3) 40^ / >^^ Dv<«..^ 9?!."®" University Library BX1806 .065 1869 ''°P?.,.j?n«* 'he Council. olin 3 1924 029 392 051 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029392051 THE POPE AND THE COUNCIL RIVIXGTOXS ILontllin . Waterloo PLtce. ©iforll High SlreeL (Eamirilisr Trinity Street. THE POPE AND THE COUNCIL BY JANUS AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION FROM THE GERMAN SECOND EniTION. EIVINGTONS 3Lonti0n, ©i&ri), ant dLamhxitiQZ SCRIBNER, WELFOED AND CO., NEW YORK 1869. [All rights reserved.] c" The '• Preside':! White . Library EDINBURGH I T. CONSTABLE, PKIXTI^K TO THE QUEEN, AND TO THE UNIVERSITY. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Notice by Translator, . . . . ix Pkefacb, ....... xiii Intboduotion — Jesuit Programme for the Council, ... 1 Eecent Provincial Synods on Papal Infallibility, . 5 Method of Proceedings pre-arranged, ... 6 CHAPTER I. MAKING THE SYLLABUS DOGMATTC. Schrader's Affirmative Statement of the Propositions, 9 (1.) Coercive Power of the Church, ... 9 (2.) Political Supremacy of the Popes, . . . 13 (3.) Eevision of History, . . . . . 15 (4.) Freedom of Conscience and Persecution, . . 16 (5.) Modern Civilisation and Constitutionalism condemned, 20 CHAPTER II. THE NEW DOGMA ABOUT MARY, .... 34 vi Table of Contents. CHAPTER in. PAPAL 1NPAI.LIBIL1TT. PAGE Sect. 1. — UUramontanism, . . . 3l Sect. 2. — Comequences of the Dogma of Infallibility, . 45 Sect. 3. — Errors and Contradictions of the Popes, . 51 Sect. 4. — The Verdict of History on the Position of Bishops of Bome in the A ncient Church, . . 63 Sect. 5. — The Primacy in the Ancient Constitution of the Church, ..... 77 Sect. 6.— The Teaching of the Fathers on the Primacy, 86 Sect. 7. — Forgeries — The Isidorian Decretals, ... 94 Forgeries of the Hildebrandine Era, . 100 Earlier Goman Fabrications, . . 122 The Liber Pontificalis, . . . 128 The Donation of Constantine, . . 131 Donations of Pepin and Charlemagne, 135 The Decretum of Gratian, . . 142 .Sect. 8. — Progress of Papal Power in the Twelfth and Thir- teenth Centuries, .... 151 Seit. 9. — Papal Encroachments on Episcopal Bights Legates, ... .164 Exemptions and Dispensations, 165 The Pallium, ... Ig7 Plenitudo Potestatis, . Igg Appeals to Rome, . 172 Papal Patronage, . . lyg Table of Contents. vii PAGM Reservations, . . .176 The Oath o£ Obedience, . . 176 Interference with Diocesan Administration and its Results, . . . . 177 Sect. 10. — Personal Attitude of the Popes, . . 181 Sect. 11. — Relation of Popes to Councils in the Middle Ages, 190 Sect. 12. — Neglect of Tlieology at Rome, . 199 Sect. 13. — The College of Cardinals, 205 Sect. li.—The " Curia," .... 215 Sect. 15. — The Judgments of Contemporaries, . . 22ii Sect. 16. — The Inquisition, . . 235 Sect. 17. — Trials far Witchcraft, .... 249 Sect. 18. — Dominican Forgeries and their Results, . 261 Sect. 19. — Papal Infallibility Disputed, . . 271 Sect. 20. — Fresh Forgeries, . ■ 278 Sect. 21.— Interdicts, . . 289 Sect. 22. — The Schism of the Antipopes, . 292 Sect. 23. — The Council of Constance, . . ■ 298 Sect. 24..— The Council of Basle, . . . 308 Sect. 25. — 7''he Union with the Greeh Church, . . 319 Sect. 26. — TJie Papal Reaction, .... 327 Sect. 27. — Temper and Circumstances of the Fifteenth Century, 337 Sect. 28. — The Opening of the Sixteenth Century— The Fifth Lateran Synod, . . 347 Security of the Curia, . . 349 The Roman Chancery, . . . 351 Coneete and Savonarola, . . . 353 Sect. 29.— The State of Contemporary Opinion, . . 355 VIU Table of Contents. Sect. 30. — The Council of Trent and Us Sesults, . Sect. 31. — Papal IvfaUibillUy farmvlized into a Doctrine — Ibalian Theologians, . Admissions made by Infallibiliats, . Eiill of Paul rv., Cum ex Apostolat&s officio, Ertll, In Com& £>omim, The Jesuit Divdnes, . £ellarmine, . Cortuptions of the Breviary, The Koman Martyrology corrupted, . The laidorian Forgeries maintained, Definitions ex cathedrd, Sect. 32. — The Infallibility of the Church and of the Popes compared — Infallibility of the Church, . Infallibility of the Pope, Moral Effect of the Theory on the Popes, Sect. 33. — ,fhaf is meant by a Free Council, PAGE 365 371 377 382 384 387 390 396 399 401 403 411 412 414 419 NOTICE BY THE TRANSLATOR. XT will be obvious at a glance to the reader, that this -^ work emanates from Catholic authorship, and dis- cusses the great religious crisis through which the Church and the world are now passing from a Catholic, though a " liberal Catholic," point of view. That it bears evi- dence of no common attainments and grasp of mind a very cursory examination will suffice to show. An English, translation is offered to the public under the belief that there are very many in this country, as well Protestants as Catholics, who will gladly avail them- selves of an opportunity of learning, on the most direct authority, how the grave questions which just now agitate the Church are regarded by the members of a school, morally if not numerically strong, within her pale, who yield indeed to none in their loyal devotion X Notice by the Translator. to Catholic truth, but are unable to identify its interests with the advance of Ultramontanism, or rather, who cannot but recognise between the two an antithesis which the Church history of the last thousand years too eloquently attests, and to which present facts, no less than past experience, give all the significance of a solemn warning it would be worse than unwisdom to ignore. Two rival tendencies, alien alike in their principles and their aims, which have long been silently develop- ing themselves, are now contending for the mastery within the bosom of the Church, like the unborn babes in Eebekah's womb, and it is simply a truism to assert that every section of our divided Christendom is inter- ested in the result of the struggle. "We live in an age powerful beyond all that have gone before for good and for evil, penetrated perhaps more deeply than controversial- ists are willing to admit by Christian sentiment, but also presenting in too many quarters a spectacle unprece-^ dented in modern history, of fixed and deliberate anta- gonism to the dogmas of the Christian creed. Not only the world of sense, but of supernatural revelation, is Notice by the Translator. xi delivered over to the disputations of men. At sucli a tnoment, it is proposed, amid the fervid acclamations of one party, the earnest and sorrowful protests of another, the careless acquiescence or sullen indiffer- ence of a host of nominal believers, and the triumphant sneers of an amused but unbelieving outside world, to erect Papal Infallibility into an article — and therefore inevitably the cardinal article — of the Catholic faith. Under a profound sense of the range and gravity of the issues involved this work was written, and with a simi- lar feeling, which each day's experience only deepens, it has been translated. Man's necessity, we know, is God's opportunity, and even at the eleventh hour He may stretch forth His arm to save His menaced and afflicted Church. " Oculi omnium in Te sperant, Domine, et Tu das escam illorum in tempore opportune." We cannot, indeed, forget that two years elapsed before the oecumenical pretensions of the Latrocinium of Ephesus were formally superseded, and that for more than twenty the Church lay, technically at least, under the reproach of heresy inflicted on her by the Council of Eimini, to which St. Jerome gave expression in the xii Notice by tfie Translator. well-known words, " mundus miratus est se esse Ai'ia- num." Meanwhile, it behoves us to possess our souls in patience, as knowing that the Church is greater than any parties or individuals who for the moment may usurp her functions and prostitute her awful name, and that, come what will, truth must ultimately prevaiL It may be well to add that the substance of the earlier portion of this volume appeared in a series of articles on " The Council and the Civiltk," published during last March in the Allgemeine Zeitung^ which attracted very general attention on the Continent. But the whole subject is here worked out in detail, and with constant reference to the original authorities for every statement that is dwelt upon. > -See Allg. Z. for March 10-15, 1869. P REFA CE. THE immediate object of this work is to investigate by the light of history those questions which, we are credibly informed, are to be decided at the (Ecu- menical Council already announced. And as we have endeavoured to fulfil this task by direct reference to original authorities, it is not perhaps too much to hope that our labours will attract attention in scientific circles, and serve as a contribution to Ecclesiastical History. But this work aims also at something more than the mere calm and aimless exhibition of histori- cal events ; the reader will readily perceive that it has a far wider scope, and deals with ecclesiastical politics, — in one word, that it is a pleading for very life, an appeal to the thinkers among believing Christians, a protest based on history against a menacing future, against the programme of a powerful coalition, at one time openly proclaimed, at another more darkly insi- xiv Preface. nuated, and which thousands of busy hands are daily and hourly employed in carrying out. We have "written under a deep sense of anxiety in presence of a serious danger, threatening primarily the internal condition of the Catholic Church, and then — as is inevitahle with what affects a corporation includ- ing 180 millions of men— destined to assume vaster dimensions, and take the shape of a great social pro- blem, which cannot be without its influence on eccle- siastical communities and nations outside the Catholic Church. This danger does not date from yesterday, and did not begin with the proclamation of the Council. For some twenty- four years the reactionary movement in the Catholic Church, which is now swollen to a mighty torrent, has been manifesting itself, and now it is pre- paring, like an advancing flood-tide, to take possession of the whole organic life of the Church by means of this Council. We — and the plural must not here be understood iiguratively, but literally — we confess to entertaining that view of the Catholic Church and her mission which its opponents designate by that much-abused term, so convenient in its vagueness for polemical pur- Preface. xv poses — Liheral; a term in the worst repute with all uncompromising adherents of the Court of Eome and of the Jesuits — two powers intimately allied, — and never mentioned by them without bitterness. We are of their opinion who are persuaded, first, that the Catholic Church, far from assuming an hostile and suspicious attitude towards the principles of political, intellectual, and religious freedom and independence of judgment, in so far as they are capable of a Christian interpreta- tion, or rather are directly derived from the letter and spirit of the Gospel, ought, on the contrary, to be in positive accord with them, and to exercise a constant purifying and ennobling influence on their develop- ment ; secondly, that a great and searching reformation of the Church is necessary and inevitable, however long it may be evaded. To us the Catholic Church and the Papacy are by no means convertible terms, and therefore, while in out- ward communion with them, we are inwardly separated by a gi-eat gulf from those whose ideal of the Church is an universal empire spiritually, and, where it is pos- sible, physically, ruled by a single monarch, — an empire of force and oppression, where the spiritual authority is aided by the secular arm in summarily suppressing xvi Preface. every movement it dislikes. In a word, we reject that doctrine and idea of the Church which has for years been commended by the organ of the Eoman Jesuits as alone true, as the sole remaining anchor of deliverance for the perishing human race. It will more precisely indicate our point of view if we quote the words of a man regarded in his lifetime as the ornament and pride of the German clergy, the Cardinal and Prince Bishop Diepenbrock, who was himself the pupil of the ever-memorable Sailer, and shared his sentiments. Diepenbrock replied to the reforming suggestions of his friend Passavant, involving an alteration in the hierarchy, a softening of the sharp distinction between clergy and laity, a co-operation of the people in Church-goverimient, and a transformation of the Eoman Court, by saying that " only in this way can health be restored to the general body, and earthly conditions be elevated and ennobled, which is a task that Christianity must accomplish ; only thus, by deve- loping and quickening the constitution and doctrine of the Church, can the questionings and aspirations this remarkable age of ours is everywhere seething with obtain their rest and satisfaction." " It is true, indeed," he added, " that the ultra party Preface. xvii in the Church hopes to reach its goal by an opposite road. But such a return to the past is an impossibility in history. The Middle Ages are left behind once for all, and nothing but a fata morgana can make them hover like a possible future before the lively imagination of and his allies. The necessity of a complete re- novation of the Church is already dawning on the vision of all who think without prejudice, while to the few only its nature and method are as clear as the thing itself. To speak out such ideas openly I hold to be a sort of duty of charity towards mankind."-' It would be easy to quote from the writings of Giigler, Gorres, Eckstein, Francis Baader, and Mohler — to mention only the departed — a series of testimonies to prove that the most gifted and enlightened among German Catholics have entertained the same or kin- dred views. Diepenbrock only lived to witness the first tentative approaches of that Ultramontanism which he has de- scribed. What appeared in his time as an isolated and half-unconscious tendency, has since grown up into a powerful party, with clearly ascertained objects, which has gained a firm footing through the wide ramifications 1 See Letters published in Passavant's Nachlass {Remains), p. 87. b xviii Preface. of the Jesuit Order, and enlists the energetic services of a constantly increasing body of fellow-labourers in the clergy educated at the Jesuit CoUege in Eome. As it had become necessary to assail this party, which carries on its plans either in ignorance of Church history or by deliberately falsifying it, we were obliged to distin- guish the primacy as it existed in the ancient Church from its later form, and we could not therefore avoid bringing forward in this connexion a very dark side of the history of the Papacy. Every one who examines the internal relations of Church history will be con- strained to acknowledge that, since the eleventh cen- tury, there has been no period of it on which a Chris- tian student can dwell with unmixed satisfaction ; and as he endeavours to get at the bottom of the causes underlying that unmistakable decay of Church Ufe, con- stantly getting a deeper hold, and more widely spreading he will always be brought back to the distortion and transformation of the Primacy aS the ultimate root of the evil If the Primacy is on the one hand a source of strength to the Catholic Church, yet on the other hand ' it cannot be denied that, when one looks at it from the standpoint of the ancient Church — from the Apostolic age tin about 845, — the Papacy, such as it has become, Preface. xix presents the appearance of a disfiguring, sickly, and choking excrescence on the organization of the Church, hindering and decomposing the action of its vital powers, and bringing manifold diseases in its train. And now, when for many years preparations have been going on for effecting the final completion of the sys- tem which lies at the root of the present incongrxiities in the Church, and surrounding it with an impregnable bulwark by the doctrine of Infallibility, it becomes the duty of every one who wishes well to the Church and to society, to which it supplies an element of life, to try, according to the measure of his knowledge and working power, what can yet be done to ward off so fatal a catastrophe. We do not conceal from ourselves that the charge of a radical aversion to the Papacy will be brought from more than one quarter against this book and its authors. Their number is legion at the present day, for whom the scriptural saying, " MeHora sunt vulnera dUigentis quam fraudulenta oscula odientis," has no meaning, and who cannot comprehend how a man can at once love and honour an institution, and yet expose its weak points, denounce its faults, and purposely exhibit their mischievous results. In their opinion, things of the XX Preface. kind should be carefully hushed up, or only apologeti- cally referred to. And for some time past this way of looking at matters has heen designated " piety." It is therefore pious to believe gladly and readily fables and falsehoods which have been invented for certaia ends coimected with religion, or are clothed in a religious dress; it is pious either whoUy to deny the injuries and abuses of the Church's life, and the perversities in her government, or, when this is impracticable, to do one's utmost to defend them, and to gain them the cre- dit of being due to good motives, or, at least, of having a tolerable side. The absence of such a disposition is visited in ecclesiastical circles with tbe reproach of im- piety — a reproach which, accordingly, our work is sure not to escape. But we do not acknowledge the jus- tice of this view ; we consider it, indeed, a commend- able piety to maintain silence about the personal in- firmities or errors of a man in high position, or even at the head of the Church, or at least to deal gently with them, but we think it a complete misapplication of the term when it is called a duty of piety to conceal or colour historical facts and faulty institutions. On the contrary, we believe our piety owes its first duties to the Divine institution of the Church and to the truth, and Preface. xxi it is precisely this piety -whicli constrains us to oppose, frankly and decisively, every disfigurement or disturb- ance either of the one or the other. And we hold it the more imperative on us to come forward, when not only hereditary evils are not to be got rid of, but are actually to be increased by new abuses, and that too at a time when the falling away from Christianity has become so general and cuts so deep — partly for this very reason, that, under the mass of rubbish it is oveflaid with, its eternal, divine, and saving germ is hidden from the short-sighted gaze of the present generation. In proof that herein we are but acting in the spirit of the Church, we can appeal to sayings, the one of a Pope, the other of a highly-venerated saint. Innocent iii. said, "Falsitas sub velamine sanctitatis tolerari non debet," and St. Bernard declares, " Melius est ut scan- dalum oriatur quam Veritas relinquatur." Every faithful Catholic is convinced — and to that con- viction the authors of this book profess their adherence — ^that the primacy rests on Divine appointment. The Church from the first was founded upon it, and the Lord of the Church ordained its type in the person of Peter. It has therefore, from the necessity of the case, developed itself up to a certain point, but on this has followed, since xxii Preface. the ninth century, a further development — artificial and sickly rather than sound and natural — of the Primacy into the Papacy, a transformation more than a develop- ment, the consequences of which have been the splitting up of the previously united Church into three great ecclesiastical bodies, divided and at enmity with each other. The ancient Church found the need of a centre of unity, of a bishop possessed of primatial authority, to whom the oppressed might turn, and by whose powerful intercession they might obtain justice. But when the presidency in the Church became an empire, when in place of the first bishop deliberating and deciding in union with his " brethren '' on the affairs of the Church, and setting them the example of submission to her laws, was substituted the despotic rule of an absolute mon- arch, then the unity of the Church, so firmly secured be- fore, was broken up. "When we inquire for definite, fixed, and universally acknowledged rights, exercised equally throughout the whole Church during the first Christian centuries by the bishop of Eome, as holding the primacy, we seem to lose sight of him again, for of the privilege8| afterwards obtained or laid claim to by the Popes not one can be traced up to the earliest times, and pointed to as a right uninterruptedly and everywhere exercised Preface. xxiii But we meet with abundant facts whicli prove nnmis- takeably that the Eoman bishops not only believed themselves to be in possession of a Divine right, and acted accordingly, but that this right was actually recognised by others. And if it was often affirmed, as by the Council of Chalcedon, that the Eoman Church had received its privileges from the Fathers, we shall have to consider that the Primacy itself, the first rank among Churches, was not given to it by any Synod at any fixed time, but had always existed since the time of the Apostles, and that to any heathen who asked which among their Churches was the first and principal one, whose voice and testimony had the greatest weight and influence, every Christian would have answered at once that it was the Eoman Church, where the two chief Apostles, Peter and Paul, sealed their testimony with their blood, just as Irenseus has expressed it. But we shall be obliged to allow that the form which this Primacy took depended on the concessions of the particular local Churches, and was never therefore the same everywhere, acting within certain fixed limits prescribed by law. No one acquainted with Church history will choose to afBrm that the Popes ever exer- cised a fixed primatial right, in the same way in Africa xxiv Preface. as in Egypt, in Gaul as in Mesopotamia; and the well-known fact speaks clearly enough for itself that throughout the whole ancient canon law, whether in the collections preserved in the Eastern or the Western Church, there is no mention of Papal rights, or any re - ference to a legally defined action of the bishop of Kome in other Churches, with the single exception of the canon of Sardica, which never obtained universally even in the Wast. A good illustration of this relation of the Primacy to the Church is afforded by the Council of Chalcedon in 451. The position of Pope Leo, though he was not present, is evidently a very high and influential one; more honour was shown to him and his Church than had been ever shown at any Synod to any other bishop, and his legates presided with great authority at this most numerous of the ancient assemblies of the Church. Meanwhile matters came at last to a point, where the Council maintained, and eventually, after long opposi- tion on the side of Eome, carried out its own will against the legates, and the instructions they had received from Leo.^ 1 In the account of patristic teaching on the Koman primacy given below (pp. 87 sjj.), there is no mention made of one important name, St. Preface. xxv In this book the first attempt has been made to give a history of the hypothesis of Papal Infallibility from its first beginnings to the end of the sixteenth century, when it appears in its complete form. That hypothesis, late as was the date of its invention, and though for a long time it met with strenuoiis opposi- tion, will yet always have numerous adherents, if it is to remain for the future in its former condition of a mere theological opinion, for it is recommended by* its convenience and facility of applicatioii. It seems to attain, by the shortest road, in the simplest way, and with least waste of time, what the ancient Ohurch expended so much trouble upon, with so many appli- ances, and for so long a time. But, if once generally Jerome's. As the omission Mght be considered intentional, we take this opportunity of making some remarks on him. His letters to Pope Bamasus of 375 ffipp. ed. Vallarsi, i. 39), were written under the pressure of his distress in Syria from the charge of heresy ; he was unwilling to use the received expression, "three hypostases," instead of "three persons," and was therefore accused of Sabellianism. He then urged the Pope, with courtly and high-sounding professions of unconditional suhmission to his authority, hut, at the same time, in a strictly menacing tone, to pronounce upon this term in the sense needed for justifying him. In fact, he gave St. Cyril of Jerusalem, to whom he sent his profession of faith, as high a place as the Pope. But Cyril, with good ground, thought the case a suspicious one, and gave him no answer. St. J-erome's well-known saying, "Inter duodecim unus eligitur, ut capite constituto schisraatis toUeretur ocoasio," gives the most pointed expression to the view then entertained by the faithful of the nature of the Primacy, only the notions current in our day of the privileges involved in this description of it are more extensive than was then the case. xxvi Preface. accepted as a rule of faith, it becomes not only a soft cushion on which the wearied or perplexed mind, as well of the layman as of the theologian, may repose softly, and abandon itseKto undisturbed slumber, but it also supplies to the intellectual world in religious matters what our steam conveyances and electrical wires supply to the ma- terial world in the saving of time and labour. Nothing could be more economical or better adapted to save study and intellectual toil even for Eome herself ; for the ia- evitable result of the principle would speedily bring us to this point, that the essence of Infallibility consists in the Pope's signature to a decree hastily drawn up by a congregation or a single theologian. The remark has frequently been made that it is chiefly converts, with little theological cultivation, but plenty of youthful zeal, who surrender themselves in willing and joyful mental slavery to the infallible ruler of souls ; rejoicing and deeming themselves fortunate to have a master, visible, palpable, and easily inquired o£ Christ seems to them so exalted and so distant, the Church so large and wide, so many-sided in its opinions, and so silent on many points people would like to know about. How much easier to get a dogmatic decision from a Pope by the proper amount of pressure ! We may call to mind, Preface. xxvii in this connexion, the decisions of Alexander vii. in favour of the newly discovered doctrine of attrition, the decrees of Clement xi. and Benedict xni., and the powers which have thereby been called into operation. But if raising the doctrine of Infallibility into an article of faith must, on the one hand, cripple aU intel- lectual movement and scientific activity in the Catholic Church, it would, on the other hand, build up a new wall of partition, and that the strongest and most im- penetrable of all, between that Church and the religious communities separated from her. We must renounce that dearest hope which no Christian can banish from his breast, the hope of a future reunion of the divided Churches both of the East and the West. For no one who is moderately acquainted with the history of the Eastern Church and of the Protestant bodies, wiU seri- ously hold it to be conceivable that a time can ever come in which even any considerable portion of these Churches will subject itself, of its own free-will, to the arbitrary power of a single man, stretched, as it would be, through the doctrine of InfalUbility, even beyond its pre- sent proportions. Only when a universal conflagration of libraries had destroyed all historical documents, when Easterns and Westerns knew no more of their own early xxviii Preface. history than the Maories in New Zealand know of theirs now, and when, by a miracle, great nations had abjured their whole intellectual character and habits of thought, — then, and not tiU. then, would such a submission be possible. What was it that gave the Councils of Constance and Basle, in the fifteenth century, so constraining an autho- rity and such a lasting influence on the condition of the Church? It was the power of public opinion which backed them up. And if at this day a strong and unanimous public opinion, at once positive in its faith and firm in its resistance to the realization of the Ultra- montane scheme, were awakened and openly proclaimed in Europe, or even in Germany only, then, in spite of the utterances, so suggestive of gloomy forebodings, of the Bishops of Mayence, St. Polten, and Mechlin, the present danger would happily pass away. We have attempted in this work to contribute to the awakening and direction of such a public opinion. It may, perchance, produce no more permanent effect than a stone thrown into the water, which makes a momentary ripple on the surface, and then leaves all as it was before ; but yet it may act like a net cast into the sea, which brings in a rich draught of fishes. Preface. xxix Tor many reasons no names of authors are placed on our title-page. We consider tliat a work so entirely made up of facts, and supporting all its statements by reference to the original authorities, miist and can speak for itself, without needing any names attached to it. We are anxious that the reader's attention should be exclusively concentrated on the matter itself, and that, in the event of its evoking controversy, no opportu- nity should be given for transferring the dispute from the sphere of objective and scientific investigation of the weighty questions under review, conducted with dignity and calmness, into the alien region of venomous personal defamation and invective. JvHy 31, 1869. INTRODUCTION. THE veil whicli has hitherto hung over the prepara- tions and intention of the great General Council is already lifted. The Civiltcb Gattolica of 6th Tebruary published the following remarkable article, in the form of a com- munication from France : — " The liberal Catholics are afraid the Council may proclaim the doctrines of the Syllabus and the Infallibility of the Pope, but they do not give up the hope that it may modify or interpret certain statements of the Syllabus in a sense favourable to their own ideas, and that the question of Infallibility will either not be mooted or not decided. The true Catholics, who are the great majority of the faithful, entertain opposite hopes. They wish the Council to promulgate the doctrines of the Syllabus. In any case, the Council could put out in a positive form, and with the requisite developments, the negative statements of the Syllabus, and thereby quite set aside the misappre- 2 Introduction. hensions wMch exist about some of them. Catholics will accept with delight the proclamation of the Pope's dogmatic infallibility. Every one knows that he him- self is not disposed to take the initiative in a matter so directly concerning himself; but it is hoped that his infallibility will be defined unanimously, by acclama- tion, by the mouth of the assembled Fathers, under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost. Finally, many CathoKcs wish the Council to crown the many honours the Church has bestowed on the all-blessed Virgin by promulgating her glorious assumption into heaven as a dogma." It is said before, that " Catholics believe the Council will be of short duration, like the Council of Chalcedon {i.e., that it will only last three weeks). It is believed that the Bishops will be so united on the main points, that the minority, however willing, will not be able to make any prolonged opposition.'' In a later issue of the Cimltd similar wishes are put into the mouth of the Belgian Catholics, " who are not only devoted body and soul to the interests of the Church and the Holy See, but submit without hesitation to all doctrinal decisions of the Holy See." They hope, among other things, that the Council wiU once for all put an end to the division among Catholics, by striking a de- Introduction. 3 cisive blow at the spirit and doctrines of Liberalism, and that the doctrine of the Pope's infallibility and supremacy over a General Council wiU be defined. The Belgian correspondent is no less emphatic in re- pudiating the tolerably opposite desires of the so-called liberal Catholics. These, who number many of the younger clergy among their ranks, and who have not completely submitted to the teaching of the Encyclical and Syllabus, maintain that political questions do not belong to the Popes, and some of them have violently distorted the Encyclical and Syllabus in their own sense.-' Their blindness, to say nothing worse, is so great, that they either expect opposite decisions to these, or an interpretation in their own sense. We shall not be wrong in taking these correspon- dents' articles of the Civilta, which are, perhaps, to be followed by others from other parts of the Catholic world, as something more than feelers merely to ascer- tain whether things are ripe for the dogmatic surprises already prepared. No ! these zealots are not accus- tomed to pay the very slightest regard to the mental disposition of their age. In these communications ' [This seems to refer to the Pastoral of the Bishop of Orleans, Dupan- loup.— Tb.] 4 Introduction. about the wishes and hopes of Catholics, which take the innocent form of petitions to the Holy See, we have significant hints of what the Coimcil is expected to do ; significant hints, first to the Bishops to acquaint themselves with their duty, and abstain from useless opposition ; and next, to the rest of the Catholic world to prepare itseK for the approaching " announcements of the Holy Ghost." The Civilth, written by Roman Jesuits, and com- mended some years ago in a Papal Brief as the purest journalistic organ of true Church doctrine, may be regarded as in some sense the Moniteur of the Court of Eome. It is not too much to say that in all im- portant questions its thoughts are identical with those of the chief head, and of many other " heads," in Eoma Its lofty tone and arrogant handling of all opponents correspond to this official character. Its articles often read like Papal Bulls spun out. One could not there- fore desire a more trustworthy authority as to the aims of Eome in convoking this Council Nor are other instructive signs wanting besides the statements of the Cimltd,. The Jesuits have been active for some time past in founding confraternities which bind themselves to hold and propagate Papal Introduction. 5 Infallibility as an article of faith. Por the same object the institution of Provincial Synods has been revived during the last ten years, under stringent and repeated exhortations from Eome. And it may be seen from the published acts of those held both in and out of Germany, that the question of Papal Infallibility and of the theses of the Syllabus has been laid before them. The Jesuit Schneemann reports that the Pro- vincial Synods of Cologne, Colocsa, Utrecht, and those held in North America, have accepted Papal Infalli- bility.-' He observes that "these Synodal affirmations of Papal Infallibility, revised at Eome, are important as showing that, though as yet no formal article of faith, it is in the eyes of Eome, and of the Bishops, an in- dubitable truth. Por Provincial Synods are strictly forbidden to decide controverted points of belief." We may safely assume, on such good authority, that these decisions were not waited for at Eome, but were sent from Eome to the Provincial Synods for approval. The answers could have been known beforehand in the present state of things in the Church ; they will be produced in the Council as proofs of the belief of the majority of Catholic Bishops, and to give the ap- ■> Litera/rischer Bandweiser, 1867, pp. 439 seq. 6 Introduction. pearance of tte definition of Papal Infallibility not being so exclusively tlie work of the Jesuit-s, an ap- pearance Pius rx. was anxious to avoid in the case of the Immaculate Conception. It appears, by a letter of Plir's from Eome, that he yielded quite unexpectedly in that case to Cardinal Kauscher's demand for striking out of the BuU some of the irrelevant proofs alleged, because, as he said, this must be endured, though a humiliation for Eome, that people might not say every- thing depended on the Jesuits.^ We know on good authority that the whole plan of the campaign for fixing the Infallibility dogma is already mapped out. An English Prelate — ^we could name him — has undertaken at the commencement of proceedings to direct a humble prayer to the Holy Father to raise the opinion of his infallibility to the dignity of a dogma. The Jesuits and their Eoman allies hope that the majority of the Bishops present, who have been already primed for the occasion, will accede by acclamation to this petition, and the Holy Father will gladly yield to » Briefs aus Rom (Innsbmck, 1864), p! 25:— "The Holy Father has found this criticism of a stranger (viz. Banscher) very unpleasant, and said — ' Questa e una mortificazione per Boma, ma i bisogno di soSirla, affinche non si dica, che tntto sia dipendente dai Gesoiti." [Flir was Kector of the German Church at Borne, and Auditor of the Bota. His Letters are reviewed in the Saturday Review for May 28, 1864. — Tb.] Introduction. 7 the pressure coming on Mm spontaneously, and, as it were, through a sudden and irresistible inspiration from on high, and so the new dogma will be settled at one sitting, without further examination, as by the stroke of a magician's wand. As the Eoman people are told after a Conclave, Habemus Papam, on the evening of this memorable sitting the news will go forth to the whole Catholic world, Habemus Papam infallihilem. And before this newly risen and bright sun of divine truth, all the ghosts of false science and forms of modern civilisation will be scared away for ever. Meanwhile, to keep to the articles of the Givilta already quoted, it is clear from them that the Council is summoned chiefly for the purpose of satisfying the darling wishes of the Jesuits and that part of the Ouria which is led by them. We propose to examine these theories in the follow- ing order : — first we shall take the Syllabus and what concerns it ; then we shall briefly discuss the new dogma about Mary ; and lastly we shall set the dogma of Papal Infallibility in the light of history. CHAPTER I. MAKING THE SYLLABUS DOGMATIC. THE articles of the Syllabus — such, we are told, is one of the urgent wishes of true Catholics — are to he defined by the Council in the form of positiye dogmas. The Church will thus be enriched with a considerable number of new articles of faith, hitherto unheard of or abundantly contradicted ; but when once Papal Infallibility has become matter of faith, this will be only the first fruits of a far richer harvest in the future. The extent of the Catholic Church will thereby be gi-adually narrowed, perhaps till it presents the spectacle once offered to the world by a Pope, Peter de Luna, Benedict XTFT., who from his castle of Peniscola condemned the whole of Christendom which refused to acknowledge him, and finally, when the Council of Constance had solemnly deposed biin (1417), and the number of his adherents was reduced to a few indivi- duals, declared — "The whole Church is assembled in The Syllabus. 9 Peniscola, not in Constance, as once the whole human race was collected in Koah's ark." But this will give them little concern ; nay, the more the educated classes are forced out of the Church, the easier will it be for Loyola's steersmen to guide the ship, and reduce the true flock that still remains in it to more complete subjection. Catholicism, hitherto regarded as a uni- versal religion, would, by a notable irony of its fate, be transformed into the precise opposite of what its name and notion imports. As the assembled Bishops are to exercise their power of formulating dogmas on the contents of the Syllabus, they have only to set their conciliar seal on a work already prepared to their hand by the Vienna Jesuit, Schrader.' He has already turned the negative statements of the Syllabus iato affirmatives, and so we can, without trouble, anti- cipate the decisions of the Council on this matter. And, as it is to last only three weeks, from and after 29th December 1869 the Eoman Catholic world wiU be enriched by the following truths, and wUl have to ac- cept, on peril of salvation, the following principles : — (1.) The Church has the right of employing external ^ Defr Pdbst und die modemen Idem. Heft n. Die Enoyolioa. Wien, 1865. lo The Syllabus. coercion ; she has direct and indirect temporal power, potestatem temporaUm as distinguished from spiritiialem, or, in ecclesiastical language, power of civil and corporal punishment.'' Schrader himself intimates that this is meant when he says, " It is not only minds that are under the power of the Church." * His fellow- Jesuit, Schneemann, speaks out clearly and roundly enough on this point : " As the Church has an external jurisdiction she can impose temporal punishments, and not only deprive the guilty of spiritual privileges. . . . The love of earthly things, which injures the Church's order, obviously cannot be effectively put down by merely spiritual punishments. It is little affected by them. If that order is to be avenged on what has injured it, if that is to suffer which has enjoyed the sin, temporal and sensible punishments must be employed." Among these Schneemann reckons fines, imprisonment, scourging, and banishment, and he is but endorsing an article in the Civiltd,, Bel potere coattivo della Chiesa, which maintains the necessity of the Church visiting her opponents with ■ The Syllabus condemns the following propositions: "Ecelesia vis inferendsB potestatem non habet, neque potestatem ullam temporalem, directam aut indirectam " (24). " Prseter potestatem episcopatui inhaeren- tem, alia ei attributa est temporalis potestas a civili imperio vel expresse vel tocite concessa, revocanda propterea, cum libuerit, a civUi imperio" (25). 2 Der Pabst, p. 64. The Syllabus. 1 1 fines, fasts, imprisonment, and scourging, because with- out this external power the Church could not last to the end of the world. She herself is to fix the limits of this power, and he is a rebel against God who denies it. Schneemann does not conceal his grief that the present world is so far gone from the apprehension and appli- cation of these wholesome truths : "We see that the State does not always fulfil its duties towards the Church according to the divine idea, and, let us add, cannot always fulfil them, through the wickedness of men. And thus the Church's rights in inflicting tem- poral punishment and the use of physical force are re- duced to a minimum." ^ It was from the spirit here manifested that Pius ix. in 1851 censured the teaching of the canonist Nuytz in Turin, because he allowed only the power of spiritual punishment to the Church.^ And in the Concordat made in 1863 with the Eepublics of South America, it ^ Schneemann's Die Mrchliche Gewalt und ihre Trager forms voL vii. of tie Stimmen aus Maria Laadi (Freiburg, 1867). The passages quoted are from pp. 18, 41. The article of the CiviltA referred to appeared in 1854, yol. vii. p. 603. It is said expressly of the Church that against those " che ricusano la soggezione dello spirito, operi per via di castighi temporali, multandoli nelle sostanze, manrandoli con privazioni e digiuni, afiiigendoli con carcere e battiture." The other references to the Civilid are from vol. viii. pp. 42, 279-282. 2 The worlcs censured are Jmis Mcdesiastioi Instit. and In Jus Eccles, Univ. Tractat. 12 The Syllabus. is laid down in Article 8 that the civil authorities are ahsolutely bound to execute every penalty decreed by the spiritual courts. In a statement addressed by Pius rx. to Count Duval de Beaulieu, published in the Allgemeim Zeitung of November 13, 1864, the power of the Church over the government of civil society, and its direct jurisdiction in temporal matters, is expressly guarded. It follows that they are greatly mistaken who suppose that the Biblical and old Christian spirit has prevailed in the Church over the mediaeval notion of her being an institution with coercive power to imprison, hang, and burn. On the contrary, these doctrines are to receive fresh sanction from a General Council, and that pet theory of the Popes — that they could force kings and magistrates, by excommunication and its consequences, to carry out their sentences of confiscation, imprison- ment, and death — is now to become an infalKble dogma. It follows that not only is the old institution of the Inquisition justified, but it is recommended as an urgent necessitj"- in view of the imbelief of the present aga The Civilta has long since described it as " a sublime spectacle of social perfection;"^ and the two recent • In 1855, vol. i. p. 55, the Inquisition is called "uu sublime spettacolo della perfezioue sociale." The Syllabus. 13 canonizations and beatifications of inquisitors, following ■ in rapid succession, gain in this connexion a new and remarkable significance. (2.) According to Schrader's affirmative statement of the twenty-third proposition of the Syllabus, the Popes have never exceeded the bounds of their power or usurped the rights of princes.'' All Catholics must for the future acknowledge, and all teachers of civil law and theology must maintain, that the Popes can ■still depose kings at their will, and give away whole kingdoms and nations at their good pleasure. When, for instance, Martin it. placed King Pedro of Aragon under excommunication and interdict for makins good his hereditary claim to Sicily after the rising of the Sicilians against the tyraimy of Charles i. (in 1282), and then promised indulgences for all their sins to those who fought with him and Charles against Pedro, and finally declared his kingdom forfeit, and made it over for a yearly tribute to Charles of Valois — a step which cost the two kings of France and Aragon their life, and the French the loss of an army,^ — this was not, 1 The Syllabus condemns the following proposition (23), " Eomani Pon- tifices et Concilia CEoumenica a limitibus suae potestatis reoesserunt, jura Principum usurparant." Cf. Schrader, ut sup. p. 63. 2 See Eaynald. Annul. Bccles. (ed. Mansi), vol. iii. pp. 183-4. The Bull of Martin IT. against Peter of Aragon runs thus : " Eegnum Aragonise caeter- 14 The Syllabus. as the world in its false enlightenment has hitherto supposed, a violent usurpation, but the application of a divine right which every Pope stUl possesses in full, though prudence may require that for the moment, and perhaps for some time to come, they should let it lie dormant, and adopt meantime a waiting attitude. Pope Clement iv., in 1265, after selling millions of South Italians to Charles of Anjou for a yearly tribute of eight hundred ounces of gold, declared that he would be excommunicated if the first payment was deferred beyond the appointed term, and that for the second neglect the whole nation would incur interdict, i.e., be deprived of sacraments and divine worship.^ asque terras Regis ipsius exponentes, nt sequitar, ipsum Petmm regem Aiagonum eisdem regno et terns regioqae honore sententialiter, justitia cxigente, privamus ; et privantes exponimns eadem occnpanda Catholicis, de quibus et prout Sedes Apostolica duxerit providendum, in dictis regno et terris ejusdem Ecclesise Romanse jure salvo." The Pope required of Charles of Anjou, " quingentas libras parvorum Tnronensiam " as Papal tribute, and for this consideration had a cmsade preached against Peter, with the following promise (12S3) : " Omnibus Christi fidelibus qui contra Kegem Aragonice nobis, Ecclesiae vel Begi Siciliae astiterint, si eos propterea in conflictu mori contigerit, illam peccatorom suorum, de quibus corde contriti et ore professi fueriut, veniam indulgemus quae transfretantibas in terrsE sanctai subsidiom consueverit" It is noteworthy that Martin it. compelled several German churches (Liege, Metz, Verdun, Basle) to pay a tenth of all ecclesiastical property to France for carrying on this war. When Rudolph of Hapsburg reclaimed vigorously against so unheard of a demand, Martin's successor, Eonorius IV., exhorted him "to submit patiently to the exaction out of reverence for the Papal See.'' Raynald. ni sup. pp. 600-1. 1 Raynald. p. 162. "Quod si in secundo termino infra subsequentes The Syllabus. 15 Nevertheless, the Bishops of the future Council are to make it an article of faith that the Pope did not thereby exceed the limits of his power ; in other words, that he could at his mere caprice, and for purely political or pecuniary ends, deprive millions of innocent men of what, according to the teaching of the Church, are the necessary means of salvation. (3.) If the Council executes the programme of the Civiltct, it win also undertake a correction of the hitherto prevalent estimate of history. We now read in all historical books and systems of Church law that the immunities of the clergy (e.g., the privilegium fori, the unrestricted right of acquiring property, and exemption from civil functions) were gi-adually conceded to the Church by the Eoman emperors and later kings, and have therefore a civil origin. This will be characterized as heresy.^ Those also will become guilty of heresy who write or teach that the extravagant pretensions of the Popes contributed to the separation of the Eastern and Western Churches, though this may be discovered in official duos menses eundem censum sine diminiitione qualibet non persolveritis, totum regnum ao tota terra prediota ecolesiastioo eruiit supposita inter- dicto." 1 The SyllatuB condemns the prop. (30), "EoclesiaB et personanim ecclesiasticarnm immunitas a jure civili ortnm habuit." 1 6 The Syllabus. documents from the twelfth to the sixteenth century, and the avowals of a number of contemporary authori- ties.^ In prospect of such decrees all Catholic writers on Law or History should be urgently advised to publish their works before 30th December 1869 ; for from thence- forward, " magnus ab integro sseclonim nascitur ordo," and only Jesuits or their pupils will be called or qualified, without savour of heresy, to write on secular or Church history, civil law, politics, canon law, etc. There will at least be required for literary and academical work a flexibility and elastic versatility of spirit and pen hitherto confined to journalism. (4.) Still more dangerous wiU be the questions of freedom of conscience, and persecution, when once the propositions of the Syllabus are made articles of faith, according to the will of the Jesuits and the Bishops acting under their guidanca The Syllabus condemns the whole existing view of the rights of conscience and religious faith and profes- sion : it is a wicked error to admit Protestants to equal political rights with Catholics, or to allow Protestant » It condemns proposition 38, " Dirisioni Ecclesiae in Orientalem atqne Occidentalem Bomancnun Pontificnm arbitria contulemnt." The Syllabus. 17 immigrants the free use of their worship ;* on the con- trary, to coerce and suppress them is a sacred duty, when it has become possible, as the Jesuit Fathers and their adherents teach. Till then, Schneemann^ says, the Church will, of course, act with the greatest prudence in the use of her temporal and physical power, accord- ing to altered circumstances, and will not therefore at present adopt her entire mediaeval policy. The inevitable result of this is to propagate, from generation to generation, lies, hypocrisy, and deceit by wholesale ; but that is the lesser evU. For freedom of opinion and worship produces, according to the Syllabus, profligacy and the pest of indifferentism. That, too, is to become an article of faith, and the future commenta- tors on the decrees of the Council wiU have to confirm its truth by reference to the actual condition of the nations which have these liberties. They wUl point to the Germans, the English, the French, and the Belgians 1 It condemns prop. 77, " ^tate h^c nostra non amplins expedit reli- gionem Catholicam hateri tanquam nnicam states religionem, cseteris qiubuscunque cultibus exclusis ;"— prop. 78, "Hinc laudabiliter in qui- busdam Catholic! nominis regionibus lege eantuni est, ut hominibus illuc immigrantibus liceat publicum proprii cnjnsque ouMs exercitium habere ; " prop. 79, " Enimvero falsum est civilem cujusque cuMs libertatem, itemque plenam potestatem omnibus attributam quaslibet opiniones cogi- tationesque palam publicequemanifestandi, condncere adpopulorummores animosque facilius corrumpendos ao indifferentismi pestem propagandam." 2 Schneemann, ut swgra, p. 30. B 1 8 The Syllabus. as the most profligate of men, while the Neapolitans, Spaniards, and inhabitants of the Eoman States, with whom the exclusive system flourishes, or did till quite lately, are a brilliant model of virtue among aU nations of the earth. To speak seriously, the contest inaugur- ated by the Encyclical of 1864 wiU. have to be carried out with the free use of every available Church wea- pon, — a contest against the common sentiment and moral sense of every civilized people, and all the institutions that have grown out of them. It is but a few years since Ketteler, Bishop of Mayence, in a widespread work praised by all the Catholic journals of the day, imdertook to show the moderation, tolerance, and self-restraint of the Catho- lic Church in its relations with the State and the separate Churches. He insists that the Church so thoroughly respects freedom of conscience as to repu- diate all outward coercion of those beyond her pale as immoral and utterly unlawful ; that nothing is further from her mind than to employ any physical force against those who, as being baptized, are her members ; that she must leave it entirely to their own freest determi- nation whether they will accept her faith ; and that it is absurd for Protestants to suppose they have any need to The Syllabus. 19 fear a forcible conversion, etc. etc.^ How far these state- ments can be verified by history is indeed very doubtful. Meanwhile the Bishop is instructed by the Syllabus and its commentator, Schrader, that he has fallen into that forbidden liberalism which is, according to the Eoman view, one of the grossest errors of the day, and that it was by special indulgence of Eome that his book was not put on the Index. What a light this throws on the condition of the Church, and what an unworthy mental slavery the Eoman Jesuit party threatens foreign Catholics with is thus made clear enough ! An illustrious bishop speaks, amid imiversa] applause, without a syllable of dissent from his fellow- bishops, on those grave questions, upon the right an- swer to which the legal position and beneficial action of the Church in our days in large measure depends. And now, a few years afterwards, the Pope, without indeed naming him, condemns his doctrine, and the very people who applauded the bishop's book applaud the Encyclical with yet profounder homage, and are convinced that what they took for white is black. Ketteler, who knows weU enough that the main object of the Syllabus is to exalt principles at first only applied to the condition 1 Freiheit, Autoritiit, und Kirche, Mainz, 1862. 20 The Syllabus. and circumstances of a particular country into universal articles of faith, tried to save himself by the pitiful evasion that these articles of the Syllabus do not con- tain a general principle, but only one applicable to certain countries, especially Spain,^ It appears, then, that our bishops, our theologians and preachers, and our people, did not know what the true doctrine of the Catholic Church is, but only those monks and monsi- gnori, especially the Jesuits, who compose the Eoman Congregations, and who have now for the first time since the Encyclical of Gregory xvi. opened the hitherto jealously closed fountains of knowledge. And thus the singular fact has come to light that the Catholic nations have for a long time been thoroughly heterodox, and that their appointed teachers have helped on the error, and sworn to Constitutions moulded in utterly vicious principles and laid under ban of Eome. (5.) The Syllabus closes with the notorious assertion that "they are in damnable error who regard the reconciliation of the Pope with modem civilisation as possible or desirable."* Every existing Constitution in Europe, with the sole 1 neulscMand nach dem Kriege, Mainz, 3867, cap. 12. '^ The Syllabus condemns prop. 80, " Eomanus Pontifex potest ac debet cum progressu cum liberaUsmo et cum recenti civilisatione sese reconcili- *='•<■ fit corriDonere." The Syllabus. 2 1 exception of Eussia and the Eoman States, is an outgrowth of this modern civilisation. Freedom of religious profession, worship, and teaching, freedom of political rights and duties before the law, — these, with the people's right of taxing themselves, and taking a part in legislation and municipal self-government, are the dominant principles and ideas which interpenetrate all existing Constitutions, and they are so closely connected, and so sustain each other, that where some of them are conceded, the rest inevitahly follow. But an opposite course has been steadily pursued in the Church for cen- turies, especially since the pseudo-Isidorian decretals; the hierarchical system has become more and more built up into an unlimited oligarchical absolutism, and a constantly growing and encroaching biu-eaucratic centralization has killed out all the old Church-life in its harmonious disposition and synodal self-government, or turned it into a mere empty form. Thus Church and State are like two parallel streams, one flowing north, the other south. The modern civil Constitutions, and the efforts for self-government and the limitation of arbitrary royal power, are in the strong- est contradiction to Ultramontanism, the very kernel and ruling principle of which is the consolidation of 2 2 The Syllabus. absolutism in the Church. But State and Church are intimately connected; they act and react on one an- other, and it is inevitable that the political views and tendencies of a nation should sooner or later influence it in Church matters also. Hence the profound hatred, at the bottom of the soul of every genuine ultramontane, of free institutions and the whole constitutional system. The Givilta not long since gave pointed utterance to it : — " Christian States have ceased to exist; human society is again become heathen, and is like an earthly body with no breath from heaven. But with Grod nothing is impossible ; he can quicken the dry bones, as in Ezekiel's vision. The political power, parliaments, voting urns, civil marriages, are dry bones. The universities are not only dry, but stinking bones, so great is the stench that rises from their deadly and pestilential teaching. But these bones can be recalled to life if they hear God's word and receive His law, which is proclaimed to them by the supreme and infallible doctor, the Pope."^ Let us remember that the noble mother of Euro- pean Constitutions, the English Magna Charta, was 1 Vol. iil. pp. 265 seq., 1868. " Ossa, non pnr aride, ma fetenti le imiversiti, tanto k il puzzo, che n'esce di dottrine conompitrici e pesti- feri." The Syllabus. 23 visited with the severest anger of Pope Innocent m., who understood its importance well enough. He saw therein a contempt for the Apostolic See, a curtailing of royal prerogatives, and a disgrace to the English nation; he therefore pronounced it null and void, and excom- municated the English barons who obtained it.'' We may readily do Pius rx. and his Jesuit counsellors, who are notoriously the authors of the Encyclical and Syllabus, the justice of admitting that they have done in 1864 what Innocent in 1215 was prophet enough to consider for the interests of the Church. What was then a weak and tender sapling has grown, in spite of the curse ot the most powerful of all the Popes, into a mighty tree, overshadowing half the world, and is blest with bloom- 1 The Bull (Aug. 15, 1215) mns thus : — " Nos tantae indignitatis auda- ciam dissimulare nolentes, in apostolicse sedis contemptum, regalis juris dispendium, Anglicanse gentis opprobrium et grave periculum totlus negotii cruolfixi (quod utique immineret, nisi per auctoritatem nostram revocarentur omnia, qu£e a tanto Principe cnice signato totaliter sunt extorta, etiam ipso volente ilia servari) : ex parte Dei omnipotentis, Patris et Filii, et Spiritus sancti, auctoritate quoque beatorum Petri et Pauli Apostolorum ejus, ao nostra, de communi fratrum nostrorum consilio, compositionem hujusmodi reprobamus penitus et damnamus ; sub inter- minatione anatliematis prohibentes, ne dictus Eex earn observare prae- sumat, aut Barones cum complicibus suis ipsam exigant observari : tarn chartam quam obligationes seu cautiones, quaecunque pro ipsa Tel de ipsa sunt factse, irritantes penitus, aut cassantes, ut nuUo unquam tempore aliquambabeantfirmitatem."— Eymer,i?te(iera, etc. (ed. Clarke), i. p. 135. Innocent sent a similar document to the English barons, and when they took no heed of it the ban and interdict followed. 