MASTER NEGATIVE NO 92-80666-9 MICROFILMED 1992 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES/NEW YORK as part of the _, . „ "Foundations of Western Civilization Preservation Project Funded by the ^_^ NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES Reproductions may not be made without permission from Columbia University Library COPYRIGHT STATEMENT The copyright law of the United States - Title 17, United States Code - concerns the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material... niversity Library reserves the right to refuse to accept a copy order if, in its judgement, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of the copyright law. AUTHOR: TYRRELL GEORGE TITLE: EXTERNAL RELIGION ITS USE AND ABUSE PLACE: LONDON DA TE : 1906 Restrictions on Use: COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES PRESERVATION DEPARTMENT BIBLIOGRAPHIC MICROJFQRM TARGET Original Material as Filmed - Existing Bibliographic Record 936 T9827 Tyrrell, George, 18G1-1909. External religion : its use and abuse. By the Kev. George Tyrrell ... 4th impression. London, New York and Bom- bay, Longmans, Green, & co., 1906. Ix p., 1 1., lOG p. 19 cm. I>?ctures "given to the Catholic undergraduates at Oxford, on the Sundays In I^nt term, 1899." J^ Calhollc cliurclj— Addresses, essays, lectures. i. Title. BX890.T9 , ^^ Library of CongreHs i^k'ij 8—12828 Master Negative # FILM SIZE: /U- TECHNICAL MICROFORM DATA REDUCTION RATIO: iJ_K IMAGE PLACEMENT: lA (UA) IB IID ^-. DATE FILMED: Kz/.0s_2.^_ INITIALS L^L-iS. HLMEDBY: RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS. INC WOODDRIDGE. 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LEX ORAXDI ; or, Prayer and Creed. Crown Svo. 5s. net. LEX CKLFjKXDI: a Se(iuel U) Lc.\ Oituidi. Crown 8vo. 5s. nci. Also Compiled and Edited, with additions, l)y M. I). Peirk. THE SOUL'.S ORBIT; or, Man's Journey to God. Crown Svo. 4s. 6d. net. LOXCiMANS, GRICEX. AX I) CO., LOXnoX. MA\ \OKK, AND liUMilAV. External Religion: 3ts irisc mt) abuse. »V THE REV. GEORGE TYRRELL Butboi- of " l3av& Sa\nnij3 " an^ " mora ct Uctcra " Voitrth Impression LONGMANS, GREEN, & CO 39 PATERNOSTER ROW. LONDON XEW YORK AND BOMBAY 1906 o PREFACE. ■■\ 1^ The proverbial fruitlessness of religious or philosophical controversy is doubtless in some measure due to the fact that, each one's seem- ingly many thoughts on such matters are indeed but one thought in diverse clothings ; that the conclusions to which we cleave, really so modify our understanding of the principles from which we profess to draw them, that even the few premisses we may seem to hold in union with our opponents are held in a different sense, and thus there is no common basis for argument. It might be thought that, agreeing in the Apostles' Creed and all it involves, a Catholic and Protestant could easily advance to still fuller agreement ; but it may well be doubted if their 4:if>«:}4 VI PREFACE. inner understanding of a single article is exactly the same ; while we venture to suspect that the little differences in each case would be found ultimately to depend upon, rather than support the great conclusions concerning which they are at issue. Whether theoretically it must be so, matters little, since practically, so it is that, for the most part, men first fix their beliefs, and then fabricate reasons in support of them. We flatter ourselves that our thoughts are built up logically from principles which are inde- pendent of their consequences ; but in reality, they are rather as the stones of an arch of which each is supported by all the rest. In purely abstract science, where perfect precision of terms is attainable, logic holds inexorable sway ; nor is there room for difference of opinion ; but where the conceptions dealt with are necessarily imperfectly defined, recourse to dialectical reasoning is idle, until agreement in the manner of simple apprehension can be secured. Here, however, the same difficulty besets the PREFACE. VII elements of the discussion as attends on the total construction to which it is directed. There is no rule for forcing another to apprehend things exactly as we ourselves apprehend them, whether they be simpler notions, or their more complex resultants ; the only resource is, by every artifice of exposition and illus- tration, to set out our idea so clearly that it may find its way readily into any mind already capable of responding to it. But as the same bias of vision, or refraction, which distorts the image of the whole, will proportionally distort the image of each component part, one may just as well begin with the former, and face the problem in the gross as in detail. Nay, better ; for it is our mode of conceivinc^ the whole that determines our mode of conceiving the parts, rather than inversely. It is then by the frequent and diversified setting forth of the Catholic conception of Christianity