9f) IIISTOHY OF THEOLOGY AXD DOCTRINE. God is neither good, nor the best ; it is just as incorrect to call him ?o, as to call him black or white. ' We may now consider how Ruysbroch and Tauler contended against the pantheistic and quietistic vievrs, the mistaken strivings after freedom, v/hich appeared in the forms we have described. The former says : * " We may meet with godless and devilish men, who affirm that they are God or Christ, and that their hands created heaven and earth, and on their hands all these things depend ; and that they are above all sacra- ments of the church, that they need them not, and wish them not. The ordinances of the church and what the holy fathers have recorded on parchment, they despise ; but their own godless heresy, and a life which is bound by no ordinances or institutions, and the beastly cus- toms invented by themselves, they hold to be very holy and excellent. And yet they have banished from themselves the love and fear of God ; and they disdain the knowledge of good and evil. But they have found within themselves something transcendent, above reason ; and they have wholly drunk in the opinion, that on the day of final judgment all rational creatures, evil as well as good, angels and bad spirits, will pass over into a certain essence, transcending representa- tion, and that this essence is God, in its nature blessed, but without knowledge or will. Since the beginning of time, there has never been invented a more senseless or perverse opinion than this. And yet many suffer themselves to be deceived by it, even of such as seem to be spiritually minded, when in fact they are worse than the demons themselves. For what they affirm is contradicted by pagans and by Jews, by nature, law, reason, all that Scripture teaches concern- ing good and bad angels." Ruysbroch next proceeds to distinguish between the ideal and the real being of rational creatures. " The life — says he — that we, in the divine idea, have in God, is one with liimself, and in its own nature a blessed one. But besides this, we have another in common with the angels ; a life created by God from nothing ; one which will always endure ; and such an one cannot be a blessed one in its own nature ; but it can become a blessed one by God's grace, if we attain to grace ; that is, to faith, hope, knowledge, and love. If we attain to these, we practise those virtues which are pleasing to God, and thus rise above ourselves, and become united with God ; yet a creature never becomes God." " We may meet with many — says he in another place 3 — who imagine they have experienced within themselves a certain true life, above all practice of virtue ; and that they have combined a created and uncreated life, God and the creature at once ; with regard to all which we should know that we have a certain eternal life in the original type of the divine wisdom. And this life ever abides in the Father, and proceeds forth from Him with the Son, and flows back into the same essence with the Holy ' This translation does not correspoiul, - Speoiiluiu aeternae salutis. 0pp. p it is true to the Latin words: Ac si ego ?7 (eil. 1609, pag. 50). album vocarem nigrum ; but I conjecture •* Ibid. pag. :29. from the sense that it should properly read: album vocarem aut nigniui. FRIENDS OF GOD IN GERMANY. 397 Spirit ; and thus we live in an eternal manner in the original type of the holy trinity and of the unity of the Father." But from this ha distinguishes the created life, " which springs from the same wisdom in which God knows his poAver, wisdom aiid goodness ; and this is the image or copy of the former, hy which the former lives in us. By virtue of this image of the former, our life has three properties, where- by we resemble that original ty\)e. For our essence ever contemplates the original of our uncreated essence, lives in it, and feels drawn to- wards it, where we live from God, live to God, live in God, and God in us. This, then, he regards as the hidden, primordial ground of creaturely spirits, whereby they are united in connection with that architypal being to God. " This — he says — is the true ground of life, and is in us all, as to essence, by virtue of mere nature. For it is exalted above hope, faith, grace, and all exercises of virtue, and therefore its being, life, and action are one. But this life is hidden in God and in the essence of our souls. And because this dwells in us all by nature, so, many may, in a certain way, even without grace or faith, and without any exercise of virtue whatever, come to some knowledge of it by natural reason." Accordingly, he now proceeds to trace the misconceptions of those pantheists to their one-sided mode of apprehending that hidden primordial ground separate from the supernatural light of grace. " There are — says he — men given to idle reverie, with introverted eyes, turned away from sensible images to their own simple essence ; and when so turned they deem them- selves blessed, holy ; some even look upon themselves as very God. And they care about nothing, be it good or evil, if they can but rid themselves of forms and images, and find and possess themselves in the pure repose of their essence." So after speaking of the above distinction between the ideal and the real being of the creaturely spirit, he says : i " And yet we are not the wisdom of God ; for then we should have created ourselves, which is impossible ; and to be- lieve this, is godless and heretical. For all that we are and have, we have from God and not from ourselves." Again, he says : ^ " In communion with God we are one spirit and one life with him ; but still we continue to be creatures. For though we have been transfi;:;ured by his light, and absorbed by his love, yet we still know and feel that we are something other than and different from Him. Hence it is that we feel ourselves constrained ever to look up to him and to strive towards him ; and this act will abide eternally with us. For never will it be in our power to lose our created essence and so purely to pass out from it that we shall not still, and through all eternity, con- tinue to be something different from God. For though the Son of God partook of our nature, yet he by no means made us God." How personal consciousness still continues even at the highest point reached by contemplation, in soaring upward to God, he shows thus :^ " Though we may rise above reason, still we are not without rea- son ; hence we feel that we touch and are touched ; love and are ' Ibid. p. 31. "^ Ibid. ^ Ibid. VOL. V. 34 398 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. beloved ; we are continually