24 The Syllabtis. ing children and children's children. And so, too, its latest offspring, the Austrian Constitution, — which a far feebler successor of Innocent has stigmatized as an " unspeakable abomination" (infavda sane), — ^may rest in peace, and appeal confidently to the world's verdict on the world's history. And the more so, since this very successor was not ashamed, a year or two ago, to have the question asked in London, whether he too might not find a residence in the motherland of those " demoralizing" laws of freedom. Eome has shown herself no less hostile to the French than to the English Constitution. In 1824, Leo xn. addressed a letter to Louis XVUL, pointing out the badness of the Trench Constitution, and urgently press- ing him to expunge from the charter those articles which savoured of liberalism.^ When Charles x tried to change the Constitution by the ordinances of July 1830, every one gave the blame to his episcopal advisers, and especially his confessor. Cardinal LatiL The fall of the Bourbons was the result. Soon after the establish- ment of the new Belgian Constitution in 1832, Gregory XVI. issued his famous Encyclical, recently used and confirmed by Pius jx., which pronounces freedom of ' See Artaud de Montor, Hist. Leo XII. (Paris, 1843), vol. i. p. 234 seg. The Syllabus. 2 5 conscience an insane folly, and freedom of the press a pestiferous error, whicli cannot be sufficiently detested. The immediate consequence was the rise of a liberal party in Belgium, at internecine'feud "with the Catholic party. The contest stUl goes on, after nearly forty years; the schism has grown ever wider and deeper, and the hatred fiercer between them, and, as Ultramon- tanism makes every understanding or compromise be- tween them impossible, the political controversy has merged in a systematic attacking and undermining of all positive religion. The Belgian Catholics have never been able to meet the reproach of being necessarily enemies to a Constitution condemned as wicked by the Pope, and that all their assurances of loyalty and con- scientious respect for the fundamental law of the country are mere hypocrisy. And thus, with aU the religious- ness of the people, the liberal and anti-religious party is constantly gaining ground, while the Catholic party, divided against itself by the split between ultramon- tanes and liberals (i.e., Catholics true to the Constitution), is no longer competent to form any available Cabinet. The attempt of the Congress of Malines in 1863 was wrecked ; the Syllabus has pronounced sentence of death on its programme, so eloquently set forth by 26 ■ The Syllabus. Montalembert, for reconciling the Chnrcli with civil freedom. In the United States, Catholics cannot form a politi- cal party. There, too, as an American bishop has as- sured ns, their situation is most unfavourable as regards political influence and admission to office, because it is always cast in their teeth by Protestants that they find their principles in Papal pronouncements, and can- not therefore honestly accept the common liberties and obligations of a free State, but always cherish an arrihe pensee that if ever they become strong enough they wiU upset the Constitution. In Italy, the Papal Government has used every effort to deter Austria and the other Italian sovereigns from granting parliamentary and free municipal institutiona The documents proving this are to be seen in print The Roman Court declared that it could not suffer even the very mildest forms of parliamentary government in its neighbourhood, on account of the bad example.^ ^ Prince Schwarzenberg reported this in 1850 to Baron Hiigel in Flo- rence. As tte docnment is not well known north of the Alps, we give the passage. The whole letter will be found in a book printed by Gennaielli at Florence in 1862 — " Le Dottrine cinli e religiose della Carte di iJoma," p. 72. It says, in reference to the Tuscan Constitution of 1848, "Le gouvemement pontifical avone, que ses repugnances a cet ^gard se fondent aussi sur des motifs, qui lui sont plus particuliers. II ne cherche nulla- raent a dissimnler, que, force comme il est, a devoir reconnoitre et pro- The Syllabus. 27 The mild and just Grand-Duke Leopold of Tuscany was compelled against his will, under pressure from Eome, to abolish that article of the Constitution which asserted the equality of all citizens before the law, without distinction of religion, because the Pope de- clared that it could not be promulgated " tutA con- scientid."^ Under the same influence the Jewish physicians in Tuscany were first in 1852 forbidden to practise, as they had long been allowed to do. Who can wonder, after this, at the hatred of the Italians towards the Papacy as it now is, or think any permanent peace possible between Italy and such a hierarchy as this? That the Bavarian Constitution, with its equality of religious confessions, and of all citizens before the law, is looked on with an evil eye at Eome, is sufficiently shown by the constant reproaches of the Curia since clamer tout regime parlementaire comme directement menajant pour le libre exercioe dii pouvoir spirituel, il ne sauroit voir sans alanne se pro- pager et se consolider autour de lui non seiilement des prinoipes constitu- tiounels imposes originairement par la revolution, mais encore des formes representatives plus miiigies, dont la contagion lui semWe non moins in- fevitaWe et d^sastreuse dans I'interieur des etats," etc. In other words, " Our absolutist system, supported by the Inquisition, the strictest cen- sorship, the suppression of all literature, the privileged exemption of the clergy, and arbitrary power of bishops, cannot endure any other than absolutist governments in Italy." 1 Gennarelli, ut supra, pp. 78, seq. 28 The Syllabus. 1818.* And finally, the Austrian Constitution has di'awn on itself the curse of the Vatican. In the Allo- cution of 22d June 1868 we read — " By our apostolic authority we reject and condemn the above-mentioned (new Austrian) laws in general, and in particular all that has been ordered, done, or enacted in these and in other things against the rights of the Church by the Austrian Government or its sub- ordinates ; by the same authority we declare these laws and their consequences to have been, and to be for the future, null and void {nulliusgue roboris fuisse ac fore). We exhort and adjure their authors, especially those who call themselves Catholics, and all who have dared to propose, to accept, to approve, and to execute them, to remember the censures and spiritual penalties incurred ipso facto, according to the apostolical constitutions and decrees of the (Ecumenical Councils, by those who violate the rights of the Church." By this sentence the whole legislature and executive of Austria is placed under ban, with the Emperor Francis Joseph at its head, and the Austrians may be thankful that the whole territories of the empire are not placed 1 See, for these. Concordat und Constitutions Eid der Kathol. in Bayem (Augsburg, 1847), pp. 244 seq. The Syllabus. 29 under interdict, according to the earlier precedent put in practice the last time against Venice (1606). Pius IX. condemns the Austrian Constitution for making Catholics bury the bodies of heretics in their cemeteries where they have none of their own, and he considers it " abominable" (abomin-ahilis), because it allows Protestants and Jews to erect educational iasti- tutions. He seems to have quite forgotten that similar laws have long prevailed elsewhere without opposition from Eome. If the will of the Givilta is accomplished, the Bishops will solemnly condemn, by implication, next December, the Constitutions of the countries they live in, and the laws which they, or many of them, have sworn to ob- serve, and will bind themselves to use all their efforts for the abolition of those laws and the overthrow of the Constitutions. This will not, of course, be so openly stated ; the Civiltd, and its allies wUl say, what has often been said since 1864, that the Church must ob- serve for a time a prudent economy, and must so far take account of circumstances and accomplished facts, as, without any modification of her real principles, to pay a certain external deference to them. The Bishops do well to endure the lesser evil, as long as open resist- 30 The Syllabus. ance ■would lead to worse consequences, and prejudice the interests of tlie Church. But this submission, or rather silence and endurance, is only provisional, and simply means that the lesser evil must be chosen in preference to a contest with no present prospect of success. As soon as the situation changes, and there is a hope of contending successfully against free laws, the attitude of the bishops and clergy changes too. Then, as the Court of Kome and the Jesuits teach, every oath taken to a Constitution in general or to particular laws loses its force. The oft-quoted saying of the apostle, that we must obey God rather than man, means, in the Jesuit gloss, that we must obey the Pope, as God's representative on earth, and the infallible interpreter of His will, rather than any civil authority or laws. There- fore Innocent x., in his Bull of 20th November 1648, " Zelus domils Dei," which condemns the Peace of West- phalia as " null and void, and of no effect or authority for past, present, or future," expressly adds, that no one, though he had sworn to observe the Peace, is bound to keep his oatL^ It was chiefly those conditions > The passage referred to nms as follows :— " Motn proprio, ac ex certS scleutia et mature deliberatione nostris, deque Apostolicae potestatis The Syllabus. 3 1 of the Westphalian Peace which secured to Protes- tants the free exercise of their rehgion, and admission to civil offices, that filled the Pope, as he said, with profound grief {cum intimo doloris sensu). And this sentence was adhered to, for in 1789 Pius vi. declared that the Church had never admitted the Westphalian Peace, "Pacem Westjphalicam Ecclesia nunquam prohavit." Thus again in 1805, Pius vii., in writing to his nuncio at Venice, upholds the punishments imposed by Inno- cent III. for heresy, viz., confiscation of property for private persons, and the relaxation of all obligations of tribute and subjection to heretical princes ; and he only regrets that we are fallen on such evil days, and the Bride of Christ is so humbled, that it is neither possible to carry out, nor even of any avail to recall, these holy maxims, and she cannot exercise a righteous severity against the enemies of the faith.'' These " holy maxims," then, are allowed for a while plenitudine, prsedictos alterius seu iitriusque Pacis hujusmodi artioulos CEeteraque in dictis Instrumentis contenta .... ipso jure nulla, iiTita, invalida, injusta, damnata, reprobata, inania, viribusque et eifeotu vana omnia fuisse, esse et in perpetuo fore ; neminemque ad illorum et oujus libet eorum etiamsi juramento vallata sint, . observantiam teueri .... decernimus et declaramus." — Magnum Bullar. Roman, t. v. p. 466 seq. Laixemb. 1727. 1 The Italian text of the letter is given in Essai sur la Puissance Temp, des Papes (Paris, 1818), vol. ii. p. 320. 52 The Syllabus. to lie dormant, though, according to the Jesuit plan of the campaign, they are to be raised at the approaching Council to the dignity of irreversible dogmas through the assertion of Papal Infallibility. Better times must be waited for, when the Church (that is, the Court of Eome) shall be raised once more from the dust, and seated on the throne of her universal, world-wide, spi- ritual sovereignty. But here " the true Catholics" are divided into two parties. The one party, which is sufficiently educated to understand something of the spirit and tendencies of the age, cherishes no illusions as to the possibility, ox at least the near approach, of a thousand years' reign of absolute Papal dominion, and therefore despairs of humanity, which ia its scornful blindness has rejected its last anchor of hope. The age we live in is the dark age of Antiehristian dominion, the age of wailing and woe which is to precede the appearance of the bodily Antichrist for two years and a half, after which comes the end of all things and the general judgment This party was represented in Bavaria by a learned and influential ecclesiastic, now dead, who gave it expres- sion in a pastoral of the present Cardinal Eeisach.* It 1 [Windischmaim, Vicar-General of Cardinal Keisach when Archbishop The Syllabus. 33 simply means : As history does not go our way, there shall be no more history, or, in other words, the world must come to an end, because our system is not carried out. As their wisdom is at fault, they presume the wisdom of Providence is exhausted also ! Men of this school think a Council so near the end of the world superfluous, or at best only last warning, given to men rather in wrath than in mercy. The other party, and the Jesuits at their head, see in the Council the last star of hope, and expect that, when Papal Infallibility and the articles of the Syllabus have been proclaimed, mankind will bow down its proud neck, like the royal Sicambrian, Clovis, and will burn what it adored before, and adore what it burnt. A holy bishop, Francis of Sales, often expressed his dislike of writings which deal with political questions, such as the indirect power of the Pope over princes, and thought with good reason that, in an age when the Church has so many open enemies, such questions should not be mooted.^ But St. Prancis of Sales is no authority for the Jesuits. of Munich, one of the few very learned men modern Ultramontanism has produced. — Tb.] 1 Qiuvres, zi. 406. CHAPTER II. THE NEW DOGMA ABOUT MART. IN comparison with the principles involved in sanc- tioning the Syllabus, the new dogma proposed about Mary is harmless enough. No one indeed can comprehend the urgent need for it only a few years after Pius rx. has solemnly proclaimed the Immaculate Conception as a revealed truth. But there never seems to be enough done for the glorification of Mary. It is worth whUe, however, to take note of this second exhi- bition of the characteristic contempt of the Jesuits for the tradition of the ancient Church. Neither the New Testament nor the Patristic writings tell us anything about the destiny of the Holy Virgin after the death of Christ. Two apocryphal works of the fourth or fifth century — one ascribed to St. John, the other to Mehto, Bishop of Sardis — are the earliest authorities for the tradition about her bodilv assump- The Asszcmpiion. 35 tion.'' It is contained also in the pseudo-Dionysius ; he and Gregory of Tours brought it into the Western Church.^ But centuries passed before it found any recognition. Even the Martyrology of Usuard, used in the Eoman Church in the ninth century, confined itself to the statement that nothing was known of the manner of the holy Virgin's death and the subsequent condi- tion of her body : " Plus eligebat sobrietas Ecclesise cum pietate nescire, quam aliquid frivolum et apocryphum inde tenendo docere."^ If this floating tradition too is made into a dogma under Jesuit inspiration, it may easily be foreseen that the Order — fappetit vient en mangeant — will bestow many a jewel hereafter on the dogma-thirsting world, out of the rich treasures of its traditions and pet theological doctrines. There is, for instance, the doctrine of Prdbahilism, which lies quite as near its heart as the Syllabus and Papal Infallibility, and which has stood it in such excellent stead in prac- tice.* "What a glorious justification it would be for an Order which has been so widely blamed, if the Council ^ 'Els T'r]v Koiinqtriv ttjs virepayias AeaToivTis, and De Transitu Martce, ^ De Norn. Div. 3. De Glor. Mart. i. 4. ' TJsuard, Martyrol. 18 Kal. Sept. * [The lax system of Jesuit casuistry exposed in the Provincwl Letters of Pascal. Innocent xi. condemned some of the extremer forms of it. — Tk.] 36 The Assumption. were to be so accommodating as to set its seal to this doctrine too as an article of faith ! We know that the Order expects another important service from the Council, viz., that the gymnasia and schools of higher education should be placed in its hands, as being specially called and fitted for the work, and that the Bishops should engage, wherever they have the power, to hand over these establishments to the Fathers of the Society. It is therefore extremely desirable, nay necessary, that that ever-gaping wound in the reputation of the Order — its moral system — should be healed by a decree of the CounciL CHAPTEE III. PAPAL INFALLIBILITY. § I. — Ultramonfanism. XT is the fundamental principle of the Ultramon- J- tane view that when we speak of the Church, its rights and its action, we always mean the Pope, and the Pope only. " When we speak of the Church, wo mean the Pope," says the Jesuit Gretser, at the begin- ning of the seventeenth century. Professor at Ingold- stadt, and one of the most learned theologians of the Order. Taken by itself, as the community of believers, clergy, and bishops, the Church, according to Cardinal Cajetan — the classical theologian of the Eoman Court — is the slave (servo) of the Pope. Neither in its whole nor its parts (iSTational Churches) can it desire, strive for, approve, or disapprove, anything not in absolute accordance with the Papal will and pleasure. In an 38 Papal Infallibility. article of the CiviM, entitled " The Pope the Father of the Faithful," ve read as follows : — " It is not enough for the people only to know that the Pope is the head of the Chiirch and the Bishops ; they must also understand that their ovTn faith and re- ligious life flow from him ; that in him is the bond which unites Catholics to one another, and the power which strengthens and the light which guides them; that he is the dispenser of spiritual graces, the giver of the benefits of religion, the upholder of justice, and the protector of the oppressed. And still this is not enough ; it is further requisite to refute the accusations dii-ected against the Pope by the impious and the Protestants, and to show how serviceable the Papacy and the Pope have at all times been to civil society, to the Italian people, to families, and to individuals, even in regard to their temporal interests."^ 1 Cin. 1867, vol. xii. pp. 86 scj. — " Non basta che il popolo sappia essere (il Papa) il capo della chiesa e dei vescovi : bisogna che intenda da lui de- rivare la propria fede, da lui la propria vita religiosa, in lui resiedere il vincolo cbe unisce insieme 1 cattolici, la forza che li convalida, la guida che li dirige : lui essere il dispensiere delle grazie spirituali, lui il promotore dei beneficii che la religione impari;isce, lui il conservatore della giustizia, lui il protettore degli oppressi. Ne ci6 solo basta ; si richiede di piu che dileguinsi le accuse lanciate contro del Papa dagli empii e dai protestanti, e che dimostrisi quanto benefice alle societa civili, ai popoli italiani, alle famiglie e agli individui, eziando in ordine agl' interessi temporali sia state in ogni tempo il Papato e U Papa." Ultramontanism. 39 It was St. Jerome's reproach to the Pelagians that, according to their theory, God had, as it were, wound Tip a watch once for all, and then gone to sleep because there was nothing more for Him to do. Here we have the Jesuit supplement to this view. God has gone to sleep because in His place His ever wakeful and infal- lible Vicar on earth rules, as lord of the world, and dis- penser of grace and of punishment. St. Paul's saying, " In him we live, and move, and are," is transferred to the Pope. Pew even of the Italian canonists of the fifteenth century could screw themselves up to this point, those greedy place-hunters and sycophants, who were blamed even in Eome as mainly responsible for the corruption of the Church caused by the Popes. Under the lead of the new Order of the sixteenth century all hitherto said and done for the exaltation of the Papal dignity was thrown into the background. "We owe it to BeUarmine and other Jesuits that in some documents the Pope is expressly designated " Vice-God." The Givilta, too, after asserting that all the treasures of divine revelation, of truth, righteousness, and the gifts of God, are in the Pope's hand, who is their sole dispenser and guardian, comes to the conclusion that the Pope carries on Christ's work on earth, and is in relation to us what Christ 40 Papal Infallibility. would be if He was still visibly present to rule His ChurcL^ It is but one step from this to declare the Pope an incarnation of God.^ Ultramontanism, then, is essentially Papalism, and its starting-point is that the Pope is infaUible in all doctrLnal decisions, not only on matters of faith, but in the domain of ethics, on the relations of religion to society, of Church to State, and even on State insti- tutions, and that every such decision claims unlimited and unreserved submission in word and deed from aU Catholics. On this view the power of the Pope over the Church is purely monarchical, and neither knows nor tolerates any limits. He is to be sole and absolute master; all beside him are his plenipotentiaries and servants, and are, in fact, whether mediately or imme- diately, the mere executors of his orders, whose ppwers ' Vol. iJL p. 259, 1868. " I tesori di qnesta revelazione, tesori di verita, tesori di giiistizia, tesori di carismi, vennero da Dio depositati in terra nelle mani di un uomo, che ne 6 solo dispensiero e custode . . . quest" nomo k il Papa. Ci6 evidentemente fe racchiuso nella sua stessa appellazione di Vi- cario di Christo. Imperocche se egli sostiene in terra le veci di Christo, vuol dire che egli continua nel mondo I'opera dl Christo ; ed 6 rispetto a noi cio che sarebbe esso Christo, se per s6 medesimo e visibilmente quaggiu govemasse la cbiesa." 2 [Compare with this Pusey's FArenicon, p. 327 : " One recently returned from Eome had the impression that ' some of the extreme Ultramontanes', if they do not say so in so many words, imply a qnasi-hypostatio union of the Holy Ghost with each successive Pope.' The accurate ^vriter who re- ported this to me observed in answer, ' This scans to me to be Llamaism.' " -Tr.1 Ultramontanism. 41 he can restrict or cancel at his pleasure. On Ultramon- tane principles the Church is in a normal and flourish- ing condition in proportion as it is ruled, administered, supervised, and regulated, down to the minutest details, in all its branches and national boundaries, from Eome. Eome is to act as a gigantic machine of ecclesiastical administration, a Briareus with a hundred arms, which finally decides everything, which reaches everywhere with its denunciations, censures, and manifold means of repression, and secures a rigid uniformity. Por the Church-ideal of the TJltramontanes is the Romanizing of all particular Churches, and above all the suppression of every shred of individuality in National Churches.^ liTay, more, they consider it the conscientious duty of all nations to mould themselves, to the utmost of their power, into the specifically clerico -Italian fashion of thinking and feeling. How should they not, when the Givilth says roundly, " As the Jews were formerly God's people, so are the Eomans under the New Covenant. They have a supernatural dignity" ?^ ' ["Eomanism," " Komanize," etc., are used by German -writers not as synonymous terms with Roman Catholicism, etc., but for the Romanist or Ultramontane party in the Roman Catholic Church.— Tn.] 2 Vol. iii. p. 11, 1862. " Sopranaturale essentlo il fine, per cui Iddio conseiTa lo stato Romano, sopranaturale in qualche modo si vedrii essere la dignita di ou'esto popolo." These praises of the so-called Roman people, which no longer exists— for the population of Rome is a mere iliictuathig 42 Papal Infallibility. The Ultramontane knows notlring higher than the breath and law of Eome. For him Eome is an ecclesiasti- cal address and inqmry-office, or rather a standing oracle — the Cm/^d calls the Pope sumimim oraculum,— which. can give at once an infallible solution of every doubt, speculative or practical "While others are guided in their judgment on facts and events by the moral and religious sentiment developed in their Church-life, with TJltra- montanes the authority of Eome and the typical ex- ample of Eoman morals and customs are the embodiment of the moral and ecclesiastical law. If Jewish parents are forcibly robbed of their child in Eome, that he may be brought up a Christian, the Ultramontane finds it quite in order that natural human rights should yield to the ordinances of Eome, however late devised, although theologians used to maintain that in this ease the law of Nature is the law of God, and therefore above any mere human and ecclesiastical ordinance. If the Inqui- sition still proclaims excommunication in the States of medley of Italians, and especially Italian clerics, from all parts of the Peninsula — seem to be phrases brought up from a former age. Thus, for example, in 1626, Carrerio, Provost and Professor at Padua, says, " The Italians are exalted above all nations by the special grace of God, who gives them in the Pope a spiritual monarch, who iias put down i'l i .11 their thrones great kings and yet mightier emperors, and set others in their place, to whom the greatest kingdoms have long paid tribute, as they do to no other, and who dispenses such riches to his courtiers that no king or emperor has ever had so much to give." Ultramontanism. 43 the Church against every son and daughter if they omit to denounce their parents, and get them put into prison for using flesh or milk on a fast-day, or reading a book on the Index, the Eomfinist is prepared to justify this too. If the Eoman Government, by its lottery, openly conducted by priests, fosters the passion for gambling, and produces the ruin of whole families, the Oiviltd, composes an apology for the lottery, although Alexan- der Tii. and Benedict xiii. forbade it under pain of ex- communication. If in Eome, clergymen (the so-called preti di piazza) stand in the public places till some one hires them for a mass, this gives no more offence to the Eomanist than the sale of indulgence-biLls ; and so the Eoman commissionaires, after showing visitors the vari- ous sights of the place, finally point out this spectacle to them. He thinks it at least very excusable that the very utmost is got out of dispensations and indulgences as a mine of pecuniary profit ; that, for instance, the indul- gences of " privileged altars" are sold to certain churches at a scudo apiece, thus giving occasion to the grossest superstition about the delivery of souls from Purga- tory ; that cartain marriage dispensations are granted to the wealthy for a high price, which are denied to the poorer ; that some kinds of matrimonial causes are car- 44 Papal Infallibility. ried to Eome, against the express stipulation of treaties, and the citizens thereby subjected to protracted and costly processes, — as happened not long since in a German State, when this new encroachment seemed to the local bishops so strong a case, that they made ener- getic representations at Eome on the subject, which resulted in the demand being given up for a while, and the question being allowed to be settled on the spot. Eome on her part omits no means of confirming the whole Catholic world in this clerico-Italian manner of thinking and feeling. More than nine-tenths of the Eoman congregations and tribunals are composed of Italians, and they regulate everything through their precepts and decisions, spun out into the minutest and most frivolous detail, and issued in the name of the Pope. Everji- breath of religious life is to be drawn by Italian rule. Bishoprics out of Italy are to be fiUed, as far as possible, by men who have got the Catholic mind in Eome, or who at least have been trained by the Jesuits or their pupils. The more questions any country or diocese refers to Eome — the more dispensations, indulgences, altar privi- leges, consecrated objects, and the like, it receives from Eome — the more presents of money it sends there, — so Ultramontanism. 45 much the higher praise it gets for piety and genuine Catholic sentiment. What is called Catholicity can only be attained in the eyes of the Court of Eome by every one translating himself and his ideas, on every subject that has any connexion with religion, into Italian. If, in points where the Italian form or view, or practice or manner of devotion, conflicts with their national feeling, or is being forced into the place of what is native and suits them better, Germans or Frenchmen or Englishmen repudiate the foreign use, they are said to be on a wrong road, they are not " genuine Catholics," but only liberal Catholics ; for so the Society of Jesus distinguishes what we should call " Ultramontane," or simply " Catholic." § II. — Consequences of the Dogma. The root of the whole Ultramontane habit of mind is the personal infallibility of the Pope, and accordingly the Jesuits declare it to be the wish of true Catholics that this dogma should be defined at the forthcoming Council If this desire is accomplished, a new prin- ciple of immeasurable importance, both retrospective and prospective, will be established — a principle which, when once irrevocably fixed, wiU extend its dominion 46 Papal hifallibility. over men's minds more and more, till it has coerced them into subjection to every Papal pronouncement ia matters of religion, morals, politics, and social science. Tor it will be idle to talk any more of the Pope's encroaching on a foreign domain; he, and he alone, as being infallible, will have the right of determining the limits of his teaching and action at his own good pleasure, and every such determination will bear the stamp of infallibility. "When once the narrow adherence of many Catholic theologians to the ancient tradition and the Church of the first six centuries is happily broken through, the pedantic horror of new dogmas completely got rid of, and the well-known canon of St. Vincent, " Quod semper, quodubique, quod ab omnibus," which is still respected here and there, set aside — then every Pope, however ignorant of theology, will be free to make what use he likes of his power of dogmatic creativeness, and to erect his own thoughts into the common belief, binding on the whole Church. "We say advisedly, " however ignorant he may be of theology," for the Jesuit theologians have already foreseen this contingency as being not an unusual one with Popes, and one of them. Professor Erbermann of Mayence, has observed — " A thoroughly ignorant Pope may very well Consequences of the Dogma. 47 be infallible, for God has before now pointed out the right road by the mouth of a speaking ass."^ But, after Infallibility has been made into a dogma, whoever dares to question the plenary authority of any new article of faith coined in the Vatican mint, will incur, according to the Jesuits, excommunication in this world and everlasting damnation in the next. Councils will for the future be superfluous; the Bishops will no doubt be assembled in Eome now and then to swell the pomp of a Papal canonization or some other grand ceremony, but they will have nothing more to do with dogmas. If they wish to confirm a Papal decision, itself the result of direct Divine inspiration — as, e.g., the Council of Chalcedon, after careful examination, sanctioned the dogmatic letter of Pope Leo l, — this would be bringing lanterns to aid the light of the noon- day sun. The form hitherto used by the Bishops in subscribing the doctrinal decisions of Councils, definieifis suiscripsi, would for the future be a blasphemy. Papal InfaUibUity, once defined as a dogma, wUl give the impulse to a theological, ecclesiastical, and even 1 Irenio Cathol. (Mogimt. 1645), cap. vi. p. 97 : " Quomodo Mno infertur, nos fidem saliitemque nostram ab unico tali homine suspeudere et non potius ab eo, qui novit etiam per asiniim loquentem dirigere iter nos- tnun." 48 Papal Infallibility. political revolution, the nature of wMch very few — and least of all those who are urging it on — have clearly- realized, and no hand of man will be able to stay its course. In Eome itself the saying will be verified, " Thou wilt shudder thyself at thy Ukeness to God." In the next place, the newly-coined article of faith wHL inevitably take root as the foundation and comer- stone of the whole Eoman Catholic edifice. The whole activity of theologians will be concentrated on the one point of ascertaining whether or not a Papal decision can be quoted for any given doctiine, and in labour- ing to discover and amass proof for it from history and literature. Every other authority wiU pale beside the living oracle on the Tiber, which speaks with plenary inspiration, and can always be appealed to. What use in tedious investigations of Scripture, what use in wasting time on the difficult study of tradition, which requires so many kinds of preliminary know- ledge, when a single utterance of the infallible Pope may shatter at a breath the labours of half a lifetime, and a telegraphic message to Eome will get an answer in a few hours or a few days, which becomes an axiom and article of faith ? On one side the work of theolo- gians will be greatly simplified, while on the other it Consequences of the Dogma. 49 becomes harder and more extensive. A single comma in a single Bull (of Pius V. against Baius) lias before now led to endless disputes, because it is doubtful whether it should precede -or follow certain words, and the whole dogmatic meaning of the Bull depends on its position. But the dispute, which has gone on three centuries, can never be settled now, not even by examin- ing the original document at Eome, which is written, according to the old custom, without punctuation. And how will it be in the future ? The Eabbis say, " On every apostrophe in the Bible hang whole mountains of hidden sense," and this will apply equally to Papal Bulls ; and thus theology, in the hands of the Ultra- montane school, which will alone prevail, promises to become more and more Talmudical. To prove the dogma of Papal Infallibility from Church history nothing less is required than a complete falsi- fication of it. The declarations of Popes which con- tradict the doctrines of the Church, or contradict each other (as the same Pope sometimes contradicts himself), will have to be twisted into agreement, so as to show that their heterodox or mutually destructive enuncia- tions are at bottom sound doctrine, or, when a little has been subtracted from one dictum and added to the D 50 Papal Infallibility. other, are not really contradictory, and mean the same thing. And here future theologians will have to get well indoctrinated in the Eabhinical school ; and indeed they will find a good deal of valuable matter ready to their hand in the Jesuit casuists. These last, mean- time, will be their best teachers in the skilful mani- pulation of history. They never had any particular difficulty in manufacturing Chiirch history ; they have already performed the most incredible feats in that line. Not to speak now of their zeal for the discovery and dissemination of apocryphal tales of miracles and Lives of saints, of which the Catholic world owes to them so many, we wUl merely refer here to their huge falsification of Spanish Church-history. They have provided Spain with a wholly new history, in accordance with the interests of their Order, as weU as the national wish, and the dogma of the Immaculate Conception; and this could only be accomplished by the Jesuit, Eoman De la Higuera, inventing chronicles and archseological records, with the necessary appur- tenance of relics, the genuineness of which had to be proved by a miracle brought forward for this express purpose. Errors and Contradictions of the Popes. 5 1 § III. — Errors and Contradictions of the Popes. It is necessary for illustrating the question of Infalli- bility to recall some of the historical difficulties it is beset with. Innocent i. and Gelasius i., the former writing to the Council of Milevis, the latter ia his epistle to the Bishops of Picenum, declared it to be so indispensable for infants to receive commimion, that those who die without it go straight to hell.' A thousand years later the Council of Trent anathematized this doctrine. It is the constant teaching of the Church that ordi- nation received from a bishop, quite irrespectively of his personal worthiness or unworthiness, is valid and indelible. Putting aside Baptism, the whole security of the sacraments rests on this principle of faith, and re- ordination has always been opposed in the Church as a crime and a profanation of the sacrament. Only in Eome, during the devastation which the endless wars of Goths and Lombards inflicted on Central Italy, there was a collapse of all learning and theology, which disturbed and distorted the. dogmatic tradition. Since the eighth century, the ordinations of certain Popes ' S. Aug. 0pp. ii. 640 ; CrnicU. Coll. (ed. Latbe), iv. 1178. 5 2 Papal Infallibility. began to be annulled, and the bishops and priests ordained by them were compelled to be re-ordained. This occurred first in 769, when Constantine IL, who had got possession of the Papal chair by force of arms, and kept it for thirteen months, was blinded, and deposed at a Synod, and aU his ordinations pronoimced invalid. But the strongest case occurred at the end of the ninth century, after the death of Pope Formosus, when the repeated rejection of his ordinations threw the whole Italian Church into the greatest confusion, and produced a general uncertainty as to whether there were any valid sacraments in Italy. Auxihus, who was a contemporary, said that through this universal rejection and repetition of orders (" ordinatio, exordinatio, et superordiaatio") matters had come to such a pass in Eome, that for twenty years the Christian religion had been interrupted and extinguished in Italy. Popes and Synods decided in glaring contradiction to one another, now for, now against, the validity of the ordinations, and it was self- evident that in Eome all sure knowledge on the doc- trine of ordination was lost. At the end of his second work, Auxilius, speaking in the name of those numer- ous priests and bishops whose ecclesiastical status was Errors and Contradictions of the Popes. 5 3 called in question by the decisions of Stephen vii. and Sergiiis iii., demanded the strict investigation of a General Council, as the only authority capable of solv- ing the complication introduced by the Popes.-' But the Council never met, and the dogmatic uncer- tainty and confusion in Eome continued. In the middle of the eleventh century the great contest against Simony, which was then thought equivalent to heresy, broke out, and the ordinations of a simoniacal bishop were pronounced invalid. Leo ix. re-ordained a number of persons on this ground, as Peter Damiani relates.^ Gregory vii., at his fifth Eoman Synod, made the inva- lidity of all simoniacal ordinations a rule, and the prin- ciple, confirmed by Urban 11., that a simoniacal bishop can give nothing in ordination, because he has nothing, passed into the Becretum of Gratian.^ In these cases it is obvious that doctrine and practice were most intimately connected. It was only from their holding a false, and, in its consequences, most injurious, notion of the force and nature of this sacra- ment, that the Popes acted as they did, and if they had then been generally considered infallible, a hopeless 1 Mabillon, Analecta (Paris, 1723), p. 39. ' Petri Damiani Opvsc. p. 419. 3 Qoxls. i. Q. 7. u. 24. 54 Papal Infallibility. confusion must have been introduced, not only into Italy, but the whole Church. In contrast to Pope Pelagius, who had declared, with the whole Eastern and Western Church, the indispen- sable necessity of the invocation of the Trinity in Bap- tism, Nicolas I. assured the Bulgarians that baptism in the name of Christ alone was quite sufficient, and thus exposed the Christians there to the danger of an invalid baptism. The same Pope declared confirmation administered by priests, according to the Greek usage from remote antiquity, invalid, and ordered those so confirmed to be confirmed anew by a bishop, thereby denying to the whole Eastern Church the possession of a sacrament, and laying the foundation of the bitter estrangement which led to a permanent division.^ -Stephen IL (in.) allowed marriage with a slave girl to be dissolved, and a new one contracted, whereas all previous Popes had pronounced such marriages indis- soluble.^ He also declared baptism, in case of neces- sity, valid when administered with wine.* . . - • Celestine in. tried to loosen the marriage tie by de- claring it dissolved if either party became heretical _ Innocent in. annulled this decision, and Hadrian VI. 1 Conca. CM. (ed. Labbe), vi. 54S. ' lb. vL 1650. 3 74. yj. igjo Errors and Contradictions of the Popes. 55 called Oelestine a heretic for giving it. This decision was afterwards expunged from the MS. collections of Papal decrees, but the Spanish theologian Alphonsus de Castro had seen it there.^ The Capernaite doctrine, that Christ's hody is sen- sibly {sensualiter) touched by the hands and broken by the teeth in the Eucharist — an error rejected by the whole Church, and contradicting the impassibility of His body, — was afi&rined by Nicolas 11. at the Synod of Eome in 1059, and Berengar compelled to acknowledge it. Lanfranc reproaches Berengar with afterwards want- ing to make Cardinal Humbert, instead of the Pope, responsible for this doctrine.^ Innocent III., in order to exhibit the Papal power in the fullest splendour of its divine omnipotence, invented the new doctrine that the spiritual bond which unites a bishop to his diocese is firmer and mcire indissoluble than the " carnal " bond, as he called it, between man and wife, and that God alone can loose it, viz., translate a bishop from one see to another. But as the Pope is the representative of the true God on earth, he and he alone can dissolve this holy and indissoluble bond, not ^Adv. Hor. (ed. Paris), 1565. Of. Melch. Carnis, p. 240. " Lanfranc, De Euch. c. 3 (ed. Migne), p. 412. 56 Papal Infallibility. by human but divine authority, and it is God, not man, -who looses it.^ The obvious and direct corollary, that the Pope can also dissolve the less firm and holy bond of marriage, Innocent, as we have seen, overlooked, for he solemnly condemned Celestine iil.'s decision on that point ; and thus he unwittingly involved himself in a contradiction. Many canonists have accepted this as the legitimate consequence of his teaching. Innocent betrayed his utter ignorance of theology, when he declared that the Fifth Book of Moses, being called Deuteronomy, or the Second Book of the Law, must bind the Christian Church, which is the second Church.^ This great Pope seems never to have read Deuteronomy, or he could hardly have fallen into the blunder of supposing, e.g., that the Old Testament prohi- bitions of particular kinds of food, the burnt-offerings, the harsh penal code and bloody laws of war, the prohibi- tions of woollen and linen garments, etc., were to be again made obligatory on Christians. And as the Jews were allowed in Deuteronomy to put away a wife who dis- pleased them, and take another. Innocent ran the risk 'Decretal " De Transl. Episc," c. 2, 3, 4. This was to introduce a new article of faith. The Church had not known for centuries that resig- nations, depositions, and translations of bishops, belonged by divine right to the Pope. * Decretal " QuiJUii sint legitimi," a. 13. Errors and Contradictions of the Popes. 5 7 of falling himself into a greater error about marriage than Celestine iii. Great light is thrown on this question by the history of the alternate approbations and persecutions of the Franciscan Order by the Popes. Nicolas III., in the decretal "Exiit qui seminat," gave an exposition of the rule of St. Prancis, and afi&rmed the renunciation of all personal or corporate property to be holy and meritorious ; that Christ Himself had taught, and by His example confirmed it, and also the first founders of the Church. The Franciscans therefore were to have the use only, not the possession, of property; the possession he adjudged to belong to the Eoman Church. He expressly added that this exposition of the rule of St. Francis was to have permanent force, and, like every other constitution or decretal, to be used in the schools and literally interpreted. He forbade, under pain of excommunication, all glosses against the literal sense. There can be no shadow of doubt that Mcolas meant in this decree to issue a solemn decision on a matter of faith. It is not addressed to the Fran- ciscan Order only, but to the schools (i.e., universities) and the whole Church. Clement v., in the decretal " Exivi de Paradiso," 58 Papal Infallibility. renewed the ordinance assigning the property of Fran- ciscans to the Eoman Church ; and John xxn., in the Bull " Qum-undam" declared this ordinance of Nicolas in. and Clement v. to be salutary, clear, and of force. But no sooner did John come into conflict with the Order, partly in his attempts to limit their ludicrous excesses in the exhibition of Evangelical poverty, partly from the strong denunciations of the corruption of the Papal Court, and loud demands for a reformation in the Church, which issued from the bosom of the Franciscan Order, than he began gradually, and as far as he could without prejudicing his authority, to undermine the constitution of Nicolas m. First, he removed the ex- communication for all non-literal interpretations of the Franciscan rule, and then attacked certain of its details. Meanwhile the strife grew fiercer ; the " Spirituals," in union with Louis of Bavaria, began to brand John as a heretic, and he, in a new Bull, declared the distinction be- tween use and possession impossible, neither serviceable for the Church nor for Christian perfection, and finally rejected the doctrine of his predecessor, that Christ and the Apostles were in word and deed patterns of the Franciscan ideal of poverty, as herpiical, and hostile to the Catholic faith. Errors and Contradictions of the Popes. 59 And thus the perplexing spectacle "was afforded the Church of one Pope unequivocally charging another with false doctrine. What Nicolas iii. and Clement v. had solemnly commended as right and holy, their successor branded, as solemnly, as noxious and wrong. The Fran- ciscans repeated the charge of heresy against John xxii. with the more emphasis, "since what the Popes had once defined in faith and morals, through the keys of wisdom, their successors could not call in question."^ John con- demned the ^fritings of D'Olive, and several more of their theologians, and handed over the whole community of the " Spirituals," or Fratricelli, as the advocates of extreme poverty were called, to the Inquisition. Between 1316 and 1352, 114 of them were burnt, — martyrs to their misconception of Evangelical poverty and Papal infalli- bility; for they were among the first champions of that theory, then still new in the Church. After long and bitter persecutions, Sixtus rv. at last made some satis- faction to the " Spirituals," by letting the works of their prophet and theologian, D'Olive, be re-examined, and, in contradiction to the sentence of John xxii., declared orthodox. Later Popes resumed possession of the pro- perty of the Franciscans, which John had repudiated. 1 Cf. Bossuet, Defens. Dsclarat. — (Euvres, xviii. pp. 339 seq. Liege, 1768. 6o Papal Infallibility. One of the most comprehensive, dogmatic documents ever issued by a Pope is the decree of Eugenius iv. " to the Armenians," dated 2 2d November 143 9, three months after the Council of Florence was brought to an end by the departure of the Greeks. It is a confession of faith of the Eoman Chui-ch, intended to serve as a rule of doctrine and practice for the Armenians, on those points they had previously differed about. The dogmas of the Unity of the Divine Nature, the Trinity, the In- carnation, and the Seven Sacraments, are expounded, and the Pope moreover asserts that the decree thus solemnly issued has received the sanction of the Council, that is, of the Italian bishops -whom he had detained in Florence. If this decree of the Pope were really a rule of faith, the Eastern Church would have only four sacra- ments instead of seven ; the Western Church would for at least eight centuries have been deprived of three sacraments, and of one, the want of which would make all the rest, with one exception, invalid. Eugenius iv. determines in this decree the form and matter, the sub- stance, of the sacraments, or of those things on the presence or absence of which the existence of the sacra- ment itself depends, according to the universal doctrine Errors and Contradictiotis of the Popes. 6 1 of the Churcli. He gives a form of Confirmation which never existed in one-half of the Church, and first came into use in the other after the tenth century. So again with Penance. What is given as the essential form of the sacrament was unknown in the Western Church for eleven hundred years, and never known in the Greek. And when the touching the sacred vessels, and the words accompanying the rite, are given as the form and matter of Ordination, it follows that the Latin Church for a thousand years had neither priests nor bishops — nay, like the Greek Church, which never adopted this usage, possesses to this hour neither priests nor bishops, and consequently no sacraments except Baptism, and perhaps Marriage.-' It is noteworthy that this decree — with which Papal Infallibility or the whole hierarchy and the sacraments of the Church stand or fall — is cited, refuted, and appealed to by all dogmatic writers, but that the adhe- rents of Papal InfaUibility have never meddled with it. Neither Bellarmine, nor Charlas, nor Aguirre, nor Orsi, I Cf. Denzinger, EncMHd. Symbol. etDefinit. (Wiroeb. 1854), pp. 200 seq. But Denzinger, in order to conceal the purely dogmatic character of this famous decree, has omitted the first part, on the Trinity cmd Incarnation, which is given in Eaynaldos's Annals, 1439. [The same conspicuously untenable explanation was adopted in the Dublin Review for January 1866.-TE.J 62 Papal Infallibility. nor the other apologists of the Eoman Court, troubled themselves with it. After the Papal claim to infallibility had taken a more definite shape at Eome, Sixtus v. himself brought it again into jeopardy by his edition of the Bible. The Council of Trent had pronounced St. Jerome's version authentic for the Western Church, but there was no authentic edition of the Latin Bible sanctioned by the Church. Sixtus V. undertook to provide one, which appeared, garnished with the stereotyped forms of ana- thema and penal enactments. His BuU declared that this edition, corrected by his own hand, must be received and used by everybody as the only true and genuine one, under pain of excommunication, every change, even of a single word, being forbidden under anathema. But it soon appeared that it was full of blunders, some two thousand of them introduced by the Pope himself It was said the Bible of Sixtus v. must be publicly prohibited. But Bellarmine advised that the peril Sixtus had brought the Church into should be hushed up as far as possible ; all the copies were to be called in, and the corrected Bible printed anew, under the name of Sixtus v., with a statement in the Preface that the errors had crept in through the fault of the Errors and Contradictions of the Popes. 6 o compositors and the carelessness of others. Bellarmine himself was commissioned to give circulation to these lies, to which the new Pope gave his name, by compos- ing the Preface. In his Autobiography this Jesuit and Cardinal congratulates himself on having thus requited Sixtus with good for evil ; for the Pope had put his great work on Controversies on the Index, because he had not maintained the direct, but only the indirect, dominion of the Pope over the whole world. And now followed a fresh mishap. The Autobiography, which was kept in the archives of the Eoman Jesuits, got known in Eome through several transcripts. On this Cardinal Azzolini urged that, as Bellarmine had insulted three Popes and exhibited two as liars, viz., Gregory xiv. and Clement viii., his work should be suppressed and burnt, and the strictest secrecy inculcated about it.' § IV. — The Verdict of History. Some explanation is imperatively needed of the strange phenomenon, that an opinion according to which Christ 1 For, thought Azzolini, what shall we say, if ovs adversaries infer " Papa potest falli in exponendS Eoolesiae S. Soriptura "— the Pope can err in expounding Scripture — nay, hath eiTed, "non solum in exponendo sed in eS multa perperam mutando," not only in expounding it, but in making many wrong changes in the text ? — Voto nella causa della Beatif. del Card. Bellarm. (Ferrara, 1761), p. 40. 64 Papal Infallibility. has made the Pope of the day the one vehicle of His in- spirations, the pillar and exclusive organ of Divine truth, ■without -whom the Churcli is like a body without a soul, deprived of the power of vision, and unahle to deter- mine any point of faith — that such an opinion, which is for the future to be a sort of dogmatic Atlas carrying the whole edifice of faith and morals on its shoulders, should have first been certainly ascertained in the year of grace 1869, but is from henceforth to be placed as a primary article of faith at the head of eveiy catechism. For thirteen centuries an incomprehensible silence on this fundamental article reigned throughout the whole Church and her Kterature. Ifone of the ancient confessions of faith, no catechism, none of the patristic writings composed for the instruction of the people, contain a syllable about the Pope, still less any hint . that all certainty of faith and doctrine depends on him. For the first thousand years of Church history not a question of doctrine wa.s finaUy decided by the Pope. The Eoman bishops took no part in the commotions which the numerous Gnostic sects, the Montanists and Chiliasts, produced in the early Church, nor can a single dogmatic decree issued by one of them be found during the first four centuries, nor a trace of the existence of any. The Verdict of History. 65 Even the controversy about Christ kindled by Paul of Samosata, which occupied the whole Eastern Church for a long time, and necessitated the assembling of several Councils, was terminated without the Pope taking any part in it. So again in the chain of controversies and dis- cussions connected with the names of Theodotus, Arte- mon, Noetus, Sabellius, Beryllus, and Lucian of Antioch, which troubled the whole Church, and extended over nearly 150 years, there is no proof that the Eoman bishops acted beyond the limits of their own local Church, or accomplished any dogmatic result. The only exception is the dogmatic treatise of the Eoman bishop Dionysius, following a Synod held at Eome in 262, de- nouncing and rejecting SabeUianism and the opposite method of expression of Dionysius of Alexandria. This document, if any authority had been ascribed to it, was well fitted in itself to cut short, or rather strangle at its birth, the long Arian disturbance j but it was not known out of Alexandria, and exercised no influence whatever on the later course of the controversy. It is only known from the fragments quoted afterwards by Athanasius. In three controversies during this early period the Eoman Church took an active part, — the question about Easter, about heretical baptism, and about the peni- E 66 Papal Infallibility. tential discipline. In all three the Popes were unable to carry out their own will and view and practice, and the other Churches maintained their different usage with- out its leading to any permanent division. Pope Victor's attempt to compel the Churches of Asia Minor to adopt the Eoman usage, by excluding them from his com- munion, proved a failure. The dispute about the stricter or milder administra- tion of penance, and as to whether certain heinous sins should exclude from communion for life, lasted a long time in the Church of Eome, as elsewhere. There is no trace found of any attempt to force other Churches to adopt the principles received at Eome ; and even in the fourth century, the Spanish Synod of Elvira estab- lished rules differing widely from the Eoman. This difference had an intimate relation to dogma. The dispute about heretical baptism, in the middle of the third century, had a stDl more clearly dogmatic char- acter, for the whole Church doctrine of the efficacy and conditions of sacramental grace was involved. Yet the opposition of Pope Stephen to the doctrine, confirmed at several African and Asiatic Synods, against the validity pf schismatical baptism, remained wholly in- operative. Stephen went so far as to exclude those The Verdict of History. 67 Churelies from his communion, but he only drew down sharp censures on his unlawful arrogance. Both St. Cyprian and Firmilian of Cesarea denied his having any right to dictate a doctrine to other bishops and Churches. And the other Eastern Churches, too, which were not directly mixed up in the dispute, retained their own practice for a long time, quite undisturbed by the Eoman theory. Later on, St. Augustine, looking back at this dispute, maintains that the pronouncement of Stephen, categorical as it was, was no decision of the Church, and that St. Cyprian and the Africans were therefore justified in rejecting it ; he says the real obli- gation of conforming to a common practice originated with the decree of a great {flenariwm) Council, meaning the Council of Aries in 314.^ In the Arian disputes, which engaged and disturbed the Church beyond all others for above half a century, and were discussed in more than fifty Synods, the Eoman See for a long time remained passive. Through the long episcopate of Pope Silvester (314-335) there is no document or sign of doctrinal activity, any more than ' Aug., De Bapt. contr. Donat., 0pp. (ed. Benedict.) ix. pp. 98-111. The advocates of Papal Infallibility are obliged to give np St. Augustine. Orsi formally rebukes him, and Bellarmine (De Eccles. i. i) tUnks he perhaps spoke a falsehood. 68 Papal Infallibility. from all his predecessors from 269 to 314. Julius and liberius (337-366) were the first to take part in the course of events, but they only increased the uncer- tainty. Julius pronounced Marcellus of Ancyra, an avowed SabeUian, orthodox at his Eoman Synod ; and Liberius purchased his return from exile from the Em- peror by condemning Athanasius, and subscribing an Arian creed. " Anathema to thee, Liberius !" was then the cry of zealous Catholic bishops like Hilary of Poitiers. This apostasy of Liberius sufficed, through the whole of the middle ages, for a proof that Popes could fall into heresy as well as other people. Later on, and especially after the unfortunate issue of the Synods of Milan, Sirmium, Eimini, and Seleucia, when men's confidence in this method of securing sound definitions was greatly shaken, and St. Jerome wrote that the world was amazed to find itself Arian — then, if ever, we might expect that Christians and Churches would resort in their perplexity from all parts of the empire to the Eoman See for aid and counsel, as the one anchor of salvation and rock of orthodoxy; but nothing of the kind took place ; so far from it, that in aU. the treatises and discussions consequent on the Synods of Eimini and Seleucia in 359, the Pope's name The Verdict of History. 69 ';S never once mentioned. The first sign of life lie gave was some years afterwards, when he adopted the pro- cedure of the Synod of Alexandria against the bishops who fell at Pdmini.^ During all the fourth century Councils alone decided dogmatic questions. If the Bishop of Eome was ever appealed to for a decision, it was understood that he was desired to call a Synod to decide the point at issue. At the second CEcumenical Council in 381, which. decreed the most important definition of faith since the Nicene, by first formulizing the doctrine of the Holy Ghost, the Church of Eome was not represented at aU ; only the decrees were communicated to it ^s to other Churches. Two Eoman Synods, under Damasus, about 378, did indeed anathematize certain errors without naming their authors; but Pope Sirieius (384-398) declined to pro- nounce on the false doctrine of a bishop (Bonosus), when requested to do so, on the ground that he had no right, and must await the sentence of the bishops of the province, " to make it the rule of his own."^ He con- demned the teaching of Jovinian, which originated in Eome itself, but only through the means of a Synod. A greater share fell to the Popes in the Pelagian con - 1 Epist. Pontif. (ed. Const.) p. 448. = lb. p. 679. 70 Papal Infallibility. troversies, which chiefly concerned the West, than in previous ones. Innocent I., when invoked by the Africans, after five years of disputing, had sanctioned the decrees of their two Synods of Milevis and Carthage (417), and pronounced a work of Pelagius heretical, so that St. Augustine said, in a sermon, " The matter is now ended." ^ But he deceived himself, for the strife was only fairly begun, and it was not ended till many years later, by the decision of the CEcTunenical Council of Ephesus in 431. Meanwhile Pope Zosimus spoke on the Pelagian doctrine in a very different fashion from his immediate predecessor. Innocent. He bestowed high commendation on the profession of faith of Celes- tius, who was accused before him of the heresy, though it contained an open denial of Original Sin, and severely rebuked the African bishops, who had made the com- plaint, for accusing so orthodox a person of heresy. It was only after they had addressed an energetic letter to Zosimus, telling him that they adhered to their decision, and that he was mistaken, and after they had again anathematized the teaching of Pelagius and Celestius, at a Council held at Carthage, that the Pope assented to their judgment 1 Sermo 13], <^ 10. Opy. (ed. .Ajntwerp) v. 449. The Verdict of History. 