in its entirety, viewed now from one side, now from another, that we best render Vlll PREFACE. assistance to those many souls who, consciously or unconsciously, are in need of such an ideal and to whom it has only to be clearly presented in order to be apprehended, desired, and accepted. These lectures, slight as they are in many ways and directed to practice rather than to speculation, do nevertheless sketch, in a few rough strokes, one particular outline of the Catholic Religion, which may be of interest just now when the question of ecclesiasticism has come into prominence once more before the eyes of the British public — a question whose solution largely depends on the view we take of the relation of external to internal religion. The Catholic and the Protestant conception of Christianity are distinct from one another not only in their entirety, but — such is the organic unity of each system — in their every detail, notwithstanding many ail-but coincidences and points of ail-but contact. Were these contacts and coincidences perfect, logic might force the PREFACE. IX opponents to total concord under pain of incoherence. But, since as a fact they are not, we shall better deal at once with the two con- ceptions in their entirety, than wrangle about any of their parts, since these are really shaped and animated by the same spirit that charac- terizes the whole. In either case our task is one, not of argurhent, but of exposition ; we have but to let the Truth appear, and then bid men " Come and see ! " And of these, some will remain and some will go away, according to the power of seeing they bring with them. G- T. 'M CONTENTS. Lecture Lecture IL The Incarnation a Redemption of the internal through the external . The religion of the Incarnation, external and internal page I 19 Lecture III. Insuflficiency of merely internal religion 39 Lecture IV. Insufficiency ofmerely external religion 58 Lecture V. Abuse of external means of grace . 80 Lecture VI. Abuse of external means of light , 106 Lecture VII. Abuse of the promise of indefectibility 128 Lecture VIII. Interior Faith 148 LECTURE I. THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF THE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. It has been thought advisable, as far as practically possible, to preserve some kind of rough sequence in these courses of instruction ; ^ and therefore as my Right Reverend predecessor has dealt with the Incarnation, it has been suggested that I should deal with what is some- times called the " Extension of the Incarnation " in the Church and in the individual. To explain in general what we mean by this con- ception, will perhaps best serve as a programme, or an argument of what is to follow. A work so many-sided as that of the Incarna- tion, looking to so many different ends that it is impossible for us to say which is principal in the Divine mind, branches out and extends itself in countless directions ; so that if we are * These were instructions given to the Catholic undergraduates at Oxford, on the Sundays in Lent Term, 1899. 2 THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF not to be lost in labyrinths of perplexity, we must fix on some one of these many divergent lines of its development, and content ourselves with seeing how this or that particular feature of the Incarnation reproduces itself in the Church and in the individual. Plainly this can be seen only by a process of comparison ; by looking first upon one picture and then upon the other, on the original and the reproduction, on Christ and on the Church. It will be necessary for us, therefore, to look- again upon the mystery of the Incarnation, not indeed in its many-sided entirety, but with a view to fixing our attention upon that particular feature of it which it is our purpose to consider as repeated in the Church. Whether, as St. Bonaventure and many others have thought, in the event of man's perseverance in original justice, the Son of God would have become incarnate, not as a "man of sorrows and acquainted with grief," but in a glorified impassible humanity— whether He would have assumed the headship of mankind, wedding our unfallen race into the family of the three Divine Persons, and by this alliance lifting it above that of the angels— all this is matter of a more or less probable and even profitable conjecture, but in no sense, of revealed truth. "Christ THE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. 