renewed, and return back into oui selves ; we go and return, like lightning. For by love we contend and brace ourselves, as if stemming a torrent, because we have not power to press through and pass beyond the creaturely essence." " Although — says he in another placed — love absorbs the soul, con- sumes it, and even demands of it what is impossible, and although the soul longs to resolve itself into love as into nothing, yet it can never perish but will always endure. I would, however — says he- — call to the reader's recollection that, where it was asserted by me that we are one with God, it is to be understood that we are one with him in love, not in nature and essence. For God's essence is uncreated, but ours is created ; which makes an infinite difference. Hence, we may in- deed be united one Avith the other, but never become one. And if our own essence were annihilated, we could neither know, nor love, nor be blessed." And again, in the remarkable passage ^ where he ascribes the fall of the angels to their falling in love with their own nature, and thinking they did not need the supernatural gifts of God, he adds : " And yet still worse than all evil spirits are those hypocritical men Avho despise God, and his gifts, and Holy Church and all her sacra- ments, and Holy Scripture, and all exercises of virtue, and say they lead a life exalted above every other kind, something quite transcend- ent, and that they have sunk themselves into the same repose as they had before they were created, and that they have no knowledge, no love, no will, no craving, no exercises of virtue, but are rid of them all. And because they would sin, and commit foul crimes without compunction of conscience, they say besides, that in the day of judg- ment good and evil spirits, godless and pious men, will all be trans- formed together into the simple essence of God ; and then all would in this enjoy an essential blessedness, without knowledge or love of God ; and then God would neither know nor love himself nor any creature." Furthermore, we should here give prominent place to that profoundly thoughtful, truthful description of a one-sided intellectualized mj'sticism, divorced of all vitality of feeling, where he says : 4 " The most danger- ous temptation besets those who, without exercise of the virtues, find within themselves, by imageless, naked inteUigence, the essential being of their souls, and possess the same in a certain naked repose of their spirit and their nature. These sink into a certain empty and blind re- pose of their essence ; they do not concern themselves in the least about performing good works and exercises, external or internal ; and all internal acts, as willing, knowing, loving, longing, and all active tendency to God, they despise and spurn. If these had but striven for one short hour of their life, with pure love and a* holy dispo- sition, after God, and had a taste of the true virtues, they could never have fallen into this blindness and into this unbelief. Assuredly, our Lord and Saviour Christ himself, all classes of the blessed spirits, and ' Ibid. pag. 34. * De quatuor subtilib. tentationib., pag « Ibid. 196 (ed. 1609, pag. 360). * Ibid. pag. 27. FRIENDS OF GOD IN GERMANY. 399 holy men, will, through all eternity, act, love, long, thank, praise, have will and consciousness ; nor can they, without these acts, he blessed. God himself, if he did not act, would not be God, and could not be blessed. Grievously therefore do they err, these poor men, who are to be mourned over with many tears, who slumber and sink down in this mistaken repose of their souls Hence comes a pervened freedom. They are simple people, without all practice of the virtues, and who remain at a very far remove from any true mortification of their nature. Or if they have sought long and much to exercise themselves in great penitence, still they have done it without love and without a pure disposition towards God." Perhaps we may infer from these last words, that many who had taken great pains in the practice of self-mortification afterwards fell away into this mystic bent of apathy. " It is the manner of this people — says he — to sit quiet in one spot, with no sort of occupation, retiring into themselves with an idle sensuousness, stript bare of all images. And because they are without the practice of the virtues, and without love through union with God, hence they do not penetrate into themselves, but reposing in their own essence, convert this into their god or idol. Meanwhile, they fancy themselves one with God." " Thus we are — says he in another place' — without any mediation, in a way exalted above all the virtues, united with God, where, in the highest point of our cre- ated essence, we bear his image within us ; still, we ever continue to be like him, and united with him in ourselves, through his grace and by our virtuous life." He says^ — " We may find a certain race of hypocrites. They would be regarded as persons standing in a passive relation to God ; they would be inactive, and merely certain instru- ments of God. They affirm, therefore, that they stand only in a passive relation, without any action of their own ; and those Avorks which God produces in them as his blind instruments, are more excel- lent and possessed of greater merit than the works of other men. They affirm that they are incapable of committing sin, because God alone works all things in them, and only what God wills and nothing else is done by them. They imagine that every thing to which they feel inwardly impelled, whether it be in agreement with virtue or op- posed to it, proceeds from the motions of the Holy Spirit." From this class Ruysbroch distinguishes another as a still worse one, who pushed this pantheistic quietism to such an extreme as to believe themselves not only raised by it above all religious rites, all the ordi- nances of the church, all obedience to the church, in their own im- agined perfection, their denudation from all creaturely properties and their absorption into God, but also empowered by it to annul all dis- tinctions of right and wrong, and justify every species of irregularity, p)-ovided no disturbance were otfered to the repose of the spirit. We are reminded by all this of similar phenomena, which have occurred among many Gnostic sects, and in ancient India. He tells us first in ' Lib. de septem amoris gradib., pag. ' De ornatu spiiital. nuptiar., pag. 275 224. 400 HISTORY OF THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. what respects they agreed with those before mentioned : " The}' sit still and idle, without any exertion of virtue or