7 1 But St. Augustine's saying, quoted above, has been al- leged in proof of his accepting Papal InfaUibility, which, in dealing with the baptismal controversy, he so often and so pointedly repudiates. Such a notion was utterly foreign to his mind. The Pelagian system was in his eyes so manifest and deadly an error {ajperta pernicies), that there seemed to him no need even of a Synod to condemn it.^ The two African Synods, and the Pope's assent to their decrees, appeared to him more than enough, and so the matter might be regarded as at an end. That a Eoman judgment in itself was not con- clusive, but that a "Concilium plenarium" was neces- sary for that purpose, he had himself emphatically maintained; and the conduct of Pope Zosimus could only confirm his opinion. A new chapter in the dogmatic action of the Popes opens with the year 430, which was the starting-point of the controversies on the Incarnation and the relation of the two natures in Christ, which lasted on to the close of the seventh century. Pope Celestine's condemnation of Nestorius was superseded by the Emperor's convokiug a General Council at Ephesus in 431, where it was sub- mitted to examination, and approved. "When the Euty- 1 Cvnlr. Ep. Pelag. i. 4, c. ult. 72 Papal Infallibility. chian controversy arose, the letter of Leo the Great to Flavian appeared in 449, and this was the first dogmatic writing of a Pope which found acceptance both in East and West, but not until it had been examined at the Council of Chalcedon. Leo himself acknowledged that his treatise could not become a nile of faith till it was confirmed by the bishops.^ Pope Vigilius was less happy in the dispute about the " Three Chapters " — ^the writings of Theodore, Theo- doret, and Ibas, which were held to be Nestorian, — ^which he first pronounced orthodox in 546, then condemned the next year, and thus again reversed this sentence in deference to the Western bishops, and then came into conflict with the Pifth General Council, which excom- municated him. PinaUy, he submitted to the judgment of the Council, declaring that he had unfortunately been a tool in the hands of Satan, who labours for the destruc- tion of the Church, and had thus been divided from his colleagues, but God had now enlightened him.^ Thus he thrice contradicted himself : first he anathematized those who condemned the Three Chapters as erroneous ; then he anathematized those who held them to be orthodox, 1 Leonis Ep. ad Episc. GaU. See Mansi, Condi. vL 181. * See Ms letter to the Patriarcli Eutychiiis. Cf. De Marca, Dissert. (Paris, 1669), p. 45. The Verdict of History. 73 as lie had just before himself held them to be ; soon after he condemned the condemnation of the Three Chapters ; and lastly, the Emperor and Council triumphed again over the fickle Pope. A long schism in the West was the consequence. Whole National Churches — Africa, North Italy, Illyria — broke off communion -with the Popes, whom they accused of having sacrificed the faith and authority of the Council of Chalcedon by condemning the Three Chapters. Pelagius i., Vigilius's successor, whose oi'thodoxy was on this ground sus- pected by the Erankish king, Childebert, and the bishops of Gaul, never dreamt of claiming immunity from error, but excused himself in all directions. He laid before Childebert a public profession of his faith, and declared himself, before the bishops of Tuscany, ready to give to every one an account of his faith. Often and earnestly as the Popes exhorted separated bishops and Churches to return to communion with Eome, they never appealed to any peculiar authority or exemption from error in the Eoman See. The Monothelite controversy, growing out of the as- sertion that Christ had not two wills, a human and a Divine, but one Divine will only, led to the General Synod of Constantinople in 680. At the beginning of 74 Papal Infallibility. the controversy, Pope Honorius I., when questioned by three Patriarchs, had spoken entirely in favour of the heretical doctrine in letters addressed to them, and had thereby powerfully aided the new sect. Later on, in 649, Pope Martin, with a Synod of 105 bishops from Southern and Central Italy, condemned Monothelism. But the sentence of a Pope and a small Synod had no binding authority then, and the Emperor Constantine found it necessary to summon a General Council to settle the question. It was foreseen that Pope Hon- orius I., who had hitherto been protected by silence, must share the fate of the other chief authors of the heresy at this CounciL He was, in fact, condemned for heresy in the most solemn manner, and not a single voice, not even of the Papal legates who were present, was raised in his defence. His dogmatic writings were committed to the flames as heretical. The Popes sub- mitted to the inevitable; they subscribed the anathema, and themselves undertook to see that the "heretic'' Honorius was condemned in the West as well as throughout the East, and his name struck out of the Liturgy. This one fact — that a Great Council, univer- sally received afterwards without hesitation through- out the Church, and presided over by Papal legates, The Verdict of History. 75 pronounced the dogmatic decision of a Pope heretical, and anathematized him hy name as a heretic — is a proof, clear as the sun at noonday, that the notion of any peculiar enlightenment or inerrancy of the Popes was then utterly unknown to the whole Church. The only resource of the defenders of Papal Infallibility, since Torquemada and Bellarmine, has been to attack the Acts of the Council as spurious, and maintain that they are a wholesale forgery of the Greeks. The Jesuits clung tenaciously to this notion till the middle of the last century. Since it has had to be abandoned, the device has been to try and torture the words of Honorius into a sort of orthodox sense. But whatever comes of that, nothing can alter the fact, that at the time both Councils and Popes were convinced of the faUibility of the Pope. A century later. Pope Hadrian i. vainly endeavoured to get the decrees of the second Mcene Council on Image Worship, which he had approved, received by Charles the Great and his bishops. The great assembly at Prankfort in 794, and the Caroline books, rejected and attacked these decrees, and Hadrian did not ven- ture to offer more than verbal opposition. In 824 the bishops assembled in synod at Paris spoke without 7 6 Papal Infallibility. remorse of the "absurdities" {alsona) of Pope Hadrian, who, they said, had commanded an heretical worship of images.^ No less L'ght is thrown on the relations of Western bishops to the Pope by the Predestinarian controversy occasioned by the monk Gottschalk, and prolonged for ten years at Synods and in various writings. The first prelates of the day, Hincmar, Ehabanus, Amnio, Pru- dentius, Wenilo, and others, took opposite sides. Synod contended against Synod, and there seemed no possi- bility of coming to an agreement. Yet it never occurred to any one to appeal to the Pope's sentence, ready as he was to interpose in the affairs of the Prankish Church ; only at the last Gottschalk himself made an unsuc- cessful attempt to get his hard fate mitigated by the Pope. Up to the time of the Isidorian decretals no serious attempt was made anywhere to introduce the neo- Eoman theory of Infallibility. The Popes did not dream of laying claim to such a privilege. Their relation to the Church had to be fundamentally revolutionized, and the idea of the Primacy altered, before there could be any room for this doctrine to grow up ; after that it ' Kansi, Concil. xiv. 415 sej. The Verdict of History. 77 developed itself by a sort of logical sequence, but very slowly, being at issue with notorious historical facts. § V. — Tlw Ancient Constitution of the Church. To get a view of the enormous difference in the posi- tion and action of the Primacy, as it was in the Eoman Empire, and as it became in the later middle ages, it is enough to point out the following facts : — (1.) The Popes took no part in convoking Councils. All Great Councils, to which bishops came from differ- ent countries, were convoked by the Emperors, nor were the Popes ever consulted about it beforehand. If they thought a General Council necessary, they had to petition the Imperial Court, as Innocent did in the matter of St. Chrysostom, and Leo after the Synod of 449 -^ and then they did not always prevail, as both the Popes just named learnt by experience. (2.) They were not always allowed to preside, per- sonally or by deputy, at the Great Councils, though no one denied them the first rank in the Church. At Nice, at the two Councils of Ephesus in 431 and 449, and at the Fifth General Council in 553, others pre- sided; only at Chalcedon in 451, and Constantinople in ^ [The " Latrooinium" of Ephesus.— Tn.] 78 Papal Infallibility. 680, did the Papal legates preside. And it is clear that the Popes did not claim this as their exclusive right, from the conduct of Leo i. in sending his legates to Ephesus, although he knew that the Emperor had named, not him, hut the bishop of Alexandria, to preside. (3.) Neither the dogmatic nor the disciplinary deci- sions of these Councils required Papal confirmation, for their force and authority depended on the consent of the Church, as expressed in the Synod, and afterwards in the fact of its being generally received. The con- firmation of the Nicene Council by Pope Silvester was afterwards invented at Eome, because facts would not square with the newly devised theory. (4.) For the first thoiisand years no Pope ever issued a doctrinal decision intended for and addressed to the whole Church. Their doctrinal pronouncements, if de- signed to condemn new heresies, were always submitted to a Synod, or were answers to inquiries from one or more bishops. They only became a standard of faith after being read, examined, and approved at an CEcume- nical Council (5.) The Popes possessed none of the three powers which are the proper attributes of sovereignty, neither Ancient Constitution of the Church. 79 the legislative, the administrative, nor the judicial. The Council of Satdica, in 343, gave them, indeed, a handle for the attempt to usurp the latter. Here it was decreed for the first time, and as a personal privilege to the then Pope, Julius, that he should be authorized to appoint judges for a hishop in the second instance to hear the cause on the spot, with the assistance of a Eoman legate, and, in the event of a further appeal, to pronounce sen- tence himself. But this regulation was received neither by the Eastern Church nor the African, never observed by the former, and steadily rejected by the latter, and it never came into full force anywhere till after the Isidorian decretals were fabricated. The African bishops wrote to Pope Boniface l, in 41 9, " We are resolved not to admit this arrogant claim." ^ The Popes at that time made no attempt to exercise legislative power. For a long time, according to their own statement, no canons but those of the first Mcene Council obtained in the West, in the East only the canons of Eastern Synods. Declarations or ordinances issued by Popes in reply to questions of particular bishops could not be regarded as general laws of the 1 Mpist. Fontif. (ed. Coust.), p. 113 : — " Non eumus jam istum typhum uassurL" 8o Papal Infallibility. Churcli, for the simple reason that they were only known to particular bishops and Churches. The spread of the Dionysian writings, with the second part com- posed of Papal documents, after the sixth century, began gradually to pioneer the way for the notion that certain decretals of the Eoman bishops had the force of law, but their authority was still limited, as in the Spanish Church, to those issued by Eoman Synods, or else was made dependent on their express acceptance by National Churches. Even if the Popes had attempted at that time to exercise a formal government over the Church, the thing was a sheer impossibility. Government cannot be carried on by occasional Synods, and there was no other means of governiag. The Popes would have required a court, a system of clerical oflBcials, congregations, and the like, but nothing of the kind was remotely dreamt of. The Eoman clergy were organized just like every other ; for all the of&ces and functions undertaken later, and stni discharged by the court, there was then neither need nor occasion. (6.) Nobody thought of getting dispensations from Church laws from the Eoman bishops, nor was a single tax or tribute paid to the Eoman See, for no court as yet existed. To make laws which could be dispensed for Ancient Constitution of the Chtirch. 8i money would have appeared both, a folly and a crime. The power of the keys, or of hinding and loosing, was universally held to belong to the other bishops just as much as to the bishop of Eome. (7.) The bishops of Eome could exclude neither indi- viduals nor Churches from the communion of the Church Universal They could withdraw their own Church from communion with particular bishops or Churches, and they often did so, but this in nowise affected their rela- tion to other bishops or Churches, as was shown, among other instances, by the long Antiochene schism from 361 to 413. And, on the other hand, if they admitted into their own communion one excommunicated by other Churches, this did not bring him into communion with any other Church. (8.) For a long time nothing was known in Eome of definite rights bequeathed by Peter to his successors. Nothing but a care for the weal of the Church, and the duty of watching over the observance of the canons, was ascribed to them. Only after the Sardican Council, and in reliance solely on it, or the Mcene, which was designedly confounded with it, was a right of hearing ap- peals laid claim to. Innocent i. himself (402-417), who tried to give the widest extent to the Sardican canon, and 82 Papal Infallibility. claimed, on the strength of it, a right to interpose in all graver Church questions, grounded his claim entirely on " the Fathers " and the Synod. So, too, with Zosimus (417-418), — it was the Fathers who had given the See of Eome the privilege of final decision in appeals.^ But soon afterwards, at the Council of Ephesus, the Eoman legates declared that Peter, to whom Christ gave the power of binding and loosing, lives and judges in his suc- cessors.^ No one put forward this plea more frequently or more energetically than Leo i. But when the Coun- cil of Chalcedon declared, in its famous twenty-eighth canon, that it was the Fathers who adjudged the primacy to Eome, and that too on account of the political dignity of the city, Leo did not venture to contradict them, though he strenuously resisted the main purport of the canon, which raised the See of Constantinople to the first rank after the Eoman, and to equal rights. It was not the degradation of the Eoman See, but only the injury done to the Eastern Patriarchs and the Nicene canon, which, according to his own assurance, was the ground of his refusing his assent to the canon of Chalcedon.* He ' Mansi, Cmea. iv. 366. » lb. iv. 1296. 3 The sixth Nicene canon, referring to the rights of the Boman See over part of the Italian Church, had given the same rights to the bishops of Alexandria and Antioch over their own Patriarchates. Ancient Constihttion of the Church. 83 had, indeed, some years tefore, induced the Emperor Yalentinian iir. to issue an edict in favour of the See of Eome, which subjected all the bishops of the then very- reduced Western empire (strictly only those of Italy and Gaul) to the Pope, and which, had it obtained full force, would have changed the whole constitution of the West- ern Church. This edict names, besides the canon of Sardica, and the greatness of the city, " the merit of St. Peter," as the first ground for so comprehensive a power, which the bishops were to be compelled by the imperial officers to bow to. But when Leo had to deal with Byzantium and the East, he no longer dared to plead this argument, — which would alone have proved the hated twenty-eighth canon of Chalcedon to be null and void, — but preferred to appeal to the.Nicene Council, utterly untenable as his inferences from the sixth canon must have appeared to the Greeks. The opposition of his successors was equally fruitless. The canon took full effect, and from that day to this has determined the form and constitution of the Eastern Church, and its view of the prerogatives of Eome. (9.) What was afterwards called the Papal system, when first proclaimed in words only, was repudiated with horror by that best and greatest of Popes, Gregory 84 Papal Infallibility. the Great. On this theory the Pope has the plenitude of power, all other bishops are only his servants and auxiliaries, from him all power is derived, and he is concurrent ordinary in every diocese. So Gregory un- derstood the title of " (Ecumenical Patriarch," and would not endure that so " wicked and blasphemous a title " should be given to himself or any one else.^ (10.) There are many National Churches which were never under Eome, and never even had any intercourse by letter with Eome, without this being considered a defect, or causing any difficulty about Church com- munion. Such an autonomous Church, always in- dependent of Eome, was the most ancient of those founded beyond the limits of the empire, the Armenian, wherein the primatial dignity descended for a long time in the family of the national apostle, Gregory the Illuminator. The great Syro-Persian Church in Meso- potamia, and the western part of the kingdom of the Sassanidse, with its thousands of martyrs, was from the first, and always remained, equally free from any in- fluence of Eome. In its records and its rich litera- ture we find no trace of the arm of Eome having reached there. The same holds good of the Ethiopian ' Lib. V. Et[i. 18 ad Joann ; Lib. viii. Ep. 30 ad Eulog. etc. Ancient Constitution of the Church. 85 or Abyssinian Church, which was indeed united to the See of Alexandria, but wherein nothing, except perhaps a distant echo, was heard of the claims of Eome. In the West, the Irish and the ancient British Church remained for centuries autonomous, and under no sort of influence of Eome. If we put into a positive form this negative account of the position of the ancient Popes, we get the follow- ing picture of the organization of the ancient Church : — Without prejudice to its agreement with the Church Universal in all essential points, every Church manages its own affairs with perfect freedom and independence, and maintains its own traditional usages and discipline, all questions not concerning the whole Church, or of primary importance, being settled on the spot. The Church is organized in dioceses, provinces, patriarchates (National Churches were added afterwards in the West), with the bishop of Eome at the head as first Patriarch, the Centre and Eepresentative of unity, and, as such, the bond between East and West, between the Churches of the Greek and the Latin tongue, the chief watcher and guardian of the, as yet very few, common laws of the Church, — for a long time only the Mcene ; but he does not encroach on the rights of patriarchs, metropolitans. 86 Papal Infallibility. and bishops. Laws and articles of faith, of universal obligation, are issued only by the whole Church, con- centrated and represented at an (Ecumenical Council. § Yl.—The Teaching of the Fathers. What has now become a rule in dogmatic works — to give a separate "treatise" or "locus" to the Pope — came in with Aquinas, the first theologian who, on grounds to be explained presently, made the doctrine of the Pope a formal part of dogmatic theology, i.e., of the Scholastic, and it thus dates from 1274. Since then every doctrinal treatise has its section on the " Primacy," and since Melchior Canus (about 1550) more especially, but in a shorter form with Aquinas, a dis- cussion of the Pope's authority in matters of faith. With the Jesuit theologians (compare, e.g., among living writers, Passaglia, Schrader, Weninger, etc.), the monarchical authority and magisterial power of the Pope is the chief article on which aU the rest depends, and which comes before all in weight and fundamental significance. And rightly so, if the Pope is infallible in his decisions ; for then every authority in the Church, that of Councils included, is a mere derivation from his, and all certainty of faith rests ultimately on The Teaching of the Fathers. 87 him and his divine prerogative of heing the vehicle of a permanent Divine inspiration. Every Christian must say : " I helieve this or that article of faith, because I believe in the Pope's infallibility, and because the Pope has decided it, or has ratified the decision and teaching of others." And now compare with this the silence of the ancient Church. In the first three centuries, St. Irenseus is the only writer who connects the superiority of the Eoman Church with doctrine ; but he places this superiority, rightly understood, only in its antiquity, its double apostolical origin, and in the circumstance of the pure tradition being guarded and maintained there through the constant concourse of the faithful from all countries. Tertullian, Cyprian,^ Lactantius, know nothing of special Papal prerogative, or of any higher or supreme right of deciding ia matter of doc- trine. In the writings of the Greek doctors, Eusebius, St. Athanasius, St. Basil the Great,^ the two Gregories, ' On the famous interpolation in Cyprian's He Unit. Bccles. see later. 2 St. Basil {0pp. ed. Beiied. iii. 301, Epp. 239 and 214) lias expressed most strongly his contempt for the writings of the Popes, " those insolent and puffed up Occidentals, who would only sanction false doctrine." He says he would not receive their letters if they fell from heaven. He was provoked hy the support given at Rome to the open Sabellianism of Mar- cellus and the unsettling of the Antiochene Church. 88 Papal Infallibility. and St. Epiphanius, there is not one word of any pre- rogatives of the Eoman bishop. The most copious of the Greek Fathers, St. Chrysostom, is wholly silent on the subject, and so are the two Cyrils ; equally silent are the Latins, Hilary, Pacian, Zeno, Lucifer, Sulpicius, and St. Ambrose. Even the Eoman writer Ursinus (about 440), in defending the Eoman view of re-baptism, avoids — ^perhaps cannot venture upon any appeal to — ^the authority of the Eoman Church, as final, or even of especial weight !^ St. Augustine has written more on the Church, its unity and authority, than all the other Fathers put together. Tet, from all his numerous works, filling ten folios, only one sentence, in one letter, can be quoted, where he says that the principality of the Apostolic Chair has always been in Eome,^ — ^which could, of course, be said then with equal truth of Antioch, Jerusalem, and Alexandria. Any reader of his Pastoral Letter to the separated Donatists on the Unity of the Church, must find it inexplicable, on the Jesuit theory, that in these seventy-five chapters there is not a single ^ That he is the author is clear from the all but contemporary statement of Gennadins, and the oldest MS. See Bennettis, PrivUegia JR. P. Vin- dicata (Eoms, 1766), ii. 274. » Eji. 43, (J^p. (Antwerp), ii. 69. The Teaching of the Fathers. 89 word on the necessity of communion with Eome as the centre of unity. He urges all sorts of arguments to show that the Donatists are bound to return to the Church, hut of the Papal Chair, as one of them, he knows nothing. So again with the famous Gommoni- torium of St. Vincent of Lerins, composed in 434. If the view of Eoman infallibility had existed anywhere in the Church at that time, it could not have been possibly passed over in a book exclusively concerned with the question of the means for ascertaining the genuine Christian doctrine. But the author keeps to the three notes of universality, permanence, and con- sent, and to the (Ecumenical Councils. Even Pope Pelagius I. praises St. Augustine for "being mindful of the divine doctrine which places the foundation of the Church in the Apostolical Sees, and teaching that they are schismatics who separate themselves from the communion of these Apostolical Sees." ^ This Pope (555- 560), then, knows nothing of any exclusive teaching privilege of Eome, but only of the necessity of adher- ing in disputed questions of faith to the Apostolical Churches — Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem, as well as Eome.^ 1 Mansi, Condi, ix. 716. " -n, is. 732. go Papal Infallibility. Moreover, we have writings or statements about the ranks of the hierarchy in the ancient Church, and the Papal dignity is never named as one of them, or men- tioned as anything existing apart in the Church. In the writings of the Areopagite, composed at the end of the fifth century, on the hierarchy, only bishops, presbyters, and deacons are mentioned. In 6 3 1 , the famous Spanish theologian, Isidore of Seville, describes all the grades of the hierarchy, and divides bishops into four ranks — Patriarchs, Archbishops, Metropolitans, and Bishops. Gratian incorporated this long chapter from Isidore into his Dearetum, strange as it must have appeared to him that the first and highest office should not be named at alL As late as 789 the Spanish Abbot Beatus gives the same account; he too knows no higher office in the Church than Patriarchs, of whom he calls the Eoman the first.^ There is another fact the infallibilist will find it impossible to explain. We have a copious literature on the Christian sects and heresies of the first six centu- ries, — Irenaeus, Hippolytus, Epiphanius, Philastrius, St Augustiae, and, later, Leontius and Timotheus, have left us accounts of them to the number of eighty, but ' Beati Comment, in Apoc. (Madr. 1776), p. 99. The Teachifig of the Fathers. g i not a single one is reproached "witli rejecting the Pope's authority in matters of faith, whUe Aerius, e.g., is re- proached with denying the episcopate as a grade of the hierarchy. Had the mot d'ordre heen given for centu- ries to observe a dead silence on this, in the Ultramon- tane view, articulus stantis vel cadentis .Ecclesice ? All this is intelligible enough, if we look at the patristic interpretation of the words of Christ to St. Peter. Of all the Fathers who interpret these passages in the Gospels (Matt. xvi. 18, John xxi. 17), not a single one applies them to the Roman bishops as Peter's suc- cessors. How many Pathers have busied themselves with these texts, yet not one of them whose commen- taries we possess — Origen, Chrysostom, Hilary, Augus- tine, Cyril, Theodoret, and those whose interpretations are collected in catenas, — has dropped the faintest hint that the primacy of Eome is the consequence of the commission and promise to Peter ! Not one of them has explained the rock or foundation on which Christ would build His Church of the office given to Peter to be transmitted to his successors, but they understood by it either Christ Himself, or Peter's confession of faith in Christ ; often both together. Or else they thought Peter was the foundation equally with all the other 92 Papal Infallibility. Apostles, the Twelve being together the foundation-stones of the Church (Apoc. xxi 14). The Fathers could the less recognise ia the power of the keys, and the power of hinding and loosing, any special prerogative or lord- ship of the Eoman bishop, inasmuch as — what is ob- vious to any one at first sight — they did not regard a power first given to Peter, and afterwards conferred in precisely the same words on aU the Apostles, as any- thing peculiar to him, or hereditary in the line of Eoman bishops, and they held the symbol of the keys as mean- ing just the same as the figurative expression of binding and loosing.^ Every one knows the one classical passage of Scrip- ture on which the edifice of Papal Infallibility has been reared : " I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not : and when thou art converted, confirm thy brethren."^ But these words manifestly refer only to Peter person- ally, to his denial of Christ and his conversion ; he is told that he, whose failure of faith would be only of • DoUinger might therefore have spared himself the tronhle of trying to show that the power of the keys differs from the power of binding and loosing, so that the former extended over the whole Church, and passed to Peter's successors (First Age of the Church, pp. 29, 30, 2d ed.) This contradicts all the patiistic interpretations, and the ezegetical tradition of the Church. « Luke xxii. 32. The Teaching of the Fathers. 93 short duration, is to strengthen the other Apostles, whose faith would likewise waver. It is directly against the sense of the passage, which speaks simply of faith, first wavering, and then to be confirmed in the Messianic dignity of Christ, to find in it a promise of future infal- libility to a succession of Popes, just because they hold the office Peter first held in the Eoman Church. No single writer to the end of the seventh century dreamt of such an interpretation ; all without exception — and there are eighteen of them — explain it simply as a prayer of Christ that his Apostle might not whoUy suc- cumb, and lose his faith entirely in his approaching trial. The first to find in it a promise of privileges to the Church of Eome was Pope Agatho in 680, when trying to avert the threatened condemnation of his pre- decessor, Honorius, through whom the Eoman Church had lost its boasted privilege of doctrinal purity. Now, the Tridentine profession of faith, imposed on the clergy since Pius iv., contains a vow never to inter- pret Holy Scripture otherwise than in accord with the unanimous consent of the Fathers — that is, the great Church doctors of the first six centuries, for Gregory the Great, who died in 604, was the last of the Fathers ; every bishop and theologian therefore breaks his oath 94 Papal Infallibility. when he interprets the passage in question of a gift of infallibility promised by Christ to the Popes. § VII. — Forgeries. At the beginning of the ninth century no change had taken place in the constitution of the Church as we have described it, and especially none as to the autho- rity for deciding matters of faitL When the FranMsh bishops came to Leo m., he assured them that, far from setting himself above the Fathers of the Council in 381, who made the additions to the Mcene Creed, he did not venture to put himself on a par with them, and there- fore refused to sanction the interpolation of Filiogue into the Creed.^ But in the middle of that century — about 845 — arose the huge fabrication of' the Isidorian decretals, which had results far beyond what its author contemplated, and gradually, but surely, changed the whole constitu- tion and government of the Church. It would be difficult to find in. all history a second instance of so successful, and yet so clumsy a forgery. For three cen- turies past it has been exposed, yet the principles it introduced and brought into practice have taken such • Condi. GaU. (ed. Sirmondi) ii. 256. Forgeries. 95 deep root in the soil of the Chtuch, and have so grown iato her life, that the ex£Osure of the fraud has pro- duced no result in shaking the dominant system. About a hundred pretended decrees of the earliest Popes, together with certain spurious writings of other Church dignitaries and acts of Synods, were then fabri- cated in the west of Gaul, and eagerly seized upon by Pope Nicolas i. at Eome, to be used as genuine docu- ments in support of the new claims put forward by him- self and his successors. The immediate object of the compiler of this forgery was to protect bishops against their metropolitans and other authorities, so as to secure absolute impunity, and the exclusion of all influence of the secular power. This end was to be gained through such an immense extension of the Papal power, that, as these principles gradually penetrated the Church, and were followed out into their consequences, she neces- sarily assumed the form of an absolute monarchy sub- jected to the arbitrary power of a single individual, and the foundation of the edifice of Papal Infallibility was already laid — first, by the priaciple that the decrees of every Council require Papal confirmation; secondly, by the assertion that the fulness of power, even in matters of faith, resides in the Pope alone, who g6 Papal Infallibility. is bishop of the universal Church, while the other bishops are his servants. Now, if the Pope is really the bishop of the whole Church, so that every other bishop is his servant, he, who is the sole and legitimate mouth of the Church, ought to be infallible. If the decrees of Councils are invalid without Papal confirmation, the divine attesta- tion of a doctrine undeniably rests in the last resort on the word of one man, and the notion of the absolute power of that one man over the whole Church includes that of his infallibility, as the shell contains the kernel With perfect consistency, therefore, the pseudo-Isidore makes his early Popes say: "The Eoman Church re- mains to the end free from stain of heresy."^ Formerly all learned students of ecclesiastical anti- CLuity and canon-law — men like De Marca, Baluze, Constant, Gibert, Berardi, Zallweia, etc.- — were agreed that the change introduced by the pseudo-Isidore was a substantial one, that it displaced the old system of Church government and brought in the new. Modem writers have maintained that the compiler of the forgery only meant to codify the existing state of things, and 1 Ey. InuAi in HinscHus' ed. of Decretals, p. 179. Cf. p. 206. The same statement is put into tlie month of Maicns and Felix I. Forgeries. 97 give it a formal status, and that the sani<. development would have taken place without his trick^ The truth is: — First, Before his fabrication many very efficacious forgeries had won a gradual recognition at Eome since the beginning of the sixth century ; and on them was based the maxim that the Pope, as supreme in the Church, could be judged by no man. Secondly, The Isidorian doctrine contradicted itself, for it aimed at two things which were mutually incom- patible, — the complete independence and impunity of bishops on the one hand, and the advancement of Papal power on the other. The first point it sought to effect by such strange and unpractical rules that they never attained any real vitality, while, on the contrary, the principles about the power of the Eoman See worked their way, and became dominant under favourable circumstances, but with a result greatly opposed to the views of Isidore, by bringing the bishops into complete subjection to Eome. But that the pseudo-Isidorian principles eventually revolutionized the whole consti- tution of the Church, and introduced a new system in 1 So Walter, Phillips, Schulte, Pachmann, among canonists, and Dollinger in Ms Church History (ii. 41-43), on grounds betraying a very imperfect knowledge of the decretals. G 98 Papal Infallibility. place of the old, — on that point there can be no contro- versy among candid historians. At the time when the forged decretals hegan to be widely known, the See of Eome was occupied by Nico- las I. (858-867), a Pope who exceeded all his prede- cessors in the audacity of his designs. FaToured and protected by the break-up of the empire of Charles the Great, he met East and West alike with the firm resolu- tion of pressing to the uttermost every claim of any one of his predecessors, and pushing the limits of the Eoman supremacy to the point of absolute monarchy. By a bold but non-natural torturing of a single word against the sense of a whole code of law, he managed to give a turn to a canon of a General Council, excluding all appeals to Eome, as though it opened to the whole clergy in East and "West a right of appeal to Eome, and made the Pope the supreme judge of all bishops and clergy of the whole world.^ He wrote this to the Eastern Emperor, to the Frankish king, Charles, and to all the Frankish bishops.^ And he referred the Orientals, and so sharp-sighted a ' Canon 17 of Chalcedon, whicli speaks of appeals to the "primas dioceseos," i.e., one of the Eastern patriarchs, not a civil ruler, as Baxmann thinks {Poliiik der Piibste, ii. 13). Nicolas said the singular meant the plural, "dioceseon," and that the "primate" meant the Pope, — a notion which would not seem worth a reply in Constantinople. 2 Mansi, ConeU. v. 202, 688, 694. Forgeries. 99 man as Photius, to tliose fabrications fathered on Popes Silvester and Sixtus, which were thenceforth used for centuries, and gained the Roman Church the oft-repeated reproach from the Greeks, of being the native home of inventions and falsifications of documents. Soon after, receiving the new implements forged in the Isidorian workshop (about 863 or 864), Mcolas met the doubts of the Frankish bishops with the assurance that the Eoman Church had long preserved all those documents with honour in her archives, and that every writing of a Pope, even if not part of the Dionysian collection of canons, was binding on the whole Church.-' In a Synod at Eome in 863 he had accordingly anathematized all who should refuse to receive the teaching or ordinances of a Pope.^ If, indeed, all Papal utterances were a rule for the whole Church, and all decrees of Councils dependent on the Pope's good pleasure, — as Mcolas asserted on the strength of the Isidorian forgery, — then there would be but one step further to the promulgation of Papal Infallibility, though it has been long delayed. It was thought enough to repeat from time to time that the Eoman Church keeps the faith pure, and is free from every stain. 1 Mansi, Omoil. xv. 695. ^ Harduin, Condi, t. 574. lOO Papal Infallibiliiy. Nearly three centuries passed before the seed sown produced its full harvest. For almost two hundred years, from the death of Nicolas i. to the time of Leo DC, the Roman See was in a condition which did not allow of any systematic acquisition and enforcement of new or extended rights. For above sixty years (883-955) the Eoman Church was enslaved and degraded, while the Apostolic See became the prey and the plaything of rival factions of the nobles, and for a long time of ambitious and profligate women. It was only renovated for a brief interval (997-1003) in the persons of Gregory V. and Silvester n., by the influence of the Saxon emperor. Then the Papacy sank back into utter confusion and moral impotence ; the Tuscan Coxmts made it hereditary in their family; again and again dissolute boys, like John xn. and Benedict rx., occupied and disgraced the Apostolic throne, which was now bought and sold like a piece of merchandise, and at last three Popes fought for the tiara, untH the Emperor Henry m. put an end to the scandal by elevating a German bishop to the See of Rome. "With Leo ix. (1048-1054) was inaugurated a new era of the Papacy, which may be called the Hildebrandine. ^Yithin sixty years, through the contest with kings. Forgeries. loi bmhops, and clergy, against simony^ clerical marriage, arjd investiture, the Eopian See had risen to a height of power even Nicolas i. never aspired to. A large and ■'powerful party, stronger than that which two hundred years before had undertaken to carry through the Isidorian forgery, had been labouring since the middle of the eleventh century, with all its might, to weld the States of Europe into a theocratic priest-kingdom, with the Pope as its head. The urgent need of reform in the Church helped on the growth of the spiritual monarchy, and again the purification of the Church seemed to need such a concentration and increase of ecclesiastical power. In France this party was sup- ported by the most influential spiritual corporation of the time, the Congregation of Cluny. In Italy, men like Peter Damiani, Bishop Anselm of Lucca, Humbert, Deusdedit, and above aU HUdebrand, — who was the life and soul of the enterprise, — helped on the new system, though some of them, as Damiani and Hildebrand, differed widely both in theory and practice. It has not perhaps been sufficiently observed that Gre- gory VII. is in fact the only one of all the Popes who set himself with clear and deliberate purpose to introduce a new constitution of the Church, and by new means. «^ 1 02 Papal Infallibility. He regarded himself not merely as the reformer of Chui'ch, but as the divinely commissioned founder wholly new order of things, fond as he was of appeajm^, to his predecessors. Nicolas L alone approaches him in' this, but none of the later Popes, aU of whom, even the boldest, have but fiUed in the outline he sketched. Gregory saw from the iirst that Synods regularly held by the Popes, and new codes of Church law, were the means for introducing the new system. Synods had been held, at his suggestion, by Leo ix. and his successors, and he himself carried on the work in those assembled after 1073. But only Popes and their legates were henceforth to hold Synods ; in every other form the institution was to disappear. Gregory collected about him. by degrees the right men for elabo- rating his system of Church law. Anselm of Lucca, nephew of Pope Alexander li., compiled the most im- portant and comprehensive work, at his command, between 1080 and 1086. Anselm may be called the founder of the new Gregorian system of Church law, first, by extracting and putting into convenient working shape everything in the Isidorian forgeries serviceable for the Papal absolutism ; next, by altering the law of the Church, through a tissue of fresh inventions and Forgeries. 103 ti'interpolations, in accordance with the requirements of arhis party and the stand-point of Gregory.-' Then came I Deusdedit, whom Gregory made a Cardinal, with some more inventions. At the same time Bonizo compiled his work, the main object of which was to exalt the Papal prerogatives. The forty propositions or titles of this part of his work correspond entirely to Gregory's Bidatus and the materials supplied by Anselm and Deusdedit.^ The last great work of the Gregorians (before Gratian) was the Polycarpus of Cardinal Gregory of Pavia (before 1118), which almost always adheres to Anselm in its falsifications.^ The Preface of Deusdedit to his work is the pro- gramme of the whole school whose labours were at length crowned with such complete success.* The Eoman Church, says the Cardinal, is the mother of all Churches, for Peter first founded the Patriarchal Sees of the East, and then gave bishops to all the cities of 1 The contents of the Anselmian collection are known from the list of chapters in the Spicilegium Rom. (ed. Mai, vi. ) ; from Antonius Augiistinus, Epitome Juris Pontif. (Paris, 1641) ; and from the citations of Pithou in the Paris edition of Gratian, 1686. " Nova Patrum BiUioth. {ed. Mai), vii. 3, 48. 3 Ito of Chartres, though a contemporary of Cardinal Gregory, cannot be reckoned among the Gregorian canonists. Much as he was influenced in his compilations by Isidore, and sometimes by Anselm, still in certain important articles he held to the old Church law. * It is found in Memorie del Card. Passionei (Roma, 1762), p. 30. 1 04 Papal Infallibility. the West. Councils cannot be held without the sanc- tion of the Pope, according to the decisions of the 318 Fathers at Xice. The Eoman clergy rule with- out the Pope, when the See is vacant, and therefore Cyprian and the Africans humbly submitted to their decisions before the election of Cornelius — a pet crot- chet of the Cardinal's, which Ansebn, who was not a Cardinal, did not adopt. He adds, that he writes in order to confirm the authority of Eome and the liberty of the Church against its assailants, and maintains that the testimonies he has collected disprove all objections, on the principle that the lesser must always yield to the greater — i.e., the authority of CouncUs and Fathers to the Pope. "With this one axiom — which not only opened the door wide for the Isidorian decretals, but prevented any attempt to moderate their system by an appeal to the ancient canons — the revolution in the Church was accomplished in the simplest and least troublesome manner. Clearly and cautiously as the Gregorian party went to work, they lived in a world of dreams and illusions about the past and about remote countries. They could not escape the imperative necessity of demonstrating their new system to have been the constant practice of Forgeries. 105 the Church, and it is difficult, if not impossible, to dis- tinguish -where involuntary delusion merged into con- scious deceit. Whatever present exigencies required ■was selected from the mythical stores at their com- mand hastily and recklessly ; then fresh inventions were added, and soon every claim of Rome could be shown to have a legitimate foundation in existing records and decrees. It is so far true to say, that without the pseudo- Isidore there would have been no Gregory vii., that the Isidorian forgeries were the broad foundation the Gregorians buOt upon. But the first object of Isidore was to secure the impunity of bishops, whereas the Eoman party — which for a long time had a majority of the bishops against it — wanted to introduce a state of things where the Popes or their legates could sum- marily depose bishops, intimidate them, and reduce them to complete subjection to every Papal command. The newly invented doctrines about the deposing power contributed to this end. In a word, a new his- tory and a new civil and canon law was required, and both had to be obtained by improving on the Isidorian principles with new forgeries. The correction of his- tory was to some extent provided for in Germany by 1 06 Papal Infallibility. the monk Bernold, and in Italy by the zealous Grego- rian Bonizo, Bishop of Piaeenza, who tried, among other things, to get rid of the coronation of Charles the Great.^ Their other assistants had to invent or adapt historical facts for party purposes, for their new codes of Church law innovated largely on ancient Church history. Gregory himself had his own little stock of fabricated or distorted facts to support pretensions and undertakings which seemed to his contemporaries strange and unauthorized. It was, for instance, an axiomatic fact with him that Pope Innocent i. excom- municated the Emperor Arcadius, that Pope Zachary deposed the Prankish king Childeric, and that Gregory the Great threatened to depose the kings who should rob a hospice at Autun.^ He treated the Donation of Constantine as a valuable and important document ; it gave him a right over Corsica and Sardinia.^ His pupil Leo IX. used it against the Greeks, and his friend Peter Damiani against Germany ; Anselm and Deusdedit as- signed it a prominent place in their legal books. > See Jaffa's Introduction to his edition of Bonitho in Monumenta Qre- gor., pp. 596 seq. ^ He appealed to a recently forged document in Autun, whioli Launoi (0pp. V. p. ii. 445) has dissected. ^ DoUinger is mistaken in saying (Pdbstfaieln, p. 84) that Gregory never appealed to it. Forgeries. 107 At the same time, Gregory thought it most import- ant, -with all his legislative activity and lofty claims and high-handed measures, not to seem too much of an innovator and despot ; he constantly affirmed that he only wished to restore the ancient laws of the Church, and abolish late abuses. When he drew out the whole system of Papal omnipotence in twenty-seven theses in his Didatus, these theses were partly mere repetitions or corollaries of the Isidorian decretals ; partly he and his friends and allies sought to give them the appear- ance of tradition and antiquity by new fictions.'' Gregory's chief work is his letter to Bishop Hermann of Metz, designed to prove how well grounded is the Pope's dominion over emperors and liings, and his right to depose them in cases of necessity. In this he showed his adherents how to manipulate facts and texts, by twisting a passage in a letter of Pope Gelasius to the Emperor Anastasius so skilfullj^, by means of omissions and arbitrary collocations, as to make Gela- sius say just the opposite of what he really said, — viz., that kings are absolutely and universally subject to the Pope, whereas what he did say was, that the rulers 1 As to tliis Dictatus 'beiiig his own work, and an authentic part of the ■Register edited by himself, see Giesebrecht, Gesetzgeb. der Horn. Kirche., Miinchner hist. Jahrbuch, 1866, p. 149. 1 08 Papal Infallibility. of the Church are always subject to the laws of the emperors, only disclaiming the interference of the secular power in questions of faith and the sacraments.^ How what was a falsification to begin with was falsi- fied again in the interests of the new system, and accen- tuated to sei-ve the cause of ecclesiastical despotism, may be seen from the eleventh canon of Causa 25, Q. 1, in Gratian. The Council of Toledo in 646 had excommunicated the Spanish priests who took part in the rebellion against the King, and included the King himself in the anathema if he violated this censure (Jmjus canonis ceTisuram). Out of this Isidore made, two hvmdred years afterwards, the following: — The anathema applied to all kings who violated any canon binding under censure, or allowed it to be violated by others; and this he put into the mouth of Pope Hadrian.^ In the new text-books compiled by Anselm, Deusdedit, and Gregory of Pavia, the (pretended) de- crees of the Popes were put in place of the canons of Councils, and this supplied just what was wanted — a system of ancient Church law to justify the procedures of Gregory vn. and Urban 11. against the princes of their own day — and a Pope would never lack some pre- 1 Eegistr. (ei JafK), p. 457. ' Capp. AngUram. p. 769 (ed. Hinsch.) Forgeries. 109 text for threatening excommunication, with all its con- sec[uences.'' Gregory borrowed one main pillar of tis system from the False Decretals. Isidore had made Pope Julius (about 338) write to the Eastern bishops, — " The Church of Eome, by a singular privilege, has the right of open- ing and shutting the gates of heaven to whom she wilL" ^ On this Gregory built his scheme of dominion.' How should not he be able to judge on earth, on whose will hung the salvation or damnation of men ? The passage was made into a special decree or chapter in the new codes.* The typical formula of binding and loosing had become an inexhaustible treasure-chamber of rights and claims, The Gregorians used it as a charm to put them in possession of everything worth having. If Gregory — who was notoriously the first to undertake dethroning kings — wanted to depose the German Emperor, he said, " To me is _given power to bind and loose on earth and in heaven."^ Were sub- 1 The monk Bernold, in his Ap6l. contr. Schismat, written in 1087 (Ussermann, ed. p. 361), fabricates " Apostoliose Sodis statuta." 2 Decret. psevdo-Is. (ed. Hinsch.), p. 464. 3 Mommi.^_^^ecipr.{ei^Z^9iY,'prii5. "i^By Deusdedit ; see Galland. Syll. ii.' 745 ; by Anselm, Maii Spicil. Rom. vi. 317. 23 ; by Bouizo, Maii Pat. Nov. BiUioth. vii. 3, 47 ; Gre- gory's Polycarpus, i. 4, tit. 34. J' See the form in Mansi, xx. 467. no Papal Infallibility. ject.s to te absolved from their oaths of allegiance? — which he was also the first to attempt, — he did it by- virtue of his power to loose. Did he want to dispose of other people's property ? he declared, as at his Eoman Synod of 1080, — " We desire to show the world that we can give or take away at our will kingdoms, duchies, earldoms, in a word, the possessions of all men; for we can bind and loose." ■* In the same way a sayiag ascribed to Constantine, at the Council of Nice, iu a legend recorded by Eufinus, was amplified tiU it was fashioned into a perfect mine of high-fiying pretensions. Constantine, according to this fable, when the written accusations of the bishops against each other were laid before him, burned them, saying, in allusion to a verse of the Psalter, that the bishops were gods, and no man could dare to judge them. Nicolas I. quoted this to the Emperor Michael.^ Anselm adopted the story into his collection, Gratian followed, and Gregory himself found in it clear evidence that he, the Pope, the bishop of bishops, stood in unapproachable majesty over all monarchs of the earth. For, as the passage stood in Anselm and Gratian, it was the Pope whom Constan- ' Mansi, xx. 536, " Quia si potestis in ooelo ligare et solvere, potestis in terr^ imperia . . . et omnium hominum possessiones pro meritis tollere unicuique et concedere." " Mansi, xv. 215. Forgeries. 1 1 1 tine called a god, and so it has been understood and explained ever since.^ A man like Gregory vii., little familiar as he was with theological questions, must have held the prerogative of Infallibility the most precious jewel of his crown. His claims to universal dominion, to the deposing power, and the right of dispensing subjects from their oaths, all rested ultimately on his own authority. All was to be believed because he, the infallible Pope, affirmed it. Accordingly, stronger proofs and testimonies than Isidore supplied had to be found for this infallibility of his. Pope Agatho had said at a Eoman Synod, in 680, that all the English bishops were to observe the ordi- nances made in former Eoman Synods for the Anglo- Saxon Church.^ Cardinal Deusdedit made this into a decree issued by Agatho to all bishops in the world, saying they must receive all Papal orders as though attested by the very voice of Peter, and therefore, of course, infallible.^ One of the boldest falsifications the 1 Dist. 96, 97. " Satis evidenter ostenditiir a ssculari potestate iieo ligari prorsus nee solvi posse Pontificem, qurni constat a pio Principe Con- stantino Deum appellatwni, nee posse Deum ab hominibus judicari maui- festum est." 2 Labb^, Condi, vi. 580. 3 It occurs in the same spurious form in Gregory's Polycarpus, Ivo's Collection, and— whicb was, of course, quite conclusive— in Gratian's Decretum, Dist. 19, c. 2. 112 Papal Infallibility. Gregorians allowed themselves occurs first in Anselm's,^ and then in Cardinal Gregory's works, from whom Gra- tian borrowed it. St. Augustine had said that all those cauonical. writings (of the Bible) were pre-eminently attested, which Apostolical Churches had first received and possessed. He meant the Churches of Corinth, Ephesus, etc. The passage was corrupted into, — " Those Epistles belong to canonical writings which the Holy See has issued ;" and thus it came to pass that the mediasval theologians and canonists, who generally derived their whole knowledge of the Fathers from the passages col- lected by Peter Lombard and Gratian, really believed that St. Augustine had put the decretal letters of Popes on a par with Scripture.^ When Cardinal Tiirrecremata, about 1450, and Cardinal Cajetan, about 1516, put the Infalli- bUity doctrine into formal shape, they too relied on the clear testimony of St. Augustine, which left no doubt that the first theologian of the ancient Church had declared every Papal utterance to be as free from error as the Apostolical Epistles.* 1 See Pithon's ed. of Gratian. Cf. Grat. THst. 19, o. 6. 2 The title of the canon in Gratian is, " Inter canonicaa Scripturas decretales epistolae anuuraerantur." ' Toirecremata, Sumvw, de JScd. P. ii. ; Cajetan, i)e Primal. Ram. c. 14. Alphonsns de Castro has exposed the whole forgery in his work A do. Heeres. (Paris, 1565) i. 11. Forgeries. 113 That Papal Infallibility might be more firmly believed, personal sanctity was also ascribed to every Pope. This notion was first invented by Ennodius, deacon and secretary of Pope Symmachus, who wrote in 503 to defend him against certain charges. The Popes, he said, must be held to inherit innocence and sanctity from Peter.^ Isidore eagerly seized on this, and in- vented two Eoman Synods, which had unanimously ap- proved and subscribed the work of Ennodius.^ Gregory VII. made this holiness of aU Popes, which he said he had personal experience of, the foundation of his claim to universal dominion.^ Every sovereign, he said, how- ever good before, becomes corrupted by the use of power, whereas every rightly appointed Pope* becomes a saint through the imputed merits of St. Peter. Even an exorcist' among the clergy, he added, is higher and more powerful than every secular monarch, for he casts out devils, whose slaves evil princes are. This doctrine of the personal sanctity of every Pope, put forward by the Gregorians, and by Gregory vii. himself, as a claim ■ Liher Apol., 0pp. (Sirmondi) i. 1621. 2 Decret. pseudo-Isidor. (ed. Hinsch.), pp. 675, seq. 3 Ep. viii. 21 (Jaffe), p. 463. * This proviso was meant to cover the frequent oases of such evil Popes as, e.g., John xii. and Benedict ix. 6 [One of the lower ranks of the Catholic clergy.— Tn.] II 1 1 4 Papal Infallibility. made by Pope Symmaclius, was adopted into the codes of canon law. But as notorious facts, and the crimes and excesses of many Popes, which no denials could get rid of, were in glaring contradiction to it, a supplemen- tary theory had to he invented, which Cardinal Deus- dedit published under the venerated name of St. Boniface, the apostle of Germany. It was to this effect : — ^Even if a Pope is so bad that he drags down whole nations to hell with him in troops, nobody can rebuke him ; for he who judges all can be judged of no man ; the only exception is in case of his swerving from the faith. That this could have been written nowhere but in Eome, and certainly not by St. Boniface, is self-evident. There were no " innumerable nations" in his day for the Pope to drag down into hell with him hke slaves. The words imply past experience of many profligate Popes, and a period of enormously extended Papal power over the nations, and were clearly invented after the pontificate of Bene- dict rx. Gratian has, of course, adopted them from Deusdedit.^ The Gregorian doctrine since 1080 then is, that every Pope, lawfully appointed, and not thrust in by force, is holy and infaUible. But his holiness is imputed, not > But. 40, u. 53. Forgeries. 115 inherent, so that if he have no merits of his own, he inherits those of his predecessor St. Peter. ISTotwith- standing his holiness, he may drag countless troops of men down to hell, and none of them may withstand or warn him; notwithstanding his infallibility, he may become an apostate, and then he may be resisted. Pro- bably the later distinction between his ofticial or e,x cathedra infallibility and his personal denial of the faith was implied here. Gregory vii. seems to have sincerely believed that his infallibility was already acknowledged throughout the Christian world, even in the East. He wrote to the Emperor Henry, " The Greek Church is fallen away, and the Armenians also have lost the right faith, but," he adds, " all the Easterns await from St. Peter (viz., from me) the decision on their various opinions, and at this time will the promise of Peter's confirming his brethren be fulfilled."^ He wanted then (in 1074) to go at the head of a great army to Constantinople, and there to hold his solemn judgment in matters of faith, for he does not seem to have counted on the voluntary submission of the Greeks ; instead of which he contented himself with plunging Germany and Italy into a religious 1 E:p. u. 31, p. 45 (Jaff^). 1 1 6 Papal Infallibility. and civil war, the end of wliich he did not live to see. All history proves, he says, how clearly hoUness is con- nected with infallibility in the Popes. While there are at most only a few kings or emperors who have been holy, out of 153 Popes 100 have not only been holy, but have reached the highest grade of sanctity.^ And the Gregorians disseminated the fable, which even the well-known annals of the Popes contradicted, that of the thirty before Constantino all but one were martyrs.'' The Gregorians busied themselves greatly with the rectification of Papal history, and as the apostasy of Liberius — copied from St Jerome's Chronicle into so many historical works — was not easy to reconcile with Papal infallibility and sanctity, Anselm adopted into his codex the earlier fable, that Liberius, when exiled, had ordained FeHx his successor, by advice of the Eoman clergy, and abdicated, so that his subsequent apostasy did not matter.^ If every Pope is holy and infallible, then, according to the Gregorian view, all Christendom must tremble before liim, as before an Asiatic despot whose disfavour is death. Accordingly, Anselm and Cardinal Gregory ' Ep. viii. 21, p. 463 (Jaff^). 2 Bonizo, Patr. Nov. Bihl. vii. 3, 37 (ed. Mai). ' Sclielstrate (Antiq. Illustr. i. 456) quotes the passage frcm Anselm. Forgeries. 1 1 7 extracted passages from older forgeries, especially from a spurious speech of St. Peter, to the effect that no one should hold intercourse with a man under the Pope's displeasure.