3 Jesus came into this world to save sinners," says St. Paul ; but whether He would have come had there been no sinners to save, we are not told. One thing is, however, fairly clear, that if we regard the shining forth, and revelation of God's goodness and wisdom and love, as the domi- nating end of all His works in our regard, a far fuller revelation of these attributes has-been rendered possible by the permission of sin than would have been otherwise possible. Wonderful as were the gifts of grace bestowed upon man in Paradise, surpassing all that God has done for him in the natural dignity of his spiritual being, yet far more wonderful is grace restored to man who had forfeited it by sin,— the kiss of peace, the costly robe and ring, the banquet of welcome prepared for the returning spendthrift and rebel. O certe neccssarium AdcB pcccatitm, sings the Church in her Easter jubilee—" O truly needful sin of Adam "—needful and necessary on the supposition that God's love was to speak itself more fully and superabundantly, not merely in giving but in pardoning, not only in liberality but in mercy and meekness, grace superabound- \\Yg where sin had abounded. Had God been made man in a world unfallen, we had known Him indeed, fair and glorious among the sons of men, bright with the radiance of Tabor, with 4 THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF the splendour of His risen and ascended Body, with a glory appealing to the tastes of our spiritual childhood and imperfection ; but our finer and more mature perception of a greater glory than all this would never have been awakened, the glory of the Divine Lover emptied of His glory — suffering, afflicted, humbled, slain ; the glory which shone upon the pallid face of the dead Christ It was, therefore, by preference into a sinful world that the Lamb of God chose to come,— not into pleasant pastures beside the still waters, but into the valley of the shadow of death, into the midst of wolves, to be torn to pieces by sin ; to absorb into Himself the venom of our malice against Him, which else had reacted upon ourselves and poisoned us. For when man struck against God by sin, he was as a bird in the tempest that flings itself against the face of a cliff, and had been dashed to pieces had not God in His pity become soft and yielding, and taken to Himself a sufl'ering nature, that the hurt of the shock might be His and not ours. Healing, restoration, redemption, atonement, such is the purpose and end of the Incarnation most emphasized in Divine revelation. Propter nQS homines^ says the Creed, et propter nostram THE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. 5 saluteui — words which indeed admit of a wider sense, but whose simpler meaning is doubtless the one intended. Humanity had fallen among thieves and lay by the wayside robbed, stript, wounded, and half-dead ; and God, the Good Samaritan, the physician and healer of human nature, drew nigh binding up our wounds, pouring in wine and oil, walking on foot that we might ride at our ease ; taking us to the shelter and hospitality of His Church, there to be cared for and ministered to, till His return. We are then considering our Incarnate Lord as the healer of our wounded nature, in order that we may see how the Church carries on this same work of healing, and by what are substantially the same methods, taking care of redeemed humanity entrusted to her keeping by that Good Samaritan. And for this end we must notice more closely the nature of our wounds, and the kind of treat- ment by which our Lord has salved them. Apart from supernatural assistance, man, as compared with the angels, is by nature a weakly and vulnerable creature, being composed of two unlikely and in some sense antithetical elements — spirit and matter, soul and body. In virtue of his body he belongs to the order of things 6 THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF visible, tani^ible, measurable in reference to time and place ; subject to succession, change, corruption, and death. In virtue of his soul, he is a spirit, lower indeed than the angels, but like them belonging to that invisible, intangible world outside time and space, which we can in no way imagine, and of which we can speak and think only in symbols and metaphors, drawn from things that appeal to our senses. In man these two worlds are mingled and wedded together ; he is, so to say, the child of their marriage; owning an earthly and a Heavenly Father ;~as it might be, a tree rooted indeed in the invisible but leaning over and dipping its branches into the passing stream of things visible. And these two elements in man are so adjusted that the lower shall minister to and be subject to the higher ; the earthly, the relative, the temporal, to the heavenly, the absolute, the eternal ; the senses and imagination feeding the mind, embodying and expressing its thought; the passions and animal feelings mingling with, aiding, and seconding the spiritual wilCgiving body and expression to its movements. Yet the lower principle being blind and head- strong is of itself incapable of intelligent sympathy with the higher, and needs to be guided and governed by it ; and therefore the free self- TIIE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. 