-^ Like the successive strata of the earth covering one another, so layer after layer of forgeries and fabrications was piled up in the Church. This shows itseE most conspicuously in the great Church question of Synods, where the two contradictory views of the self-government and administration of the Church by CouncUs, and of the absolute sovereignty of the Pope and Court of Eome over the whole Church, were at issue. In 342, Pope Julius had written to the Eastern Bishops, who had confirmed the deposition of St. Athanasius at the Synod of Antioch, that they should not have acted for themselves in a matter affect- ing the whole Church, but, according to ecclesiastical custom, in union with " aU. of us," z.e., the bishops of the West.^ Socrates, who welcomed an opportunity of pointing out the ambition of the Eoman Church,^ had twisted this into Julius saying that nothing could be decided without the bishop of Rome. His Latin trans- 1 See Gratian, Bist. 93, c. i. 2 Ep. Rom. Pont. (ed. Coustant), p. 386. 3 Thus he observes (vii. 11) that the Eoman See, like the Alexandrian, had for some time advanced to dominion (SvvatTTda) over the priesthood. 1 1 8 Papal Infallibility. lator, Epiphaniiis the Italian, about 500, went a step further, and made the Pope say that no Council couM be held without his consent.^ Isidore worked up these materials, and made Pope Julius write, in two spuri- ous epistles, that the Apostles and the Nicene Council had said no Council could be held without the Pope's injunction. And thus Anselm and the other Gregorian canonists could quote a whole string of primitive de- crees resting Councils and all their decisions on the arbitrament of the Pope, and Gratian has borrowed the whole of his seventeenth Distinction from Anselm. Even this was not enough. ITot only were Councils to be made dependent, but the institution itself, as it had existed for nine hundred years, was to be abolished. As the kings who had become absolute in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries could no longer endure any representative assemblies, so the Papacy, when it wished to become absolute, found that Synods of particular National Churches were better out of the way altogether. For it was only in and by means of Synods of parti- cular districts, provinces, and National Churches, that a healthy and somewhat independent Church life could spread and maintain itself. These had therefore to be ' Hist. Trip. i. 4, 9. Forgeries. 119 put an end to, or at least broken up and made so diffi- cult that they could only proceed at the heck of Eome. The following forgery was used for the purpose : — The opponents of Pope Symmachus, in 503, in order to show that they could assemble in Eome without him, had affirmed that the annual Provincial Synods prescribed by the Church would not lose their force merely because the Pope was not present at them. Ennodius, in his defence of Symmachus, replied that weighty causes {cmisce mMJores) were by the canon of Sardica reserved to the Pope. That was itself a mis- representation, long current in Eome ; the canon only gave a right of appeal to Eome for bishops. Anselm of Lucca, and Cardinal Gregory, and Gratian after him, made out of this the following decree of Pope Sym- machus — " The Provincial Councils ordered by the can- ons to be held annually, have lost their validity from the Pope not being present at them." And the title of the decree is, " Provincial Synods without the Pope's presence have no force" {fondere carent)} And thus an ecclesiastical revolution was brought about in three lines. But a formal prohibition of aU Synods was still ' List. 17, u. 6. 1 20 Papal Infallibility. wanted, and this was attained by Anselm, Cardinal Gregory, and Gratian after them, making Pope Gregory the Great declare that no one ever had been, or ever would be, permitted to hold a particular (not (Ecumenical) Synod.^ The fraud lay in converting what Pelagius i. had said, in the particular case of the schism of Aq[uileia, of a Council assembled against the Fifth (Ecumenical, into a general prohibition issued by Gregory L against all Synods, while, by changing the plural into the singular, a reference to the authority of the Apostolic Churches of Alexandria and Antioch was altered into an exalva ■ tion of Papal authority.^ And thus the double end was attained of putting down all meetings of bishops as in itself an illegal act of presumption, and at the same time bringing out prominently the plenitude of the Papal power, which could even withdraw from all Christendom the apostolical institution of Synods at its wilL But Isidore's chief contribution to the designs of Gregory vn. was by his inventions about the effect of excommunication, for this, in the extended sense given it by Gregory, was the sharpest weapon in the 1 Decret. Dist. 17, c. 4. * Cf. on this and other falsifications, Berardi, Gratian. Can. ii. 489. Forgeries. 121 struggle for Papal domination. Isidore had made the earliest Popes assert that no speech ever could he held with an excommunicated man, whence Gregory and his allies inferred that this applied also to kings and em- perors, and that nobody could, even in matters of business, hold any intercourse with them if excommu- nicated, so that they were no longer fit to reign, and must be deposed. By this extension of the idea, wholly unknown to the ancient Church, and destructive of the entire original character of the institution, an enormous instrument of power was created, which not only might be abused, but was itself a standing abuse, a confusion of things human and divine, and a perpetual source of civil disturbance and division. Bossuet has admitted that it was a false doctrine which Gregory introduced into the Church, by altering and distorting the notion of excommunication.* Gregory himself must have known he was the first to make the claim, and that even in the Isidorian decretals there was nothing like it, yet at the Synod of 1078 ^ he grounded it exclusively on the statutes of his predecessors. To make their spiritual arms irresistible, the Gregorians also borrowed from I Defens. Declar. pars. 1. 1. 3. c. 7. " Ivo and Gratian, for the misfortime of Europe, received this into their codes (c. 15, qu. 6. i). 122 Papal Infallibility. Isidore an alleged rule of Pope Urban I., addressed to aU bishops, that even an unjust excommunication by a bishop must be respected, and nobody could receive the condemned man.^ If we look at the whole Papal system of universal monarchy, as it has been gradually built up during seven centuries, and is now being energetically pushed on to its final completion, we can clearly distinguish the separate stones the building is composed o£ For a long time all that was done was to interpret the canon of Sardica so as to extend the appellant jurisdiction of the Pope to whatever could be brought under the gene- ral and elastic term of " greater causes." But from the end of the fifth centuiy the Papal pretensions had advanced to a point beyond this, in consequence of the attitude assumed by Leo and Gelasius, and from that time began a course of systematic fabrications, some- times manufactured in Eome, sometimes originating elsewhere, but adopted and utilized there. The conduct of the Popes since Innocent I. and Zosimus, in constantly quoting the Sardican canon on appeals as a canon of Nice, cannot be exactly ascribed to conscious fraud — the arrangement of their collection » Thus Anselm aud Card. Gregory, and then Gratian, c. 11, qu. 3. 27. Forgeries. 123 of canons misled them. There was more deliberate purpose in inserting in the Eoman manuscript of the sixth Nicene canon, " The Eoman Church always had the primacy," of which there is no syllable in the original, — a fraud exposed at the Council of Chalcedon, to the con- fusion of the Eoman legates, by reading the original.^ Towards the end of the fifth and beginning of the sixth century, the process of forgeries and fictions in the interests of Eome was actively carried on there. Then began the compilation of spurious acts of Eoman martyrs, which was continued for some centuries, and which modern criticism, even at Eome, has been obliged to give up, as, for instance, is done by Papebroch, Euinart, Orsi, and Saccarelli. The fabulous story of the conver- sion and baptism of Constantino was invented to glorify the Church of Eome, and make Pope Silvester appear a worker of miracles. Then the inviolability of the Pope had to be established, and the principle that he cannot be judged by any human tribunal, but only by himself. For four years before 514 Eome was the scene of a bloody strife about this question; the adherents of Symmachus and his opponent Laurentius murdered one another in the streets, and the Arian Goth, King Theo- * Mansi, Condi, vii. 414. 124 Papal Infallibility. doric, was as little acceptable as a judge as the Emperor, who was hated in Eome. So the acts of the Council of Sinuessa and the legend of Pope Marcellinus were invented, and the " Constitution of SUvester," viz., the decision of a Synod of 284 bishops, pretended to have been held by him in 321 at Eome, evidently compiled while the bloody scenes in which clerics were mur- dered or executed for their crimes were fresh in men's minds. There again the principle was inculcated that no one can judge the first See.^ Some other records were fabricated at Eome in the same barbarous Latin, such as the Ge,sta lAherii, designed to confirm the legend of Constantine's baptism at Eome, and to represent Pope Liberius as purified from his heresy by repentance, and graced by a divine miracle. Of the same stamp were the Qesta of Pope Xystus m. and the History of Polychronius, where the Pope is accused, but the condemnation of his accuser follows, as also of the accuser of the fabulous Polychronius, Bishop of Jeru- salem. These fabrications of the beginning of the sixth century, which all belong to the same class, had a refer- ence also to the attitude of Eome towards the Church of Constantinople. It was the period of the long inter- » AjppeacL. ad Epp. P/mt. Jtom. (ed. Constant), pp. 38 seq. Forgeries. 125 ruption of commimion between East and West caused by the Henoticon (484-519), when Pelix 11. even sum- moned the Patriarch Acacius to Eome, and Pope Gela- sius, about 495, for the first time insulted the Greeks and their twenty-eighth canon of Chalcedon, by affirm- ing that every Council must be confirmed and every Church judged by Eome, but she can be judged by none. It was not by canons, as the Council of Chal- cedon affirmed, but by the word of Christ, that she re- ceived the primacy.-^ In this he went beyond aU the claims of his predecessors. Thence came the fictions manufac- tured at Eome after his death, — a letter of the Mcene Council praying Pope Silvester for its confirmation, and the confirmation given by Silvester and a Eoman Synod ; the declaration in the acts of Xystus iii. that the Em- peror had convoked the Council by the Pope's authority ; the History of Polychronius, exhibiting the Pope, as early as 435, sitting in judgment on an Eastern Patriarch ; and lastly, the fabulous history of the Synod held by Silvester, which adopted Gelasius's saying about the divine origin of the Eoman primacy, and confirmed the order of precedence of the Churches of Alexandria and Antioch next after Eome, making no mention of Con- 1 Mansi, viii. 54. 126 Papal Infallibility. stantinople, and thus upsetting the canons of 381 and 451, which gave her the precedence.'' While this tendency to forging documents was so strong in Eome, it is remarkable that for a thousand years no attempt was made there to form a collection of canons of her own, such as the Easterns had as early as the fifth century, clearly because for a long time Eome took so very little part in ecclesiastical legislation. No doubt constant appeal was made to the canons of Councils, and Eome professed her resolve to secure their observance with all her might, and by her conspi- cuous example ; but the canon she had chiefly at heart was the third of Sardica, and the Sardican canons were never received at aU in the East.^ When Dionysius gave the Eoman Church her first tolerably comprehen- sive collection of canons, viz., his translation of the Greek canons, with the African and Sardican, more than twenty Synods had been held in Eome since 313, but there were no records of them to be found. ' These documents are printed from Mss. of the eighth century in Amort's JSlementa Juris Canon, ii. 432-486. ^ Dionysius Exiguus observes this in the Preface to the second edition of his Collection, prepared by command of Pope Hormisdas. See Andres, Lettera d Q, Morelli {Parma, 1802), p. 66. It will be seen that there was always a quarrel about the Nicene canons, arid one party wished to replace them (probably the sixth canon) by others. This points to the decisions of Silvester and his Synod, mentioned above. Forgeries. 127 Towards the end of the sixth century a fabrication was undertaken in Eome, the full effect of which did not appear till long afterwards. The famous passage in St. Cyprian's book on the Unity of the Church was adorned, in Pope Pelagius ii.'s letter to the Istrian bishops, with such additions as the Eoman pretensions required. St. Cyprian said that all the Apostles had received from Christ equal power and authority with Peter, and this was too glaring a contradiction of the theory set up since the time of Gelasius. So the fol- lowing words were interpolated : " The primacy was given to Peter to show the unity of the Church and of the chair. How can he believe himself to be in the Church who forsakes the chair of Peter, on which the Church is built ?"^ The varying judgments of the later Eoman clergy on Cyprian, who had up to his death been a decided opponent of Eome, seem to have had an influence on this interpolation. He was at first almost the only foreign martyr whose annual feast was kept in Eome ; but after Gelasius had included his writings in a list of works rejected by the Church, it became necessary to find some way of reconciling the 1 Cf. the notea of Eigaiilt, Baluze, and Krabinger, to their editions of Cyprian. 1 28 Papal Infallibility. high reverence accorded to the man with the disapproval of his writings. This seems to have led to the interpo- lation, so that the first rank among orthodox Fathers was assigned to Cyprian in the revised edition of the catalogue of Gelasius, in direct contradiction to the passage in the same decree placing him among " apocryphal," viz., rejected authors.^ But as Cyprian's writings had not spread from Eome, but had long been much read in the Gallican and N'orth Italian Churches, the additions did not get into the manu- scripts. Earlier than this an interpolation of the old catalogue of Eoman bishops had been undertaken for a definite pur- pose, and thus the foundation was laid of the lAher Pon- tificalis^ afterwards enlarged. It exists in Schelstrate's ' When in later times Cyprian was edited at Eome ty Manntius in 1563, the Honian censors insisted on the interpolated passages being retained, though not fovmd in the MSS., as the editor, Latino Latini, complains in his Letters (Viterbii, 1667, ii. 109). The minister. Cardinal Fleury, made the same condition for the Paris edition of Baluze. See Chiniao, Histoire des Capitul. (Paris, 1772), p. 226. The minister named a commission to decide whether the interpolations erased by Baluze, and expunged from every critical edition, should be printed, but Fleury was Cardinal as well as minister, and " a moins que de vouloir se faire nne querelle d'etat avec Rome imperieuse, il faUoit que le passage fftt restitu^, parceqne en le lais- sant supprim^ en Tertu d'une decision ministerieUe, il auxoit sembU qn'on vouloit porter atteinte a la primante Eomaine. Le passage fat restitue par le moyen d'un carton." 2 The Jjiber PorUificalis, or Anastasitis (falsely so called), was nsually quoted as a work of Pope Damasus in the middle ages. Forgeries. 129 edition, in its original form, of about 530.* The second edition, and continuation to the time of Conon (687) written about 730, and afterwards brought down to 724 by the same hand, is based on contemporary records for the sixth and seventh century. It is the first edition of 530 which is chiefly to be reckoned as a calculated forgery, and an important link in the chain of Eoman inventions and interpolations. It is all composed in the barbarous and ungi-ammatical Latin common to the Eoman fabrications of the sixth century.^ The objects were — first, to attest the mass of spurious acts of Eoman martyrs, and the reiterated statements that the earliest Popes had appointed a number of notaries to compile these acts, and seven deacons to superintend them ; secondly, to confirm the existing legends of Popes and Emperors, — such as the Eoman baptism of Constantino, the stories about Silvester, Pelix, and Liberius, Xystus iii., and the like ; thirdly, to assign a greater antiquity to some later liturgical usages ; fourthly, to exhibit the Popes as legis- lators for the whole Church, although, apart from the liturgical directions ascribed to them, and the constantly ■" He has collated the two editions in hia Aritiq. Heel. Rom. 1693, i. 402-495 ; in parallel columns. " See the careful analysis of the "whole work in Piper's Eiideitimg in die Monwm. Theol. (Gotha, 1867), pp. 315-349. 1 30 Papal Infallibility. recurring assertion that they had marked out the parishes and the hierarchical grades of the clergy in Eome, no particular ordinances of theirs could be quoted, and people had to be content with stating generally that Damasus or Gelasius or Hilary had made a law binding the whole Church.^ In the later and more historical portion (from 440 to 530) the Pope is specially represented as teacher of doctrine and supreme judge, with a view to the Greeks. In the first edition every historical notice, except about buildings, sacred offerings, and cemeteries, is false : the author's statements about the fortunes and acts of par- ticular Popes never agree with what is known of their history, but rather contradict it, sometimes glaringly; and thus we must regard as fabulous even what cannot be proved such from sources now accessible to us, for there is almost always an obvious design.^ The fictions of the Xt&er Pontificalis had a far-reach- ing influence after they became known, and were used — ■ The phrase " fecit Constitutum de omni Eoclesit." is repeated on nearly every page, but what the ordinance was is never specified, while the pre- tended liturgical appointments are always precisely expressed. ' The Liber Pontificalis has been critically examined by Tillemont, and more fully by Constant, and its gross anachronisms proved, so that there can be no doubt abcut its fabulous character, and it gives one the impres- sion throughout of deliberate 6aud. Clearly the compilers had no historical or documentary evidence. The first enlargement of the Liberian catalogue reached almost to Damasus, and must have been composed early in the Forgeries. 1 3 1 first by Bede about 710— in the rest of the West. They supplied the basis for the notion of the Popes having constantly acted from the first as legislators of the whole Church, and they greatly helped on the later fabrication of Isidore, who incorporated these records of Papal enactments into his decretals, and thereby gave them an appearance of being genuine. This agreement of the forged decretals with the aimals of the Popes is what gave the former so long a hold on public belief After the middle of the eighth century, the famous Donation of Constantine was concocted at Eome. It is based on the earlier fifth-century legend of his cure from leprosy, and baptism by Pope Silvester, which is re- peated at length, and the Emperor is said, out of grati- tude, to have bestowed Italy and the western provinces on the Pope, and also to have made many regulations about the honorary prerogatives and dress of the Eoman clergy.'' The Pope is, moreover, represented as lord sixtli century. The two letters of Damasus and Jerome were invented for it, according to wMch Damasus collected and sent to St. Jerome what could te found of the biographies of the Popes. In a second and altered edition, some twenty years later, about 536, was added the list of Popes from Da- masus to Felix IV. This last part, from 440, is historical, but strongly coloured, and garnished with fables devised in the interest of Eome. 1 The " western provinces" must not be understood of Gaul, Spain, etc. The phrase is used for the northern parts of the Peninsula — Lombardy, Venetia, and Istria,— which do not properly belong to Eoman Italy. 132 Papal Infallibility. and master of all bishops, and having authority over the four great thrones of Antioch, Alexandria, Constan- tinople, and Jerusalem. The forgery betrayed its Eoman authorship in every line; it is self-evident that a cleric of the Lateran Church was the composer. The document was obvi- ously intended to be shown to the Prankish king, Pepin, and must have been compiled just before 754. Constantine relates in it how he served the Pope as his groom, and led his horse some distance. This induced Pepin to offer the Pope a homage, so foreign to Prankish ideas, and the Pope told him from the first that he expected, not a gift, but restitution from him and his Franks.^ The first reference to this gift of Constantine occurs in Hadrian's letter to Charles the Great in 777, where he tells him that, as the new Constantine, he has ' There can be no doubt as to the Eoman origin of the "Donation." The Jesuit Cantel has rightly recognised this in his Hist. Metrop. Urb. p. 195. He thinks a Eoman subdeacon, John, was the author. The document had a threefold object, — against the Longobards, who were threatening Borne, against the Greeks, who wonld acknowledge no supremacy of the Eoman See over their Church, and with a view to the Franks. The attempt of the Jesuits in the Civiltd to make a Frank the author, simply because .tineas of Paris and Ado of Vienne mention the gift in the ninth cent\iry, is not worth serious notice ; it refutes itself. There is the closest agreement in style and idea between the "Donation" and contemporary Eoman docu- ments, especially the Consliiiitum Pauli I. (Harduin, Conckl. iii. 1999 sej.) and the Epistola S. Petri, compiled in 753 or 764. The phrase " Concinnatio Forgeries. 133 indeed given the Cliurcli what is her own, but that he has more of the old Imperial endowments to restore to her. The Popes had already heen accustomed, for several years, since 752, to speak, not of gifts, but restitutions, in their letters ; the Italian towns and provinces were to be restored, sometimes to St. Peter, sometimes to the Eoman republic.'' Such language first became intelli- gible when the Donation of Constantine was brought forward to show that the Pope was the rightful pos- sessor as heir of the Eoman Csesars in Italy; for, he being at once the successor of Peter and of Constantine, what was given to the Eoman Eepublic was given to Peter, and vice versd. In this way it was made clear to Pepin that he had simply to reject the demands of the Greek Imperial Court about the restoration of its terri- tory as unauthorized. It would indeed be incomprehensible how Pepin luminarium," used only in Papal letters of that date, and in the Consti- tutum and Donatio, betrays a Eoman hand. So does the form of impreca- tion and threat of hell-torments, found also in the Constitutuvi and Epis- tola S. Petri, and the term " Satrapse," wholly foreign to the West, and found only in the "Donation," and in contemporary Papal letters. See Cenni, MorMm. Dominat. Pontif. i. 154. 1 "Exarchatum Ravennae et rei-puMic» jura sen looa reddere" is the phrase in the Liber Pontif. See Le Cointe, Annal. Bed. Franc, v. 424. Again, in the letter of Pope Stephen we read, "per Donationis paginam civitates et loca . . . restituenda oonfirm^stis." And so constantly when the Exarchate and Pentapolis are snoken of. 1 34 Papal Infallibility. could have been induced to give the Exarchate, with twenty towns, to the Pope, who never possessed it, and thereby to draw on himself the enmity of the still powerful Imperial Court, merely that the lamps in the Eoman churches might be furnished with oil,^ had he not been shown that the Pope had a right to it by the gift of Constantine, and terrified by the threat of ven- geance from the Prince of the Apostles, if his property should be withheld. There was no fear of such docu- ments as the Epistle of Peter and the Donation of Con- stantine being critically examined at the warlike Court of Pepin. Men who might be written to that their bodies and souls would be eternally lacerated and tor- mented in hell if they did not fight against the enemies of the Church, believed readily enough that Constantine had given Italy to Pope Silvester. Those were days of darkness in Prance, and, in the complete extinction of aU learning, there was not a single man about Pepin whose sharpsightedness the Eoman agents had reason to dread.^ One is tempted to ascribe to the same hand the Epistle of St. Peter to his " adopted son" the King of 1 This was always given in the covetous begging-letters of the Popes as their main ground for demanding the gifts of land they wished for. '^ See the Benedictine Hist. Lit de la France, iv. 3. Forgeries. 135 the Franks, whicli appeared also at this moment of great danger and distress, as well as of lofty hopes and preten- sions, — a fabrication which for strangeness and audacity has never been exceeded. Entreating and promising victory, and then again threatening the pains of hell, the Prince of the Apostles adjures the Franks to deli- ver Eome and the Eoman Church. The Epistle really went from Eome to the Frankish kingdom, and seems to have produced its effect there .^ Twenty years later the need was felt at Eome of a more extensive invention or interpolation. Pepin had given the Pope the Exarchate, taken away from the Longobards, with Eavenna for its capital, and twenty other towns of the Emilia, Flaminia, and Pentapolis, or the triangle of coast between Bologna, Comacchio, and Ancona.^ More he had been unable to give, for this was all the territory the Longobards had shortly before acquired, and were now obliged to give up. In 774 Pepin's son, Charles the Great, after taking Pavia, be- came king of the Longobardic territory, stretching far southwards. N'o more could be said about the gift of ' It was incorporated in the official collection of the Codex Ca/rolinus. Of. Cenni, op. cit. 150. 2 This is clear from the enumerations in the Liber Pontif. and the notice in Leo of Ostia. See Le Cointe, v. 484, and Mock, De Donat. d Car. M. oblat&, pp. 8 seq. 1 36 Papal Iiifallibility. Constantine ; Charles would have had at once to abdi- cate. Moreover, a strong Italian sovereign was wanted at Eome, who from his own part of the peninsula could also keep the Papal dominions in subjection; at the same time, the Eoman lust for land and subjects and revenues was not long satisfied with the Exarchate and its belongings. So a document was laid before the King in Eome, professing to be his father's gift or promise {jpromissio) of Kiersy. He renewed it, as it was shown him, and gave away thereby the greater part of Italy, including a good deal that did not belong to him; for the document, as quoted in Adrian's Bio- graphy, specifies as territories to be assigned to the Popes all Corsica, Venetia, and Istria, Luni, Monselice, Parma, Eeggio, Mantua, the duchies of Spoleto and Benevento, and the Exarchate.^ It has seemed to every one mysterious and inexplicable that Charlemagne should have made so comprehensive a gift, leaving himself but little of his Italian kingdom Accordingly Muratori, Sugenheim, Hegel, Gregorovius, and Niehues have either declared the passage spurious, or accused the Papal biographer of falsehood ; else, ob- serves Mehues, we must accuse Charles of consciously > lAh. Pontif. (ed Vignol.) iL 193. Forgeries. 137 indorsing a perjury, and Adrian of a cowardly negli- gence.^ Abel thinks the suspicions against the genuine- ness of the passage are strong, but not conclusive, and contents himself with assuming that the gift was really equal to Pepin's, but was very limited.^ Lastly, Mock accepts the extent of the gift, but rejects its equality to Pepin's, and therefore the truth of Adrian's Biography ; and Baxmann, the latest authority, leaves all uncertain.^ In short, no one has succeeded in unravelling the secret. But the thing explains itself when we compare the twice printed and wholly fabulous document,* profess- ing to be the pact or bond of Pepin, and which really describes the geographical extent of the gift as it is stated in Adrian's Biography, only with the addition of more names of towns^ This document is closely related to the Donation of Constantine. Like Constan- tino, Pepin gives an express account of his relations to the Pope as an explanation to the Greeks and Lombards of his gifts, and disclaims for himself and his successors all interest in the alienated territories, except the right 1 QescMcMe des Verh&Un. zmschen Kaiserthmn wnd Pabsthum. i. 565. " Forschwngen xur deutschen Geschichte, i. 469 seq. Jahrbiich, i. 131. 3 Politik der Pabste. 1. 277. * Fantvizzi, Monum. Eavennaii, vi. 26i ; Troya, Codice diplom. Longo- bard. (Napoli, 1854), iv. 503 seq. Troya thinks the document genuine, which is unintelligible in a man of his information. 1 38 Papal Infallibility. of having prayers offered for the rest of their souls, and the title of a Eoman patrician ; for those territories were become the lawful property of the Pope through so many imperial deeds of gift. For this document, obviously composed in the style of the Donation of Constantine and the Eoman biographies of Popes, it is difficult to assign any other origin or object than the purpose of having it laid before Charlemagne;^ audit shows how he was induced to make a promise he found it impossible to keep; for he henceforth vigorously with- stood the perpetually renewed demands of the Popes, and made the counter requisition that Eome should prove its title to each particular domain separately. There have unquestionably been some falsifications in the privileges granted to the Eoman See by Em- perors later than Charles the Great, though they do not go so far as has often been maintained. The pact or gift of Louis the Pious in 817 bears iuternal signs of genuineness, but has evidently been interpolated.^ ' It mtist else have been meant for the eye of one of the later Carlovin- gians. Clearly it was designed for the eye of a Prankish king, and after the estahlishment of the empire Pepin's disclaimer of reserving any power in the alienated dominions would have no further object. We must there- fore hold to Charles the Great, and the date of 774, and attribute the wrong name of the Pope to the ignorance of a later copyist. ^ It has been held as a pure invention by most scholars, as Pagi, Mura- tori, Beretto, Le Bret, Pertz, Gregorovius, Baxmann, and lastly, that great Forgeries. 139 It makes the Emperor give the islands of Corsica, Sar- dinia, and Sicily, with the opposite coasts, and all Tus- cany and Spoleto, to Pope Pascal. It is needless to ohserve that if Louis had really partly given and partly confirmed to the Pope the greater part of Italy in this elastic and unlimited fashion, the whole subsequent history of the Papacy to Gregory vii. would be an insoluble riddle ; for the Popes neither possessed nor once claimed those territories, which together make up a large kingdom. Innocent in. was the first to main- tain that all Tuscany belonged to the Popes; no one did so before him. Gregory vii. first claimed the duchy of Spoleto. The falsification certainly took place to- wards the end of the eleventh century, when matters were managed so actively and astutely at Eome ; for Gregory vii. was also the first to claim Sardinia, but he takes occasion to observe that the Sardinians have hitherto had no relations with the Eoman See, or rather, as he thinks, have become as much strangers to it, through the negligence of his predecessors, as the people at the ends of the earth.-' Urban 11., indeed, in 1091, proved that Corsica was a Papal fief, not merely from master in the criticism of the Caroline documents, Siokel, while Marini (Numo EsofDVi, etc., Eoma, 1822) and Gfrorer defend it as genuine. 1 Epist. i. 29. 140 Papal Infallibility. the gift of Louis or Charlemagne, but from the Dona- tion of Constantine, which, as then interpreted, assigned to Pope Silvester all islands of the "West, including the Balearic Isles, and even Ireland. So again with the privileges of the Emperors Otho I. in 962, and Heniy ir. in 1020. The documents are in both cases genuine, or copies of genuine ones, in the main, but the statement of the IAhe,r Pontificalis about Charlemagne's Donation was manifestly interpolated wholesale afterwards.^ It is well Icnown that the Countess Matilda, who was entirely under the influence of Gregory vii. and Anselm of Lucca, gave Liguria and Tuscany to the Eoman See in 1077.'' When we remember that Gre- gory VII., in 1081, required of the pretender Eudolph an oath that he would restore the lands and revenues which Constantine and Charlemagne had given to St. Peter,' that Leo rx. had already solemnly appealed to the Donation of Constantine, and that Matilda's ad- viser, Anselm, had inserted this Donation in his Codex, we may easUy judge what document was used to con- > Cf. Watterict, Yitoe Pont. i. 45 ; Hefele, ConcU. Gesckichte, iv. 580 ; Beitr&ge, i. 265. ' Leo Cassinensis in Pertz, Monum. Germ. ix. 738. Liguria means the Lomljardio ducMes Monging to Matilda, » Ep. viii. 8. 26. Forgeries. 141 vince her that she was obliged in conscience to make so extensive an abdication or restitution. We cannot suppose that such a man as Gregory vil. would consciously take part in these fabrications, but, in his iinlimited credulity and eager desire for territory and dominion, he appealed to the first forged document that came to hand as a solid proof. Thus, in 1081, he affirmed that, according to the documents preserved in the archives of St. Peter's, Charles the Great had made the whole of Gaul tributary to the Eoman Church, and given to her aJl Saxony.'' A document forged at Eome in the tenth or eleventh century is undoubtedly referred to, which may be found in Torrigio.^ Charles there calls himself Emperor in the year 797, and his kingdoms are Francia, Aquitania, and Gaul ; Alcuin is his Chancellor, and each of his kingdoms is to pay an annual tribute of 400 pounds to Eome. We have put forward these facts about the deeds of gift, because they set in a clear light the line habitually followed at Eome from the sixth to the tweKth centiiry, 1 E'p. Tiii. 23. 2 he. Grotte Vaticane (Roma, 1639), pp. 505-510. As Acts of the Martyrs had been fabricated there earlier, so, from the tenth century, false docu- ments were fabricated wholesale at Eome, as the monographs about parti- cular Eoman churches prove. So the first document of 570 Marini quotes (Papiri Diplom., Eoma, 1805) is an invention. See Jaflf^, Regesta, p. 936. 142 Papdil Infallibility. and because their authors are undoubtedly the very persons chargeable with the fictions undertaken in the interests of ecclesiastical supremacy. We shall now continue our enumeration and examination of the for- geries by which the whole constitution of the Church was gradually changed. The pseudo-Isidorian forgery of the middle of the ninth century has been already mentioned. Eome, as we have seen, had no part in that, though she after- wards took full advantage of it for extending her power, the substance of these forgeries being incorporated into the canonical collections of the Gregorian party. The most potent instrument of the new Papal system was Gratian's Decretum, which issued about the middle of the twelfth century from the first school of Law in Europe, the juristic teacher of the whole of Western Christendom, Bologna. In this work the Isidorian forgeries were combined with those of the Gregorian writers, Deusdedit, Anselm, Gregory of Pavia, and with Gratian's own additions. His work displaced all the older collections of canon law, and became the manual and repertory, not for canonists only, but for the scholastic theologians, who, for the most part, derived all their knowledge of Fathers and Councils from it. Forgeries. 143 N"o book has ever come near it in its influence in the Church, although there is scarcely another so chokefull of gross errors, both intentional and unintentional N'ot only Anselm, Deusdedit, and Cardinal Gregory, whose works had little circulation, but also the German Bur- kard (or his assistant, the Abbot Olbert) had pioneered the way for Gratian. Burkard had not only made copious use of the Isidorian fictions in his Collection, compiled between 1012 and 1024, but had also ascribed the eccle- siastical decisions in the capitularies to various Popes, so that from the middle of the eleventh century the erroneous notion took rise that the free determinations of Prankish Synods in the ninth century were the autocratic commands of Popes. All these fabrications — the rich harvest of three centuries — Gratian inserted in good faith into his collection, but he also added, knowingly and deliberately, a number of fresh corrup- tions, all in the spirit and interest of the Papal system. It may be shown by certain examples, going deep into the development of the new Church system, how Gratian the Italian forwarded by his own interpola- tions the grand national scheme of making the whole Christian world, in a certain sense, the domain of the Italian clergy, through the Papacy. The German and 1 44 Papal Infallibility. "West Frankish bishops had already bowed to the Isi- dorian decretals. Their influence is shown in the deci- sions of the German National Synod at Tribur in 895. We may see here how deeply the pseudo-Isidore, with the imperial dignity of his Popes, and their dictatorial commands, had penetrated into the very lifeblood of the German hierarchy. It came to this, that the bishops had bound themselves most closely to King Arnulf, who was present, and took a prominent part in the Synod, and that he, desiring the imperial crown, which had already once allured him into Italy, could only obtain it by the favour of Pope Pormosus. So they decided that, though the yoke of Eome should become intolerable, it ought to be borne with pious resignation. How often has this saying been repeated since ! It was ascribed to Charles the Great, just as Constantine is afi&rmed to have called the Pope a God. And since Gratian adopted it as a capitulary of Charles, and stamped it as a universal canon,^ it became the current view up to the time of the Council of Constance, albeit sometimes contradicted in act, that it is a duty to endure the unendurable if Eome imposes it. The corruption of the thirty-sixth canon of the > mst. 19. 0. 3. Forgeries, 145 (Ecumenical Council of 692 is Gratian's own doing.'' It renewed tlie canon of Chaleedon (451), which gave the Patriarch of l^Tew Eonie, or Constantinople, equal rights with the Eoman Patriarch. Gratian, by a change of two words, gives it a precisely opposite sense, and suppresses the reference to the canon of Chaleedon. He also reduces the five Patriarchs to four ; for the ancient equality of position of the Eoman bishop and the four chief bishops of the East was now to disappear, though even the Gregorians, as, e.g., Anselm, had treated him as one of the Patriarchs.^ There was no longer any room for the patriarchal dignity of the Eoman See ; he who had drawn to himself every conceivable right in the Church could hardly exercise a particular patri- archal power in one portion of it. The plenary powers of the Pope were become a mwre magnum, within which there could be no sea or lake of special privileges.^ This showed itself conspicuously in reference to the proviuces of Eastern lUyricum, — Macedonia, Thessaly, Epirus, 1 Diat. 22. 6. The Eoman correctors have snhstitiited "neo non" for Gratian's fahrication of " non tamen," which was left for 400 years. " Anselm and Deusdedit set aside the famous decree of Nicolas n., giv- ing the German Emperor the right of confirming Papal elections, on the ground that one patriarch, the Eoman, could not annul the decision of five patriarchs at Constantinople. 3 The numberless privileges accorded hy Popes to the Mendicant Orders were afterwards called a "mare magnum." 1 46 Papal Infallibility. Dardania, — ^which were before under tlie patriarchal jurisdiction of the Eoman bishop, so that the metropo- litan of Thessalonica was appointed his vicar over them. The Emperor Leo, the Isaurian, separated those provinces from Eome about 730, and they now belonged to the patriarchate of Constantinople. There was a long dis- pute about it ; the perpetually renewed demands of the Popes gained no attention at Constantinople till the establishment of the Latin Empire there in 1204 gave them power for the moment in these Eastern lands also. And it is significant that Innocent in., far from attempting to resume his ancient patriarchal rights there, made the Bishop of Tomobus Patriarch, — an ephemeral creation, soon to be again extinguished.^ The canon of the African Synod, — that immoveable stumblingblock of all Papalists, — which forbids any appeal beyond the seas, i.R., to Eome, Gratian adapted to the service of the new system by an addition which made the Synod affirm precisely what it denies. If Isidore undertook by his fabrications to annul the old law forbidding bishops being moved from one see to another, Gratian, following Anselm and Cardinal Gre- gory, improved on this by a fresh forgery, appropriating ' Le Quien, Oriens Christ, i. 96-98 ; ii. 24, 25. Forgeries. 147 to the Pope alone the right of translation.^ One of the most important of his additions, and also an evidence of the wide divergence between the old and new Church law, is the chapter — also based on Anselm, Deusdedit, and Cardinal Gregory — which elaborated a system of religions persecution.^ While, on the one hand, by fal- sifying a canon quoted by Ivo and Burkard, he makes Gregory the Great order that the Church should protect homicides and murderers ;^ on the other hand, he takes great pains to inculcate, in a long series of canons, that it is lawful, nay, a duty, to constrain men to goodness, and therefore to faith, and to what was then reckoned matter of faith, by all means of physical compulsion, and particularly to torture and execute heretics, and confiscate their property. In this he went beyond the Gregorian canonists. He does not fail to urge that Urban n. had declared any one who should kill an ex- communicated person, out of zeal to the Church, to be by no means a murderer, and hence draws the general conclusion that it is clear the " bad " — aU who are de- clared " bad " by the Church authorities — are not only to be scourged, but executed. StUl worse things may be found in the work of the ' Caus. 7. Q. i. 34. ' Cans. 23. Q. iv. 4, 5. 3 cms. 23. Q. v. 7. 148 Papal Infallibility. Bolognese monk, which, through the mstrumentality of the Gwria, became the manual and canonical code of the "West, to the scandal of religion and the Church, and this medley, not of simple, but complicated and multi- plied forgeries, was rich in materials containing the germ of future developments, and cutting deep in their consequences into both the civil and ecclesiastical life of the "West. So was it with the idea of heresy, which even then was fashioned into a two-edged sword, and veritable instrument of ecclesiastical domination. Pope Nicolas i. had afiBrmed, in his letter to the Greek Emperor Michael, that by the sixth canon of the (Ecu- menical Council of 381 (the first of Constantinople), which he grossly distorted, schismatics and excom- municated men were to be treated as heretics. Anselm and Gratian embodied this statement in their new codes ;^ so that at the very time when heresy was stamped as a capital offence, the term received a terrible and unlimited extension, as indeed everything had been done by earlier fabrications to make heretics of all who dared to disobey a Papal command, or speak against a Papal decision on doctrine. The earlier Gregorians had not laid down so clearly and nakedly as Gratian, that in his unlimited superi- 1 Cans. 4. Q. i. 0, 2. Forgeries. 1 49 ority to all law, the Pope stands on an equality with the Son of God. Gratian says that, as Christ submitted to the law on earth, though in truth he was its Lord, so the Pope is high above all laws of the Church, and can dispose of them as he will, since they derive all their force from him alone.'' This became, and chiefly through Gratian's influence, the prevalent doctrine of the Cwria, so that even after the great reforming Councils, Eugenius IV., in 1439, answered King Charles vii., when he ap- pealed to the laws of the Church, that it was simply ludicrous to come with such an appeal to the Pope, who remits, suspends, changes, or annuls these laws at his good pleasure.^ In the fifty years between the appearance of Gratian's Decretum and the pontificate of the most powerful of the Popes, Innocent in., the Papal system, such as it had become in its three stages of development, through the pseudo-Isidore, the Gregorian school, and Gratian, worked its way to complete dominion. In the Eoman courts Gratian's Code was acted upon — at Bologna it was taught; even the Emperor Prederick i. had his son Henry ^^. instructed in the Decretum and Eoman law.* The whole decretal legislation from 1159 to 1320 1 Caus. 25. Q. i. c. 11, 12, 16. ' Eaynald, anno 1439, 37. » Cf. Bolimer, Diss, de Deer. Grat. in Pref. to his Corp. Jwr. Can. p. xvii. 1 50 Papal Infallibility. is built upon the foundation of Gratian. The same is true of Aquiuas's dogmatic theology on all kindred points, as, indeed, the whole scholastic system in ques- tions of Church constitution was modelled on the favourite science of the clergy of the period. Jurisprud- ence, as interpreted by Gratian, Eaymund, and the other compilers of decretals. The theologians borrowed theory, texts, and proofs, alike from these compilations. As early as the twelfth century, in quoting a passage from Gratian, the Popes used to say, it was "m sactris canonibus" or "in decretis."^ And about 1570, the Eoman correctors of the Decretum, appointed by three Popes, said the work was intrusted to them, that the authority of this most useful and weighty Codex might not be weakened.^ So high stood the character of this work, saturated through and through as it is with de- ceit and error and forgeries, which, like a great wedge driven into the fabric of the Church, gradually loosened, disjointed, and disiutegrated the whole of its ancient order, not, indeed, without putting another, and, in its way, very strong constitution in its place. i Thus Alex. m. {Deer. v. 6 de Oespons. inpab.), Clem. in. {De Jure Patron, o. 25), and Innoo. m., cite Gratian with the words, "in corpore decretonim." * " Ne hujusce ntilissimi et gravissimi Codicis Taoillaret auctoiitas." Progress of the Papal Power. 1 5 1 § VIII. Progress of the Papal Power. Alexander III. (1159-81) and Innocent iii. (1198-1216) were the chief authors of the development of the netv system, and creators of the decretal canon law, through the number of their edicts, and the unity and coherence of their policy, based on one fundamental idea. The notion is more prominent with Innocent than even with Gre- gory VII., that the Pope is God's locum tenens on earth, set to watch over the social, political, and religious con- dition of mankind, like a Divine Providence, as chief overseer and lord, who must put down all opposition. The radical principle with him, as with Gregory, is that all rank and authority not held by priests is an incon- gruity in the Divine plan of the world, introduced through human folly and sinfulness, while the priesthood is, properly speaking, the sole ordinance and institution of God.^ Gregory had declared, of course in direct contradiction to the Gospel teaching about the Divine institution of government, that the royal power was set up at the instigation of Satan, by persons ignorant of God, and fuU of crimes, out of mere lust of dominion, whereas before men had been equal.^ ' See Up. ad Joan. Angl. Reg. in Eymer's Fmdera Reg. Angl. i. 1, 119, " Institutiim fuit sacerdotiura per ordinationem Divinam, regnum autem per extortionem humanam," etc. ' Epist. lib. viii. Ep 21 ; " Quis nesciat, reges et duces ab iis habuisse 1 5 2 Papal Infallibility. New means of influence accrued to the Eoman See through the Crusades, and the consequent change in the system of penance and indulgences, the privileges awarded to Crusaders, and the leadership in these holy wars, which, as a matter of course, devolved on the Popes. The same end was served by the military Orders, which acknowledged the Pope as their only superior; the constant union with France, clergy as well as kings (before 1300) ; and still more by the intellectual power the Papal monarchy derived from the two great Universities — Bologna, the school of Papal canon law, and Paris, the home of scholasticism, which was more and more lending itself to the Papal system. But, above all, from the beginning of the thirteenth century, the new Eeligious Orders of Mendicants, which swarmed over the whole Christian world — Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians, and Carmelites, especially the two first — were the strongest pillars and supports of this monarchy. After the Isidorian decretals and Gratian, the introduction of these Orders, with their rigid monarchical organization, was the third great lever whereby the old Church system, resting on the grada- principium, qui Deum ignorantes, snperbiS, lapinis, peifidiS, homicidiis postremo Tmiversis pene sceleribos, mundi principe diabolo viaelicet agi- tante, dominari offioa cupiditateetintolerabUipraesumtioiie affeotaverunt !" Progress of the Papal Power. 153 tion of bishops, presbyteries, and parish priests, was undermined and destroyed. Completely under Eoman control, and acting everywhere as Papal delegates, wholly independent of bishops, with plenary power to encroach on the rights of parish priests, these monks set up their own churches in the Church, laboured for the honour and greatness of their Order, and for the Papal authority on which their prerogatives rested. We may say that that authority was literally doubled through their means. They became masters of literature, of the pulpits, and of the university chairs ; they travelled about as Papal tax-gatherers and preachers of indulgences, with plenary power, even of inflicting excommunication. And thus the spiritual campaign organized at Eome was carried into every vUlage, and the parish clergy generally suc- cumbed to the Mendicants, armed as they were with privileges from head to heel. Tor they possessed and used the effective expedients of easy absolution, and new devotions and methods of salvation, invented by themselves, to which the parish priests had nothing to oppose, while their isolation made every attempt at open resistance on their part useless. They could compel both priest and people, by excommunication, to hear them preach the Papal indulgences, and could absolve 154 Papal Infallibility. from reserved sins in the confessional Bishops and priests felt their impotence against the new power of these monks, strengthened by the Inquisition, and had, however indignantly, to bend under the yoke laid on their necks by two powers irresistible in their union. If Gregory vii. supported his new claims, his political lordship and subjugation of the monarchy, on falsehoods, not indeed of his own coining, Innocent m. went further in this direction, and dealt with history as with the Bible, according to the exigencies of the case. He invented the story that the Empire had been transferred from the Greeks to the Franks by a Papal sentence;-^ and thence inferred that the German princes derived their right of electing the Emperor from the Pope only, and asserted that he had the right of rejecting their nominee. Later Papal authors have transformed these assertions into historical facts invented by themselves. One of Gregory vii.'s maxims, ascribing personal hohness to every rightly elected Pope, was suffered to drop. There was danger of the want of holiness sug- gesting the invalidity of the election, and therefore the decretal books, while iipholding the rest of Gregory's postulates, were silent about this. Moreover, every • De Elect, c. 84. Progress of the Papal Power. 155 one knew and said that simony, wMch was generally treated as heresy, was rampant in the Eoman Court, and that taking bribes for benefices and legal proceed- ings was a daily occurrence with the Popes and Car- dinals. The charge of heresy going on under the very eyes of the Pope, and with his express or tacit consent could not be answered, and was constantly urged, till the canonists hit upon the resource of maintaining that what was simony in others was not simony in the Pope, because he is superior to law, and everything in the Church is his property, which he can deal with as he wili^ The Gregorian system required the most complete inmiunity of the whole clergy from the secular power and civil courts. It served to create an immense army, exclusively belonging to the Pope, and widely separated by common caste feeling and caste interests from the lay world. Every clergyman was to recognise but one lord acd ruler, the Pope, who disposed of him indirectly, through the bishops, who were bound by oath to himself, or directly, ia cases of exemption, and used him as a 1 ThiTS the canonist John of God, about 1245, quotes and repudiates the statement, "Lex Julia dicit quod apud Romam simonia non oommittltur" {Ve Posn. D. Papm). See excerpts in Theodori Pcenitent. (ed. Petit.) Paris, 1677. There was a long controTcrsy about it. 1 5 6 Papal Infallibility. tool for the execution of his commands. Gratian has adapted his Codex to these views, partly hy means of the pseudo-Isidorian fabrications, partly by later corrup- tions of his own and the Gregorians.^ The Papal pre- scriptions in the code of decretals, completely establish the principle that clerics are exempt from secular courts, and that by Divine ordinance.^ The Popes added that no cleric could renounce this privilege, as it belonged to the whole Church. One would have supposed there would be no further need for so perilous an instrument as falsification of texts, when all that was required for the development of Papal domination in Church and State could easily be built on the strong and broad foundation of Gratian's Decretum. And yet the same method was still pursued, and that too with texts of Scripture. Innocent m. wished to make Deuteronomy a code for Christians, that he might get Bible authority for his doctrine of Papal power over life and death ; but for that the words had to be altered. It is there said that an Israelite may ' Thus (Cans. ii. Q. i. c. 5) he has expunged the words of a law of Theo- dosius confining the exemption to spiritaal matters, and thereby wholly altered it. So (i6. o. 6) he changed the words " sine scientiS Pontiflcis " into "sine lioentiS,," to make the civil authority over clerics dependent on delegation from the hishops. = Deer, de Jvdic. c. 4, 8, 10 ; De Foro Compei. u. i. 2. Q. 12, 13. Progress of the Papal Power. 1 5 7 appeal to the high priest and chief judge, and if he does not abide by their sentence shall be put to death.^ I;^nocent, by a slight interpolation in the text of the Vulgate, made this into a statement that whoever does not submit to the decision of the high priest (whose place the Pope occupies under the New Covenant) is to be sentenced by the judge to execution.^ And Leo x. quoted the passage with the same corruption, in a Bull of his, giving a false reference to the Book of Kings instead of Deuteronomy, to prove that whoever dis- obeyed the Pope must be put to death.^ Innocent went beyond Gratian, above aU, in fixing the relations of the Church to the State and secular princes. He taught that the Papal power is to the imperial and royal as the sun to the moon, which last has only a borrowed light, or the soul to the body, which exists not for itself, but only to be the slave of the soul, and the two swords (Luke xxii. 38) are a symbol of the ecclesiastical and secular power, both of which belong to the Pope, but he wields one himself and intrusts the other to princes to use at his behest, and 1 Deut. xvii. 12. ' Deer. Per VeneraUlem, "Qui filii sint legitimi," 4. 17. 3 Pastor jiEUrnus, Harduin, Condi, ix. 1826. 1 5 8 Papal Infallibility. for the service of the Chinch.^ In his famous decretal Novit, Innocent was the first to lay down the theory, often repeated by later Popes, that wherever a serious sin has been committed, or is charged by one party on the other, it behoves the Pope to interpose with his judgment, to punish, and to annul the decisions of the civO. tribunal.* The principle this newly devised claim is based upon must apply to every clergyman, parish priest, or bishop, within his own sphere, and a general domination of clergy over laity would follow, as in Thibet; the Popes, however, claimed the right for themselves alone. Moreover there accrued to the Popes new and unlimited powers, exalting them over princes, peoples, and courts of justice, beyond what any mortal had yet enjoyed, from the so-called "Evangelical denunciation." It means that by asserting that it is a sin on the part of the defendant not to admit the right of the plaintiff, any cause can be brought before the Pope, if he chooses to meddle with it, — before a judge, that is, who is reponsible to God alone.^ 1 Innoo. in. in c. 6, De Majorit. et Obed., D. L 33. Gregory vn. had before used the symbol of the two heavenly luminaries, Ep. ad Guil. Regem. ^ C. 13 de Judic. D. 2. 1. It belongs to the Pope " de qnoonnque peooato corripere quemlibet Christlamim." 3 The chief authority is Decret. c. 13, De Judic. ii. i. Progress of the Papal Power. 159 All roads at that time led to Eome. Whichever of the Isidorio- Gregorian maxims one started from, the resvdt was the same. Either it was said the right of the Church is alone Divine, and therefore takes precedence of all other rights, but in the Church the Pope is the fountain and possessor of all rights, and thus every one is ahsolutely subject to him ; or, the Pope is the ruler of souls, but the body is the mere vassal and instrument of the soul, — therefore the Pope is also supreme over bodies, with power of life and death. And again, who- ever disobeys a Papal command shows thereby that he holds wrong notions about the extent of Papal power, and the irresistible force of Papal commands and pro hibitions, and thus he incurs at least vehement sus- picion of heresy, and must answer for his orthodoxy before the Holy Office. The very names the Popes assumed or accepted mark the broad division between the earlier and new Gre- gorian Papacy. To the end of the twelfth century they had called themselves Vicars of Peter, but since Inno- cent in. this title was superseded by Vicar of Christ.'' In fact the gulf between the position and rights of a Gregory l. and the pretensions and plenary power of a 1 Bengnot, Scriptor. JRerum Oallic. z. Prof. 47. 1 60 Papal Infallibility. Gregory ix., or between 600 and 1230, is as wide as from Peter to Christ. All bishops had formerly been styled representatives of Christ, but when the Pope laid claim to this title, it meant — " I am the represen- tative on earth of the Almighty, and my power stands high above all earthly power and limitations, in me and through me is the Church free," — according to the mediaeval clerical view of Church freedom, which re- garded the Church as free only if omnipotent, and the Church in the last resort as simply meaning the Pope. Gregory ix. went still further in his assertion of an absolute domination over the State, when he declared, on the strength of the forged Donation of Constantine, that the Pope is properly lord and master of the whole world, things as well as persons, so that his predeces- sors had only in some sense delegated their power to emperors and kings, but had relinquished nothing of the substance of their jurisdiction.^ Innocent iv. claimed, as self-evident, the same direct dominion over the world, and all that is in it, only that he proclaimed in yet stronger terms the absolute universal supremacy of the Popes, and the union of the two supreme powers ' See Huillard Brfholles, Codex dipl. Frieder, il iv. 921. " Ut in nni- verso mmido rertmi obtineret et corporum principatum." Progress of the Papal Power. 1 6 1 in one hand. He thougM it false to say that Constan- tiae had given secular power to the Papal Chair, for this it possessed from the nature of the case and directly from Christ, who founded a kingdom, and gave to Peter the keys both of earthly and heavenly sovereignty. Secu- lar power was only so far legitimate as secular princes used it by commission from the Pope. Constantine had in truth only given back to the Church part of what was hers from the beginning, and what he had no right to hold. If possible, he spoke even more dis- paragingly than Gregory vii. of the origin of secular princedoms and their possessors. Innocent iv. supple- mented the hierarchical organization by adding a link hitherto wanting to the papal ehain, when he esta- blished the principle that every cleric must obey the Pope, even if he commands what is wrong, for no one can judge him. The only exception was if the com- mand involved heresy or tended to the destruction of the whole Church.-'' Boniface vin. gave a dogmatic and 1 Comment, in Decretal. Franoof. 1570, 655. Innocent wrote this com- mentary as Pope. He has openly told us what amount of Christian cul- ture and knowledge, hoth for clergy and laity, suits the Papal system. It is enough, he says, for the laity to know that there is a God who re- wards the good, and, for the rest, to believe implicitly what the Church believes. Bishops and pastors must distinctly know the articles of the Apostles' Creed ; the other clergy need not know more than the laity, and also that the body of Christ is made in the sacrament of the altar. — Qam- 1 6 2 Papal Infallibility. biblical foundation to the doctrine of the universahty of papal dominion in his BuU, Unam Sanctam, where he condemns the independence of the civil power in its own sphere as Manicheism. He affirms that the Pope is judge over aU secular matters where sin is involved, and holds the two swords, one to be used by himself, the other by kings and warriors, but at his beck and by his permission ; that he judges all, but is judged by none, being responsible to God only ; and that whoever denies this subjection of every human being to the Pope cannot be saved. His violent perversion of the clearest texts of Scripture in support of these claims was matter of astonishment and mockery even at the time.-' After the removal of the Papal See to Avignon, when the Oitria had become French both in its personnel and its political line, the juristic dogmatism of the Popes was applied principally to the empire, and for centuries the steady aim of their policy was to break the imperial power in Germany and Italy and dissolve ment. in Deer. 2. Naturally, therefore, the laity were forbidden to read the Bible in their own tongue, and, if they conversed publicly or privately on matters of faith, incurred excommunication by a Bull of Alexander vr., and after a year became amenable to the Inquisition. — Sext. Dec. 5, 2. 1 See the writings of contemoorarv French jurists and theologians in Dnpuy's collection. Progress of the Papal Power. 163 its unity. Clement v. declared "by apostolical authority" that every emperor must take an actual oath of obedi- ence to the Pope, so that he might form no alliance with any sovereign suspected by him.'^ The Popes even insisted to the Greek emperors and patriarchs on the undoubted truth of faith that aU ful- ness of spiritual and secular power, at least in Christen- dom, belonged to them. Thus Gregory ix. and Gregory x. "We know this," said the latter, "from reading the Gos- pel" Innocent iii. wrote to the Patriarch of Constantin- ople that "Christ has committed the whole world to the government of the Popes." And he gives, as conclusive evidence of this, that Peter once walked on the sea, — the sea signifying the nations, — whence it is clear that his successors are entitled to rule the nations.^ One of the most far-reaching principles gradually developed from the Gregorian system was, that every baptized man becomes thereby a subject of the Pope, and must remain such all his life, whether he wiU or no. Every Christian, even though baptized outside the papal communion, is not only therefore subject to aU papal laws (though invincible ignorance may be a 1 Clementin. de Jurej. Tit. 9, p. 1058 (ed. Bolimer). 2 Innoc. in. lib. li. 209, ad Pair. Constantin. "Domiiius Petro non solum nniversam Eodesiam, sed totum reliquit sseoulum gubemandum." 164 Papal Infallibility. conceivable excuse in particular cases), but the Pope can call him to account and punish him for every grave sin, and this may extend to the penalty of death. For, in the first place, all disobedience to a papal command is either heresy or proximate heresy ; and, moreover, the Pope can excommunicate him for his offences, and if he does not submit and receive absolution within a year, he is declared a heretic, and incurs death and con- fiscation of his goods. § IX. — Papal Encroachments on Episcopal Rights. In order completely to subvert the old constitution of the Church and the regular administration of dioceses by bishops, the institution of Legates was brought in from Hildebrand's time. Sometimes with a general com- mission to visit Churches, sometimes for a special emergency, but always invested with unlimited powers, and determined to bring back considerable sums of money over the Alps, the legates traversed different countries surrounded by a troop of greedy Italians, and armed against opposition by ban and interdict, and held forced synods, the decrees of which they themselves dictated. Contemporaries in their alarm compared Encroachments on Bishops ; Dispensations. 165 the appearance of these legates to physical calamities, hailstrokes or pestilence.^ Complaints and appeals to Eome availed nothing, for it was a fixed principle with the Popes to uphold the authority of their legate. The Pope in the new system is not only the chief, but is in fact the sole legislator of the Church. He, as Boniface vni. expressed it, carries all rights in the shrine of his breast, and draws out thence from time to time what he thinks the needs of the world and Church require. And so it comes to pass that a single Pope of the thirteenth or fourteenth century, an Innocent iii., Gregory ix., or John xxii., has made more laws than fifty Popes of an earlier period put together. The notions about the plenary powers of the Caesars prevalent in the latter days of the Eoman empire had their influence here, and the Popes called their acts by the same name as the Caesarean laws, Eescripts and Decrees. And as the Pope makes laws by his supreme authority, so too he can wholly or temporarily suspend them ; thus he, and he alone, can dispense with Church laws, whether canons of Councils 1 Cf. e.y., Johann. Sarisb. 0pp. (ed. Giles), iii. 331. Polyorat. 5, 16: " Ita debacchantiir ao si ad Ecclesiam iiagellandam egressus sit Satan a facie Domini." — Petri Blesends epist. ap. Baron, a. 1193, 2 ff. 1 66 Papal Infallibility. or decrees of Popes. The customary limitation — that he cannot dispense with the law of God — ^was frequently superseded by the canonists, especially since Innocent m., hy his declaration about marriage, and the yet holier bond between a bishop and his diocese, which the Pope can dissolve at his good pleasure, prepared the way for the belief that it is not beyond papal power to dispense with some at least of the laws of God. Whenever the Pope issued a new law the Owrvi reckoned what the necessary dispensations would bring in, and many laws were unmistakably framed with a view to the purchase of dispensations. So too with exemptions from episcopal jurisdiction; every exempted corporation or monastery had to pay a yearly tribute to the See of Eome, whose interest it was to thwart and restrain episcopal authority^ whenever it tried to act And thus a bishop who took in hand the administration of his diocese in good earnest found himself cramped at every step, surrounded, as it were, in his own country by hostile fortresses closed against him, and in perpetual danger of incurring suspension or excommunication, or being cited to Eome for violating some papal privilege ; for every college and convent watched jealously over its own privileges and exemptions, and regarded the bishops Encroachments on Bishops ; the Pallium. 167 as its natural enemies. And as bishops and corpora- tions were in mutual hostility, so the parochial clergy found opponents and dangerous rivals in the richly privileged Mendicant Orders, who were indefatigable in their attempts to appropriate the lucrative functions of the priesthood, and to decoy the people from the parish churches into their own. The members of the Curia, as John of Salisbury remarks, had one common view : whoever did not agree to their doctrines was either a heretic or a schismatic.^ The Curia wanted to be in- fallible even before the Popes made that claim. They thought this shield indispensable for carrying on their business. The Popes made their first experience with the Pal- lium of the irresistible charm, which signs of honour, decorations, titles, distinctions in the colour and cut of a garment, have for ordinary men, and especially clerics, and thus learnt what effective instruments of power they might become. From the fifth century the Popes had bestowed the pall on archbishops named as vicars of their patriarchal rights, and in the eighth it began also to be given to metropolitans, although 1 Polycrat. 6, 24. 0pp. (ed. Giles), iv. 61. " Qui a doctrinS vestrS dis- sentit, aut haereticua aut sohismatious eet." 1 68 Papal Infallibility. these last hesitated to receive it on the conditions offered by Eome, as was proved by the attitude of the Prankish archbishops towards the thoroughly Eoman- izing Boniface.^ On the strength of the pseudo-Isi- dorian fabrications, which exercised a most destructive influence on metropolitan rights, the Popes who became founders of the new system — Mcolas I., John vm., Gregory vil. — insisted that a metropolitan could per- form no ecclesiastical function before receiving this ornament. The next step was to ascribe a secret and mystical power to it, and when Paschal li., and all the Popes after him, and the Decretals maintained that the fulness of high priestly office was attached to it, it inevitably followed that this office is an outflow of the papal plenary power, so far as it extends. Meanwhile this notion of metropolitan jurisdiction being delegated from the Pope was developed in contradiction to facts ; for the Popes had appropriated to themselves the weightiest and most valuable rights of metropolitans, and did this still more after the beginning of the thir- teenth century ; and next they began to give the pall to some bishops avowedly as a mere ornament, and without any single right being attached to it. But as a means I Bonif. Epist. (ed. Serarius) ; Ep. 141, 142, pp. 211, 212. Encroachments ; Plenitudo Potestatis. 1 69 for reducing metropolitans to complete dependence on Eome, sealed moreover by an oath of obedience, it quite answered its end. Gregory vii. altered the previous form into a regular oath of vassalage, so that the relation was one of personal loyalty, and the terms of the oath were borrowed from oaths of civil fealty.^ The next thing was to mould the bishops by a vow of obedience into pliant tools of the Eoman sovereignty, and guard against any danger of opposition on their part to the expanding schemes and claims of the Cwria. For a long time bishops were much better off than metropolitans, for in the thirteenth century they stiU received their confirmation — which in the ancient Church was not separated from ordination — from the metropolitan, whUe the latter had to buy the pall and the accompanying license to exercise this office at a high price from Eome.^ Innocent iii. grounded on a misrepresentation of a passage of Leo i.'s letter to the Bishop of Thessalonica, whom he had made his vicar, saying, that he had com- mitted to him part of his responsibility, and on one 1 The " Kegulse Patrum," whioli the metropolitaji previotisly swore to observe, was changed into " Kegalia S. Petri." ^ In the fifteenth century, German archbishops had to pay 20,000 florins r£1600], equivalent to ten times that sum now, for the pallium. 1 70 Papal Infallibility. of the Isidorian fabrications, the principle that the Pope alone has plenary jurisdiction in the Church, while all hishops are merely his assistants for such portions of his duty as he pleases to intrust to them. This may be said to be the completion of the papal system. It reduces all bishops to mere helpers, to whom the Pope assigns such share of his rights as he finds good, whence he can also assume to himself at his arbitrary will such of their ancient rights as he pleases.^ And now the term " Universal Bishop," used by the Pope, gained its true significance. Though rejected even by Leo. rx., it described quite correctly the Pope's posi- tion as understood at Eome since the beginning of the thirteenth century. In the ancient sense of the word there were no more any bishops, but only delegates and vicars of the Pope. A number of rights never thought of by the ancient Popes followed as a matter of course. There was no need of particular laws or papal reservations in many cases ; it was enough to draw the necessary consequences from the Isidorian or Gregorian fabrications and inter- polations. It seemed self-evident that the Pope alone ' Innoc m. Ep. i. 350 ; Bearet. Greg. 3. 8. Encroachments ; Plenitudo Potestahs. 171 could appoint and depose bishops, could interfere always and directly in their dioceses by the exercise of a con- current jurisdiction, and bring any cases before his own Court. Innocent iii., as we have seen, claimed a special Divine revelation for the Pope's right of depos- ing bishops. It has been charged against him as a wicked error and capricious invention; but we must remember that, when he had persuaded himself and others that every Pope possesses the fulness of juris- diction, and is absolute ruler of the whole Church, not by concession of the Church, but by Divine appoint- ment, he might fairly assume a Divine right to dispose of his bishops as an absolute monarch disposes of his of&cials. And, in fact, some bishops soon began to subscribe themselves as such "by the favour of the Papal See." Whatever relics of freedom had hitherto been preserved from the ancient Church were now trampled and rooted out. No one had doubted before that a bishop could re- sign his office when he felt unequal to its duties. This was usually done at Provincial Synods. But from the time of Gratian and Innocent iii., the new principle, that only the Pope can dissolve the bond between a bishop and his Church, was extended to the case of resignation 172 Papal TnfaUibility. also.^ And then came the further requirement, made into a rule by John xxn., that sees vacated by resigna- tion lapsed to the Pope. Again, the appeals encouraged in every way by the Popes, and the ready grants of dispensations, paved the way for their acquiring one of the most important rights, in the appointment of bishops. As the pseudo-Isidore had given an unprecedented extension and impetus to appeals to Eome, the new Decretal legislation since Alexander m. was specially adapted for multiplying and encouraging appeals to the Curia. Alexander tnew well what he was about when he declared appeals, which hung like a Damocles' sword over the head of every bishop, to be the most important of his rights. Some thirteen new articles in the Decretals ^ provided for the Curia being occupied annually with thousands of processes, which often extended over many years, bringing in a rich harvest to the of&cials, and filling the streets and also the churchyards of Eome. And a further point was secured by this, for the bishops and arch- deacons, impeded and disabled by the endless number of Papal exemptions and privileges, lost all desire to 1 D. de Translat. c. 2 (1, 7). 2 They are quoted in Die Gesckichte der Appel. von Geisil. Gerichtsho/. Frankfort, 1788, p. 127 sqj. Encroachments on Bishops ; Appeals. 173 take Church discipline in hand, and thereby involve themselves in tedious and costly processes at Eome. And thus the anarchy in dioceses and wild demoraliza- tion of the clergy reached a point one cannot read of without horror in contemporary writers. When appeals came to Eome on disputed presentations to benefices or episcopal elections, the Popes often took occasion to oust both the rival claimants, and appoint a third per- son. Abbot Conrad of Lichtenau says, — " There is no bishopric or spiritual dignity or parish that is not made the subject of a process at Eome, and woe to him who comes empty-handed ! Eejoice, mother Eome, at the crimes of thy sons, for they are thy gain; to thee flows all the gold. and silver; thou art become mistress of the world through the badness, not the piety, of mankind."^ No people suffered more from these appeals and processes than the Germans. After the Concordat of Worms (1122), the Popes had gradually managed to exclude the German emperors from all share in episcopal appointments, and practically to nullify the Concordat. And then, partly from the circumstances of the German dioceses, partly from the new Papal enactments, most 1 Vliron. p. 321. 174 Papal Infallibility. elections came to be disputed, and a handle was given to one party or the other for an appeal to Eome, which was taken full advantage of The candidates or their proc- tors had to waste years in Eome, and either died there or carried home with them nothing but debts, disease, and a vivid impression of the dominant corruption there. The Popes could now dispose as they liked of the German archbishops and their votes for the empire ; for besides the pallium, the heavy tax, and the oath of obedience, they had the Eoman debts and censures to fear, in case of insolvency, and this constrained them to follow the Pope's guidance even in secular matters, supposing the oath they had sworn was not sufficient to make them into mere machines of the will of the Curia. These facts alone explain the elections of Henry Easpo in 1246, William of Holland in 1247, Eichard and Alphonsus in 1257, and the miserable interregnum from 1256 to 1273. Only in this way could the ruin of the Hohenstaufen House have been accomplished, and Germany have been kept in the state of weakness and division required for the French and Angiovine interest, and the policy of the French Popes, Urban iv., Clement rv., and Martin rv. During the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the Encroachments on Bishops ; Patronage. 175 Popes made gigantic strides in the acquisition of new rights and the suppression of other peoples'. Innocent III. had recognised the right of archbishops to confirm and ordain their suffragans/ but Nicolas III. (1280) re- served their confirmation to the Pope. In the ancient Church it was held uncanonical for a Pope or Patriarch to make appointments or bestow benefices out of his own district. The Popes began their meddling in the matter only by begging recommendations of favourites of their own, and without specifying any particular benefice. So was it still in the tweKth century. But soon these recommendations took the form of mandates. Italians, nephews and favourites of the Popes, persons who had aided them in the controversies of the day, or suffered in their interest, were to be provided for, enriched, and indemnified in foreign countries. Eights of patronage were not respected if they stood in the way ; the Papal lawyer knew how to manage that, often through means of Papal executors appointed for the purpose. This caused loud discontent in national Churches ; protests were made even at the Synod of Lyons in 1245. Mean- while the Popes had another gate open for attaining rights of patronage. A great number of bishops and 1 J). Be Elect, c. 11, 20, 28 (1, 6). 1 76 Papal Infallibility. prelates were drawn to Eome and detained there by processes spun out intermmably. They died o£f by shoals in that unhealthy city, the home of fevers, as Peter Damiani calls it, and now suddenly a new Papal right was devised, of giving away all benefices vacated by the death or resignation of their occupants at Eome. Clement rv. announced it to the world in 1266, while at the same time broadly affirming the right of the Pope to give away all Church offices without distinction.' Then came the reservations of the French Popes at Avignon. They reserved to themselves a certain num- ber of bishoprics, which, however, in France they often had to bestow according to the pleasure of the king. At the same time commendams were introduced, whereby they sometimes gave abbacies to secular priests, and other Church dignities to laymen. The oath of obedience or vassalage the bishops had now to take to the Pope was understood as binding them to unconditional subjection in political as well as ecclesiastical matters, whence Innocent in. de- clared the German bishops perjured who acknowledged any other emperor than Otho whom he had chosen.^ It was by means of this oath that the Popes carried the 1 Sext. Deer. 3, 4. 2. « Registr. de Neg. Imp. Ep. 68. Encroachments on Bishops. 177 exclusion of the Hohenstaufen from the throne.^ Accord- ing to Pius IL, a bishop broke his oath who uttered any truth inconvenient for the Pope, and he required the Archbishop of Mayence by virtue of it to convoke no imperial parliament ■without the Pope's consent.^ Thus the Eoman Court became the universal heir of all former authorities and institutions in the Church. It had appropriated the rights of metropolitans, synods, bishops, national Churches, and besides that, the powers formerly exercised by the emperors and Prankish kiags, in ecclesiastical matters. The inevitable consequence was to cripple the pastoral, whether parochial or diocesan administration throughout the Church, and introduce a general state of religious disease and decay, bishops and parish priests withdrawing more and more from their pastoral charges. This gave an immense lift to monas- ticism, with its strongly organized centralization, and the great religious communities became the centres of all active Church life. The exemptions and other privi- leges, only to be obtained at Eome, bound them closely to the Papacy, whose great support they were well known to be against the bishops. Leo x. assembled a commission, composed of members of the Eeligious 1 Eaynald. Annal. a. 1206, 13 ; Leibnit. Prodr. Cod. Jur. Gent. i. 11, 12. 2 Gotellin, Comrn. Pii II., 65, 143. M 178 Papal Infallibility. Orders in Eome, to consult on the means for forwarding papal interests and their own against their common enemies, the bishops.^ " For," says PaUavicini, " every monarchical Government must have a select hody of subalterns in every province of the kingdom not subject to the immediate local authorities ; hence exemptions."^ The monks were the w HIIin g and devoted servants and agents of the Koman Court against the bishops,* who were looked upon and treated as its bom enemies. At no time or place has the contradiction been so glaring between theory and practice, principles and proceedings, as during those centuries at Eome and Avignon. The Popes condemned all taking of interest, but the most elaborate banking business was carried on under their very eyes, and in close connexion with the Curia, who would have lost the breath of life, if the Florentine and Siennese capitalists and brokers had not advanced the required sums at usurious interest to the prelates, place-hunters, and numberless litigants. The papal bankers were a protected and privileged class, while everywhere else their fellows were under the ban, 1 Bzovius, Annul. Eccl. xix. a. 1516. ' Storia del Concil. di Trento, 12, 13. 8. ' Bossuet says, "La cour de Borne regardant les evSqnes comme ses ennemis, n'a plus mis sa coniiance et ses esperances que dans cette multi- tude d'exempts." — (Euvres, xri 461. Ed. de liege, 1768. Encroachments on Bishops. 1 79 and collected their debts and interest without mercy under shelter of Papal censures.^ As early as the twelfth century the Curia had made the discovery, which they were already reaping the fruits of in the thir- teenth, that it was greatly for their interest to have a number of bishops, dioceses, and beneficiaries in their debt all over Europe, who were all the more pliant the more easily they could be held to payment by excom- munication, and by putting on the screw of interest, at a time when ready money could generally be procured with difficulty only, and at an enormous interest. Thus Cardinal Nicolas Tudeschi, the first canonist of his day, observes that the Church dignities were so loaded with excessive imposts and extortions that they were always subject to debts, and nothing of their revenues was avail- able for religious purposes." Cardinal Zabarella saw clearly enough that the root of the ecclesiastical cor- ruption was the doctrine of legal sycophants about the papal omnipotence, whereby they had persuaded the Popes that they could do whatever they liked. " So 1 Of. Biblioth. de I'Ecole daCha/rtfes, 19' annSe (Paris 1858), p. 118, and Peter Dubois' account, about 1306 (" De Eecup. Terrs SanctEC," Bongars, Gesta Dei per Francos, ii. 315), of how one had to borrow many thou- sands " sub gravibus usuris ab illis qui public^ Paps mercatores vocantur " to spend on the Pope and Cardinals. * Tract de Condi. Basil, in Pragmatica Semctio (ed. Paris, 1666), p. 913. 1 80 Papal Infallibility. completely has the Pope destroyed all rights of aU lesser Churches that their bishops are as good as non-exist- ent."^ Chancellor Gerson says, still more emphatically, " In consequence of clerical avarice, simony, and the greed and lust of power of the Popes, the authority of bishops and inferior Church of&cers is completely done away with, so that they look like mere pictures in the Church, and are almost superfluous."^ The Bishop of Lisieux observes later how the whole constitution of the Church is in a state of dissolution, and everything has long been fuU of quarrels and divisions through the conduct of the Popes.^ And the Church, torn to pieces with discontents and dissensions, made the impression on thinking men like Gerson, Pelayo, d' A illy, ZabareUa, and others, of having become " brutal," a hard prison- house, where only dungeon-air coruld be breathed, and therefore full of hypocrisy and pretence. The Vene- tian Sanuto, in 1327, reckoned that half the Christian world was under excommunication, including the most devoted servants of the Popes, so lavish had they been in the use of ban and interdict since 1071.* Epis- ' De ScMsmatibus (ed. Schardius), pp. 560, 561. ' Opp. (ed. Dupin), ii. p. 1, 174. 3 In a letter to Louis xi. See Durand de Maillane, LiberUs de I'JBglise Ocdlieane, iii. 6, 61, sq^q. * Jipist. ajp. Bongars. Oesta Beiper Francos, ii. 310. Encroachments on Bishops. i8i copal officials, archdeacons, and all who could then ex- communicate, followed the papal example in this respect. They considered the Roman Church their model, and inferred that they should not be niggardly in the use of such weapons. And if, as often happened, bishops themselves were suspended or excommunicated, simply for being unwilling or unable to pay the legates their journey money, why should laymen fare better ?' Thus it came to pass, as Dubois said in 1300, that at every sitting of the episcopal officials in France more than 10,000 souls were thrust out of the way of salvation into the hands of Satan -^ and in every parish, thirty, forty, or even seventy persons were excommunicated on the slenderest pretexts. Absolution from censures could indeed be purchased, but an exorbitant price was often demanded.^ § X. — The, Personal Attitude of the Popes. The means used by the Popes to secure obedience, and break the force of opposition among people, princes, or clergy, were always violent. The interdict which -suddenly robbed millions, the whole population of a > Memoires de I'Acad. des Inscript. (1855), xviii. 458. ^ See the episcopal memorial drawn up for the General Council of 1311, Bzovius, Annal. Eccl. ann. 1311, p. 163 (ed. Colon.) 1 8 2 Papal Infallibility. country, — often for trifling causes which they had no- thing to do with themselves, — of Divine worship and sacraments, was no longer sufficient. The Popes de- clared families, cities, and states outlawed, and gave them lip to plunder and slavery, as, for instance, Cle- ment V. did with Venice, or excommunicated them, like Gregory xi., to the seventh generation, or they had whole cities destroyed from the face of the earth, and the in- habitants transported, — the fate Boniface vin. deter- mined on for Palestrina. It is a psychological marvel how this unnatural theory of a priestly domination, embracing the whole world, controlling and subjugating the whole of life, could ever have become established. It would have required superhuman capacities and Divine attributes to wield such a power even in the most imperfect way with some regard to equity and justice, and conscientious and really religious men would have been tormented, nay, utterly crushed, under the sense of its rightfulness and the corresponding obligations it involved. _Ihere- was indeed no want of modest phrase f^l ngy ; pyery Pnpp. as serts i n the customaryJagguage_that^is_3ei: ■ Verci, Sioria delta Marca Trivig. lii. 87. ' Opere di S. Cat. de Siena, ii. 160. Personal A ttitude of Popes. 183 cap acities are unequal to the dignity and burden, but fo r all that, tbeii constant endeavour for centuries to increase their already excessive power is a proof that no need _ f or restricting theraselv e3jwagujujl^;_realized. There have been kings "who said they would not be absolute rulers if they could. So the Popes of the first centuries could say, We desire not to rule over canons and coun- cils, but to be ruled by thena. '^iit sincp. "NTicnla.H t , a.nd especially since Gregory vii, the princi ple was _aaMg&d t hat the Pope is lord of canons and councils : the l asL-. jarmj ^iH will bnt hia will is la.w. In numberless cases, of course, his will was simply the custom and practical tradition of the Curia, and the Pope, the mightiest ruler in the world, was in one sense the most limited since the eleventh century, for he could only act as the temporary depositary of this capital of power, a steward who ought to increase, but must never suffer it to be diminished. The strongest will must succumb before the quiet, passive, but energetic resistance of a corporation bound together by common interests, work- ing by a common rule, and striving for a common end ; how much more the good intentions of individual Popes, generally of great age when elected, who saw but a few years of work before them, and knew by long experience 1 84 Papal Infallibility. the firmness of that serried phalanx of ofacials smronnd- ing them, whose opposition soon reduced them to a mere trunk without arms or feet. And thus it came to pass that, while those at a distance felt and said that the proverMal shortness of Popes' lives was a providential dispensation to save the Church from utter ruin,^ the Popes admitted that they felt themselves the most un- fortunate of men. Thus Adrian iv. was driven to the melancholy avowal that no condition is so pitiahle as a Pope's, whose throne is planted thick with thorns, and his destiny only bitterness, with a heavy weight pressing on his shoulders. It was this consciousness of supreme power in theory, and of lamentable slavery and dependence on a purely selfish Court in practice, combined with a feeling of the curse that must rest on such an administrative machine, composed of clerical parasites and vampires, which ex- torted the complaint uttered by Nicolas v. before two Carthusian monks, that no man in the world was more wretched and unhappy than he was, that nobody who came near him told him the truth, and that his Italians were insatiable,^ etc. Still later, MarceUus n. exclaimed, 1 Joh. Sarisb. Polyc. 6. 24 ; Opp. iv. 60 (ed. Giles). ' Vespas, Vita Nicol. \. in Muratori, Script. Mer. ItaZ. xxv. 286. Personal A ttitude of Popes. 185 under a similar feeling of anguish, that he did not see how a Pope could be saved.^ One may say without exaggeration, that the indivi- dual Popes did not know the whole extent of their power, it was so immense. More than a century's legislation, steadily directed to the one end of self- aggrandizement, from the Bictatus of Gregory to the latest articles of the Extravagantes, had so well pro- vided for every contingency, that a Pope could never be at a loss for some legitimate plea for interference, however purely secular the point at issue might be. By the formula, " non obstante," ete., the Pope's right was secured of suspending for that particular case any papal law which chanced to conflict with the interests of the Curia. The whole legislation of the ancient Church was gradually abrogated, or sometimes changed into the precise opposite. The papal decretals had devoured the decisions of councils, like Pharaoh's seven lean kine. What had become of the Mcene, Chalce- donian, and African canons ? Like half-buried tomb- stones in a deserted churchyard, scattered fragments of this older order cropped up here and there. " It is clear as the noonday sun," said Chancellor Gerson, the 1 PoUidor. Vit. Marc. II., 132 (Eoma, 1744). 1 86 Papal Infallibility. most learned theologian and warmest friend of the Charch in that age, " that the ordinances of the four first and subsequent General Councils have heen metamor- phosed and exposed to mockery and oblivion through the ever-increasing avarice of Popes, Cardinals, and Prelates, through the unjust constitutions of the papal Court, the rules of the Chancery, and the dispensations, absolutions, and indulgences granted from lust of domination."^ To the Popes, not to the German emperors, belongs the title "semper Augustus'' as formerly understood. They are " always aggrandizers of the kingdom," i.e., of their own. They became such under the sincere conviction, cherished from earliest youth, that the welfare of the whole Church and Christian world depended on their power being great and irresistible ; that their right and power, and theirs alone, was truly divine, and therefore unlimited, because no mere earthly right could limit an authority given from heaven. And we must recognise the sincerity of this conviction, by which the Popes were thoroughly possessed, even when it drove them to the use of crooked means, to falsification, for- gery, and misrepresentation. Everytliing which Popes had formerly shrunk from or ' Trad, de Ref. Eccl. in Cane. Univ. c. 17. Personal A ttitude of Popes. 1 8 7 avoided, or been cautioned against, they now eagerly seized upon. Gregory the Great had complained that, under the pressure of business, his mind could not rise to higher things.^ Even Alexander 11., in 1066, when the great centralization movement was just beginning, said that for five years he had scarcely been able to pay any attention to the internal affairs of his own special flock, the Church of the city of Eome, still less of foreign Churches.^ Early Church history was one long warning for the Popes not to mix themselves up with the affairs of foreign Churches, and want to decide from a distance on one-sided and partial information. Every one in the ancient Church, the Popes included, was persuaded that nothing is more injurious in Church matters than decisions made at a distance, in ignorance of local circumstances. As a rule they made mistakes, and involved themselves in humiliations and contradic- tory judgments. So it was with Basilides in Spain, Hilary of Aries in Gaul, Marcellus of Ancyra, Eusta- thius of Sebaste, Meletius at Antioch, with Eros and Lazarus, and with Apiarius in Africa; constantly the Popes made rash mistakes, and were deceived, imposed 1 Greg. M. Ep. i. 1 ; vii. 25. 5. * Bouquet, Script. Rer. Oall. xiv. 543. 1 8 8 Papal Infallibility. upon, and misled through, their hurried or importunate action. And constantly had the wisdom of the Nicene decision been commended, that everything should be examined and decided on the spot. The Popes and Gregorians were ready enough, indeed, to appeal to the Nicene canon, but they appealed to the spurious one. And if, in the fourth and fifth centuries, the Popes only interfered -with the concerns of foreign Churches now and then at long intervals, and in the same way as the bishops of other apostolical sees, such cases oc- curred now by thousands in one year, and every new reservation was a copious source of emolument, so that Bishop Alvaro Pelayo tells us that whenever he entered the apartments of the Eoman Court clergy, he found them occupied in counting up the gold coin which lay there in heaps.^ Every opportunity of extending the jurisdiction of the Curia was welcome. Nothing was too insignificant Exemptions and privileges were so managed that fresh grants became constantly necessary. Thus, e.g., the im- munity from episcopal censures granted beforehand to individuals and whole colleges was an inexhaustible source of revenue. And the bishops on their side were ' Dt Plaiuta Bed., ii. 29. Personal Attitude of Popes. 1 89 compelled to procure papal privileges, at least to enable them to guard their property with censures against holders of Eoman privileges ; the Bishop of Laon obtained such a privilege from Urban iv.^ So far was the principle, " divide et impera," carried at Eome, that even cathedral chapters, who are supposed to be the immediate counsellors and presbytery of the bishop, were armed with privileges and exemptions against him, and he against them. If we look at the huge number of Papal priv£eges conferred in the thirteenth century on one national Church only, the French, we cannot but marvel at the slavish spirit of the bishops, who dared not move an inch without sanction from Eome, as well as at the utter insignificance of the objects for which special authorization or dispensation from Eome was thought necessary. If a monastery wanted leave for the sick to eat meat, or the inmates to talk at dinner, a permission from the Pope was required. Above all, bishops, convents, and individuals needed to protect themselves by Papal privileges against the censures and spiritual methods of extortion employed so prodigally by the Legates.^ * Qallia Christ, vi. instr. 308. " A clear idea of these may be formed from inspecting Brequigny's and Pardessus' Tables Ch/ronologiques, 1230-1300, a.d. I go Papal Infallibility. § XI. — Tlie, Relation of Popes to Councils. Hitherto the Church had known but one means of protection against internal corruption, that of Councils. But the attitude towards Councils taken up by the Popes since Gregory vn. made this too unavailing. Councils were perverted, as we shall see, into mere tools of Papal domination, and reduced to a condition of undignified servitude, which made them mere shadows of the Councils of the ancient Church. All synods counted as oecumenical, and whose decrees had force throughout the universal Church, were held during the first nine centuries ia the East, — at Mcsea, Ephesus, Chalcedon, and Constantiuople. During that period the Popes had never once made the attempt to gather about them a great synod of bishops from differ- ent countries. Two centuries followed, the tenth and eleventh, without any great synod. In 1123, immedi- ately after the close of the Investiture controversy, and to confirm and seal the great victory won through the Gregorian system, CaJixtus u. assembled a numerous synod, afterwards called (Ecumenical (the first Lateran) at which, very significantly, twice as many abbots as bishops (600 to 300) were present. No contemporary Relation of Popes to Councils. 191 tells us anything of this first general assembly of the West; it passed unnoticed, and left no trace behind. The Pope promulgated at it certain laws on subordinate points — simony, clerical marriages, and the Truce of God. There is no sign of any action on the part of the bishops ; they seem to have been summoned merely as a foil to the Papacy, for this was the first example of a council professing to be oecumenical, where not the Council, as for a thousand years, but the Pope published the decrees in his own name.^ Sixteen years later, in 1139, Innocent 11. assembled a second (Ecumenical Synod, again at Eome (the second Lateran). Once more the bishops appeared as mere passive witnesses to hear the Pope's lofty commands, and to see him tear, with words of abuse, the pastoral staff from the hand and the pallium from the shoulders of prelates ordained by his rival, Pierleone.^ More serious and eventful was the third of these Eoman Church assemblies, held in 11 79 by Alexander iii. (the third Lateran). There were but three sessions, and the Pope published the twenty-seven canons he had put ^ "Auctoritate sedis apostolioffiproMbemus" in first canon. Harduin, Concil. vi. ii. 1111. 2 Harduin, i. o. 1214. [Pierleone was the anti-pope Anacletus ii.— Ta] 192 Papal Infallibility. before them as enacted "with the consent of the Synod." So completely did the -world regard these assemhlies as mere arrangements for the solemn promulgation of papal commands, that the Emperor described the third Lateran Synod in a document as " the Council of the Supreme Pontiff."^ Any free deliberation in presence of an Iimocent m., when in 1215 he summoned 453 bishops to the fourth Lateran Council, was not to be thought of. From the standpoint of the Popes at that time, the only business of bishops at a Council must be to inform the Pope of the condition of their dioceses, to give him their advice, and form a picturesque background for the solemn promul- gation of his decrees. Perhaps the greatest number of bishops ever seen at a Western Council were present, besides ambassadors of sovereigns. Innocent had his decrees read to them,^ and after listening in silence they were allowed to give their assent.^ When they wished to return home, the Pope forbade them untU. they had paid him large sums of money, which they had to 1 See Trouillart, Docum. de Bile, i. 389,— " In general! Concilio summi Pontifiois . . . judicatum est." 2 See Matt. Paris, Hist. Angl. ann. 1215. " Reoitata sunt in pleno Con- cilio, capitula 70." 3 We know tlie decisions only from their appearing in different parts of Gregory ix.'s decretal book under the heading, " luuocentius m. in Concil. Lat." Relation of Popes to Cotmcils. 1 93 borrow at high interest frora the brokers of the papal Court.i The one act of the first Council of Lyons in 1245 worthy of record, was the deposition of Frederick 11. by Innocent iv. with 144 bishops, chiefly Spanish and French.^ In this affair of such high importance to Italy and Germany, these two nations were either not at all, or very inadecLuately, represented ; it was an assembly chiefly composed of prelates from foreign nations which supported the Pope in his procedure, and allowed itself thus to help him in meddling with the concerns of Italy and Germany. The right of deposing the Emperor, and thereby plunging Germany and Italy into confusion and a long civil war, was again proved by the fables to which Gregory vii. had before ap- ' Matt. Paris, Hist. Minor, Lond. 1866, ii. 176. ^ WeleamfroiiifromEaynaldiis(4?smffiZ. ann. 1245, i.) that Innocent only summoned the ArohMsliop of Sens with his suffragans, the King of Prance, and a number of English bishops. Eaynaldus, who had the papal Register, •w-ith all the documents before him, could not disclose more. The German prelates, who had come to Lyons, departed shortly before the opening of the Council. Innocent therefore avoided calling it a General Council ; and it is a proof of the unhistorical and imsoientiflc character of so many theo- logical manuals, that they usually cite this as an CEcumenical Council, though it has no claim on the conditions they themselves give to being such. StiU more glaringly is this true of the Council of Vienne in 1311, to which Clement v. himself said, that he had only summoned certain selected bishops. — See his Letter to the Emperor Henry iii. in Eayuald. Anrud. ann. 1311. N 194 Papal Infallibility. pealed, viz., that Pope Innocent had excommunicated the Emperor Arcadius, and Pope Anastasius had not only excommunicated the Emperor Anastasius, but deprived him of his empire.^ The natural inference was, that the Popes could do to a German Emperor what they had done to the Greek Emperor at Constan- tinople. This time again the bishops and abbots had to pay or promise the Pope large sums for carrying on his war against the Emperor, and thus to burden their churches and convents with heavy debts.^ The second Synod of Lyons, counted as the sixth (Ecumenical Council of the West, at which 500 bishops and twice as many abbots assembled in 1274, was con- voked by the best Pope of that age, who, had it only been possible, would gladly have repaired the mischief done by the policy of his predecessors — Gregory x. But even he did not venture to restore the old forms of Councils, necessary and helpful as they would have been for effecting a reformation of the desolated and disjointed Church. The union with the Greek Church was a mere formal act concluded without any delibera- tion, and broke up again in a few years. Eor the rest, ^ See the official historian of the Curia, Nicolas of Curbio, Vita Innoc. IT. in Baluze, Miscell. i. 198, ed. Mansi. ' For fuller particulars, of. Tillemont, Vie, de S. Louis, iii. 83. Relation of Popes to Councils. 195 it is impossible to say what decrees the Pope had published at the Council, for the thirty-one articles found in the papal Decretals, under the title, " Gregory X. at the Synod of Lyons,'"- were partly promulgated during the CouncU, and partly afterwards, as the Pope himself declares.^ Of the intended reform of the Church nothing was effected. As the deposition of the Emperor Frederick was the one event of the first Synod of Lyons, so the suppres- sion of the Templars was the one result of the Synod of Vienne in 1311. When at that Synod, to which he only admitted bishops previously selected by himself, Clement v. observed that a majority was favourably disposed towards the Order of Templars, he ordered a cleric to proclaim, that any bishop who spoke a word without being first asked for his opinion by the Pope, would incur the greater excommunication. And thereupon he announced that, " by the plenitude of his power," he annihilated the Order, although he could not abolish it on the strength of the criminal charges brought against it. But Clement himself was a m.ere tool of the French King ; to accommodate him he had ordered his inquisitors everywhere to extort confessions 1 Sextus Decretal. ^ Harduin, Condi, vii. 705. 1 96 Papal Infallibility. from the ill-fated Knights -Templars by torture. And yet he must have known before the Council met, that the result of the investigation did not justify the penal abolition of the Order. All he gained by it was, that the King allowed him to put a stop to the process against his predecessor Boniface vin., which was a source of pain, anxiety, shame, and humiliation for Clement and the Papacy generally ; for if Boniface had been condemned on the charge of heresy and unbelief brought against him by Bling PhiUp, all his acts would have become null and void, and a terrible confusion in the Church must have followed. "This assemblage," says the contemporary writer, Walter of Hemingburgh, " cannot be called a Council, for the Pope did every- thing out of his own head, so that the Council neither answered nor assented."^ The servitude of bishops and degradation of Councils could go no further. And now came a change for which the Great Schism pre- pared the way. After the deposition of the last German Emperor who deserved the name, July 17, 1245, the Papacy be- came the prey for French and Italians to quarrel over. In the long contest of Popes and anti-popes, the old 1 Chrm. Walt, de Hemingb. Lond. 1849, li. 293. Relation of Popes to Councils. 197 weapons by which the Papacy had acquired its gigantic power became somewhat blunted ; the nations rebelled. A different spirit' and different principles prevailed at the fifteenth century Councils of Pisa, Constance, and Basle, and the preponderance of Italian bishops was broken by new regulations. Even at the Synod of Florence in 1439, the forms of the ancient Councils and free discussion had to be allowed on account of the Greeks, and the mere dictation and promulgation of decrees previously prepared in the papal Curia had to be abandoned. Soon, however, better days for the Curia returned. Julius II. inaugurated, and Leo x. concluded, the fifth Lateran Synod with about fifty-three Italian bishops and a number of cardinals (1512-17). That such an assem- blage is no representation of the whole Church, that it sounds like a mockery to put it on a par with the Synods of Nicaea, Chalcedon, and Constantinople at a time when, by the admission of a bishop who was pre- sent, there were not four capable men among the 200 bishops of Italy, is evident to the blindest eye. Julius showed his appreciation of it, when he had a decree laid before it at the third session forbidding the annual market hitherto held at Lyons, and transferring it to 1 98 Papal Infallibility. Geneva.^ Prior Kilian Leib of Eebdorf expresses won- der in his annals at this being called a General Coun- cil, at which hardly any one was present besides the usual attendants of the Court, and nothing of import- ance was done.^ The papal decrees published there were, however, far from unimportant. On the contrary, a de- cree was issued exceeding in weight and significance any published in former Eoman Councils, viz., Leo x's Bull, Pastor uEtemiis, in which, while abolishing the Prag- matic Sanction in France, he declares as a dogma that " the Pope has full and unlimited authority over Coun- cils ; he can at his good pleasure summon, remove, or dissolve them." The proofs for this cited in the Bull are all spurious or irrelevant. Earlier and later fictions, partly borrowed from the pseudo- Isidore, are quoted to show that the ancient Councils were under the absolute authority of the Pope, that even the Nicene Coimcil supplicated him for the confirmation of its decrees, etc. The long deduction, in which every statement would be a lie, if the compiler could be credited with any know- ledge of Church history, closes with the renewal of Boniface vm.'s Bull, U')iam Sanctam. 1 Condi, ed. Labte, xiv. 82. " See Aretin's Beitriirje, -viL 624. Theological Shtdy at Rome. 199 § XII. — Theological Study at Borne. It may seem strange that since the new system of Church government centralized at Eome had come into vogue, and the Councils had pretty well lost their importance, the Popes should not have thought of establishing a theological school ia Eome at the seat of the Curia. The profound ignorance of the Eoman clergy, and their incapacity forjudging theological ques- tions, was proverbial. As early as the end of the seventh century. Pope Agatho had to make the humi- liating confession to the Greeks, that the right interpre- tation of Holy Scripture could not be found with the Eoman clergy, who had to work with their hands for their support They could do no more than preserve the traditions handed down from the ancient Councils and Popes.-' The Greeks, who were better versed in Biblical studies, might well ascribe to this ignorance, admitted by the Popes, the interpreting the prayer of Christ for St. Peter (Luke xxii. 32) in a sense which had never occurred to any one before, and which clearly had but one object, viz., to secure authority in doctrinal matters to the Eoman Church, in spite of the undeni- • Harduin, Condi, iii. 1078. 200 Papal Infallibility. able rudeness and ignorance of its clergy. Their defects in learning and knowledge tad to be suppKed by special Divine inspiration. Gregory II. speaks, fifty years later, as modestly as Pope Agatho. Otho of Vercelli, in the tentb century, and Gerbert in the eleventh, expressed themselves strongly about this theological ignorance of the Eoman clergy.^ But since Gratian's time juris- prudence became the queen of sciences ; exegesis of Holy Scripture, and study of tradition and the Fathers were dropped,for they would have led to suspicious results and dangerous disclosures, and would eventually have exposed the evil contradictions between the old and new law of the Church. The new codes of canon law, Gratian, the decretals, and the Eoman imperial law, were studied ; and, accordingly. Innocent iv. established a school of law in Eome, leaving theology to the distant Paris. Theology was never extensively prosecuted at Eome, or with any result, nor did those who wished to study it go there dur- ing the Middle -Ages. Among the cardinals there were always at least twenty jurists to one theologian; andhere- in the Gwria was genuinely Italian, or Italy genuinely Eoman ; for though from the beginning of the thirteenth 1 Pertz, Monum,. iii. 675. 2 Mail, Nova Coll. vi. ii. 60. "In tanU Ecclesia viz iiiras posset reperiri, quin vel illiteratna, vel simoniacus, Tel esset concubinarius. " Theological Study at Rome. 201 century there had beou an emulation in establishing universities, it was never theology, but jurisprudence and medicine, that was thought of. Although they had some great theologians to show, as Aquinas, Bonaven- ture, ^gidius Colonna, the Italians gladly left the care of theology to the French, English, and Germans, and such of them as desired to become theologians, like those just named, had to seek their education and sphere of work abroad. Dante says of his countrymen that they only study the Decretals, and neglect the Gospels and the Fathers. And among Italians the Eoman clergy did least for the cultivation of theological science.^ The Popes were the more ready to abdicate all influ- ence through the cultivation of science, since so many other means of action were open to them, and such as could not in the long-run bear scientific examination. Moreover, they had the new Eeligious Orders of Domini- cans and Minorites for that work, who, acting under the most stringent censure and discipline of Eome, exercised through their own Generals, and being accustomed to identify the interests of their own Order with those of the ' Eeumont observes (Oeschichte der Stadt Horn, ii. 678) that the intellec- t^ial productiveness of Borne was at best very slight. 202 Papal Infallibility. Curia, had given every guarantee that they would repu- diate whatever did not subserve the new Eoman system. It was from the bosom of these Orders, especially the Dominicans, that the Curia selected its official court theologian — for one at least it was obliged to have — the Master of the Sacred Palace. And thus, as Eoger Bacon and contemporary vsriters generally state, juristic science, and not theology, was the sure road to Church dignities and preferment. For theology, as conducted by the school of St. Anselm of Canterbury, Abailard, Bernard, Eobert Pullus, Hugh and Eichard of St. Victor, and the other scholastics before Aquinas, had done nothing directly for strengthening the papal dominion over the world and establishing the Gregorian system. Nowhere in the writings of these theologians is there any exposition of the doctrine of Church authority on the basis of the papal system. The dealings with the Greeks, before and after the Synod of Lyons in 1274, and the newly discovered spuri- ous testimonies of Greek Fathers and Councils, as well as Gregory rs.'s collection of Decretals, first introduced it into theology. The jurists were the first to prostitute their science to an instrument of flattery, and it was not till after the end of the thirteenth century that the theolo- Theological Shidy at Rome. 203 gians followed them in the same path. Those who took that liae belonged mostly to the great Mendicant Orders, who had the most urgent reasons for advancing rather than depreciating the plenary papal jurisdiction, to which they owed the privileges and exemptions so lavishly bestowed on them ; and if any of their members had written in an opposite sense, they would have been sure soon to find themselves in the convent prison. Only men in so extraordinary and abnormal a position as Occam and other " Spirituals," could be influenced in a contrary direction ; and such writers, as we see in the case of the acute Marsilio of Padua, could find no certain track in the maze of forgeries and fictions, though, they saw through some of them.^ To this jurisprudence, viz., the corrupt system of canon law perverted into an instrument of despotism, and to the Papacy, the wretched state of moral and re- ligious degradation throughout Western Christendom was generally ascribed. By the united streams flowing from 1 [Marsilio of Padua, a famous jurist, wrote a booli called " Defence of the Faith against the Usurped Jurisdiction of the Eoman Pontiff," which had the distinction of being the first work condemned in a papal Bull, issued ty John xxil. in 1327. It was answered in the Summa of Agostino Trionfo of Ancona (dedicated to John xxii.), an Augustinian friar, who maintained the Pope's absolute jurisdiction over the whole world. Chris- tian or Pagan, and over Piirg.itiiry.— Tr.] 204 Papal Infallibility. these two fountains— both, up to 1305, Italian — the 3olognese School of Law and the Gwria — men said the whole world was poisoned. " It is the jurists," according to Eoger Bacon, "who now rule the Church, and torment and perplex Christians with processes endlessly spun out."^ And, in fact, the most powerful Popes, such as Innocent m. and Iimocent iv., Clement iv. and Boniface vin., attained as jurists the highest dignity and sove- reignty over the world. Bacon thought the only remedy was for canon law to become more theological or BiblicaL He saw a source of corruption, just as Dante did, in the papal Decretals, and the precedence over Holy Scripture assigned to them.^ We see how deep that remarkable man, Eoger Bacon, saw into the causes of corruption which were hidden from most of his contemporaries, although he, like all the rest, could only form conjectures, and could not gain that clear insight which was impossible without historical and critical information unattainable in his day. But he believed, and many for forty years (since 1225) had been hoping with him, that a purification of the Church was approaching, through the means of a God-fearing Pope, and, perhaps, with the co-operation • Opus Tert. ed. Brewer, 1859, p. 84. ' Paradiso ix. 136-8. Theological Study at Rome. 205 of a good emperor, consisting essentially in a thorough reform of the system of Church law.^ V § XIII. — jT/ie College of Cardinals. The two main pillars of the new Papacy, and, at the same time, the two institutions which knew how to fetter the Popes themselves, and make them subservi- ent to their own interests, were the College of Cardinals and the Curia. In proportion as the rupture, partly conscious, partly unconscious, between the Papacy and the old Church order and legislation was consummated, the College or Senate of Cardinals took shape, and in 1059, when the right of papal election was transferred to it,hecame a body of electors.^ Through the Legations, and their share in the administration of what had become ' Kog. Bacon, Compend. Stud. ed. Brewer, pp. 339-403. " Totus clerus vaoat STiperbise, luxuri^, avaritiee," etc. Here, too, he dwells on tlie decay of all learning for forty years past, attributing it principally to the cor- ruption of Church law. ^ [Before 1059, the right of election resided in the whole body of Roman clergy, down to the acolytes, with the concurrence of the magistrates and the citizens. Nicolas n., acting under Hildebrand's advice, issued a Bull conferring the elective franchise exclusively on the College of Cardinals, reserving, however, to the German Emperor the right of confirmation. By a Bull of Alexander in., in the third Lateran Council (1179), two-thirds of the votes were required for a valid election, and this regulation is still in force. See Cartwright's Papal Conclaves, pp. 11-16, and of. Eemans's Medueoal Christianity, pp. 73, 101, where the Bull of Nicolas is quoted at length. The forms to be observed in Conclave, still in force, were fixed by a constitution of Gregory x. in the Second Council of Lyons, 1272. — Cartwright, pp. 20 seq.; Hemans, pp. 362-3.— Tr.] 2o6 Papal Infallibility. au unlimited sovereignty, the cardinals rapidly rose to a height from which they looked down on the bishops, who, as late as the eleventh century, took precedence of them in Councils. "While the new system of Papalism was yet in its birth-throes, in 1054, the car- dinal-bishops claimed precedence of archbishops; but in 1196 the archbishops still always took precedence of them. At the Synod of Lyons, in 1245, the precedence of all cardinals, even presbyters and deacons, to all the bishops of the Christian world was first fixed, and never afterwards disputed. By degrees it came to this, that bishops could only venture to speak to cardinals on their knees, and were treated by them as servants.-^ It was not without -set purpose that the Gregorians, Anselm and Gregory of Padua, and Gratian after them, had incorporated into their codes those passages of St. Jerome which aifirm the original equality of bishops and presbyters, and reduce the superiority of bishops to mere customary law. These short-sighted architects of the papal system did not perceive that they were thereby laying the axe to the root of the Eoman Primacy ; aU they wanted was to pave the way for ' See an anonjnnous French writing of the end of the fourteenth century, given in Paulin Paris, Manuscr. Franc. Ti. 265. The College of Cardinals. 