7 induced perfection of man lies in a certain delicate and easily-disturbed balance, between the visible and the invisible principles of his being ; between the flesh and the spirit. Spiritiis qiiidem promphis est, caro atitem injinua — " The spirit indeed is ready, but the flesh is infirm." The flesh is the weak, the corruptible, the vulnerable element of our composition, in virtue of which our equilibrium is at the best fearfully unstable. Speaking in the gross all the sins which men commit — sins of the mind as well as sins of the body — arc, if not directly, at least indirectly traceable to the infirmity of the flesh — to the fact that, our spirit is, through its dependence upon the body and the senses, tied down to the world of feelings and illusions and appearances. So much is this the case, that in Holy Scripture the " flesh " is more commonly used to denote all that is corrupt and sinful within us, whereas the spirit stands for all that is god- like or divine. Not indeed that one part of our nature is essentially evil — weak is not evil — and the other essentially good, as heretics have often taught ; for where due equilibrium is preserved each part in balancing helps the other, and fulfils it. For it is in the embodied spirit, not in the disembodied, that the highest and fullest human 8 THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF perfection is realized. Man is not an angel prisoned in a body; but through his body supplements in some little way the poverty and imperfection of a spiritual nature of a lower grade than that of the angels. Yet because all human sin is traceable to culpable ignorance or to passion, i.e., to some illusion of the senses or imagination, some uncontrolled outbreak of ungoverned heat, some failure of faith or even of intelligence as to the reality of things invisible and the unreality of things visible —for this reason the flesh which through our senses links us with the visible world, has come to stand for the principle of sin; whereas the spirit which through faith and reason links us with the invisible world, has come to be regarded as the principle of righteousness and divinity. Left to ourselves, and in the merely natural order of things, the perfect balancing of the spiritual with the fleshly elements of our being, of reason with imagination, of the will with the feelings, is something attained very slowly and with great difficulty ; and in the attaining of which our life-task of self-development consists But it is a point of common Catholic teaching that God having destined our first parents for a perfection and blessedness altogether above and beyond what was naturally due to them, THE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. Q started them at that point of perfection which would otherwise have been their goal, and by certain preternatural endowments, gave them what they had not laboured for, namely, all those virtues of mind, heart, affections and passions, by which the flesh and spirit are brought into perfect harmony and concord, that so their energies might be set free and multiplied for conflicts and temptations of an altogether higher order, temptations attendant on altogether superhuman aspirations and attainments ; mysterious temptations, such as we can imagine the angels to have been proved by. There is enough in that dim Oriental record of the Fall, to satisfy us that it was through unbelief in the invisible, through intellectual self-sufficiency, through spiritual pride, that man wilfully and inexcusably subjected himself to the bondage above which he had been supernaturally raised, to the tyranny of things visible — of the flesh, the senses, the imagination, the passions. " Of every tree in the garden shalt thou eat, but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat ; for in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die." Here there is figured some mysterious and at first si^rht unreasonable restriction of the 10 THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF indulgence of the natural inclination, a restric- tion to be submitted to with blind faith in the wisdom and goodness of God. And this restric- tion was disregarded, seemingly, not through any extreme pressure of carnal appetite, but through a certain revolt of the mind, rebelling again^'st the invisible, impatient to see and understand everything, as though God had no right to keep a secret from man. Although then the flesh in its healthy state of perfect obedience to the spirit, could not have been the instigating motive of the Fall, could not have responded in any irregular and unmanageable way to temptation from without, yet it was the instrument which man deliberately chose for his own destruction ; and in so doing, he released it from its obedience, and cut the cords by which God had bound the lower appetite into subjection to the higher ; and in freeing the slave, soon found that he had let loose a