207 the superiority of cardinals, and with it the domination of the Curia, and to bnild up the papal system on the ruins of the ancient episcopal system. As their views of the Church and the hierarchy were drawn exclusively from Gratian, bishops towards the end of the thirteenth century were brought to allow themselves to be made cardinal-presbyters, and even to regard as a promotion this degradation of the Episcopate to the Presbyterate, which in the first centuries of the Church would have been thought a monstrosity. In the palmy days of exemptions, of the overthrow of all ancient Church laws, and the loosening of the diocesan tie, at a time when the parochial system was torn to pieces by the strolling mendicant monks, this too became part of the system. The rival principles of a cardinal oligarchy and of papal absolutism were long trembling in the balance in the Eoman Church. There were Popes like Martin iv. and Clement v. who carried out their French policy against the resistance of the Italian cardinals ; Popes before whom the cardinals scarcely dared to lift their eyes or utter a word, like Boniface viii. and Paul iv. ; Popes who put to death their cardinals, like Urban vi., Alexander vi., and Leo x. But, as a rule, the College 2o8 Papal Infallibility. of Cardinals, to which the Pope owed his election, and which preserved the interests and traditions of the papal system, took the lead. They took care that the Popes should give up nothing of the accepted principles or let drop any particle of the plenary authority Eome had gained, and took in fact, as well as in theory, their full part in the government of the Church. They contrived to make the Popes in many cases the mere executive of their will The later and still prevalent device, of carrying out plans the majority are opposed to with the aid of two or three cardinals like-miuded with the Pope, and without consulting the College, was hardly adopted in the thirteenth century, or only under Martin rv. But Boniface vni., Clement v., and John xxii., and the Popes after the middle of the fifteenth century, nearly all understood and adopted it energetically, and the more securely as they held the greater part of the body in their hands, through the dispensation of benefices and emoluments. The struggle between absolute monarchy and oligarchy lasted really for two centuries. The car- dinals wanted the Pope to be absolute and omnipo- tent in his external rule over national Churches, but they sought to bind him by conditions at the time of The College of Cardinals. 209 election, and by a recognised share in the government in the name of the Curia. Innocent vi., in 1353, had repudiated any such conditions, on the ground .that the papal power bestowed by God in all its plenitude could not be limited. But the attempt was constantly renewed. A series of articles was put forward in con- clave, which the new Pope, immediately after his elec- tion, and before consecration, swore to observe, partly drawn up in the interests of the cardinals, as, e.g., for a participation of revenues between the Pope and car- dinals, and their being irremoveable, partly with a view of restricting the worst acts of extravagance and arbi- trary power on the part of the Popes, by requiring the assent of the cardinals. Eugenius it. confirmed these articles without thereby really binding himself^ Pius II. took a similar oath, and swore to reform the Eoman Curia. It was an urgent necessity to keep secret these capitulations, which in themselves presented a gloomy picture of the misgovemment of the Church, as the Popes of that age, in addition to all the other bitter complaints against them, would have been charged on all sides with perjury. Pius II., in spite of the articles he had sworn to, acted just as arbitrarily as his predecessors. Nevertheless • Eaynald. Annal. anu. 1431. O 2IO Papal Infallibility. the oath imposed on Paul ii. in conclave in 1464 included still more articles. He was to have them read in public once a month, and to allow the cardinals to assemble twice a year to discuss how the Pope had kept his oath. Paul soon discovered, and was told by his flatterers, that his papal freedom was too much limited, and ac- cordingly broke his oath, and compelled or induced the cardinals to subscribe a new and entirely changed capitu- lation, without reading it. He dragged back Bessarion, who was escaping from the room, and enforced his signature by the threat of excommunication. He re- warded the cardinals with a new head-dress, a silk cap, besides a scarlet cape, hitherto only worn by the Popes.^ This occurrence did not prevent them from again devising a capitulation, on the death of Sixtus IV. (1484), for the new Pope to swear to ; it provided afresh for the advantage and enrichment of the cardinals at the expense of Church discipline and order. Inno- cent vm. took — and broke it.* The same farce was enacted with Julius n. in 1503. The Popes swore to summon an (Ecumenical Council at the earliest opportunity, and so the controversy went ' Card. Jacobi Papiens. Comment. Franco/. 1614, p. .".72. » Raynald. AnnaL. ann. 1484. 23. The College of Cardinals. 2 1 1 on repeating itself for nearly a century, the cardinals wanting a larger share in Church government and emoluments, the Popes refusing to stint themselves in the full enjoyment of their despotic power. - The victory at last, as was inevitable, remained with the Popes, and in the course of the sixteenth century the cardinals lost again the rights they had hitherto main- tained, and were reduced simply to advisers, whom the Pope might consult or not as he pleased, but whose opinions could not bind him. It seemed like a Nemesis, that the Popes, who since Gergory vil's time were so ingenious in inventing oaths to entangle men's consciences and bring everything under their own power, now themselves took oaths, which they regularly broke. On the other hand, it is a riddle how the very cardinals who elected a Sixtus rv., an Innocent viii., and an Alexander vi., one after the other, and thereby broke their own oaths, could sup- pose a Pope would be really withheld, by swearing to certain conditions at his election, from the seductions of absolute power. It was perhaps the lesser evil that the Popes eventually triumphed, for the despotism of an oligarchy is apt to be more oppressive than that of a single individual. 212 Papal Infallibility. Unquestionably the influence over Church life ex- ercised by the cardinals was mainly an injurious one. The institution was a later artificial creation, a foreign and disturbing element newly interpolated, a thousand years after the foundation of the Church, into the origi- nal hierarchy based on the ordinance of Christ and the Apostles. The cardinals wanted to excel the wealthiest bishops in expenditure, pomp, aud number of servants, and Eome and the environs did not supply means for this. They wanted to provide their nephews and friends with benefices, and to enrich their families. In their interest, and to satisfy their wants, the order of the Church had to be disintegrated, heaping incompatible of&ces on one person to be allowed,^ and the system of increasing the revenues of the Curia by simony to be constantly extended. It was they who lived and bat- tened on the grasping corruption of the Church.^ Before the thirteenth century there were only two examples of the union of the cardinalate with foreign bishoprics, but under Innocent iv.(1250) it became common, and thus the Eoman Church supplied the precedent of the contempt • This was carried so far in the fourteenth century that one cardinal held five hundred benefices. Cf. "De oomipto Eccles. statu," Lydins' edition of Werke Clemang. 1614, p. 15. « Alv. Pelag. De Planet. Eccl. ii. 16, f. 52. The College of Cardinals. 2 1 3 and neglect of of&cial duties. Jacob of Vitry thought, even in his day, the revenues of the whole of France were insufficient for the expenditure of the cardinals.^ The great Schism, from 1378 to 1 429, was ascribed by Western Christendom solely to their greed and lust of power. In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the cardinals sometimes elected Popes not of their own body, but this never occurred after the middle of the fifteenth. During all the twelfth and the first half of the thirteenth century papal elections took place within a few days of the decease of the last Pope, but after the Papacy had reached the summit of its power, and the Pope was regarded as the spouse of the Church, widowed by his death, long vacancies, sometimes of years, became common. It seemed as if the cardinals wanted to show the world by a rare irony how easily the Church could get on without him from whom, in the new theory, all her authority was derived. Thus Celestine iv. was elected after a vacancy of two years, Gregory x. after three, Mcolas iv. after one. Two years and three months elapsed between his death and the election of Celestine v. There was a vacancy of eleven months after the death of Benedict xi., and of 1 Acta SaiKt. BoUand. 23 Juu. p. 675. 2 1 4 Papal Infallibility. two years and four mouths after Cleuieut v., and the Christian world had to get accustomed to every conclave being the theatre of intrigues and quarrels between the French and Italian nations, which fought for the pos- session of the Papacy, till at last the French acquired exclusive possession of it. The German nation was practically excluded from the College of Cardinals at that time. The German Popes, from 1046 to 1059, made no German cardinals. During the contest of the Papacy against the Salic and Hohenstaufen emperors, some Germans who declared themselves against the Emperor were made cardinals ; as Cuno, Cardinal-bishop of Prseneste in 1114, who, more papal than the Popes, filled all Germany with excom- munications in his office of Legate. After him there is the Cluniac, Gerhard, and Ditwein in 1134. Then Conrad of Wittelsbach, and Siegfried of Eppenstein, were appointed on account of their hostility to the Hohen- staufen, and Conrad of Urach by Honorius m. After him, the only German cardinal in the thirteenth century is Oliverius of Paderborn, and then, for above a century and a half, no German enjoyed the dignity. We must remember that every German would lean to the imperial side, and this, especially after French The College of Cardinals. 215 policy became dominant in the Curia, would secure their exclusion. Urban vi., in 1379, when repudiated by the French and in the extremest distress, was the next to name some German cardinals. § HVJ.—The Curia. If we describe the great change which took place be- tween the end of the eleventh century and about 11 30, in the space of some forty years, by saying that the Roman Church became the Roman Court, this indicates a phe- nomenon of world-wide historical interest in its enor- mous consequences. The distinction between a Church and a Court is in truth a very great one. By the Church of Jerusalem, or Alexandria, or Ephesus, or Eome, or Carthage, had always been understood a Christian people united with their bishop and presbyters, a com- munity of clergy and laity bound together by the ties of brotherhood.* Ordinary matters were settled in the permanent synod of the bishop and his clergy ; weightier and extraordinary matters in a council composed of the neighbouring bishops. In such a Church there were laymen bishops and priests teaching and dispensing 1 Thus in the well-known definition of St. Cyprian {Ep. 69), " Eoelesi.i est aacerdoti plebs adunata et pastori grex adhierens." 2 1 6 Papal Infallibility. sacraments, but no legal functionaries. Such a Church could never become a court as long as the ecclesi- astical spirit and usage preYailed. But now what used to be called the Eoman Church had become a Court, that is to say, an arena of rival litigants ; a chancery of writers, notaries, and tax-gatherers, where transac- tions about privileges, dispensations, exemptions, etc., were carried on, and suitors went with petitions from door to door ; a rallying-point for clerical place-hunters from every nation of Europe. In earlier days those who were ordained for the divine service in Eome and the Eoman Church had managed the business which its supe- rior rank rendered necessary. Weightier matters were settled at synods comprising the bishops of the province, and a few persons sufficed for so limited a circle of affairs as is indicated by the official collection of formularies, the Liber Biurnus, so late as the beginning of the eighth century. T\Tiat a complete difference after the "Worms Concordat of 11 22, and stUl more after Gratian ! In com- parison with the enormous mass of business, processes, graces, indulgences, absolutions, commands, and de- cisions addressed to the remotest countries of Europe, and even to Asia, the functions of the local Church service sunk into insignificance, and a troop of some Thfi Curia. 217 hundreds of persons was required whose home was the Curia, and their ambition to rise iii it, and whose constant aim was to contrive fresh financial transactions, to mul- tiply taxes, and enlarge the profits that accrued to them and the papal treasury, which was always in want. Secure and unassailable in the service of such a power, the officials of the Curia did not trouble themselves about the hatred and contempt of the world which had been made tributary to them. " Oderint, dum metuant."^ The warnings of the most enlightened men were vain. Early in the twelfth century, the great danger this change of the Eoman Church into a Court must bring upon the Christian world had been seen through by men like Gerhoch of Eeigersberg, St. Ber- nard, John of Salisbury, Peter of Blois, and almost all in that age whose mind we are still acquainted with.^ 1 What giant strides centralization had made, and the consequent in- crease of the husiness of the Cmia, may be illustrated from the case of a single official. About the middle of the thirteenth century there -was but one " Auditor Cameras." About 1370, twenty auditors were hardly enough for the Pope alone, and every cardinal had several besides. Cf. Baluze and Mansi, Miscel. i. 479. It is mentioned here that under Gregory xi. seven bishops were at one time under excommunication, simply for not having paid the " servitia" for the decree of provisions. 2 Gerhoch observes in his letter to Eugenius in., about 1150, "De cor- rupto Bcclesie statu" (Baloz. Miscel. v. 63), as something new and deplorable, " quod nunc dicitur Curia Romana quod antea dicebatur Eccle- sia Romana." In his work, written some fifteen years later, De Investi- gatione Antickristi, he painted in darker colours the disintegration of the 2 1 8 Papal Infallibility. Jacob of Vitry, who subsequently became a cardinal, after making some stay at the Court, perceived, as he writes to his friend (12 16), that it had lost every vestige of real Church spirit, and its members busied them- selves solely with politics, litigation; and processes, and never breathed a syllable about spiritual concerns.^ Among the bishops of Innocent iv.'s time there was not one more highly honoured and admired than Gros- tete. Bishop of Lincoln, nor one for a long time more devoted to the Pope. Dominated by Gratian and the Gregorian system, he supposed his episcopal jurisdic- tion was simply intrusted to him as a derivation from the papal. But the corruptions, which like a poisonous miasma penetrated from the Gwria into every portion of the Church, the gross hypocrisy exhibited in declar- ing the taking of interest a mortal sin, while the papal usurers and brokers exhausted the churches and corpora- tions in all countries with usurious imposts, and, begin- ning from London, had made every English bishopric Clrarch through exemptions bought at Bome, and the greed of the Bomans. Cf. Archiv.fHrosterreich. Geschichtsqnellen, xx. UOsej. He variously sup- plements and confirms St. Bernard's complaints about the disorder at Bome. ^ Saint Genois, Sar les Lettres inidites de Jacques de Vitry, Bmxelles, 1846, p. 31.— " Cum autem aliquanto tempore fuissem in curiS, multa in- veni spirltui meo contraria, adeo enim circa ssecularia et temporalia, circa reges et regua, circa Utes et jurgia occupati erant, quod vix de spirituali- bns aJiquid loqui permittebant" The Curia. 2 1 9 tributary to them ; this and a great deal more led him shortly before his death to reproach the Pope with his tyrannical conduct in a letter sharply warning him to repent ; and he stiU prophesied, when on his deathbed, that the Egyptian bondage, to which the whole Churchy had been degraded by the Eoman Guria, would become yet worse.'' Somewhat later, when Pope Nicolas in. wanted to make John of Parma, General of the Minorites, whom Pius rv. beatified in 1777, a cardinal, he declined, say- ing : — " The Eoman Church hardly concerns itself with anything but wars and juggleries (' truffce ') ; for the sal- vation of souls it takes no care." The Pope answered, sighing, "We are so accustomed to these things ' Epist. Rolerti G., ed. Luard, p. 432, Lond. 1861 ; Matt. Par., Hist. Angl. p. 586, Paris 1644. — [There is a curious story told in the Liber Monasterii de Melsd (ed. B. A. Bond, vol. ii. London, 1867, in the Master of the EoUs' Series) which illustrates the contemporary view of the suhject in England, as to why '' St. Robert GrostSte," as the monastic chronicler calls him, was not canonized. It is said that, being summoned to Rome by Innocent rv. and excommunicated, he appealed from the judgment of the Pope to the tribunal of Christ, and two years after his death appeared by night to Innocent, in full pontiiioals, saying, " Arise, wretched man, and come to judgment," and struck him with his pastoral staff. In the morning the bed was found covered with blood and the Pope dead. "And therefore," adds the chronicler, "the Curia would not let him be canonized, although he was honoured by illustrious miracles." Cf. for another ver sion of the story, Milman's Lat. Christ, vi. 293. It is true that GrostSte excited the Pope's anger by refusing to confer a rich canonry at Lincoln on his nephew, a young boy (puerulus), but not true that he was excommuni- cated.— Tr.] 2 2 o Papal Infallibility. that we think everything we say and do is really beneficial." ^ Prom the middle of the twelftli century the whole secu- lar aud religious literature of Europe grew more and more hostile to the Papacy and the Curia. German as weU as Proven9al poetry, historians as well as theologians — none of them as a rule attack the authority or rights of the Pope, but they all abound in sharp denunciations and bitter complaints of the decay of the Church occasioned by Eome, the demoralization of the clergy corrupted by the Curia, the simony of an ecclesiastical court where every stroke of a pen, and every transaction, has its price, where benefices, dispensations, licenses, absolu- tions, indulgences, and privileges are bought like so much merchandise. St. Hildegard, that famous prophetess on the Ehine, highly honoured by Popes and Emperors, predicted of the Popes, as early as 1170, — "They seize upon us, like ravening beasts, with their power of bind- ing and loosing, and through them the whole Church is withered. They desire to subjugate the kingdoms of the world, but the nations wUl rise against them and the too rich aud haughty clergy, whose property they will reduce to its right limits. The pride of the Popes, <■ Salimbene, in Affo's Vit. del Ji. Giov. di Parma, 1777, p. 169. The Curia. 2 2 1 who no longer otserve any religion, will be brought low ; Eome and its immediate neighbourhood will alone be left to them, partly in consequence of wars, partly by the common agreement of the States." ^ More cutting and more terrible sound the words of the northern prophetess, St. Bridget, who lived in Eome some two centuries later. It has not prejudiced the high reverence felt for her visions, universally regarded as inspired, and defended in an express treatise by Cardinal Torquemada, that they contain the most vivid pictures of the corruption of the Papal See and its Court, and their mischievous influence on the Church. She calls the Pope worse than Lucifer, a murderer of the souls intrusted to him, who condemns the innocent and sells the elect for filthy lucre.^ Every one told the same tale. Bishops and abbots had to exhaust and denude their churches and estab- lishments to satisfy the greed of the court officials and get their causes settled.* They bid against each other in bribery. Every one, from doorkeeper to Pope, had 1 TMs remarkable prophecy, with many more of St. Hildegard's, is in the collections of Baluze and Mansi, Miseel. ii. 444-447. ' Revel, i. c. 41, p. 49, of. iv. c. 49, p. 211. 3 Bishop Stephen of Toumay, in 1192, said, " Eomano plumbo nndantur ecclesise."— ^2). 16. 222 Papal Infallibility. to be paid and fee'd, or the case was lost. It may be seen from the accounts of ambassadors, e.g., of the de- puties sent in 1292 from the Commune of Bruges, that giving once was not enough, but the fee had to be con- stantly repeated as long as the process lasted.^ The cardinals' and Popes' nephews were quite inordinately insatiable. The jurist, Peter Dubois, thought it a mis- fortune for the whole of Christendom that the cardinals foimd themselves compelled to live by robbery, as their benefices were not productive enough. The upshot was, that poor men could neither hope to gaia preferment nor could keep it, and bishops entered on their oflBce already loaded with heavy debts, which were further augmented by the annates introduced in the fourteentli century. In the eleventh century there was an energetic move- ment throughout the whole Church with a view to putting an end to the sale of benefices at royal courts, but now the Eomah Court had made simony the supreme power everywhere. The little finger of the Ouria pressed more heavily on the churches than ever ' They may be fotmd in Keryyn of Lettenhove, Hist, de Flandre, ii. 589. Again Herculano {Hist de Portugal) cites from the Codex Vatican. 3457, a bill of the Archbishop of Bruges, showing that he paid throngh the Bomaa bankers the sum of 3000 florins to nineteen cardinals in 1226. The Curia. 223 the arm of kings. No one knew what remedy to suggest ; complaints and reproaches were disregarded, and synods were powerless and condemned to silence in the ahsence of the Pope or his legates. Every cleric excused his simoni^al conduct by the example of the Eoman Church. It was the common saying, that every one was taught from youth upwards to look on the Eoman Church as the mistress of doctrine and the bright example for all other Churches; that what she approved and openly practised others must also approve and copy, and that they migW on their side make their profits out of spiritual minis- tries and sacraments who had dearly bought the right to do so at Eome with their benefices, and who, indeed, could in no other way pay off the debts incurred there. § XV. — TM Judgments of Contemporaries. Bishop Durandus of Mende contemplates the Church of his age from many points of view, especially its con- dition in 1310 in Italy and the south of Prance, but he is always brought back to the one crying evil, and source of so many corruptions, the papal Court. "It is that Court," he says, " which has drawn all things to itself, and is in danger of losing all. It is always sending out into the various dioceses immoral clerks, provided with 2 24 Papal Infallibility. benefices, whom the bishops are obliged obediently to receive, while they have no persons fit for the work of the ChurcL It is continually extorting large sums from prelates, to be shared betwe.en the Pope and his cardinals, and by this simony is corrupting the Uni- versal Church to the utmost of its power. While the Curia goes on in this way, all remedies for the Church are vain."^ He then enumerates the most necessary reforms, without which the Church must siak deeper and deeper in corruption, but they cut, in fact, at the roots of the whole papal system as it had existed for 200 years, and therefore his book produced no effect worth mentioning, though the Pope asked for it, and it was laid before the Council of Vienne. 1 Durandus says the Eoman Church is reviled in every country. Every one is ashamed of her, and charges her with corrupting the vhole clergy, whose immorality has exposed them to universal hatred. It is the fault ofthe Curio, he says, "ut . . . inde tota Eoclesia vilipendatur et quasi contemptui habeatur." — Tract, de modo Gen. CtmcU. celeb. (Paris, 1761), p. 300. He, at the same time, differs widely in his devotion to the Pope from his contemporaries Pelayo and Trionfo. He maintains the Pope's absolute dominion over monarchs, and insists on the Donation of Constan- stine, and the rights that flow from it. But he desiderates a certain decen- tralization. He wants the Curia, which has absorbed all Church rights and jurisdiction, to give back some of them, and restore to national Churches and bishops some freedom of action. See Tract, (ut sup.), p. 294, where he says the Eoman Court understands " omnia traham ad Me Ipsum " as authorizing its appropriating the rights of all others exclusively to itself. One would like to know whether this book, which holds up to the Pope and cardinals, as in a mirror, so terrible a reflection of their misdeeds and iniquitous acts against the Church, was ever read in Avignon. Contemporary Judgments. 225 One of the Prench Popes, Urban v., who had some good instincts, acknowledged the misery and corruption of the Church, and thought (ia 1368) the cessation of Councils was the main cause of the mischief^ But he did not perceive, or at least did not say, that this was the fault of his predecessors, whose systematic policy had brought matters to such a pass that it was partly impossible and partly useless to hold Councils. This state of things led theologians, who wished to use Bib- lical language, to appropriate involuntarily the sayings of Old Testament prophets on the corruptions of their people, and to describe the Church of the day as the venal harlot whose shame God would shortly uncover in sight of all men. Mcolas Oresme, Bishop of Lisieux, for instance, does so in an address before Urban v. and the cardinals at Avignon in 1363.^ Great, iadeed, must have been the evil, when even bishops applied such expressions and metaphors to the Church and the Papal See ; which coiacided with those used by the sectaries of the time, and bordered closely on suspicious inferences as to their right of separatiag from so terribly corrupt an institution. "When we read all these accusations and these descrip- J Crnidl. (ed. Latb^), xi. 1958. = Brown, Fasc. Hsr. Expet. ii. 487. P 226 Papal Infallibility. tions, agreeing in the main, of tlie Curia and the Papal administration — and the strongest things are invariably said by eye-witnesses, — and observe how the impressions and experiences of aU classes are the same, we can understand how the Apocalyptic images and their ful- filment in Eome and in the Curia occurred to every mind. The transference of power from Italians to Frenchmen, through the removal of the Curia to Avig- non, and the succession of French Popes who appointed for the most part cardinals of their own nation only, led to no important change. Only the Italians then became as keen-sighted as others in detecting the corruption of the Church, for the Papacy, with aU. its endless resources for the enrichment of so many Italian families, had slipped out of their grasp. They felt what Italy, or rather what " the Latin race," had thereby lost, for as yet there was no Italian but only a Latin national senti- ment. Lombardy was half German. The inhabitants of Tuscany and the States of the Church believed them- selves the genuine and only rightful descendants of the old Eomans, and entitled, as such, to rule the world through the Papacy, which was their appanage; and thus Dante urges them in his letters not to endure any longer that the fame and honour of the Latin Contemporary yudgments. 227 name should be disgraced by the avarice of the Gascons^ (Clement v. and John xxii.) Even a man like St. Bonaventure, whom the Popes had loaded with honours, and who was bound, by the closest ties to Eome as a cardinal and General of his Order, did not hesitate in his Commentary on the Apocalypse to declare Eome to be the harlot who makes kings and nations drunk with the wine of her whoredoms. Por in Eome, he said, Church dignities were bought and sold, there did the princes and rulers of the Church assemble, dishonouring God by their incontinence, adherents of Satan, and plunderers of the flock of Christ. He adds that the prelates, corrupted by Eome, infect the clergy with their vices ; and the clergy, by their evil example of avarice and profligacy, poison and lead to perdition the whole Christian people.^ If the General of the Order spoke . thus of the Eoman Court, we may easily comprehend how its stricter members, the " Spirituals," went further still, and called the Curia, the utterly corrupt " carnal Church," and predicted a great renewal and purifica- tion through a holy Pope, the Papa Angelicus, long looked for, but never willing to appear. 1 Epist. ed. Torsi, Livomo, 1843, p. 90. '' Oper. Omn. Supplem. mb ausp. Clem. ziv. Trid. 1773, ii. 729, 755, 815. Cf. Apol. contra eos qui Ord. Min. aversantur, Q. I, 228 Papal Infallibility. It was not, therefore, as was commonly said, from the blindness of Ghibelline party spirit that Dante too applied to the Popes the Apocalyptic prophecy of the harlot on the seven hills who is drunk with the blood of men, and seduces princes and peoples ; he had read St. Bonaventure, and puts directly into his mouth ia Paradise the denunciation on the covetous policy of the Court of Eome.^ It had occurred to him, as to others, that the Papacy was in fact the hostile power which weakened and unsettled the Empire, and was promoting its fall, and was thus furthering and hastening the appearance of Antichrist, who was held in check by the continuance of the Empire. And why should Dante scruple to speak out, when almost at the same time a bishop and ofBcial of the Papal Court, Alvaro Pelayo, pointed, from long personal experience and observation, to the very detaUs which showed the fulfilment of St. John's prophecy of the harlot in the then condition of the Papacy?^ Tet the whole of his great work is devoted to proving that the Papacy I Parad. xiL 91-94. ' Pelayo says {De Planet. Bed. ii. 28) " Ecclesia," but the context shows that the Court of Avignon is meant ; and he says afterwards (37), " Con- sidering the Papal Court has filled the whole Church with simony, and the consequent corruption of religion, it is natural enough the heretics should call the Church the whore." Contemporary Jiidgments. 229 is the power ordained by God to rule absolutely the world and the Church. It is very instructive to ob- serve how this man, while examining the condition of the Church from every side, and painting it in lively colours, is obliged again and again to confess that it is the Papal See itself, and that alone, which has infected the whole Church with the poison of its avarice, its ambition, and its pride; that the clergy had become bitterly hated for their vices by the whole lay world, and that the Eoman Court was mainly responsible for their corruption. All this is conspicuous on almost every page of his work. He observes that the bad example given by the Popes is universally followed, and the prelates say, " The Pope does so, and why not we?" Thus the whole Church is turned, as it were, into blood, and there is an universal darkening of head and mem- bers.-^ But if the reader expects Pelayo to come to the conclusion that the old order in the Church should be restored as far as possible, and a limit be set to this unlimited despotism, he wiU. find himself greatly mis- taken. He holds to the principle that the Pope is God's representative on earth, and that one can no 1 Be Planet. Mod. ii. 48, 49. The work was -written in 1329. The author says that even right-minded people no longer dare to utter the truth because of the persecution it would entail. Yet he became Bishop of Silva. 230 Papal Infallibility. more dream of setting limits to his power, tlian any- body, or the whole Christian world, would undertake to limit the omnipotence of God, Hi a contemporary, Agostino Trionfo of Ancona, an Aiigustinian monk, who wrote his Summa on the Church by command of John xxn, had already dis- covered a new kingdom for the Pope to rule over. It had been said before that the power of God's vicar ex- tended over two realms, the earthly and the heavenly, meaning by the latter that the Pope could open or close heaven at his pleasure. From the end of the thirteenth century a third realm was added, the empire over which was assigned to the Pope by the theologians of the Ouria — Purgatory. Trionfo, commissioned by John xxn. to expound the rights of the Pope, showed that, as the dispenser of the merits of Christ, he could empty Purgatory at one stroke, by his Indulgences, of all the souls detained there, on the sole condition that some- body fulfilled the rules laid down for gaining those iadulgences ; he advises the Pope, however, not to do this.^ Only those of the unbaptized, whom God by His extraordinary mercy placed in purgatory, were not amenable there to the Pope's jurisdiction. Trionfo » Summa de Pot. Bed., KomiE, 1584, p. 193. Contemporary yudgments, 231 observes rightly enough that he helieves the Pope's power is so immeasurably great, that no Pope can ever know the full extent of it.-' Petrarch, who for years had closely observed the Owria, saw and felt, somewhat later (1350), like St. Bonaventure, Dante, and Pelayo. In his eyes, too, it is the Apocalyptic woman drunken with blood, the seducer of Christians, and plague of the human race. His descriptions are so frightful, that one would sup- pose them the exaggerations of hatred, were they not confirmed by all his contemporaries.^ The letter of the Augustinian monk of Florence, Luigi Marsigli, Pe- trarch's friend and pupil, is quite as outspoken about the Papal Court, which no longer ruled through hypocrisy — so openly did it flaunt its vices — but only through the dread inspired by its interdicts and e xcommunications.* Por four centuries, from aU nations and in aU tongues, 1 " Nee credo quod Papa possit scire totum quod potest facere per poten- tiam suam." Such things were -smtteii in 1320 at the Pope's command, and in 1584, when this work, which exhibits the Church as a dwarf with a giant's head, was republished by the Papal sacristan Fivizani, Gregory xm. accepted the dedication. 2 Epist. sine Titulo. 0pp. ii. 719. 3 Lettera del Yen. Maestro L. M. contro i vizi delta Corte del Papa, GenoTa, 1859. He calls the cardinals " avari, dissoluti, importunl, e sfacciati Limogini," most of them being of the province of Limousin, and the Cwria at this time entirely in their hands. 232 Papal Infallibility. were thousandfold accusations raised against the ambi- tion, tyranny, and greed of the Popes, their profanation of holy things, and their maMng aU the nations of Christen- dom the prey of their rapacity ; and, what is still more surprising, in all this long period no one attempted to refute these charges, or to represent them as calumnies or even exaggerations. The Eoman Court, indeed, always found champions of its rights, knowing, as it did so well, how to reward them for their services. The later scholasticism moulded on St. Thomas, the copious litera- ture of canon law, and the host of decretalists on the side of the Curia, — Italians first, and then from 1305 to 1375 from the south of France, — who fought and wrote for the Papacy as their special and eminently profitable subject, never yielded an inch of the enormous jurisdic- tion it had already acquired, but were always spinning out fresh corollaries of its previously acknowledged rights. During the long period from 1230 to 1520 the parasites of the Eoman Court ruled and cultivated the domaiu of canon law as interpreters of the new codes ; or, in the scriptural language of the cardinals who com- posed the Opinion of 1538, the Popes heaped up for themselves teachers after their lusts, having itching ears, to invent cunning devices for building up a Contemporary yudgments. 233 system "wliicli made it lawful for the Pope to do exactly ■what he pleased.-' Nevertheless, not one of all this multitude undertook the defence of the Popes and their government against the flood of reproaches and accusations which rolled up from all sides upon them, nor one of the theologians and practical Church writers ; all confined themselves to the question of legitimate right. They insist conti- nually that the first See can be judged by no man, that none may dare say to the most reprobate and mischiev- ous of Popes, " Why dost thou do so ?" One must endure anything sUently and patiently, bending humbly beneath the rod. That is all they have to say ; only now and then the iudignation of the secular and married jurists, who could not hold benefices, broke out against the clergy, who reserved all the good things of this world to themselves. Or they intimated the ground of their sUence and connivance, like Bartolo, who said, " As we live in the territory of the (Eoman) Church, we affirm the Donation of Constantine to be valid." ' Consil. Delect. Card. p. 106, in Durandus, Tract, de Modo Conail. Paris, 1671 ; " ut eomm studio et calliditate inveniretur ratio, qu^ liceret id quod liberet." The Opinion was drawn up by Cardinal Caraffa, with the as- sistance of the most respected men in Italy, but when he became Pope Paul IV. he had the Consilium put on the Index. There have not been wanting persons who regarded it as an act of heroism for a Pope to put himself on the Index. 234 Papal Infallibility. But the strength of a power like the papal must rest ultimately on public opinion ; only while contemporaries are convinced of its legitimacy, and believe that its use really rests on a higher will, can it maintain itself. In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, no one in Europe knew or even suspected the true state of the case ; no one was able to distinguish between the original germ of the primacy in the apostolic age and that colossal monarchy which presented itself before the deluded eyes of men as a work that came ready-made from the hand of God. The notion that manifold forgeries and inventions had co-operated with favourable circum- stances to foster its growth, would have been generally rejected as blasphemy. They grumbled at the use the Popes made of their power, but did not question their right to it, and the obedience paid was more willing than enforced. At the beginning of the fifteenth cen- tury, and after the commencement of the Great Schism, a few men, like Gerson, D'Ailly, and ZabareUa, began to open their eyes gradually to the truth, as they com- pared the existing state of the law with the ancient canons. They saw there must have been a portentous revolution somewhere, but how or when it happened they were stiU ignorant. The Inquisition. 235 § XVI. — The Inqumtion. A wholly new institution and mighty organization had been introduced to make the papal system irresis- tible, to impede any disclosure of its rotten foundations, and to bring the infallibility theory into full possession : it was the Inquisition. Through the influence of Gratian, who chiefly fol- lowed Ivo of Chartres, and through the legislation and unwearied activity of the Popes and their legates siace 1183, the view of the ancient Church on the treatment of the heterodox had been for a long period completely superseded, and the principle made dominant that every departure from the teaching of the Church, and every important opposition to any ecclesiastical ordinances, must be punished with death, and the most cruel of deaths, by fire. The earlier laws of the Eoman Emperors had distin- guished between heresies, and only imposed severe pen- alties on some on account of their moral enormity, but this distinction was given up after the time of Lucius III., in 1 1 84. Complete apostasy from the Christian faith, or a difference on some minor point, was all the same. Either was heresy, and to be punished with death. 236 Papal Infallibility. The Waldenses, the Poor Men of Lyons, who at first did but claim the right of preaching, although laymen, and who with more gentle treatment would never have formed themselves into a hostile sect, were dealt with just like the Cathari, who were separated by a broad gulf from CathoKcs. Innocent ill. declared the mere refusal to swear, and the opinion that oaths were unlawful, a heresy worthy of death,^ and directed that whoever differed in any respect from the common way of life of the multitude, should be treated as a heretic. Both the initiation and carrying out of this new prin- ciple must be ascribed to the Popes alone. There was nothiag in the literature of the time to pave the way for it. It was not till the practice had been systematized and carried out in many places, that scholastic theo-. logy undertook its justification.* In the ancient Church, when a bishop had become implicated in the capital punishment of a heretic, only as accuser, he was sepa- 1 Conea. (ed. Labbd) xi. 152. 2 Thus St. Thomas {Summa. ii. 9, 11, art. 3, 4) tries to prove from the symbolic names given them in Scripture, that heretics should be put to death. Thus, e.g., heretics are called "thieves" and "wolves," but we hang thieves and kill wolves. Again, he calls heretics sons of Satan, and thinks they should share even on earth the fate of their father, i.e., be burnt. He observes, on the apostle's saying that a heretic is to be avoided after two admonitions, that this avoidance is best accomplished by execut- ing him. For the Relapsed he thinks all instruction is useless, and they should be at once burnt. The Inquisition. 237 rated from the communion of his brethren, as Idacius and Ithacius were by St. Martin and St. Ambrose in 385. It was the Popes who compelled bishops and priests to condemn the heterodox to torture, confiscation of their goods, imprisonment, and death, and to enforce the execution of this sentence on the civil authorities, under pain of excommunication. From 1200 to 1500 the long series of Papal ordinances on the Inquisition, ever increasing in severity and cruelty, and their whole policy towards heresy, runs on without a break. It is a rigidly consistent system of legislation ; every Pope confirms and improves upon the devices of his prede- cessor. All is directed to the one end, of completely uprooting every difference of belief, and very soon the principle came to be openly asserted that the mere thought, without having betrayed itself by outward sign, was penal. It was only the absolute dictation of the Popes, and the notion of their infallibility in all questions of Evangelical morality, that made the Chris- tian world, silently and without reclamation, admit the code of the Inquisition, which contradicted the simplest principles of Christian justice and love to our neigh- bour, and would have been rejected with universal horror in the ancient Church. As late as the eleventh, 238 Papal Infallibility. and first half of the twelfth century, the most influen- tial voices in the Church were raised to protest against the execution of heretics. Men, like Bishop Wazo of Liege,* Bishop Hildebert of Le Mans, Eupert of Deutz, and St. Bernard, pointed out that Christ had expressly forbidden the line of conduct afterwards prescribed by the Popes, and that it could only multiply hypocrites and confirm and increase the hatred of mankind against a bloodthirsty and persecuting Church and clergy. It is only the resolve to foster and develop the Infalli- bility theory at any cost that can explain the fact of not one Pope in the long line from Lucius m down- wards having swerved from this policy. Men of gentler views and milder character, like Honorius in., Gregory X., and Celestine v., would else certainly have mitigated the severity of the maxims of their predecessors, and put some restraint on the unlimited and arbitrary power the Popes had placed in the hands of fanatical and greedy inquisitors ; for there was no want of com- plaints against the inquisitors, who often used their ofiBce for extorting money, and made the tribunal of the faith into a finance establishment The Popes were overwhelmed with complaints and petitions for redress • See Martene and Duiandu-s, Ampliss. CoU. iv. 898, sqq. The Inquisition. 239 — Clement v. mentions them;* but neither he nor a single Pope before or after him substantially diminished the power of the Inquisition, or in any way softened its Draconian code; on the contrary, the Curia was always requiring greater strictness and energy, and the Popes suffered the inquisitors, without a word of opposi- tion, to formulize their cunning in bringing their vic- tims to the stake, into the regular system of deceit and treacherous outwitting of the accused, that may be seen in the work of Eymerich the Dominican, adopted and disseminated by the Curia? It was Papal legates who induced Louis ix., when barely fourteen years old, to make the cruel law which punished all heterodoxy with death.' The Emperor Frederick n., busied in crushing the Guelphs in Italy, had, during the period when everything depended on his securing the goodwill or the neutrality of the Popes, who * Constit Clementin. Tit. 3. De Haret. ; " Multorum querela Sedis ApostolicEe protavit auditum," etc. Yet all previous and subsequent Bulls of the Popes only urged the inquisitors to a "justa severitas." * Direct. Inquis. (composed at Avignon in 1376) Venet. 1607. [Several extracts from Eymerich may be found in the Appendix to Dr. Harris Bule's History of the Inquisition.'] 3 On April 12, 1229, the treaty was concluded at Paris, -with the concur- rence of two Papal legates, which robbed Count Eaymond of Toulouse ol the greater part of his possessions; and on April 14 appeared the law, enacted immediately for these territories of Languedoo and Provence, which Papal policy had torn from their possessor, and given to the Crown of France.— Vaissette, Mist. Gen. de Langued. (Paris, 1737), iii. 374 seq. 240 Papal Infallibility were threatening and pressing on him, issued those barbarous laws against heretics in 1224, 1238, and 1239, punishing them with burning and confiscation of goods, depriving them of every legal remedy, and imposing severe penalties even on their friends and patrons. Innocent IV. repeatedly confirmed these laws also, and herein the later Popes followed him, who constantly referred to them, and inculcated their fulfilment, point- ing out that Frederick n., that great enemy of the Church, was under her obedience when he issued theuL A Papal vice-legate, Peter of Collemedio, was the first to promul- gate Louis's law in Languedoc; and it was again the Papal " legate, the Cardinal of St. Angelo, who, on entering Tou- louse that year, at the head of an army, introduced the Inquisition there.^ In 1231, and the following years, inquisitors, delegated by the Pope, Conrad of Marburg and the Dominican Dorso, were raging in Germany, Eobert, surnamed le Bougre, in Prance. And now Gregory rx., in 1233, handed over the office in perma- nence to the Dominicans, but always to be exercised in the name, and by authority of, the Pope.^ The binding force of the laws against heretics lay not ' Vaissette, iii. 382. * No bishop, observes the Jesuit Salelles, has named even one inquisitor, only the Pope does that.— Z)e Mat. TrSmnoL S. Inputs. (Eomse, 1651), L 81. The Inqzdsiiion. 241 in the authority of secular princes, but in the sovereign dominion of life and death over all Christians, claimed by the Popes as God's representatives on earth.^ Every prince or civil magistrate, according to the constant doc- trine of the Court of Eome, was to be compelled simply to carry out the sentence of the inquisitors, by the fol- lowing process : first, the magistrates were themselves excommunicated on their refusal, and then aU who held intercourse with them. If this was not enough, the city was laid imder interdict. If resistance was stUl prolonged, the officials were deprived of their posts, and, when all these means were exhausted, the city was deprived of intercourse with other cities, and its bishop's, see removed. Thus Eymerich in the fourteenth, and Cardinal Albizzi in the seventeenth century, describe the process as drawn out by the Popes for the judges in questions of faith. Only the latter measure, Eymerich thinks, ought to be left to the Pope himself.^ The practice of the Inquisition, as time went on, 1 As Innocent in. expressly states it, " non puri hominis sed veri Dei vicemgerens." 2 Director, p. 432 ; Rispost. all' Hist, del Inquis. EoniEe, p. 104. In this one case the Papal legislation was really softened, for Boniface viii. had ordered that magistrates who refused to execute the condemned should, if they remained a year under excommunication, then he themselves treated as heretics, and humt. Q 242 Papal Infallibility. Lecame further and further removed from all principles of justice and equity. Innocent iv. especially occupied himself (1243-1254) in increasing its power and sever- ity; he directed the application of the torture, which Alexander rv., Clement iv., and Calixtus m. approved. The trihunal, as carried on in all important points down to the fourteenth century, and described in Eymerich's classical work, presents a phenomenon sin- gular in human history. Here mere suspicion suf- ficed for the application of torture; it was by an act of grace that you were imprisoned for life between four narrow walls, and fed on bread and water, and it was a conscientious obligation for a son to give up his own father to torture, perpetual imprisonment, or the stake. Here the accused was not allowed to know the names of his accusers, and aU means of legal protection were withheld from him ; there was no right of appeal, and no aid of legal adviser allowed him. A:^^ lawyer who undertook his cause would have incurred excommunication. Two witnesses were enough to secure conviction, and even the depositions of those refused a hearing in all other trials, either from personal enmity to the accused, or on account of pubKc infamy, such as perjurers, panders, and malefactors, were admitted. The The Inquisition. 243 inquisitor was forbidden to show any pity ; torture in its severest form was the usual means of extorting con- fessions. No recantation or assurance of orthodoxy could save the accused ; he was allowed confession, absolution, and communion, and his profession of repentance and change of mind was accepted in foro sacramenti, but he was told at the same time that it would not be accepted judicially, and he must die if he were a relapsed heretic. Lastly, to fill up the measure, his innocent family was deprived of its property by legal confiscation, half of it passing into the Papal treasury, the other haK into the hands of the inquisitors.-' Life only, said Innocent iii., was to be left to the sons of misbelievers, and that as an act of mercy. They were therefore made incapable of civil offices and dignities. The civil authorities had to build and keep up the prisons, to provide wood for the burnings, and to carry out the sentences of the Holy Office. If they refused 1 Calderini (De Hmret, Venet. 1571, p. 98), writing in 1330, appeals to the directions of Benedict xi. that all the confiscated property should go into the Papal treasury. The manual of the Inquisition, composed later, at the beginning of the sixteenth centuiy (ed. Venet. 1588, p. 270), says, " Inquisitores . . . dicunt quod Eomana Ecclesia vult, quod dimidia dic- torum bonorum assignetur suae cameree. " And the famous jurist. Feline Sandei, bishop of Lucca in 1499, says, in his Commentar. in Secret. (De Off. Ord. in cap. irref.), "Per Bxtravagantes pontificios bona hsereticorum divlduntur inter Eomanam Ecolesiam, episcopum et inquisitorem." 244 Papal Infallibility. these menial services, or wanted to take cognizance first of the grounds of the sentence, they incurred excommu- nication, and if they did not repent and submit Avithin a year, they fell themselves under the jurisdiction of the Inquisition on suspicion of heresy. But the inquisitors derived their -whole power from the Pope;^ they were his delegates, and no one was ever condemned to torture or the stake but in his name and by his general or special order. This began in 11 83 with Lucius HL direct- ing a number of heretics to be burnt in ilanders by his legate, the Archbishop of Eheims, and was continued for centuries afterwards with terrible consistency.^ And thus it came to pass that perhaps more execu- tions took place in the name and by command of the Popes of that period than in the name of any civil ruler. In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the num- ber of decisions on points of faith received throughout the Chiirch was small as compared with the period after the Council of Trent, and the inquisitors had therefore full scope for the exercise of their own judgment as to ' The constitntion of Benedict XI., quoted by Calderini, assures the inquisitors they are " ahsoluti a, poena et a culpS" by Papal favour, through the privilege of Clement iv., and enjoy all the same rights as the Crusaders. " Pagi, Critic in Baron, a. 1183. The Inqidsition. 245 what was heretical, and used the frightful power left to them over the life and death of men simply according to their pleasure, for from their sentence there was no appeal. And as they almost always belonged to one or other of the two Mendicant Orders, whose great object was the furthering of the Papal system, they took the teaching of the Pope, so far as they knew it, as the safest and simplest criterion of the true faith. And as the great majority of the inquisitors were Dominicans, it is self-evident that, as Thomists, they would adopt this convenient and easy test. Whoever contradicted a Papal decision, or knowingly disobeyed a Papal com- mand, thereby incurred the guilt of heresy, and was handed over to the secular power to be put to death. The Popes themselves had long since laid down this principle. " Whoever does not agree with the Apostolic See," says Paschal 11., making a (spurious) citation from St. Ambrose, " is without any doubt a heretic."^ And when the Archbishop of Mayence complained of the Concordat being violated by the Pope, CaHxtus in. an- swered him, in 1457, that he must know this was an attack on the authority of the Pope, and that he thereby committed a flagrant crime of heresy, and incurred ' Martene, Thesaur. Anecdot. i. 338. 246 Papal Infallibility. the penalties prescribed for it by divine and Imnian laws.^ That contradicting the Pope was treated and punished as heresy was shown in the most pointed way, when the Minorites, who, as genuine disciples of St. Francis, wished to observe the rule of poverty in all its strictness, were condemned. John of Belna, the inquisitor at Carcas- sonne, appealed to the most famous canonist of that time, Henry of Segusio, who had declared that he is a heretic who does not receive Papal decrees, and that he lapses into heathenism who refuses to obey the Papal See.^ As we said before, a number of the " Spirituals " paid with their lives for disputing the right of John xxil to upset their rule and the Bull of his predecessor, Nico- las m.' No Council had condemned their opinion ; it was only Papal authority, and in this case the authority of the reigning Pope, on the strength of which they were sentenced to the stake, and it went against all natural feeling to ascribe possibility of error to an authority which it was a capital offence to reject. Jurists and theologians who were building up the rights of the Inquisition went further stilL Ambrose of Vignate ' Raynald. Annal. ann. 1457, p. 49. ' " Peccatum Paganitatis iiiourrit." — Baluze and Mansi, MisceU. ii. 275. s Tract, de Ecer. (Roma, 1581), f. 11. The Inquisition. 247 (who wrote about 1460) declares him to be a heretic who thinks of the sacraments otherwise than the Eoman Church, so that if a theologian had then raised his voice against the receut decree of Eugenius iv. to the Arme- nians, and the errors contained in it, he would have incurred sentence of death. As in the thirteenth century, so it was still iu the sixteenth. Cornelius Agrippa describes the conduct of the inquisitors in his time, about 1 530, as follows : " The inquisitors act entirely by the rule of the canon law and the Papal decretals, as if it was impossible for a Pope to err. They neither go by Scripture nor the tradition of the Fathers. The Fathers, they say, can err and mis- lead, but the Eoman Church, whose head the Pope is, cannot err. They accept as a rule of faith the teaching of the Oiiria, and the only question they ask the accused is, whether he believes in the Eoman Church. If he says Yes, they say, ' The Church condemns this proposi- tion — recant it.' If he refuses, he is handed over to the secular power to be burnt." ^ In the long strife of Guelphs and GhibeUines, inquisi- tors and trials for heresy were among the means con- stantly employed by the Popes to crush the opiponents of ' De Vanit. Scient. c. 9S.—lIagceeomit. 1662, p. Hi. 248 Papal Infalhbility. their policy and of the Angiovine preponderance. The Bolognese jurist, Calderini, maintains that whoever de- spises Papal decretals is a heretic, for he thereby seems to contemn the power of the keys. That might be applied to every GhibeUine.^ Thus Innocent iv., in 1248, declared his great Guelphic enemy, Ezzelino, a heretic. In vain did he give assurance, through an ambassador, of the purity of his faith, and offer to swear to it ; Innocent stuck to his point, that Ezzelino was one of the Paterines (a new Gnostic sect), without being able to bring forward even any plausible ground for the charge.^ John xxn. made still more copious use of the same means, partly for carrying out his own territorial claims, partly in support of the rule of King Robert in Italy. On this ground the Margraves Einaldo and Obizzo of Este, zealous Catholics, and never Ghibellines, but Guelphs, found themselves suddenly declared heretics by the Pope in 1320, and subjected to a process of the Inquisition.' Two years afterwards the same thing happened to the whole of the stanchly GhibeUine house of the Visconti at Milan ; a Papal Bull announced to them that they were heretics, 1 Tractat. Novus Aureus et Solerrm. de Hceret. (Venet. 1571), f. 5. Cal- derini, adopted son of the famous Giovanni d' Andrea, wrote about 1330. ' Verci, Storia degli Ecelini, ii. 258. 3 Muratori, Annali, xii. 138 (Milano, 1819). The Inquisition. 249 and condemned all their adherents and subjects to slavery.-^ Similar cases occurred repeatedly. When the Popes themselves made such a use of their judicial power in matters of faith, when Nicolas III. is reproached by his contemporaries with enriching his family through the plunder extorted by means of the Inquisition, one cannot be much surprised to iind the inquisitors so habitually using their office for pur- poses of extortion, as Alvaro Pelayo complains. Clem- ent v., however, declared that an inquisitor, "simply following his conscience," has fuU power to imprison, and even put into irons, any one he pleases.^ § HYU.— Trials for Witchcraft. When we affirm that the whole treatment of witch- craft, as it existed from the thirteenth to the sixteenth century, was partly the direct, partly the indirect, result of the belief in the irrefragable authority of the Pope, this will perhaps sound like a paradox, and yet it is not difficult to show that such is certainly the case. For many centuries the relics of heathen misbelief, and the popular notions about diabolical agency, noc- turnal meetings with demons, enchantments, and witch- ' Muratori, op. cit. 150. ' Clement de Secret, c. "Multorum."' 250 Papal In/allidiiiiy. craft, were viewed and treated as a folly inconsis- tent with Christian belief. Many Councils directed that penance should be imposed on women addicted to this delusion. A canon, adopted into the collections of Eegino, Burkard, Ivo, and Gratian, and always appealed to, ordered the people to be instructed on the nonentity of witchcraft, and its incompatibility with the Chris- tian faith.^ It was long looked upon as a wicked and unchristian error, as something heretical, to attribute superhuman powers and effects to the aid of demons. In the eleventh century it was still considered a hein- ous sin merely to believe in enchantments and the tricks of professors of witchcraft, as may be seen from Burkard and the penitentiaries. No one coidd then anticipate a time when the Popes would acknowledge this belief in their Bulls, and du-ect their subordinates to condemn thousands of men to death on the strength of it. There is no trace of any belief in diabolical sorcery to be found throughout the liturgical literature of the ^ Tills canon got into Gratian's Decretum as a canon of Ancyra, tbrongh a mistake of 5urkard's, who took it from Eegino, bnt misinterpreted the reference, as though this passage also came from the Ancyran canon. See Berardi, Gratian. Can. i. 40 ; Begino (ed. Wassersahleben), p. 354. Eegino has compiled his chapter 371 from passages in the psendo-Augustinian writing, De Spiritu et Animd, with some additions. Trials for Witchcraft. 251 ancient Eoman Church. Even in the twelfth century John of Salisbury reckons the various kinds of belief in magic among fables and illusions. But at that time the writings of the Cistercians and Dominicans, filled with visions, legends, and miracles, began to spread in the Church, — writings such as the compilations of Csesa- rius of Heisterbach, Thomas of Cantimpre, Stephen of Bourbon, and the like. At the same time, the prin- ciple became more and more definitely laid down that there were mu-acles among the numerous heretical sects, which could only be Satanic. And to this was added a notion wholly unknown in earlier times. As the legend of Theophilus spread in the "West, the notion got into vogue that men could make a compact with Satan, securing them many enjoyments and the posses- sion of preternatural powers.