tyrant : Sent dominaii sunt nostri-^ " Our slaves have become our tyrants." Hence- forward, he himself became the slave of the visible, the tangible, the illusory, the unreal, of that world, to which he belongs as a creature of space and time, of flesh and blood. Thus it was that the flesh, the instrument of his sin, became the instrument of his chastisement THE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. Il Man was robbed and wounded and left half- dead. It was then for the greater manifestation of God's power and wisdom, that He should not only in His mercy undo the work of sin ; but that He should take the very instrument and occasion of evil — the flesh namcl}^ and the visible order of things to which it belongs — and make it an instrument for the remedy of evil. Hoc opus nostrae salutis Ordo depoposcerat Multiformis proditoris Ars ut artcm falleret Et medelam ferret inde Hostis undo laescrat — as the Church sings in one of her Passion-tide hymns. "A certain sense of order and justice," she tells us, " demanded that the work of our restoration should be in such wise, that the craft of the many-sided traitor should be met by God's counter-craft, fetching our cure from the same quarter whence the enemy had brought our hurt," namely, from the flesh, from the visible element of our composition. It is therefore on this feature of the economy of the Incarnation that we wish to dwell ; how Christ has not merely redeemed the whole man. 12 THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF body as well as soul ; the whole creation, visible as well as invisible ; but how He has used the weaker element for the redemption of the stronger; saving the spirit through the flesh; the invisible through the visible ; the internal through the external ; how He has chosen the feeble things of this world to confound the strong ; the foolish to confound the wise ; the ignoble to confound the noble ; the things that relatively are not to confound the things that are— "to confound," that is, to rebuke, to humble, and so to exalt and redeem. Not without some intentional emphasis does St. John proclaim the mystery as "the Word made/ For flesh hath cleansed what flesh had stained And God's own flesh as God hath reigned. THE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. I3 earth for thy sake, on thy account," says God to the first Adam ; "thorns and briers shall it bring forth." Through Adam's sin, the whole visible order of things was cursed and alienated from God. It had been created to gwo, praise to God through man. Itself soulless and voice- less, it could not know itself or praise God for what He had made it ; but man could see it and know it, and praise God for it ; and so in man it was to have found a voice and given glory to God. The chords were there, tuned by Divine skill, but silent till struck by human hands. But by sin, man lost the art of that music, and his every touch upon that instrument drew out some harsh discord. There was no change in God's work — good and exceeding good as He had pronounced it — the change was all and only in man's heart. "Thorns and briers shall it bring forth." The visible order of things previously submitted by the power of God to man's service, and yielding its fruit in response to light and pleasurable labour, now returned to its natural unruliness, bringing forth thorns and briers, sorrows and snares, and needing to be weeded and laboriously cultivated in the sweat of man's brow, to yield him even in niggardly measure that bread whereby his soul might live. Absolutely speaking, thorns and 14 THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF briers were there before, yet relatively to man they were not, till he threw himself wilfully in their midst to be entanolcd and pierced. The chan-e was not in nature, but in man ; it was the effect not of things visible, but of man's misuse of things visible. For thorns and briers, sorrows and temptations, are largely little else than a " form " our own mind puts upon things. " It depends on how we take things," as we s^y What is sweet in itself is bitter to the disordered palate; and light that gladdens the healthy eye, hurts and tortures that which is weak and unduly sensitive. And, therefore, since Christ has come with hcalmg in His wings; to breathe into us once more the breath of IKe ; to sanctify and harmonize our flesh and spirit through contact with His own sacred Flesh and Spirit, so far as He has already begun even in this life to change us and bring our flesh once more into obedience to our spirit ; in that same measure and de-ree He has begun the restoration of the whole visible world to the service of man and the glory of God. It became dumb and blind and deaf, when man was separated from God and enslaved to his own flesh ; but nous throuo-h the sacred Flesh of Christ, and that of the safnts of Christ, It has received vision and voice and THE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. I5 hearing ; " He hath done all things well ; He hath made the deaf to hear and the dumb to speak," the long-silent spheres take up their broken melody once more ; the heavens again tell out the glory of God, and the firmament showeth His handiwork. Yet here again it is in us and through us that the transformation is wrought. The nature of water was not in itself changed when Christ trod the restless waves ; nor was that of fire robbed of its natural destructiveness when it singed not a hair of God's saints while it con- sumed their tormentors ; nor were lions less fiercely-natured in the moment when they crouched and licked the feet of the martyrs in the arena ; nor did the timid birds of the air belie or alter their natural character when they trustfully gathered around the Saint of Assisi. "What manner of man is this that the winds and the sea obey Him?" A wisely put question ! They did not say: What manner of sea and wind is this? It was in Him and not in the elements that they sought the explanation of the marvel. In the measure that man is what he ought to be, that he approaches his lost supernatural dignity as a son of God, the world will be to him what it ought to be, and so it too will be delivered from its bondage and servitude IP I l6 THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION OF by being brought under man's feet, even as man finds his hberty at the feet of God Of this con- summation the Prophet says : " Thou hast made him h'ttle less than a god, and hast put all things under his feet ; " and again : " Sit at My right hand till I make thy foes thy footstool;" till thy enemies have become thy lovers and servants. To deal with the extension of the Incarnation as we propose, is to show how the Catholic religion carries on the work of man's redemption by the same methods as Christ, turning by some wondrous magic the poison into an antidote, using for our cure those same visible things which we had misused and still misuse to our hurt. Other defective and false interpretations of our religious instinct seeing all the sin and evil occasioned by the misuse of the senses and the material world, have come to regard the body, the senses,and everything corporeal,as essentially and irredeemably evil, and to seek the liberation and redemption of the spirit through the destruc- tion of the flesh, and by way of a false and impossible asceticism. This error has charac- terized, not merely the great non-Christian religions of the East, in whose dim twilight so many hundreds of millions have had to grope their way to Heaven as best they might; but THE INTERNAL THROUGH THE EXTERNAL. I7 also numberless Christian sects of the Puritan or Catharist type, as well as many schools of pietism just barely tolerated within the Church,— alien to her spirit and guided largely by an unconscious bias of neo-platonism ; escaping her censure only through the very confusion of their modes of thought and expression. But in that interpretation of our religious instinct which God Himself has given us through the Incarnation and in the Catholic religion of Human Nature, the essential and ineffaceable goodness of all God's creatures is the pre- dominant idea. The seeming evilness of the senses and of material things is not in them- selves, but in the perverse will of man who misuses them. Let that will be healed and rectified, and at once the visible world returns to its original obedience ; and what before were stumbling-blocks, are now steps sloping up to the throne of God. The body, the senses, the imagination, the feelings, the passions, are all, through the redemption of Christ, restored to their original functions as instruments for the sanctification of the soul. That there should be a visible and hierarchic Church, involving a duty of visible membership as a normal condition of salvation; that she C THE INCARNATION A REDEMPTION. should use visible rites and sacraments in the sanctification of souls ; that the Divine Word should be brought to our souls not by private inspiration, but by the folly and weakness of preaching; that the mysteries of eternity, the dogmas of faith, should be conceived in the forms of human thought, expressed in the language of human speech ; that in a thousand ways this Catholic religion should press the visible order into the service of the invisible, redeeming every form of human thought and love and action from the service of sin to the service of God, making the kingdoms of this world, — the king- doms of art and of science and economics and politics, to be the kingdoms of God and His Christ ; bringing music and painting and song and drama into the very Holy of holies itself, all this is but a certain extension of the Incar- nation ; an expansion of that economy whereby the flesh, i.e,, the visible world, which throu