-^ Csesarius and Vincent of Beauvais brought the first reports of such compacts being actually made, and soon the official Papal his- torians themselves, Martin the Pole and others, related that a Pope, Silvester n., had really attained the high- ' The story of the sorcerer Theophilus, " qui diaholo homagium fecit et per diabolum ad quod volehat promotus erat," appeared, so important, that Martin the Pole and Leo of Orvieto embodied it in their abridgments of Papal and Imperial history. And from the end of the thirteenth cen- tury there are constant charges of persons,' as, e.g., the Bishop of Coven- try in 1301, doing homage to the devil. 252 Papal Infallibility. est dignity in the Churcli thiough a compact with Satan. Hardly was the Inquisition established by the Popes, and the first inquisitors, acting under Papal commission, in full work in Germany and France, than heresy came to be mixed up with sorcery or Satan-worship. The Dominican theologians seized on an incidental expres- sion of St. Augustine, used in mere blind credulity, in order to spin out a theory of impure commerce between hvmian beings and demons, and children bom of the incruhws} Aquinas became the master and oracle of this new doctrine ; ^ and soon it was not safe even to dispute the dark delusion. In a Bull of 1231 Gregory ix. ordered the secular sword to be unsheathed in Germany against the newly discovered heretical abomination of which his inquisi- tors had informed him.^ He related with full belief nocturnal meetings, where the devil appeared in the form of a toad, a pale spectre, and a black tom-cat, and > Be Civ. Dei, xv. 23. He afterwards confessed himself, in reference to a similar statement (Retract, ii. 30), " se rem dixisse occultissimam anda- ciori asseTeratione qnam debnerit." ' Summa, Pars. L Q. 51, art. 3, 6. » Cf. Mansi, Condi, xxiii. 823 ; RipoU. BuUar. Ord. Prced. i. 52. The Bull was wrongly referred to the Stedinger, as Schumacher shows. Die Stedinger, pp. 225 sqq. T7-ialsfor Witchcraft. 253 wicked abominations were practised. The Pope owed tMs information principally to Conrad of Marburg, who had every one burnt who did not admit that he had touched the toad, and kissed the lean white man and the tom-cat.^ In the south of France, the inquisitors, somewhat later, made similar discoveries; in 1275 a woman of sixty was burnt there for sexual intercourse with Satan. It was chiefly the introduction of torture by Innocent IV. into trials for heresy, which helped to establish this idea by procuring all the requisite confessions. When Clement v. named inquisitors for the trial of the Knights- Templars, they soon extorted confessions at Mmes by torture, that the devil had appeared as a black tom-cat in their nightly meetings, and demons in the form of women had committed fornication with them after the lights were extinguished.^ About 1330, John xxii. ordered in a Bull, couched in general terms, that aU who meddled with sorcery (the enumeration of such acts is 1 So says Archbishop Siegfried of Mayenoe, in Ms letter to the Pope {AlbericKs, ann. 1233, p. 544, ed. Leihnit.) The Jesuit Spee, in Hs well- known Oautio Crimin, dub. 23, n. 6, has rightly observed that it was the Papal inquisitors who naturalized the notion in Germany : — " Vereri in- cipio, imo ssepe ante sum veritus, ne prsedicti inquisitores omnem hanc sagarum multitudinem primiim in Germaniam importi,rint torturis suis tarn indisoretis, imo, inquam verissime, discretis et divisis." a Menard, MUi. de. Nimes, Preuves (Paris, 1750), i. 211. 254 Papal Infallibility. very comprehensive) should be punished, like heretics, with the exception of confiscation of their goods.^ From the middle of the fifteenth century, and par- ticularly after Innocent Tin. had issued his Bull on witchcraft, the trials, which had before been compara- tively few, began to be much more numerous. At first the inquisitors, who had had their hands quite free since the Bull of Pope John, took the opinion of jurists. The most renowned jurist of his age, Bartolo, about 1350, de- cided for death by fire.^ This decision, which inaugurated the regular burning of witches, is ver}' remarkable. Here we plainly see the mischief done by the crude, material- istic, hierarchical interpretation of the Bible by the Popes and their juristic and theological parasites. It lay in applying what Christ and the Apostles had spoken, in Oriental imagery, describing the spiritual by sensible figures, to worldly dominion and compulsory power over the lives and property of men. St. Paul's statement that " the spiritual man judges all things," was under- stood, and explained in the BuU Unam Sanctam, to mean that the Pope is the supreme judge of nations and kings. When Jeremiah describes his prophetic 1 Cf. Binsleld, Tract, de Confess. Male/. (Trevir. 1596), p. 760. > Ziletti, Consil. Select. 1577, i. 8. Trials for Witchcraft. 255 office of denouncing the judgments of God, in Oriental language, as a commission to destroy and lay waste, the Pope interprets this of the power conferred on him by God to destroy and uproot what and whom he wUl. When it is said in the Psalms, of the future Messianic King, that he shall rule the heathen with a rod of iron, this was taken to prove the right and duty of the Popes to introduce the Inquisition with its capital penalties. Thus the Papal jurists corrupted theology, and the Papal theologians jurisprudence. And in the same spirit altogether the jurists declared, like Bartolo in his decision, that a witch must be burnt, because Christ says that he that abideth not in communion with Him is cast out as a rotten branch to be burnt. In the work of Eymerich sorcery and witchcraft is treated as an undoubted reality, coming under the juris- diction of the Inquisition. The limits between the lawful use of pretended magical powers, and the magic forbidden under penalty of death, long remained mut- able and uncertain. In a BuU of 1471, Sixtus iv. reserved to himself, as an exclusive prerogative of the Pope, the fabrication and engraving of the waxen lambs used as a preservative against enchantments. According to him, their touch bestowed, besides remission of sin. 256 Papal Infallibility. security against fire, shipwreck, lightning, and hail- stones. And soon after the Pope had thus himself encouraged the crude superstition of the people. Inno- cent VTTT, in 1484 issued his Bull on witchcraft, in conse- quence of the laity and clergy in some German dioceses having opposed and endeavoured to thwart the inquisi- tors appointed for the prosecution of sorcerers. In this Bidl the Pope repeatedly expresses his belief in the possibility of sexual intercourse with demons as " in- cubi " and " succubi," of women and animals when pregnant, fruits, vineyards, storehouses, and fields being injured through sorcery, of men and beasts being tor- mented, and men and women rendered impotent. He then complains of the hindrances thrown in the way of the inquisitors he had sent to put dowu such wickedness, by these prying clerics and laymen, who want to know more than is necessary,^ and arms them with fresh powers. The inquisitors were Sprenger, the author of the notorious Witches' Hammer, and Institoris. In like manner, Alexander VL, Leo x., Julius n., Adrian yl, and other Popes, for more than a century after Innocent viiL, gave an ecclesiastical sanction to this delusion by their directions for the prosecution of magic. 1 " Qaeerentes plura sapere quam oporteat" Trials for Witchcraft. 257 Theology held itself bound to follow the precedent of its great master, St. Thomas, by indorsing the greatest absurdities of this belief in witchcraft. The main difficulty was only how to evade the force of the canon Gratian had cited from Eegino, which every one took for an ordinance of the Council of Ancyra, whereby the Church had, as early as 314, declared the new doctrine about the works of Satan and his wor- shippers to be an error and denial of Christian firuth, and had thus by anticipation described Popes and in- quisitors as heretics. Most persons consoled themselves with the consideration that anyhow the Pope's autho- rity stood higher, or that a different kind of witches was intended. " So many have been executed already," says the Dominican inquisitor, Bernard Eategno, about 1510, " and the Popes have allowed it." ^ Some Minor- ites, however, maintained belief in the reality of witch- craft to be a folly and a heresy, as, for instance, did Samuel Cassini and Alfonso Spina, and the latter thought the inquisitors had witches burnt simply on account of that belief.^ But the Popes and the Do- minicans maintaiaed the reality of the diabolical 1 Bern. Comensis, Lucem. Inquis. (Eomse, 1584), p. 114. 2 Fortalit. Fidei (Paris, 1511), f. 365. 258 Papal Infallibility. agency, and thus the two views stood out in sharp con- trast in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. A man might at the same time be condemned as a heretic in Spain for affirming, and iu Italy for denying, the reality of the witches' nightly rides. But by degrees the three- fold authority of the Popes, of Aquinas, and of the powerful Dominican Order, prevailed, and all contradic- tion was put to silence. The teaching of the Domini- cans, Nider, Jacquier, Dodo, and the two leading Papal theologians, Bartholomew Spina and Silvester Mazzo- lini (Prierias), on sorcery and witchcraft, had aU the weight of Papal approbation. Spina expressly stated that the truth and reality of the "Witches' Sabbath, with its horrors and wonders, rested on the authority of the infallible Pope, in whose name and by whose commis- sion the inquisitors tried the accused. And as some jurists appealed to the pretended canon of the Council of Ancyra, in Gratian's Becretum, on behalf of the vic- tims sacrificed in shoals to this fanatical folly in Italy, Spina did not hesitate to declare that the authority of the CouncU, which bad pronounced all this to be a pure delusion, must succumb to the authority of the Pope.^ So, too, the Jesuit Delrio appealed, in vindication > Malleus Mal^c. Apol. Prima (Francof. 1588), ii. 652-653. Trials for Witchcraft. 259 of this whole system of superstition, to the sentences of the Popes on sorcerers and witches, which proved that they did not regard their "wild vagaries as Dlusions, but as sober realities. " This," he continues, " is the opinion of aU. ecclesiastical tribunals in Italy, Spain, Germany, and Prance, and all inquisitors have followed it in practice. This therefore is the opiuion and sentence of the Church, and to dissent from it is a sign of a heart not sincerely Catholic, and savours of heresy." ^ Every literary attempt of physicians, jurists, natural- ists, and theologians, to throw any light on the matter, and explain the natural causes of the supposed diaboli- cal phenomena, was put down by the Eoman censure, so far as its power reached. For a century, all works written in this sense were placed on the Index, as hap- pened in the case of the works of Weier, Godelmann, Wolfhart or Lycosthenes, Agrippa, Servin, Delia Porta, and others. On the other hand, all attempts were vain to get the Jesuit Delrio's most pernicious handbook of sorcery, which served a.s a guide for the judges, cen- sured. Whoever dared to express doubts on the sub- ject, or to expose the delusion, had to recant and admit that he had spoken under the inspiration of the Evil 1 Disquis. Mag. i. 16. 26o Papal Infallibility. Spirit, and was either imprisoned for life or burnt. Such a recantation the theologian De Lure or Edeline was compelled to make about J. 16Q -; but it did not save him. When the priest Cornelius Loos CaUidius affirmed, a century later, that the unhappy women only confessed under torture what they had never done, and that thus gold and silver was obtained by a new sort of alchemy out of men's blood, the Papal Nuncio impri- soned, him. He had to recant, but relapsed, and after a long imprisonment only escaped by his death the fate of his contemporary Fladey the Treves counsellor, who was burnt for assailing the trials of witches on the strength of the so-called canon of Ancyra.* As late as 1623, Gregory xv. ordered that any one who made a pact with Satan, producing impotence in animals, or injuring the fruits of the earth, should be imprisoned for life by the Inquisition. At last, when these mis- chievous practices of the Inquisition had been carried on for 170 years, and countless victims had been sacrificed to the fancies of the Popes and monks, an instruction of the Eoman Inquisition appeared in 1657, containing the shameful admission that for a long time not a single process had been rightly conducted by the inquisitors, that they had wickedly erred through their reckless 1 JJisquis. Mag. iii. 58, 227 se Opusc. xxxiv. (ed. Paris), xx. 549, 580. Dominican Forgeries : Results. 271 of new religious, with still laiger exemptions, an3 own- ing no obedience but to their distant superiors. The result was such' that even a cardinal, Simon of Beau- lieu, said in France, in 1283, that all ecclesiastical dis- cipline was ruined by the privileges of the Begging Orders, and that one might well call the Church a monster/ The parish priests were then the most powerless and unprotected of all classes of the clergy; they had no organ and no representation for making their com- plaints heard. The bishops complained frequently, and the University of Paris made a long resistance ; but all had to bow to the united power of the Popes and the Mendicants. The only effect was to convince the monks more clearly that the Papal system, with its theory of Infallibility, was as indispensable and valuable to them as to the Curia itself. § XIX. Infallibility Disputed. All the alleged grounds for Papal Infallibility, through the older Eoman fabrications, the pseudo-Isidore, the Gregorians, and Gratian, and, finally, the Dominican forgeries and the theological authority of St. Thomas, were now admitted almost without contradiction. Yet ' Hist. Lit. de France, xxi. 24. 272 Papal Infallibility disputed : it was not generally acknowledged that a Pope was actually infallible in his pronouncements on matters of faith. In countries where the Inquisition was not per- manently established, the contrary might be taught, and for centuries opposite views on this point prevailed. That the Koman Church was. divinely guaranteed by a special Providence against entire apostasy from the faith was affirmed by Guibert of Tolirnay about 1250/ and Nicolas of Lyra,^ and was pretty generally believed. But then it was always assumed that a Pope could fall into heresy, and give a wrong decision iu weighty questions of faith, and that he might in that case be sentenced and deposed by the Church. Besides the history of Liberius, it was mainly the oft-quoted canon of Gratian, ascribed to St. Boniface, that supplied the rule of judgnient here.* Even the boldest champions of Papal absolutism, men like Agostino Trionfo and Alvaro Pelayo, assumed that the Popes could err, and that their decisions were no certain criterion. But they also held that an heretical Pope ipso facto ceased to be Pope, without or before any judicial sentence, so that Councils, which are the Church's judicature, only attested the ' De Offio. Episc. c. 35, in Biblioth. Max. PatTum, t. xxv. » Ad Lucam, xxii. 31. 3 .Si Fapa, Dist. vi. 50. Re-ordination. 273 vacancy of the Papal throne as an accomplished fact. In that case, according to Trionfo, the Papal authority- resides in the Church, as at a Pope's death.^ So too, Cardinal Jacob Fournier, afterwards Pope, thought that Papal decisions were by no means final, but might be overruled by another Pope, and that John xxii. had done well in annulling the offensive and doctrinally erroneous decision of Nicolas iii. on the poverty of Christ, and the distinction of use and possession.^ And Innocent iii. had said before, — " For other sins I acknowledge no judge but God, but I can be judged by the Church for a sin concerning matters of faith." ^ And Innocent iv. allowed that a Papal command containing anything heretical, or threatening destruction to the whole Church system, was not to be obeyed, and that a Pope might err in matters of faith.* John xxii. had to learn, not without personal mortification, that his authority was of little weight when opposed to the dominant belief, and that a simple recantation was his only resource. 1 Summa, v. 6. ' See Eymerio. Director. Inguis. p. 295. ' De Conseo. Pontif. Serm. 3. Oyip. (ed. Venet. 1578), p. 194. But he ttinks God would hardly suffer a Pope to err against the faith. * Comment, in Dec. v. 39, f. 595. "Papa etiam potest errare in fide et ideo non debet quis dieei-e, credo id quod credit Papa, sed illud quod credit Ecclesia, et sic dicendo non errabit." The passage is left in the repertory of his work, hut has been expunged from the text of the later editions. 2 74 Papal Infallibility disputed: When he preached at Avignon the doctrine that the blessed do not enjoy the Beatific Vision before the general resurrection, a universal outcry was raised in Paris. The theologians drew up propositions declaring the doctrine to be heretical. The King had it publicly condemned in Paris with sound of trumpets, and com- manded the Pope to accept the judgment of the Paris doctors, who must know what was the true faith better than the spiritual jurists, who understood little or nothing of theology.^ That was the estimate long en- tertained of the Curia. No confidence was felt in their judgment on questions of dogma and theology. The inseparable connexion between Aquinas and Papal InfalUbUity was shown in the contest already mentioned between the University of Paris and the Dominican Order, in the person of Montson. The Do- minicans said that St. Thomas's doctrine was in all points sanctioned by the Popes, among others by Urban v. in his Bull, addressed to the High School of Toulouse ; and thus the Popes bear witness to St. Thomas, and he to the Popes. But St. Thomas teaches, on the authority of his spuri- ^ As Cardinal D'Ailly stated it to the assembly of the French clei^ in 1406, the King's message to the Pope was still ruder and more peremptory, " qn'il se revoquait ou qu'U se ferait ardre." Cf. Du Chastenet, Xmiv. Hist, du Cone, de Constance (Paris, 1718), Prenves, p. 153. ViUani, whose brother was then in Avignon, does not mention this. Re-ordination. 275 •nis Cyril, that it is enough for the Pope alone to declare what is matter of faith, and to sanction or condemn any doctrine. On the other hand, the Faculty enumerated a whole series of errors in St. Thomas, and classed among them this very doctrine of Papal Infallibility.^ They distinctly call it heresy, it being notoriously the doc- trine of the Church that there is an appeal from a Pope to a General Council, and that every bishop, by divine and human right, is qualified to pronounce sentence on points of faith. Thus in 1388 the dogmatic infallibility of the Popes was repudiated by the first and most influen- tial theological corporation in the Church, and the supe- riority of Councils in matters of faith expressly affirmed, though certainly no Paris theologian doubted the genu- ineness of the imposing testimonies cited by St. Thomas. The Popes themselves were constantly bringing their dogmatic authority afresh into suspicion. The most thorough-going and credulous devotee of Eoman suprem- acy could not help feeling uneasy when he found that the Papal See was at a loss for any clear and well-defined principles, on one of the gravest and most practically im- portant questions, involving aU certainty of individual and corporate religious life — the doctrine of ordination, ' D'Ai'geiitrd, Collect. Jvdic. i. 2, 84. 276 Papal Infallibility disputed: that the Guriawas constantly fluctuating on this question, and that it had infected the Schola with the same uncer- taiaty since the middle of the twelfth century, as may be seen from Peter Lombard. We mean that since the eighth century, as was before said, ordinations which were valid according to immutable laws, grounded in the very nature of the Church and the Sacraments, had been declared null at Rome, and re-ordinations performed, which had thrown the Italian Church into the most vexatious confusion by the end of the ninth century. And again the increase of simony had given occasion to Popes, as, e.g., Leo rx., to annul a number of ordinations at a Eoman Synod, and either to solemnize or order regular re- ordinations.^ This was based on the double error of supposing that simony, or procur- ing ordination for money, was heresy, and that heresy made the ordination invalid. The mischief done by the Popes in this way was immeasurable, for there were but few priests and bishops then throughout Italy alto- gether free from simony, so that millions of the laity became perplexed about the sacraments they had re- ceived from clergy said to be invalidly ordained, and ^ Petri Damiani, Opusc. v. p. 419. " Leo ix. plerosque Simoniaeoa et male promotes tanquam noviter ordinavit." Re-ordination. 277 hatred and feuds between the people and their pastors penetrated every village, nor was it easy to find any way out of this labyrinth of universal religious doubt and in- terruption or destruction of the succession. Nor was this all. The same confusion was imported into Germany too, and the ordinations of those bishops were declared to be invalid whom the Popes had excommunicated for their loyalty to the Emperor Henry iv. Thus, at the Synod of Quedlinburg in 1085, the Papal legate Otho annulled the ordinations of the bishops of Mayence, Augsburg, and Coire, although Peter Damiani had long since raised his voice against this capricious annulling of ordinations and re-ordaining.-' Otho, afterwards Pope Urban 11., de- clared that even when there was no simony in the actual ordination, it was rendered invalid if performed by a simoniacal bishop.^ At a Synod at Piacenza he annulled the ordinations of his rival. Archbishop Guibert of Eavenna,^ cele- brated after his excommunication by Gregory vii., and thereby gave public evidence of another gross error, 1 Bemold. in Pertz, Monum. vii. 442 ; Hardiiin, Condi, vi. 1. 614. 2 This letter of Urban ii. has puzzled theologians who dislike seeing a Pope openly teach heresy. Thus, e.g., Witasse {Tract. Theol. ed Venet. vi. 81) says it is " intricatissiinus et diffioillimus locus." Wecilo is the bishop referred to. 3 [The Antipope Clement iii., elected at Brixeu in 1080. —Til.] 2 78 Papal Infallibility. that the validity of sacraments is affected by Church ceiisures.^ Even Innocent n. made a great Synod, the second Council of Lateran, an accomplice in his error of declaring invalid the ordinations of " schismatics/' ie., of the episcopal adherents of Pope Anacletus, who had been elected by a majority of the cardinals, but was then dead, — an act of arbitrary caprice and notorious heresy, which cannot be excused, like earlier re-ordina- tions, by the horror professedly felt for simony.^ Hence it was the Eoman Church itself which, notwithstanding the protests raised from time to time within its bosom against the terrible disorder caused by these ordinations, was again and again falling into the same error, and dis- turbing the consciences and belief of the faithful in a way that in the ancient Church would have been found intolerable, and against which a remedy would soon have been discovered. § XX. — Fnsh Forgeries. Soon after St. Thomas's time, towards the end of the thirteenth century, there arose a need for further in- ventions, this time in the domain of history, to sustain and further the system. As the contradictions between > CmuM. (ed. Labte), x. 50i. " lb. p. 1009. Fresh Forgeries : Historical. 2 79 the older historical authorities and the recent codes of canon law, Gratian and the Decretals, were obvious to every one who looked beneath the surface, it seemed desirable to represent the history of the Popes and Emperors in such a way as to get rid of those contra- dictions, and give an historical sanction to the new canon law. This task was undertaken, at the command of Clement v., by Martin of Troppau, called the Pole, owing to Mcolas iii. having made him Archbishop of Gnesen in 1275. He was penitentiary and chaplain to the Pope; all jurists and canonists were said to biad up his book with Gratian and the Decretals, and all theologians with the Bible history of Peter Comestor.^ And this book is, of all historical works of the middle ages, at once the most popular and the most utterly fabulous. Many of its fictions simply evidence the want of any historical sense and the miracle-mon- gering credulity which had been the rage since the rise of the Mendicant Orders ; but many also were in- vented with deliberate intention. The Popes were to be exhibited, as in the itSer Pontificalis, but stm more 1 [Peter Comestor, Chancellor of Paris at the end of the twelfth cen- tury, wrote a history extending from the Creation to the birth of Christ. This work, with the Sentences of Peter Lombard and Gratian's Decretum, is said to have made up the average reading of mediaeval divines.— Te.] 28o Papal Infallibility. conspicuously, as the rulers and legislators of the whole Church, the pseudo-Isidorian fabrications and Gratian were to be confirmed, and history made to reflect the supremacy of Popes over Emperors. The book indi- cates a great falling off in historical composition ; and this is to be accounted for by the general influence of the Begging Monks, especially the Dominicans, with their insatiable hankering after miracles, and their constant endeavour to trace the Papal system to the earliest ages, in materially obscuring historical knowledge, and degrad- ing it below the level it had attained in the twelfth cen- tury. The mere fact of so miserable and thoroughly men- dacious a book as Martin's gaining such universal cur- rency and influence is an eloquent proof of this decline. The same object, of adapting the history both of the Empire and the Church to the Gregorian system, was followed by the Dominican Tolomeo of Lucca, Papal librarian, whom John xxii. appointed in 1318 to the see of Torcello. His Church History, up to 1313, is much fuller than Martin's 'Iry compendium, and a far more spirited and artistic Cc .! position. This is true also of his continuation of the Political Treatise com- menced by Aquinas,^ and his Annals from the year 1 St. Thomas only wrote the first book of the De Regimine Principum, Fresh Forgeries: Historical. 281 1062. His principal work often reads like a commen- tary on Gratian or the pseudo-Isidore, whom, however, he only knew through Gratian. The purport of his work for the first twelve centuries is to mould the fabrications of these two writers and the Decretals into a coherent history. It may suffice for an illustration of his treatment of ancient Church history, to say that he describes Pope Vigilius as holding the fifth QJcumenical Council at Constantinople in sovereign majesty, with the hearty co-operation of the Emperor Justinian, who manifested an entire devotion to him.-"^ So was history written at the Papal Court. One of its main objects was to supply an historical basis for the principles of Eome, and her claims to jurisdiction over the German empire, the elections to the throne, and the emperors. At that time the Papacy was gradually passing into French hands. The institution of Legates, unknown in the ancient Church, but imported into the ecclesiasti- cal system by means of a spurious canon, and accounted necessary by Gratian,^ had enabled the Popes to and two chapters of the second. Tolomeo completed the second, and -wrote the third and fourth hooks. Cf. Quetif-Echard, i. 543. 1 Ptol. Luc. 895-899. ^Dist. 94, c. 2, with the title "Bxcommuiiioetur qui legatum Sedia Apo- stolioae impedire tentaverit." The passage is from pseudo-Isidore, hut speaks in very general terms of the episcopal office, which was not to he 282 Papal Infallibility. dominate and tax the various National Churches, and was now in full bloom. The Popes had overthrown the Hohenstaufen dynasty, and transplanted a French dynasty and French influence into Italy for the sake of the South Italian kingdom. The feudal claim of the Nor- mans was not enough to legitimatize this procedure, and some other title had to be discovered. Tolomeo accordingly related that the Emperor Constantine had presented this kingdom to the Pope as a " manuale," which he could dispose of as he pleased.^ Thus his whole History is thrown iuto the shape requisite for the Cwrm and the Dominicans in 1 3 1 3. He begins by saying that Christ was the first Pope, and keeps to that pro- gramme throughout. The second Pope was Peter, who founded, by his disciples, all the principal churches in Italy and GauL Tolomeo was also the first to disseminate, in the Papal interest, the fable about the appointment of the Electors by Gregory V. in 995.^ This was the complement of the impeded. By omitting tlie word " vestram," and with the help of Gratian's title, the Legates are represented as competent to excommunicate any one 1 Ptol. Luc. 1066. ^ Not Trionfo, as Friedhnrg maintains {De Fin. inter Eccl. et Cimt. regund. Judieio, 1861, p. 25). Nor was the passage interpolated into St. Thomas, as he thinks, and the hook does not belong to ^gidius of C!olumna, as Wattenbach thinks [Deutschlands OescMchtsquel. 519), but the passage is in Tolomeo's continuation. Qu^tif and Echard have already pointed out Fresh Forgeries: Historical. 283 theory of translations invented by Alexander in. and Innocent in. It was the Popes, according to Innocent, who took the Empire from the Greeks and gave it to the Franks, and they did this for their own better pro- tection.-' Charlemagne, by command of the Church, put an end to the empire of the Greeks, says Tolomeo.^ Boniface viii. brought the German emperor Albert to acknowledge formally that the Popes had transferred the Empire; that it was they who had conferred the right of election on certain princes, and given to kings and emperors the power of the civil sword.^ And to this were added the new claims, first put in force by Clement v., that the Pope succeeds during a vacancy to the Imperial power, and that every Emperor is bound to take an oath of fealty to him, — claims which John xxii. acted upon in his contest with the Emperor Louis, and from whence he drew the further corollary, which he at once put into practice against Louis, that he, as Pope, was administrator of the Empire during a vacancy.^ The Gwria found Gratian and the Decretals insufiScient this addition of Tolomeo's to St. Thomas's work, and shown that, he was the first to disseminate the fahle, and probably himself invented it. 1 Registr. Epp. 29, 62 ; Decret. o. 34, De Elect, i. 6. 2 Ptol. Luc. 974. 3 Baynald. Annal. ann. 1303, 8. * Cf. "Processus in Ludovio. Bav." in Martene, Thes. Anecd. ii. 710, seq., where a whole series of fables and falsifications, lilve Martin's and Tolo- 284 Papal Infallibility. for these purposes, and so to the numerous class of Papal Court jurists and Court theologians, lilce Trioufo and ^gidius Columna, must be added the Court his- torians Martin and Tolomeo. Besides these, special fictions were wanted to meet the circumstances of particular countries and National Churches, so as to adapt their history to the require- ments of the Papal system. This was eminently true of Spain. The business of cooking history was carried on in her case more systematically than anywhere else. The ancient Spanish Church, without ignoring the Eoman primacy,^ had yet maintained an independent attitude towards it. Her Synods, regularly held, exer- cised judicial power over bishops and metropolitans, and sometimes opposed even Popes in questions of faith, as, e.g., the Synod of Toledo in 688 subjected Pope Bene- dict's letter to severe criticism, and did not scruple to charge him with "barefaced contradiction of the Fathers." At the time of the Arabian invasion, and till towards the end of the eleventh century, the Spanish Church meo's, are produced as -weapons against the Emperors and tleir adherents, as, e.g.. Pope Innocent's excommunication of the Emperor Arcadius, the legends of Constantine and Theodosius, and many more. ' Thus the most influential of Spanish prelates and theologians, Isidore of Seville, in his letter to the Duke Claudius, asserts his subjection to the Boman See more emphatically than was usual with bishops of that age. Fresh Forgeries : Historical. 285 preserved her independent life.' Eoman influences were seldom felt, and only at long intervals. Archbishop Diego Gehnirez, a zealous advocate of the Gregorian system, testifies, at the beginning of the twelfth century, that no Spanish bishop then (in the previous century) paid to the Eoman Church tribute or obedience, and that the Spanish Church followed the laws of Toledo, not of Eome.^ A change in the interests of Eome was effected through the influence of the monks of Clugny, who received abbeys and bishoprics, through the action of French queens, and the policy of some kings who were seeking support at Eome. Even Gregory vii. asserted that aU Spain had from ancient times been the property of the Popes, as he expected also to be able to demand Hungary, Eussia, Provence, and Saxony. And this claim had one result, in the suppression of the Mozarabic and substitution of the Eoman rite in 1085. A French Cluniac monk became Archbishop of Toledo, and for 150 years, up to the middle of the thirteenth century, a con- 1 Masdeu, Bist. GriUc. de Mspatia, xiii. 258 sciq. Here it is observed that, according to a letter issued by Adrian I. about 790, denouncing certain abuses, there had for two centuries been no correspondence of the Popes with Spain. Nor was there any even in the eleventh century, before Gre- gory vil.'s time, except on a few unimportant points. 2 Hist. Compost. 253, in vol. xx. of Florez' EspaTIa Sagrada. 286 Papal Infallibility. stant struggle went on for the subjugation of the Spanish Church. This was the aim of the historical fictions first perpetrated by Bishop Pelayo of Oviedo, and then by Bishop Lucas of Tuy. The former adulterated Sam- piro's Chronicle by inventing an embassy of the Spanish Church to John viii., some decrees of that Pope, and a Synod held by his order at Oviedo, besides other things.^ More comprehensive and still more influential were the inventions of Lucas, who thoroughly corrupted the ancient history of Spain. In order to give an appear- ance of early and complete dependence on Eome to the Spanish Church, he represented Archbishop Leander as a legate of the Pope, and falsified the whole history of Isidore, whom he converts into a vicar of Pope Gregory.^ The misfortunes of Spain and the overthrow of the Gothic kingdom are explaiaed by a purely fabu- lous history he invented of King Witiza, who is said to have forbidden the Spaniards, on paia of death, to obey the Pope.^ 1 Florez' EspaTia Sagrada, xiv. 440. 2 76. ix. 203-204. ^ " Chrouicon Mundi" in Schotti Hisp. JUustrat. iv. 69. " Istud quidem causa pereundi Hispanise fuit," says Lucas. The moral to be drawn was that the prosperity of Spain depended on obedience to the Pope. The whole Chronicle, wiitten about 1236, is a tissue of lies, exceeding anything previously known, or at least published, in Spain. Fresh Forgeries : St. Cyril. 287 In theo]ogy, from the beginning of the fourteenth cen- tury, the spurious passages of St. Cyril and forged canons of Councils maintained their ground, being guaranteed against all suspicion by the authority of St. Thomas. Since the work of Trionfo in 1320, up to 1450, it is remarkable that no single new work appeared in the interest of the Papal system. But then the contest between the Council of Basle and Pope Eugenius iv. evoked the work of Cardinal Torquemada, besides some others of less importance. Torquemada's argument, which was held up to the time of Bellarmine to be the most conclusive apology of the Papal system, rests en- tirely on fabrications later than the pseudo- Isidore, and chiefly on the spurious passages of St. Cyril. To ignore the authority of St. Thomas is, according to the Car- dinal, bad enough, but to slight the testimony of St. Cyril is intolerable. The Pope is infallible ; all autho- rity of the other bishops is borrowed or derived from his. Decisions of Councils without his assent are null and void. These fundamental principles of Torquemada are proved by the spurious passages of Anaeletus, Cle- ment, the Council of Chalcedon, St. Cyril, and a mass of forged or adulterated testimonies.^ In the times of ^ Be Pontif. M. et Oen. Condi. Aiictorit. (Venet. 1583), p. 17 ; Summa de 288 Papal Infallibility. Leo X. and Clement ni, the Cardinals Thomas of Vio, or Cajetan, and Jacobazzi, followed closely in his foot- steps.^ Melchior Canus built firmly on the authority of Cyril, attested by St. Thomas, and so did BeUamune and the Jesuits who followed him. The Dominicans, Nicolai, Le Quien, Qu^tif, and Echard, were the first to avow openly that their master, St. Thomas, had been deceived by an impostor, and had in his turn misled the whole tribe of theologians and canonists who fol- lowed him.^ On the other hand, the Jesuits, including even such a scholar as Labb^, while giving up the pseudo-Isidorian decretals, manifested their resolve still to cUng to Cyril.^ In Italy, as late as 1713, Professor Ecd. (Venet. 1561), p. 171 ; Afparat. super Deer, Union. Gnec. (Venet. 1561), p. 366, and in many other places. ' Opera (ed. Serry), Patav. 734, p. 194, " Cyrillus . . . mnlto eviden- tius quam caeteri auotores liuic veritati testimonium perhibet," viz., that the Pope is the infallible judge of doctrine. Those who wish to get abird's- eye view of the extent to which the genuine tradition of Church authority was still overlaid and obliterated by the rubbish of later inventions and forgeries about 1563, when the Lod of Canus appeared, must read the fifth book of his work. It is indeed still worse iifty years later in this part of Bellarmine's work. The difference is that Canus was honest in his belief, which cannot be said of Bellamiine. ^ Le Quien speaks out with peculiar distinctness on the point in the Preface to his Paiwplia contra Schi^na Grcecorum, published at Paris in 1718 under the name of Steph. de Altimura, pp. xv.-xvii. 3 Cf. Labb^, De Script. Ecdes. (Paris, 1660), i. 244. He and Bellar- mine sheltered themselves under the pretext that the Thesaurus of Cyril has come to us in a mutilated condition ; Dupin, Ceillier, Oudin, and others have long since sho^vn the falsehood of this assei-tion. Fresh Forgeries : S^. Cyril. 289 Andruzzi of Bologna cited the most important of the interpolations in St. Cyril as a conclusive argument in his controversial treatise against the patriarch Dosi- theus.^ § XXI. — Interacts. To all these means for supporting the universal supremacy of the Popes, and hringing the belief of their infallibility into more general acceptance, were added the Interdicts to "which whole countries were frequently subjected. God's Vicar upon earth, it was said, acts like God, who often includes many innocent persons in the punishment of the guilty few ; who shall dare to contradict him ? He acts under Divine guidance, and his acts cannot be measured by the rules of human justice. And thus from the Divine inspiration which guided their action was inferred the doctrinal iufaUi- bility of the Popes, and mce, versa, just as is the case now with the people, and even the clergy, especially in countries of the Latin race. The Popes had indeed themselves declared, in their new code, in the sixth book of the Decretals, that tuterdicts produced the most injurious effects on the religion of the people, strength- 1 Yelus Qroeda de Rom. Sede prceclare sentiens, Venet. 1713, p. 219. T ago Papal Infallibility. ening their impiety, eliciting heresies, originating numberless dangers to souls, and depriving the Chiu'ch of her rightful dues.^ But notwithstanding this con- fession, they made more copious use of interdicts than ever; their proceedings against Germany during the long struggle against the Emperor Louis the Bavarian exceeded, through the long duration of the interdict, anything that had happened there- before. It really seemed as if they wished to root out from the minds of men the gospel teaching about the rights of baptized Christians, and teach them instead to regard themselves as mere herds of cattle belonging to the Pope, with no will of their own, or, as Alvaro Pelayo said, teach them to fly from his wrath to his mercy, which, however, had been refused to them. The results of this conduct varied greatly according to differences of national character. While it led some nations to question more and more the Divine right of an authority so horribly abused, and thus scattered seeds which bore fruit a century and a half later ; others were confirmed in the notion that the Papacy is a mysterious power like the Godhead, whose ways are unsearchable, and which must not be too closely scrutinized, but must always be blindly * Cap. nit. de Exoom. in Sexto Deer. Interdicts. 291 trusted as being enlightened from on high, and acting under Divine inspiration. Paradoxical as it may sound, it is an historical fact that the more suspicious and scandalous the conduct of the Popes — with their exemptions, privileges, indul- gences, and the like, and the consequent confusion in the Church — appeared to pious men, the more inclined they. felt to take refuge from their own doubts and sus- picions in the bosom of Papal infallibility. Tested by simple Christian feeling, they would have been obliged to condemn this, and much else, as an abuse and heinous sin against the Church. But that feeling had to con- tend with the notion, instilled into them from youth, that the Pope is the lord and master of the Church, whom none may contradict or call to account. This may be illustrated by the language of Peter Cantor, as early as the end of the twelfth century. He says there would indeed be just reason to apprehend that the Papal corruptions might produce a general separation from the spiritual empire of Eome, for there is no scriptural justification for them ; but then it would be sacrilegious to find fault with what the Pope does. God suffers not the Eoman Church to fall into any error, and we must assume that the Pope does these things under inspira- 292 Papal Infallibility. tion of the Holy Ghost, by virtue of which he is in the last instance the sole ruler of the Church, to the exclu- sion of all others.^ § XXII. — The Schism of the Antipopes. In the fourteenth century, the Church was brought into a condition which forced doubts upon the minds of even the- most zealous votaries of the Papal system. - The long schism which for above forty years pire- sented-to'the world the novel spectacle of rival Popes mutually anathefiStfciziijg one another, and' two Giirias, — a French one at Avignon, and an Italian, — shook an authority still commonly regarded as inviticible under the last Popes before 1376. For the discomfiture suf- fered by the Papacy at the beginning of the century, in the person of Boniface vm., was soon blotted out of men's rememl)rance by the complete victory it gained soon afterwards over Germany and the Emperor. Louis; and the: practical .effects of that first humiliation' were inconsiderable,^-it left its mark rather on the Sehola and the writings; of the French jurists.- The wounds in- flicted by the "persistent- policy of the Popes for centuries on the Empire and the national unity of Germany long continued to bleed. The German Church had lost the * Vcrhum Ahbrev. (ed. Galopin), p. 11*. The Great Schism. 293 very idea of regarding itself as an organic whole ; that there had ever been such a thing as German National Synods was utterly forgotten. The experiment of " divide etimpera" had been first tried upon the German Church, and had proved a complete success. The Sehisin arose from the struggle between two na- tions for the possession of the Papacy : the Italians wanted to regain' and the French to keep it. And thus it came to pass that from 1378 to 1409 "Western Christendom was divided into two, from 1409 to 1415, into three. Obediences. A Neapolitan, Urban vi., had been elected, and his first slight attempt at a reform gave immediate occasion to -the outbreak of the schism. Soon after entering: ion -his. pontificate, he excommunicated the Cardinals ->who- were guUty of simony. But simony had long beei the daily bread of the Eoman Curia and the breath of its life; without simony the machine must come to a stand- still and instantly fall to pieces. The Cardinals had, from their own point of view, ample ground for insisting on the impossibility of subsisting without it. They accordingly revolted from Urban and elected Clement vii., a man after their own heart.^ Nobody knew at the time whose election, was the most regular, Urban's or Clement's. Things had ^ Thom. de Acem. De Creat. Urhani. See Muratori, iii. 2, 721. 294 Papal Infallibility. in fact occTirred in both elections which made them legally ravalid. The attorneys on hoth sides urged irrefutable arguments to show that the Pope of the opposite party had no claim to their recognition. There were persons on both sides, since accounted as Saints throughout the whole Church, but who then anathematized one another : on the French side, Peter of Luxemburg and Vincent Ferrer, on the Italian, Cath- erine of Sienna and Catherine the Swede. Meanwhile there were two Papal Comis and two Colleges of Car- dinals, each Court with diminished revenues, and deter- mined to put on the screw of extortion to the utmost, — each inexhaustible in the discovery of new methods of making gaia of spiritual things, and the increased application of those already in use. The situation was a painful one for all adherents of Papal infallibility, who found themselves in an inextri- cable labyrinth. Their belief necessarily implied that the particular individual who is in sole possession of all truth, and bestows on the whole Church the certainty of its faith, must be always and undoubtingly acknow- ledged as such. There can as little be any uncer- tainty allowed about the person of the right Pope as about the books of Scripture. Tet every one at that The Great Schism. 295 period must at bottom have been aware that the mere accident of what country he lived in determined which Pope he adhered to, and that all he knew of his Pope's legitimacy was that half Christendom rejected it. Spaniards and Frenchmen, believed in Clement viL or Benedict xiii., Englishmen and Italians in Ur- ban VI. or Boniface ix. What was stUl worse, the old notion, which for centuries had been fostered by the Popes, and often confirmed by them, of the invali- dity of ordinations and sacraments administered out- side the Papal communion, still widely prevailed, espe- cially in Italy. The Papal secretary Coluccio Salutato paints in strong colours the universal uncertainty and anguish of conscience produced by the schism, and his own conclusion as a Papalist is, that as all ecclesiastical jurisdiction is derived from the Pope, and as a Pope invalidly elected cannot give what he does not himself possess, no bishops or priests ordained since the death of Gregory xi. could guarantee the validity of the sacra- ments they administered.-^ It followed, according to him, that any one who adored the Eucharist consecrated by a priest ordained in schism worshipped an idol. 1 See his letter to the Count Jost of Moravia, in Martene, Thes. Anecd. ii. 1159, " Quis nescit ex vitios^ parte veros episcopos esse non posse ? " And the point is then further worked out. 296 Papal Infallibility. Such was the condition of Western Christendom. A happier view prevailed in France, England, Germany, and Spain, than in Italy and at the Papal Court, ahout the conditions of valid ordination and administration of sacraments. Those who had any knowledge of the constitution of the ancient Church perceived now that the con- fusion for which no remedy had been discovered for thirty years, could only be traced ultimately to the development of the Gregorian system. A strong and earnest desire was aroused for the restoration of the episcopal system, so far as it could then be distinguished through the accumulated rubbish of fabrications it was overlaid with, and the distortions and obscuring of Church history. It was felt that the old system would have made such a degradation and devastation as the Church had now experienced impossible. The conviction grew stronger and stronger that a General Council was the only effectual means for the restoration of harmony in the Church, as also for limiting Papal despotism. Ger- mans, like Henry of Langenstein and Nicholas Cusa ; Frenchmen like D'Ailly, Gerson, and Clemange ; Italians like Zabarella; Spaniards like Escobar and John of Sego- via, came, in the end of the fourteenth and beginning of the fifteenth century, to substantially similar conclu- The Great Schism. 297 sions, — that the Church must recover herself, break the chains the Curialistic system had fastened upon her, and reform herself in her head and her members. And indeed for some time, all who were eminent in the Church for intelligence and knowledge had declared themselves in favour of her rights, and the rights of free Councils, against the Papacy. Even the voices of those who thought so terribly degenerate and misused an institution as the Eoman See had now become was nevertheless indispensable, were loudly raised, but with- out producing any result. Public opinion still recog- nised the necessity of its existence, but also the urgent need for its limitation and purification. The first attempt to bring about the assembling of a real, free, and independent Council succeeded. Instead of the mock Synods which had been customary for the last 300 years, when the bishops only came to hear the Pope's decrees read and go home again, a Synod from all Europe was assembled at Pisa in 1409, at which men could dare to speak openly and vote freely. It seemed a great point to contemporaries that two Popes, Gregory xn. and Benedict xm., were deposed, and a third, Alex- ander m., was elected. But these proceedings exhausted the strength of the Synod; the mere presence of a Pope, with the Cardinals now again adhering to him, though 298 Papal Infallibility. he was the creation of the Synod, prevented even the attempt or beginning of a reformation of the Church. The reforms conceded hy Alexander were insignificant. As the other two Popes did not submit to the decision of the Synod, there were now three heads of the Church, as before in 1048, but the Pope elected by the Council received far the most general recognition. § XXIII. — Thz Council of Constance. To bring about the actual downfal of the system, it was necessary that it should be represented in the person of a Pope who was the most worthless and infamous man to be found anywhere, according to the testimony of a contemporary.^ This Pope, recognised up to the day of his deposition by the great majority of Western Chris- tendom, was Balthasar Cossa, John xxiii. Now was the first real victory won, not only over persons, but over the Papacy, and for this was required such an assembly as was the Council of Constance (1414-1418), the most numerous ever seen in the West, at which, besides 300 bishops, there were present the deputies of fifteen universities, and 300 doctors, men who were not 1 Justinger, Berner-Chronic. p. 276. " The worst and most atused man to be found, when his hadness had heen thoroughly exposed in the Oounoil at Constance." Council of Constance. 299 in the ambiguous position of having to reform abuses to which they owed their own dignities and emoluments. And this assembly had to introduce the new plan of voting by nations in place of the old one of voting by individuals, or all would have been wrecked through the great number of Italian bishops, the majority of whom considered it their natural duty to uphold tlie Papal system, the Cwria, and the means of revenue thence accruing to the Italians. The corruption of the Church, and the demoralization which was its result, had pene- trated deeper in Italy than elsewhere, and then, as afterwards, it was remarked, that the Italian bishops were the most steady opponents of every remedy and reformation. With the Council of Constance arose a star of hope for the German Church. Well were it if she had possessed men capable of taking permanent advantage of so favourable a situation. The new Emperor, Sigis- mund, full of earnest zeal to help the Church in her sore distress, managed ao skilfully to persuade and press Pope John, who was threatened in Italy, that he chose the German city of Constance for the Council, and came there himself, though not by his own goodwill. For three centuries the Germans had been thrust out by 300 Papal Infallibility. the Italians and Frencli from all active part in the general affairs of the Chnrch. They were the nation least responsible, next to the English, for the evils of the schism, — for the Owria had always been purely French and Italian, and had contained no single element of German representation. The German clergy were more sinned against than sinning. It is true that even in Germany the corruption of the Church had become intolerable, and cried to Heaven, but it was no native product of the German people ; it had been imported from the south, like a foreign pestilence, and become permanent through the destruction of the organic Ufe of the national Church. In the famous decrees of the fourth and fifth sessions, the Council of Constance declared that " every lawfully convoked (Ecumenical Council representing the Church derives its authority immediately from Christ, and every one, the Pope included, is subject to it in matters of faith, in the healing of schism, and the reformation of the Church." The decree was passed without a single dissentient voice, — a decision more eventful and pregnant in future consequences than had been arrived at by any previous Council, and accordant in principle with primitive antiquity, — for so the Church held before Council of Constance. 30 1 the appearance of the pseudo-Isidore. But at the time it must have looked like a bold innovation ; so strongly had the current set in the opposite direction for a lengthened period, and so loftily had the Popes towered ahove the humhle attitude of the silent and submissive Synods from the third Lateran to the Council of Vienne. That the Council had a full right to call itseKCEcumen- ical was obvious. The small and divided fractions of the other two Obediences could not prejudice its claims. Gregory xn. and Benedict xm. had been deserted by their Cardinals, and all that could be held to consti- tute the Eoman Church took part in the CounoiL If a Pope is subject to a Council in matters of faith he is not infallible ; the Church, and the Council which represents it, inherit the promises of Christ, and not the Pope, who may err apart from a Council, and can be judged by it for his error. This inference was clear and indisputable. But it was not the article in the decrees concerning faith, but that concerning reforma- tion, which excited the suspicion of the Cardinals. That a Pope who became heretical fell under the judgment of the Church, and therefore of a Council, was the com- monly accepted and admitted theory since the so-called canon of St. Boniface had been received into the codes, 302 Papal Infallibility. though it could not really be reconciled with the doc- trine of infallibility assumed in the same codes of canon law, and dissemiuated by Aquinas. Yet the Cardinals dared not refuse their assent to the decrees which were so menacing to the interests of the Owria. These decisions of Constance are perhaps the most extraordinary event in the whole dogmatic history of the Christian Church. Their language leaves no doubt that they were understood to be articles of faith, dog- matic definitions of the doctrine of Church authority. And they deny the fundamental position of the Papal system, which is thereby tacitly but very eloquently signalized as an error and abuse. Yet that system had prevailed in the administration of the Church for cen- turies, had been taught in the canon law books and the schools of the Eeligious Orders, especially by Thomist divines, and assumed or expressly af&rmed in aU pro- nouncements and decisions of the Popes, the new authorities for the laws of the Church. And now not a voice was raised iu its favour ; no one opposed the doctrines of Constance, no one protested ! But the state of the Church had become so imnatural and monstrous, — the measure of htmian infirmity and sinfulness which must be reckoned upon in every, Council of Constance. 303 even the best, comiminity was so largely exceeded, — and the habitual transgression of the laws of God and the ordinances of the ancient Church was so open and universal, that every one could perceive- that the whole dominant system, rather than particular individuals, was responsible for this perversion of Church-govern- ment into a vast engine of finance and money-getting, — this transformation of a free Church arranging its affairs by common consultation into a subject empire under absolutist rule, and made the prey of an oligarchy. When the Cardinals «aid, in the letter they addressed to their Pope, Gregory xii., in 1408, that there was no soundness in the Church from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head,^ they should have added, if they wished to tell the whole truth, " It is we and our col- leagues, and your predecessors, it is the Curia, who have gone on saturating the body of the Church with moral poison, and therefore is it now so sorely diseased." There were certainly but few who clearly understood all the real causes as well as the greatness of the evil, but those few spoke out distinctly what every one dimly felt. Eeform in the head and the mem- bers was the universal watchword throughout Europe, 1 Baynald. Annal. 1408. 304 Papal Infallibility. and was understood by every one to mean that the head, the Papal See, needed reform first of all, and that only then and thus would a reform of the mem- bers be possible. It was notorious to all that the good dispositions of this or that individual Pope, even if they continued, were utterly powerless, and that refor- mation in the present case meant an entire change of system. In face of this evidence all the wisdom of both schools — of the canonists and the monkish theo- logians — was dumb, built, as it was, on rotten founda- tions. They were reduced to sUence, or had, like Tudeschi and many Dominicans, to assent to the decrees of Constance. The public opinion of the whole Chris- tian world, directed and matured by the discussions carried on for the last forty years at Paris, Avignon, Eome, Pisa, and the German imiversities, was too strong for them. Even the new Pope elected at the Council of Con- stance was obliged to declare himself in accord with this feeling. He had indeed been a zealoiis adherent of John xxin., and had only at the last moment deserted him, and given in his adhesion to the Council. But he was now Pope by virtue of this deposition of his predecessor, which depended entii-ely on the decree Council of Constance. 305 passed at the Council, and therefore on the Episcopal system. John had not been deposed on account of his opposition to the Council, but only on account of his breaking his oath of obedience to it, and his crimes, after a formal investigation. An express confirmation of this decree by Martin T. seemed at the time not only super- fluous, but objectionable. It would have been like a son wanting to attest the genuine paternity of his own father, for this decree had made him Pope. Had he wished to assail its validity in any way he would have been bound at once to resign, and let the deposed Pope again take his place. It was clear to him that he could no longer act upon the right, claimed and exercised by his predecessors for 200 years, to be the ruler of the whole Church assembled and represented at the Council, and he distinctly said this in his BuU against the doctrine of Wicliffe, where he asserted the proposition that the supremacy of the Eoman Church over the rest is no part of necessary doctrine, to be an error, because Wicliffe understood by the Eoman the universal Church, or a Council, or at least denied the primacy of the Pope over the other particular Churches.^ 1 " Snper alias ecclesias paTtioiilares," i.e., no priniaoy over the universal Church or a general Council, in strict accordance with the decrees of Con- stance. So, again, in the questions addressed hy Martin's direction to the WicUffites or Hussites, they were asked whether they believed the Pope U 3o6 Papal Infallibility. He took occasion to declare, towards the end of the Council of Constance, that he confirmed all its " con- ciliar " decrees, meaning by this phraseology to withhold his approval from two decrees, on Annates, and on a book by the Dominican Falkenberg, not passed by the Coun- cil in fuH session, but in the congregations of certain nations.^ The two other Obediences also,^ in giving in their adherence to the Council afterwards, assented to its decrees, as is clearly shown by the Concordat of Nar- bonne, in the twentieth session, which enumerated the subjects coming within the competence of the Council in accordance with the decrees of the fourth and fifth sessions. After the deposition of John xxm., and the resigna- tion of Gregory xii., there occurred a significant division and struggle between the Latins and Germans. The Germans and English wanted the reformation of the Church, which was the most important and difficult task of the Council, to be undertaken before proceeding to the election of a new Pope. The experience of the Council of Pisa had proved that the election of a new Pope at once put an end to every scheme of reformation. to be Peter's successor, " habens snpremam auctoritatem in Ecclesid (not Ecclesiam) Dei," aud tliat every General Council, including that of Con- stance, represents the universal Church. 1 "Conoiliariter" is opposed to " nationaliter." ' [The adherents of Benedict xin. and Gregory xn.— Tb.] Council of Constance. 307 But the Cardinals, and with them the Italians and French — the latter from jealousy of the lofty position held by the German King Sigismimd, — pressed for the elec- tion taking precedence of the reformation. Sigismund contended skilfully, bravely, and perseveringly for the interests of the Church, the Empire, and the German people, who then with good reason called themselyes " the godly, patient, humble, and yet not feeble nation."^ Had they been somewhat less patient and humble, and had something more of that strength which union be- stows, the ecclesiastical and national discomfiture of 1417 would not have been followed by the revolt of 1517, the religious division of the nation, the Thirty Years' War, and many other disastrous consequences. But the Cardinals and Latins carried the day by gain- ing over the English, and corrupting some German prelates, as, for instance, the Archbishop of Eiga, and the Bishops of Coire and Leutomischl.^ And before the new Pope, Martin v., had been elected above a few weeks, the Otiria and " curialism " were again in the ascendant. The new rules of the Chancery, at once published by Martin, must have opened the eyes of the short-sighted French, and have shown them that ia the 1 See De Hardt, A da Cone. Const, iv. 1419. » 75. iv. 1427. 3o8 Papal Infallibility. disposal of benefices the whole network of abuses and corrupt trading upon patronage was to be maintained/ Only a few reforming ordinances came into force; the worst wounds and sores of the ecclesiastical body remained for the most part untouched. Martin under- stood how to divide the nations by pursuing a dif- ferent policy towards each. His two Concordats, with the German States and the Latin nations, chiefly related to the possession of ofl&ces, and expressly reserved to the Pope what a long and universal experience had proved to be hateful abuses, as, e.g., the annates, which were so demoralizing to the character of the clergy, and compelled them to incur heavy debts. And most of the articles were so drawn as to leave open a door for the renewal of the abuse. In the life and practice of the Church, the Papal system, with all its attendant evils, was restored. § XXIV.— 2%e CmJb'M'a. of Basle. The Episcopal system, which was the true principle of reform, still survived in the decrees of the fourth and fifth sessions of Constance, and for a long time no one dared to meddle with them. One other hope re- 1 See De Hardt, Acta Coric Const, i. 965 acq. The Council of Basle. 309 mained : the Synod had decided that another should be held after five years, and that for the future there should be an CEcumenical Council every ten years. Here again Martin v. showed that he felt bound to observe the decrees of Constance, for he actually summoned the Council, in 1423, to meet, first at Pavia, and then at Sienna. But the moment any signs of an attempt at reform manifested themselves, he dissolved it, " on account of the fewness of those present." However, shortly before his death, he summoned the new Council to meet at Basle. Eugenius iv. could not avoid carrying out the duty he had inherited from his predecessor, to which he was already pledged in conclave. When the earliest arrivals at Basle took place at the appointed time, the citizens laughed at the new-comers as dreamers, so little could they now conceive the Pope's being in earnest in convoking the Council after the course events had taken since 141 7.'' In fact, Eugenius ordered the dis- solution of the still scanty assembly immediately after its first proceedings, December 18, 1431, on the most transparently frivolous pretexts, with a view to its resum- ing its sittings a year and a half later at Bologna, under his own presidency. And yet the need for a Council had 1 Ma. Silv. Commentar. de Rebus Basil. Gestis (ed. Fea. Eom. 1823), p. 39. 3 1 o Papal Infallibility. never seemed more urgent than at that moment, on accoimt of the triumphs of the Hussites. The assembly, relying on the decrees of Constance, which had been re- peatedly promulgated, remained united, and profited by the warning of the evil consequences resulting at Con- stance from the sharp division of nations to frame a better organization for itself, by forming four deputations, in which dififerent nations and orders were represented. And thus the contest with the Pope began, at first under favourable circumstances, for public opinion throughout Europe was already enlisted on the side of the CoimcLL Moreover, it received strong support from King Sigismund, and Eugenius found himself hard pressed in Italy, and deserted by many Cardinals, and even by the Court officials, hundreds of whom had run away from him. In vain he pronounced excommuni- cation against the prelates who were on their way to Basle. Letters of adhesion poured into Basle from kings, princes, and prelates, from bishops and universities ; it seemed as if once again the spell was broken whereby the Papal system had held men's minds enthralled. Eugenius saw that he must give in,and he signified his assent to the continuance of the Council in his Bull of February 4, 1433, and named four cardinals to preside over it The Council of Basle. 311 But this Bull, again, did not satisfy the Council, though Eugenius expressly declared that he regarded it as having never been interrupted, and thereby absolutely retracted his former decree for its dissolutioa There was a design of suspending him, when Sigismund, now become Em- peror, arrived unexpectedly, and, through his exertions, ef- fected a reconciliation between the Pope and the Goimcil. Eugenius transcribed word for word the form of approval drawn up by the Council in his Bull of December 15, 1433, and recalled his three former Bulls; he was now ashamed of the third, in which he had most vigorously assailed the authority of the Council, and on the prin- ciples of the Papal system, and af&rmed that he had not sanctioned its publication.^ He admitted that the Council had been fully justified in continuing in ses- sion, and passing decrees, in spite of his Bull of disso- lution, and promised to adhere to it " with all zeal and devotion."^ " We recall the three BuUs," he said, " to show clearly to the world the purity of our intentions and sincerity of our devotion to the universal Church and the holy CEcumenical Council of Basle." The 1 The style and tone of this Bull, Deus nomt, hetray nnmistakeably th" hand of the Papal Court theologian, and Master of the Palace, Torquemada, who was in Basle in 1433, ty commission of the Pope, but seems soon after- wards to have returned to him. ''■ Mansi, Condi, xxix. 78. 312 Papal Infallibility. humiliation of the man and the discomfiture of the sys- tem were complete. It was no isolated act of conde- scension for the sake of peace, but the most definite and indubitable acknowledgment of the superior autho- rity of the Council, and his own subjection to it. The Synod had from the first taken the decrees of Constance on the supreme authority of Councils as its basis, and expressly published them anew as articles of faith, which in fact they were expressly declared to be by the Council of Constance. Pope and Council in common enjoined Western Christendom to believe these doctrines, and it certainly appeared incredible to every one then that a time could ever come when the attempt would be made to overthrow them.^ Even in his former BuHs, condemning and annulling 1 XJltramontanes, from Torquemada and Bellarmine to Orsi, have disco- vered but one escape from this dilemma, by saying that Eugenius's conces- sions were made under sheer pressure of fear. But he was perfectly free per- sonally. Sigismund was at Basle, Eugenius in Italy, and they corresponded by letter. If Eugenius was afraid, it was simply the conviction of the whole Church, the public opinion of princes, clergy, and nations, he was afraid of. And if this feeling is to be called fear, then every Pope lives in a chronic state of fear. Eugenins had ii-.' eed first sent about his ambassadors to investigate the state of opinion. E'lt v "'en the Religious Orders, always devoted to Rome, refused their servici:^ tieu. Gonzalez, General of the Jesuits, who thought the argument from ,'ear too absurd, took refuge in the pretext that Eugenius sought to deceive the Council by the ambiguous language of his BuU (De InfalUh. Rom. Pontif. Eomae, 1689, p. 69.5),— an unjust imputation on the Pope, for the BuU is clear and unambiguous from beginning to end. The Council of Basle. 3 1 3 the decisions of the Pathers at Basle, Eugenius had not ventured to touch the decrees of Constance on which they were based, and he had, moreover, recognised the second session, in which those decrees were renewed ; he had only attacked what was done after the issue of his decree for the dissolution of the Council. So com- pletely and irrevocably was the Papal See bound, as we must believe, to the decisions of Constance on Church authority, — for if Eugenius erred in confirmiag them he was not infallible, and the gift must rest with the CouncU, while, on the other hand, if he was right, his subjection in matters of faith to the Council, and there- fore his fallibility, was again affirmed. Moreover, Eugenius had maintained his right, as Pope, to dissolve or suspend any Council at his pleasure; this he now retracted, and acknowledged the legitimacy of a General Council carried on in defiance of a Papal decree for its dissolution. Por three years and a half, from the fourteenth session of November 7, 1433, to the twenty-fifth of May 7, 1437, an external harmony at least was maintained between the Council and the Pope, as represented by his legates and by Cardinal Csesarini. The decrees of reform only included matters long since universally recognised as 3 1 4 Papal Infallibility. necessary, and forbade nothing which had not been regarded as a public scandal for the Church. The regu- lar method of conferring spiritual offices was restored, reservations of elective benefices and reversionary rights in them were abolished, simony and pluralities were forbidden, some regulation and limitation of appeals was introduced, and the frequency and severity of interdicts dimiaished. All this was so reasonable, so just, and so ecclesiastical, that it was received with general applause. The Synod acted so considerately, that of the numerous rights claimed by the Popes in the De- cretals of the Corpus Juris, no single one was abrogated. And besides, by adding the exception, " for weighty and prudent reasons," the Synod had left open a wide door for the Pope, notwithstanding its prohibitions, which gave occasion to the University of Paris to blame them sharply.^ Eugenius himself had declared his entire agreement with the decrees of reformation, even after the twentieth session of January 23, 1435,^ and he repeated this on June 15 of the same year to the deputy of the Synod, John of Brekenstein.^ Yet he had a grudge against 1 Bulasi, Bist. Univ. Paris, y. 246. * " Se Concilii decreta semper suscepisse et observiisse.'' Aug. Patric. Hist. ConcU. Basil, a. 46, in Labbi, Ooncil. xiii. 1533. " Labbe, ut supra, p. 833. The Council of Basle. 3 1 5 the Council for not giving liim the means of obtaining money, which he asserted his need of, for abolishing annates, and for disputing his right to the patronage of benefices reserved by the last Popes. Before finally breaking with them, he had a charge brought against the Council, through his agents, who travelled about to the different Courts furnished with secret instructions, that they had appointed a President, and given far too sweeping an interpretation to the decrees of Constance, which, however, he had himself three years before ac- knowledged as the true one. The payment of annates, he said, was an immemorial usage — the fact being that the Popes had introduced it about forty years before, during the schism.-"- His nuncios were further instructed that, as the abuses of the Court of Eome were constantly cast in its teeth, and this produced a great impression, they should carry with them a scheme of reformation of a certain sort, in the shape of a Bull, to be produced for the edification of the sovereigns, and to shut the mouths of accusers.^ They were at the same time fur- ^ The annates amounted to half, and often more than halt, the annual in- come of a see or a henefloe, -which every fresh occupant had to pay once, and to pay in advance, to the Papal treasury. This excluded all poorer men, unless their families could raise the money, from the higher dignities in the Church, and placed the clergy generally in the position of having to enter on their posts under pressure of heavy debts. In some German bishoprics the annates amounted to 25,000 florins (£2000). ' " Per hano reforniationem, etiamsi usquequariaie plena non foret, modo 3 1 6 Papal Infallibility. nished with special powers, in foro conscientice (dispen- sations and absolutions), by the use of which they might gain over the sovereigns to the Pope.-^ The Council, on the other hand, had some weat points. Carried on and encouraged by the general confidence and assent accorded to it, it was under the temptation of entering upon a mass of details, processes, and local concerns, which were brought before it chiefly from France and Germany ; it got involved as umpire in political intrigues, and made enemies here and there even among the sovereigns. And the final decision naturally rested with them, when the struggles between the Council and the Pope broke out afresh. The negotiations with the Greek Emperor about the reunion of the Churches gave the Pope the desired pre- esset aliqua, eonim ora obstmerentnr, qui oontinne laeerant et carpnnt Eomanse Curiae famam — redderenturqae tunc reges et principes melius aedificati et magis proui ad condesoendendum petitionibus Papse et Car- dinalium," etc. Raynald. Annal. ann. 1436, 15. Had tlie Eoman encom- iast, who hsis been so discreetly reticent elsewhere, gone to sleep when he let this passage get into print ? 1 The BuU does not specify the extent of graces of this kind, such as were used for detaching the princes from the side of the Council ; but they must have been very large, for a century earlier, e.g.^ Clement v. had granted to King John of France and his wife the privilege of being absolved by their confessor, retrospectively and prospectively, from all obligations, engage- ments, and oaths, which they could not conveniently keep. " Sacramenta per vos prjestita et per vos et eos praestanda in posterura, quae vos et illi servare commode non possetis."— D'Achery, SpicU. (Paris, 1661), iv. 275. The Council of Basle. 317 text for setting up a rival Synod in Italy. He had already obtained a decision from the minority friendly to him at Basle in favour of removing into Italy, when, at the end of 1437, he proclaimed the adjournment of the Council, or rather, as the event showed, the open- ing of a new one at Perrara. As the Greeks took his side, and the Emperor, the Patriarch, and the Bishops of the Eastern Church, really came to Ferrara (as after- wards to Florence), his design succeeded. It was well known at Basle that the Synod opened on Italian soil would at once be flooded by the local bishops, the officials of the Owna, and the clerical vagrants and place-hunters, and all hopes of reforming the Church would be lost. In fact, during the two years the Council sat at Ferrara and Florence, which the Pope prolonged to two years more, until 1442, after the departure of the Greeks, not a single genuine decree of reform was framed or promulgated. Meanwhile the breach between the Fathers of Basle and the Pope was not obvious on the surface from the beginning, for Eugenius worded his original Bull as though it were based on that decree of the minority which professed to emanate from the whole Council, and thus the Synod of Ferrara at first appeared to be 3 1 8 Papal Infallibility. simply a continuation of that at Basle, and its decrees were supposed to form one body with those enacted there up to the time of the adjournment of the Synod after the twenty-fifth session. Both parties in the meantime adopted the extremest measures. The Synod of Basle, on the strength of the canon of Constance, declared it an article of faith that the authority of a General Council is higher than the Pope's, that none can dissolve or remove it against its will, and that to deny this is heresy. Thereupon Eugenius rv. was deposed, against the advice of the Emperor, and a new Pope, Duke Amadeus of Savoy, chosen, who took the name of Felix v., — a grievous mistake and presump- tion, for the horror of a two or three headed Papacy and an European schism were still only too fresh in men's memory. Moreover, when the Synod ventured on these steps, at the instigation of its leader. Cardinal AUemand of Aries, it had already become insignificant in numbers and personal weight. It was too like a tumultuous multitude composed partly of impure and incongruous elements, though it manifested good dis- cipline and steady perseverance under the leadership of the presiding Cardinal, whom it implicitly obeyed.* ' To the constantly repeated charge that the few bishops had been out- The Union with the Greek Church. 3 19 § XXV. — The Union with the Greek Church. Eugenius had to give up all hopes of the non-Italian bishops attending his Italian Council ; not one of them came, except that the Duke of Burgundy compelled two of his Bishops to appear. But at Ferrara and Florence he at last induced the Greeks, after long resistance, to accept — to be sure only for the moment — those conditions of reconciliation which he insisted upon, and to subscribe the act of union. The Emperor, in presence of the threatened destruction of his capital and the last remaining fragments of his empire, yielded at last. One of the main difficulties concerned the question of the primacy, and that at the moment was the most important point for the Pope, for if he could meet the efforts of the Synod of Basle by producing the testi- mony of the re-united Eastern Church on his side, it would greatly strengthen his case in the public opiaion of the whole West. A general recognition of the Eoman primacy was a matter of course for the Greeks, according to their own tradition, as soon as the charge voted ty the numerous presbyters, D'AUemand might have well replied, that had bishops only voted, the will of the Italian nation must have always prevailed, for their bishops outnumbered or equalled those of all other nations.— {.ffin. Silv. De Cone. Basil. 1791, p. 87.) 3 2 o Papal Infallibiliiy. against the Holy See of having become heretical or schismatical was disposed o£ The Easterns had been familiar for nearly a thousand years with the Patriarchal theory, according to which the five Patriarchs, among whom the Patriarch of old Eome was the first and chief in rank, stood at the head of the whole Church, so that nothing could be separately decided on questions of doctrine and the common interests of the Church without the consent of all five of them. But this view of the precedence of the Eoman "Pope" (the Patriarch of Alexandria had the same title with them) had at bottom as little in common with that universal Papal monarchy invented in the "West in 845, and carried out in practice since 1073, as the position of a Venetian Doge has with that of a Persian Shah. To the Greeks, at all events, the notion of such theocratic sovereignty, interfering forcibly in all the details of the Church's life, and systematically ignoring aU legal limitations, such as existed in the West, was strange and incomprehen- sible. Their Patriarchs moved within a far narrower sphere, and acted by fixed rules. The whole Papal system of indulgences was entirely unknown to them. Many rights and means of power gradually acquired by the Popes could never have come into use in their The Union with the Greek Church. 321 simple system of Church-government. And it was just these very claims of the Papal system which for cen- turies had been their main ground for resisting any overtures for reunion. As early as 1232 the Patriarch Germanus had written to the Cardinals, — " Your tyran- nical oppression and the extortions of the Eoman Church are the cause of our disunion."-' Humbert, General of the Dominicans, made the same statement in the memorial he drew up for the Council of Lyons in 1274 : — " The Eoman Church knows only how to make the yoke she has laid on men's shoulders press heavily; her extortions, her numberless legates and nuncios, and the multitude of her statutes and punish- ments, have deterred the Greeks from reunion."^ And this was the universal opinion in the West.' The French clergy appealed to it in their representation to Clement iv. in 1266 ;* and Bishop Durandus of Mende urged it upon Clement v.^ The English Sir John MandevOle related, after his return from the East, that the Greeks had answered laconically to John xxii.'s 1 Matt. Par. Eist. Angl. p. 461. ' Brown, Fascic. ii. 215. 3 So Gerhocli (Z)e Invest. Antichr. p. 171) said about 1150, "Grseci a Eomanis propter avaritiam, ut diount, se alienaverunt." * Marlot, Metrop. Hhemens, ii. 557, " Quod propter ejuamodi exactiones Orientalis Ecolesia ab obedientil Eomanse Ecclesise recesserit, patet om- nibus." ° Tractat. de Cone. p. 69. 32 2 Papal Infallibility. demand for their submission, "Thy plenary power over thy subjects we firmly believe ; thine immeasur- able pride we cannot endure, and thy greed we cannot satisfy. With thee is Satan, with us the Lord."^ In 1339, the Minorite John of Florence sent to the East by Benedict xiii., had an interview with the Patriarch of Constantinople and his Synod, and it was again said that the cause of the disunion was the insatiable pride of the Bishop of Eome.^ That notion of the Papacy according to which all Church authority is exercised by the Pope, and belongs by inherent right to him alone, in whom are centred all the rights of the episcopate, was a special stumbling- block to the Greeks ;^ and if they regarded the number of oaths in use among the Latins as unchristian, the demand that they should take an oath of obedience to the Pope was doubly hateful to them. But the hope- lessness of their situation had broken their spirit ; they were living during the Council on the alms of the Pope, and could not return home with their work unaccom- plished. Eugenius wanted them to acknowledge his ^ Itinemr. ZwoUis, 1487, i. 7. ' Joh. Marignol. Chronic, in Dotner's Script. Ter. Bohem. ii 85. =• Thus in the Crimen contra Eccl. Lat., written about 1200, and found in Coteler, Monum. Eccl. Grcec. iii. 502, we read, iva ameKTiKbv tu» cLirdfTuii/ ipxiipea rbv ndnrav. That they could not comprehend. The Union with the Greek Church. 323 monarchical power over the whole Church in the form usual in the "West, and, when the Papal theologians overwhelmed them with a mass of forged or corrupted passages derived from the pseudo-Isidore and Gratian, they answered shortly and drily, " All these canons are apocryphal."-^ The Emperor said that if the Pope in- sisted on this point, he would depart with his bishops. At last a compromise was effected; the Pope waived his demand for a recognition of his supremacy over the Church " according to Scripture and the sayings of the saints."^ The Emperor had observed on that point, that the courtly rhetoric to be found in the letters of ancient bishops and emperors could not be transmuted into the logic of strict la-v*-, and that the canons of Councils should rather be taken as the rule. The article was accordingly worded to this effect, that " the Pope is the vicar of Christ, the head of the whole Church, the Father and teacher of aU Christians, and has full authority from Christ to rule and feed the Church in the manner contained in the acts of the fficumenical Councils and in the Canons." This lan- guage defined the limits of the Papal authoiity, and the 1 Harduin, Goncil. ix. 968-974. 2 This meant, as the acts show, the strongest of the spurious passages in pseudo-Isidore and St. Thomas. 324 Papal Infallibility. rules for its exercise, and moreover reduced it within such narrow and moderate boundaries that Eugenius and his theologians would never have agreed to it had they known the true state of the case, and not heen misled by the old and new forgeries into a very mis- taken estimate of the ancient Councils, and the position the Pope occupied in them. The Greeks understood by the (Ecumenical Councils those only which were held in the East during the first eight centuries, and before the division of the two halves of the Church, the Eastern and Western, and this was recognised at Eome as self-evident, so that in the first edition printed there, as well as in the Privilegium of Clement vn., and even in the Eoman edition of 1626, the Council of Florence is called the eighth CEcumenical.^ But in the first seven Councils nothing was said of any special rights of superiority in the Pope ; only his precedence over all other patriarchs was recognised in the twenty- eighth canon of Chalcedon. The appeals, which Euge- nius wanted, were expressly forbidden by the ancient Councils. But the Latins, to whose minds the mention of the ancient Councils only suggested the legends of 1 [It is also quoted as the eighth in Cardinal Pole's Reformation of England, dated Lamheth, 1556.— Tr.] TJie Union with the Greek Church. 325 Silvester, Julius, and Virgilius, etc., and the spurious canons, thought they had provided sufficiently for the interests of the Pope by this formula. The original Latin translation rendered the Greek text faithfully, for after the long controversy with the Greeks over every word, it had been necessary to draw up the decrees first in Greek. Flavio Biondo, the Pope's secretary, gives a correct version.'' But in the Eoman edition of Abraham Cretensis, by the unob- trusive change of a single word, what the Greeks in- tended to have expressed by it had disappeared, viz., that the prerogatives attributed to the Pope are to be understood and exercised according to the rule of the ancient Councils.^ By this change the rule was trans- 1 Tie Greek version runs, " icdfl' fiv rpiwov Kal Iv rots irpaKriKon tZv oUovfiei/LKOJV fivv6do3v ical iv rots Upois icdvoffL StaXa/i/Sdj'erai.'* This is honestly rendered in the original Latin text, " quemadmodum (better ' juxta eum modum qui*) et in gestis (Ecum. Concil. et in sacris canonibus con- tiuetur." So Biondo quotes it in his History (1. x. Dec. 3), and so Cardinal Marcus Vigerius, Bishop Fisher of Rochester, Eck, and Pighius have quoted it after him. But the Dominican Antoniaus had already substituted " etiam." [" Continetur" is, however, an inadequate rendering, to say the least, of StaKaii^iivcTaL, which rather means " is determined" than " is con- tained." See an article on the Council of Florence in the Union Review, vol. iv. pp. 190 sqq. and cf. vol. iii. pp. 686, 687. — Tk.] 2 "Quemadmodum etiam," instead of " et—et." It is one of the many disingenuous statements Orsi has made himself responsible for, when he says (De Rom. Pont. Auctor. vi. 11), in the teeth of the facts as evidenced by the record of proceedings, that the Greek text was translated from the Latin, which, however, had not "etiam" originally. His ignorance of o 26 Papal Infallibility. formed into a mere confirmatory reference, and the sense of the passage became, that the prerogatives enume- rated there belonged to the Pope, and were also contained in the ancient Councils. And the decree of Union has since been printed in this corrupted form in the collections of canons, and elsewhere.^ After the departure of the Greeks, Eugenius severely denounced the Synod of Basle in his Bull issued from Florence, but this censure only touched the sessions held after its prorogation, and the " false interpretation put upon the decrees of Constance."^ In this reserved and tortuous document he did not venture to make any direct attack on the decrees of Constance, then so highly reverenced throughout the Christian world, but he tried to damage their credit by observing that they Greek may excuse him for saying, on the authority of a young man, that KaX — icoi may he translated hy " etiam." Launoy, Bossuet, Natalis Alex- ander, De Marca, the Jesnit Maimbourg, and Duguet, have long since exposed the fraud. But in the Greek version, sent directly from Florence by the Pope to the King of England, aU the words after " primacy over the whole Church" are missing, so that there is reason to snspect an inter- polation even in the Greek text. Brequigny has shown {MSmoires de I'Academ. des Inscr. t. 43, p. 306 sqq.) how suspicious are all the copies of the decree of Union, nine in number, now extant, except the British. None of them are original documents. The five original copies have dis- appeared. 1 [It is also printed in some theological manuals, and often quoted for controversial purposes, with the words about the canons of Councils sup- pressed altogether. — Tr.] = In the Decretal "Moyses Vir Dei." Cf. Cancil. {ed. LabW), xiii. 1030. The Union with the Greek Church. 327 had iDeen passed during the time of the schism by one Obedience only, and after the departure of Pope John. Yet it was not the loss of his infallibility through these decrees that so deeply grieved him. That he had already recognised. Torquemada had made him say in the former Bull (Dews novit) that the Pope's sentence must always take precedence of that of a Council, except in what concerned questions of faith, or rules necessary for the good of the whole Church, and in that case the decision of the Council must be preferred.-' § XXVI— r/ie 'Pa'pcd Reaction. The French nation assumed the most dignified and consistent attitude in view of the altered condition of the Church and the renewal of the schism. In 1438 the King opened a mixed assembly of ecclesiastics and laymen at Bourges. The deputies both of the Pope and the Council of Basle were heard, and it was decided to receive the decrees of the Council, with certain modi- fications required by the circumstances of France. Thus originated the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges, which included the freedom of Church elections, the principle of the superior authority of General Councils, and the 1 See Condi, (ed Labt^), xii. 537. 328 Papal Infallibility. rejection of the disorderly proceedings of the Curia, with its expectancies, reservations, appeals, and mani- fold devices for extorting money. It was the first comprehensive codification of what have since been called the Galilean Liberties. Detested at Eome, it became the butt for the attacks of every Pope after Eugenius rv., untU at last Leo x succeeded in abolish- ing it by the Concordat of 1517, in which the Pope and the King shared the spoils of the French Church ; the lion's share falling, however, to the King. England, involved at the time in political troubles, neglected to take a side. Few only would acknowledge the Savoyard Pope, even if they would not resolve on giving up the Council AKonso, King of Aragon and Naples, hitherto the main support of the Council of Basle, but who had now been won over by the large offers of the Pope, recalled his bishops, and together with the Venetians, who were the countrymen of Eugenius, was his great support in Italy. The German nation, under the lead of the Electors, maintained neutrality between the Synod of Basle and the Pope, but in a sense practically favourable to the CouncU ; and they solemnly accepted its decrees of reformation in 1439 at the imperial Diet of Mayence, whereby The Papal Reaction. 329 Germany bound itself, like France, to the recognition of the doctrine of Church authority laid down in the canons of Constance.^ There was no man of mark in all Germany at that time who expected any good from the Court of Eome for the Church or for his country. Most of the clergy, the Universities of Vieima, Erfurt, Cologne, Louvain, and Cracow, besides Paris,^ the sovereigns and their counsellors, and all the people, were for the Council and its doctrine against the Papal system. But Eugenius understood well how to gain over converts to his side, by bestowing privileges and grants of all kinds, and for this he was much more favourably situated than the Council, which was bound by its own principles, and the decrees it had published, and had little or nothing to give in the way of dispensations, privileges, and exemptions, but was obliged to confine itself within the limits of the ancient Church, while Eugenius, according to the tradition of the Curia, was not bound to the laws of the Church. To the Duke of Cleves he gave such important ecclesiastical 1 See, for the document of acceptance, Koch, Sanctio Pragmat. Oerm. p. 93. ' Launoy(Opj5- vi. 521 sej.) has had their judgments printed from Parisian manuscripts. 330 Papal Infallibility. rights, at the expense of the bishops, that he made him master of the Church and the clergy of his country, so that it became a proverb, " The Duke of Cleves is Pope in his own land."^ As early as 1438, Eugenius had not only deposed and anathematized the members of the Coxmcil, but laid Basle under interdict, excommuni- cated the municipal council, and rec[uired every one to plunder the merchants who were bringing their wares to the city, because it is written, " The righteous hath spoiled the ungodly." Por a long time, indeed, his acts produced no result ; there was too strong a feeling in favour of the Council, which had shown so sincere a desire to benefit the Church. Tor some years the Electors va- cillated in their policy between Eome and Basle. At last their decision came, in 1446. Eing Frederick, acting under the advice of his secretary, the accomplished rhetorician ^neas Silvio Piccolomiui, sold himself to Pope Eugenius, who could offer him more than Felix, since the latter was bound to the decisions of the Council The generous Eugenius pledged himself to pay the Eang 100,000 florins for his journey, together with the im- perial crown, assigned tithes to bini from aU the German 1 Teschenmacher, Anrud. Climce (Fraaoof. 1729), p. 294. ' Eaysald. AtmaZ. aimo 1438, 5. The Papal Reaction. 331 benefices, the patronage for one vacancy of 100 bene- fices in his hereditary territories, and the appoint- ment of bishops to six dioceses, and, finally, gave full powers to his confessor to give him twice a plenary ab- solution from all sins.' Thereby the cause of the Council and of Church reformation was lost in Germany, and the German Church sank back, step by step, into its former bondage, .^neas Silvius, who had meanwhile entered the Papal service, bribed two ministers of the Elector of Mayence, who won over their master to the side of the Pope. Thus the body of German princes was divided, and the previous demand for a new Council was reduced to a mere petition, which people did not trouble themselves about at Eome. The victory of Eugenius was complete. When on his death-bed he received the homage of the German ambassadors, the event was celebrated (Peb. 7, 1447) in Eome VTith ring- ing of bells and bonfires. Even the slight concessions the Pope had made to the Germans he thereupon at once recalled in secret Bulls, " so far as they contained anything prejudicial to the Papal See." A fortnight later he died, after triumphing over the Council and 1 Chmel, Geschicht. Friedr. XV. (Hamburg, 1839), ii. 385 ; Material, ii. 195 sjj. 332 Papal Infallibility. over Germany ; but the means lie had employed wrung from him in his agony of conscience the words, " Gabriel, how much better were it for thy soul's sal- vation hadst thou liever become Cardinal and Pope !" Meanwhile, however, he had acknowledged in his public Bull the decrees of Constance on the superiority and periodical convocation of Councils.'^ When Frederick m., in 1452, received the imperial crown from the hands of the Pope, ^neas Silvius was able to declare in his name and his presence that another Emperor would, no doubt, have desired a Council, but the Pope and the Cardinals were the best Council^ ■ The new Pope, Nicolas v. — that same Thomas of Bologna who had been so successful in his dealings with King Frederick — added a fresh conquest to the hard- won victory of his predecessor in the Concordat of Vienna (of Feb. 17, 1448), restoring to the Pope the right of appointing to a great number of German bene- fices — a compact concluded with King Frederick, as plenipotentiary of the German princes, who came into his portion of the gains and influence shared between them and the Papal Court. The princes had been the ' Eaynald. Annal. ann. 1447, 4; Miiller, Jieichstags-T}teatrum,y^. 347, seq. ; Koch, Sanctio Pragm. pp. 81 seq. ' vEuese SLlvii Hist. Fred. III. in KoUar's Atialecta, ii. 317. The Papal Reaction. 333 more readily won over at an earlier period by various privileges, because tbe observance of the reforming decrees of Basle would have considerably diminished their power over the churches in tlieir dominions. N"ot long after the compact had been agreed upon, Pope Calixtus III., in 1457, declared to the Emperor that it was obvious the Pope was not bound by the Concordat, for no agreement could bind or limit in any way the full and free authority of the Papal See, and if he paid regard to it, that was only out of favour, friendliness, and tender affection for the German nation.-' And this has been a Eoman maxim from that day forward. It was taught that an authority like the Papal cannot bind itself, for that would be inconsistent with its plenary power ; least of all can it lay an obligation on future Popes, since all have equal rights, and an equal has no power over his equal The nation therefore is bound by the Concordat, but not the Pope. And thus the Bolognese jurist, Cataldino de Buoncampagni, who wrote for the Pope against the Synod of Basle, had already determined that whatever promises the Pope might make, he was never bound by them in the fulness 1 " Quamvis liberrima sit ApostoIio» Sedis auotoritas nuUisque debeat pactiomim vinculis ooer:;eri," etc. — iEnei Silvii i'yisi. 371, Opp. (ed. Basil. 1551), 840. 334 Papal Infallibility. of his power, for as every one is his subject, every com- pact or engagement hears the character of a gracious condescension only, and can, as such, he at any moment retracted,^ and therefore the Pope, in spite of his pro- mises, was not hound to the decrees of the CounciL* It was roundly affirmed in the Eoman Court of the Eota in 1610, in reference to the German Concordat, that for the Pope and the Ouria its only validity was as a privilege graciously bestowed, and that it had no binding force.* But the hatred and contempt of both Pope and Em- peror, which had become deeply fixed in the minds of the 1 Thus, e.g., says the Roman canonist and 'assessor of the Inquisition, Pirro Corrado, Praxis Dispens. Apost. de Concord. Qa£st. 8. • De Translat. ConcU. in Boccaberti's BiUioth. Max. vi. 27. That was allowed to be again printed in 1697, notwithstanding the Soman cen- sorship. It was maintained still later by the famons canonist. Feline Sandei, whom the Pope rewarded with bishoprics for his commentary en the Decretals, "ad cap. xiii. de Jndiciis." 3 Xicolarts, Ad Concord. Germ. Tit. 3. dnb. 3, § 6. It was the re- ceived doctrine of the Curia, that Concordats could not bind the Pope. Thus the Benedictine Zallwein (Princip. Jur. Bed. iv. 300) says, " Passim docent assentatores Bomani Pontificis et cnriales Bomani apad quos ipsnm nomen Concordatomm pessimi audit." Hence all German canonists, with the exception of course of the Jesuits, have felt it necessary to prove, from the laws of nations and of the ancient Church, that a Pope is bound to keep his word and the engagements of his predecessors. Thus Barthel, Schramm, Schrodt, Diirr, Schmidt, Schlor, Oberhauser, Zallwein, etc Benedict xrv. himself alone declared, Dec. 14, 1740, in aBrief to the Chapter of Liege, that he did not hold himself bound by the Concordat. Cf. Endres, De Libert. Eccl. Germ. 1774, p. 60 ; Theod. a Palude (Hontheim) Flora Sparsi, 1770, p. 452 ; Barthel, Opusc. Jurid. 1756, ii. 373 seq. The Papal Reaction. 335 Germans, broke out at the Imperial Diet at Frankfort in 1454, and later, when the question of contributions for the war against the Turks was raised. Nobody was wUHng to trust a word said by them or their ambas- sors, since the extortion of money was the only thing aimed at. " All," says ^neas Silvius, who was soon as Pope to experience similar treatment, " cursed the Em- peror and the Pope, and treated the legates with con- tempt."^ But the summoning of a General Council was still sometimes talked of at these Diets, and the very notion had become such a bugbear of the Popes, that they made it a primary condition in their dealings with some German princes, as, e.g., with Diether of Isenberg, that they should never moot the question. Meanwhile every appeal to a General Council was promptly visited with excommunication in the most decisive manner by Pius il. At the close of his life, the Emperor Frederick seems to have repented of his share in this work of destruc- tion. The instructions he gave his ambassador for the Diet at Frankfort, in 1486, contain words to the effect that he knew what immense sums passed to Eome in the shape of annates, indulgences, and the like, and 1 Pii Commmtar. a Joh. Gobelliii (Fef. 1614), p. 22. 336 Papal Infallibility. what abject obedience and subjection to the Papal See the German nation had exhibited, above all others. These services were received thanklessly and haughtily by the Pope, Cardinals, and Court officials, and the German nation was contumeliously treated in all deal-- ings, from the highest to the lowest, so that it would be against the common nature and reason of mankind to endure such piteous treatment any longer. It was therefore to be impressed on the princes that they should no longer show obedience and submission to the Pope, in order that the German nation might no more be despised and humbled beyond all others."^ FeUx (the Antipope) was now induced by the French King to resign, and was made the chief Car- dinal, with extensive jurisdiction over several dioceses. The renmant of the Synod of Basle, which had at last been driven to Lausanne, dissolved itself, and the Car- dinal of Aries, that "adept in iniquity and son of perdition," as Eugenius had termed him, was restored without ever retracting any of his principles. This did not prevent Clement vii. from canonizing him after his death, " since his sanctity had been proved by miracles, and he had always led a heavenly, chaste, and blameless Kfe." ' Schlozer, Br^fwechsd, x. 2fi9. Temper and Circtimstances of \^th Century, 337 § XXVII. — Tem2)er and Circumstances of the Fifteenth Century. Some time had elapsed after the disastrous year 14:46, before it was understood in Germany that aU. hope of reforming the Church by means of Councils was at an end. Even so late as 1459, men could not and would not believe in this utter wreck of all schemes of re- formation. The Carthusian Prior, Vincent of Axpach, thought that if but one king would issue safe-conducts for the assemblage of a Council in his dominions, and but one bishop were to summon it, it would meet in spite of the reclamations or anathemas of the Court of Eome ; and that was the last remaining hope, for the experience of the last fifty years proved that no help could be looked for from the See of Eome. It was a far worse error than the Hussite heresy, to deprive the Church of General Councils, which are its best possession. And Vincent then relates how Eugenius succeeded in alluring over nearly all the educated to his side by the offer of benefices.^ An anonymous German writer, as early as 1443, had also lamented this falling away of the learned, such as Nicolas Cusa and Archbishop 1 Fez, Codex Epistol. iii. 335. Y 338 Papal Infallibility. Tudeschi. "The Eoman harlot has so many para- mours drunk with the wine of her fornications, that the Bride of Christ, the Church, and the Council represent- ing her, scarcely receive the loyal devotion of one among a thousand. And yet Germany, in the person of its Emperor, has been worse used by the Popes than any other kingdom; the German Emperor alone was compelled, in accordance with 'legendary and forged decretals,' to swear obedience to the Pope."^ At last, at the very moment of its dissolution, the much-abused Synod of Basle had obtained a conspicuous satisfaction; Councils were still held in such high esteem in Eome, even after the death of Eugenius, that the new Pope, Nicolas v., by advice of the Cardinals, issued a Bull, declaring all documents, processes, decrees, and censures of his predecessor against the Council void and of no effect, even though issued with the approval of the Council of Perrara or Florence, or any other.^ They were to be regarded as having never existed, and were expunged from the writings of Eugenius as com- 1 Tractat. missus March. Brandenburg. 1443. See MSS. of vol. 31 of Hardtisch collection in the library of Stuttgart. What is said of the de- cretals is surprising at that early date. Yet Nicolas of Ciisa also had just then for the iirst time recognised the spurious ohai'acter of certaia Isidorian decretals, 2 See Bull Tanto Nos, in the Jesuit Monod's Amadeus Pacif. (Paris, 1626), p. 272. Temper and Circumstances of i^tk Century. 339 pletely as the Bulls of Boniface viil. against Trance and the French king had been expunged on a former occa- sion by command of Clement v.^ And thus the prin- ciples of the two reforming Councils, on the superiority of General Councils to Popes, completely triumphed after all ; the attempts of Eugenius, acting under in- spiration of Cardinal Torquemada, to bring the Synod of Constance into bad odour, were entirely foiled, and the Curia itself bowed to the superior claims of a General Council. As regards the reforming decrees of the Fathers of Basle, so far as they prejudiced the power and finances of the Curia, they were surrendered to destruction, but the dogmatic decisions of the Pope's inferiority to a Council, on which they were based, remained untouched. Pius II., indeed, who in his former position of rhetori- cian and scholar had defended the interests of the Synod of Basle, made the most desperate attempt to directly condemn the decisions of Constance, which hung like a Damocles- sword over the uneasy heads of the Court officials, and disturbed their enjoyment of Papal autocracy. But public opinion was too em- phatically on the side of the Council, and he not only 1 The Biill says, " Tollimus, cassamus, irritaraus et cancpllamus." 340 Papal Infallibility. did not dare to go against it, but on the contrary found it prudent, in his Bull of retractation in 1463, to add ex- pressly that he acknowledged the authority and power of an (Ecumenical Council, as defined by the Council of Constance, which he reverenced.^ But the race of Torquemadas was not yet extinct. By degrees works appeared from the pens of monks and cardinals, or those who hoped to become such, designed to raise the Papal system from the humiliation it had suffered through the Councils. This was not dif&cult, for they had merely to arrange and systematize, in the form of axioms and deductions, the rich materials provided by the forgeries of Isidore, Gratian, and St. Thomas, in order to prove the groundlessness of the two closely connected doctrines, of the authority of the episcopate and of Councils. In this way originated the writings of Capistrano, Albanus, Campeggi, Elisius, Marcellus, and Laelius Jordanus, between 1460 and 1 525. The character of the whole series may be judged from any one of them, for one is copied from another, and the same falsified or spurious testimonies, canons, and statements of fact, are reproduced in all of them. When that holy and highly favoured soul, St. Cathe- 1 Coneii. (ed. LabW), liii. 1410. Temper and Circumstances of i^th Century. 341 rine of Sienna, came to Gregory XI., she told him that she found in the Court of Eome the stench of infernal vices, and on his replying that she had only been there a few days, the virgin, humble as she was, rose majesti- cally, uttering these words, " I dare to say that in my native city I have found the stench of the sins com- mitted in the Curia more oppressive than it is to those who daily commit them." ^ It was the same everywhere ; it seemed as though, through the state of things gradually brought about, and the dominant system in Eome, a new art had been discovered among men, of making corruption and vice omnipresent, and diffusing it like some subtle poison from one centre and workshop, throughout every pore of the vast organization of the ChurcL Every one who looked over the Christian world for advice and aid against the general corruption, or who only tried to effect an improvement within his own immediate sphere, found himself hampered at once by a Papal ordinance, and gave up the attempt as hopeless. Papal bulls, falminations, begging monks, clerical place- hunters,^ and inquisitors, were everywhere. Even 1 Acta Sanct. BoUand. 30 April, p. 891. ^ " Curtisanen," a name given to clerical vagrants who came to Bome to bari^er or beg for benefices. Wimpheling has accurately described them. 342 Papal Infallibility. ErasniTis cotild say, in his letter to Bishop Fisher of Eochester, " If Christ does not deliver His people from this multiform ecclesiastical tyranny, the tyranny of the Turks wUl at last become less intolerable."^ And thus from the middle of the fifteenth century every accent of hope disappears from the literature of the Church, clearly as these accents had again rung out at the beginning of the century, and about the time of the Synods of Constance and BasU, both in speech and writing. Men's thoughts could only revolve within the same narrow circle — a reformation of the Church is impossible as long as the Court of Eome remains what it is; there every mischief is fostered and protected, and thence it spreads, but there, unless by a miracle, there is no hope of reformation. So says the Abbot Jacob of Junterberg, " A reformation of the Church is to me almost incredible, for first the Court of Eome must be reformed, and the course things are taking shows how difficult that is. Yet no nation so vehemently opposes reform as the Italian, and to them all who have cause to fear it attach themselves."^ The most highly reverenced theologian of the Netherlands, " the » Erasm. Bpp. vi. 8, p. 353 (ed. Londin. 1642). * He Sept. Stat. Eccl. about 1450, in Walch, Monum. u. 2, 42. Temper and Circumstances o/i^ih Cenhiry. 343 ecstatic doctor," as he was cdled, the Carthusian Prior Dionysius Eyckel, related how it was revealed to him in a vision, which he communicated to the Pope him- self, that the whole choir of the blessed in heaven had offered intercessions for the Church on earth, which was threatened with the severest judgments, but had received answer that even if the Pope, the cardinals, and the prelates, with the rest, swore in God's name, that they wished to reform themselves, they would be perjured ; from head to foot there was no soundness in the Church.^ It was pretty generally felt that it was with the re- formation of the Church as with the Eoman king and the Sibylline books ; since the seed of corruption sown everywhere by the Cwria had so plentifully sprung up during the last fifty years, while the Church made no efforts for her deliverance, reform could only be pur- chased at a much dearer price, and with far less hope of satisfactory results. Many thought, like the Domi- nican Institoris, about 1484, "The world cries for a Council, but how can one be obtained in the present condition of the heads of the Church ? No human power avails any longer to reform the Church through a 1 Petri Borland. Chrmi. Ca/rtus. (Colon. 1608), pp. 394-9. 344 Papal Infallibility . Council, and God Mmself must come to our aid in some way unknown to us."^ The Germans at that period looked with great envy on the French, English, Scotch, and other nations, who were not so shamefully abused and recklessly plundered as the barbarous but " humble and patient" Germans, who were sacrificed by their own princes, ^neas Silvius, or Pius n., had reminded them before, that, considering their barbarism, they must account it properly an honour they had to be thankful for, that the Court of Eome, in virtue of its long attested civilizing mission for Germany, was undertaking their affairs, and indemnifying itself richly for the trouble.^ When the Elector, Jacob of Treves, advised King Frederick to gain the favour of the German nation by urging the hew Pope, Calixtus m., to remedy their gi-ievances, ^neas Silvius persuaded him rather to unite himself with the Pope than with the German people for a common object, for, said the Italian, between king and people there is an inextinguishable hatred, and it is 1 Cf. Hottinger, Uist. Ecd. Scec xv. p. 413. 2 Melons, et JRepl. Wimphd. ad ^neam Silvium, in Freher, Script. Rer. Germ. (ed. Strnv.) ii. 686-98. As late as 1516 the patriotic Wimpheling thought it necessary to defend his country and its spokesman. Chancellor Martin Maier of Mayence, against the Siennese Pope. Temper and Circumstances of \^th Century. 345 therefore wiser to secure the favour of the new Pope by rendering services to him.-^ Eome thus became the great school of iniquity, where a large part of the German and Italian clergy went through their apprenticeship as place-hunters, and re- turned home loaded with benefices and sins, as also with absolutions and indulgences. There is something ahnost enigmatical about the universal profligacy of that age. In whole dioceses and countries of Christian Europe clerical concubinage was so general that it no longer excited any surprise ; and it might be said of certain provinces that hardly one clergyman in thirty was chaste, while in our own day there are countries where the great majority of the clergy are free even from the suspicion of incontinence. This distinction is to be explained by the universally corrupt state of the ecclesiastical administration. There could be no thought of any selection or careful training for the ministry where everything was matter of sale, where both ordination and preferment were bought and begged in Eome, where the conscientious, who would not be tainted with simony, had to stand aside, while the men of no conscience prospered, and rapidly attained 1 Ootellin. Comment. Pii II. p. 25. 346 Papal Infallibility. the higher positions, and the clerical profession was that of all others which offered the easiest and idlest life, with the largest privileges and the least of corporate obligations. The Curia had abundantly provided for the universal security and impunity of the clergy. Where the heads themselves gave the example of con- tempt for all laws, human and divine, it could not be expected that their subordinates would submit to the oppressive yoke of continence, and so the contagion was sure to spread. Every one who came from Eome brought back word that in the metropolis of Christen- dom, and in the bosom of the great mother and mistress of all Churches, the clergy, with scarcely an exception, kept concubines.^ § XXVIIL — The Opening of the Sixteenth Century, - At the beginning of the sixteenth century, under Julius n., events took a turn which suggested an oppor- tunity to the Curia for recovering the ground they had in theory lost. Louis xn. of Prance, and the German emperor Maximilian, who were at political 1 When the vicar of Innocent Tin. wanted to forbid this, the Pope made him withdraw his edict, "propter quod talis effecta est vita saoerdotum et curialium ut vix reperiatur qni concubinam non retineat vel saltern meretricem." So too the Boman annalist, lufessora, in his diary, given in Ecoard. Corp. Hist. ii. 1997. The Opening of the i6th Century. 347 enmity -with the Popes, had recourse to the plan of holding ecclesiastical assemblies. First, a Trench National Synod was assembled at Tours, and then a General Council summoned to Pisa, which being almost entirely composed of French prelates, imitated the con- duct of the Council of Basle towards the Pope. The quarrel, as all the world knew, was purely political, regarding the sovereignty in Italy, and thus the scheme of the Council came to nothing. Julius 11., and Leo. X. after him, assembled their Lateran Council, with about sixty- five bishops, in opposition to it. The utter failure of the attempt made at Pisa encouraged the Guria in its turn to strike a blow at Councils, since during the period of increased confusion and uncertainty, from 1460 to 1515, the names of Constance and Basle were become obsolete. Francis I. surrendered the Pragmatic Sanction in return for the Church patronage bestowed upon him, whereby elections were abolished, and the fortunes of the superior clergy, who aimed at dignities and bene- fices, were placed absolutely iu the hands of the King. Thus fell the main support of the authority of the Council of Basle in France, as it had already fallen m Germany through the Concordat of Vienna. Maximilian, herein a worthy son of his father, had 348 Papal Infallibility. shortly before sacrificed the Council of Pisa, and given in his adherence to Julius n. and the Lateran Synod. But in Eome the Curia, seized the opportunity to raise the clergy, who in France had just been so com- pletely made dependent on the favour of the Court, from all subjection to civil ties, and accordingly, in the ninth session of the Lateran Council, it was ruled by the Pope and bishops that " by divine as well as human law the laity have no jurisdiction over ecclesiastical persons." This was a confirmation of the former decree issued by Innocent m. at the Synod of 1215 (the fourth Lateran), that no cleric should take an oath of fealty to the princes of whom he held his temporalities. It was next declared to be an obvious and notorious truth, attested by Scripture, Fathers, Popes, and Councils, that the Pope has full authority over Councils, and can summon, suspend, or dissolve them at his pleasure. "We must presume that at a period when the most complete theological barbarism prevailed in Eome itself, and there was nothing but scholasticism as represented by some Dominicans like Prierio and Cajetan, the car- dinals and bishops of the day did not even know what Eugenius iv., Mcolas v., and Pius IL had so often de- clared. For they could hardly have expected the autho- The Opening of the i6ih Century. 349 rity of a Leo x., with his hole-and-corner Council of sixty-five Italians, to outweigh the Councils of Constance and Basle, and the Popes above named, in the puhlic opinion of Europe. The Cwria, however, were further encouraged by their feeling of complete security, their consciousness that whatever they undertook, and how- ever threatening or complicated might be the political situation in Italy, they had nothing to fear in Church matters. Nor was this confidence disturbed by reproaches and accusations, however loud ; and however often the cry for a Council was raised, which always and chiefly meant only a limitation of the Papacy, the Owria took it quietly. So much stronger had the tie become dur- ing the last hundred years which bound the clergy to Eome ; every cleric who showed signs of rebelling was crushed at once, and even the laity could not escape excommunication and its consequences. Even the bold Gregory of Heimburg only found a refuge with the Hussite King in Bohemia, and was at last obliged, even there, to supplicate for absolution at Eome, when a sick and broken-down old man, in 1472.^ Yet the Christian world had endured, without any re- volt worth noting, or even the remonstrance of a Synod 1 Brookhaus, Gregor. von Kembmg (Leipzig, 1861), p. 383. 3 5 o Papal InfalliMlity. being raised, the rule of such Popes as Paiil it, Sixtus IV., Innocent vm., and Alexander vi, each of whom had striven to exceed the vices of his predecessor. Paul n., according to the expression of a contemporary, made the Papal Chair into a sewer by his debaucheries.'' The same witness observes that he had gone to Eome and visited the various ecclesiastical commimities, but had nowhere found a man of really religious life. What he says of the lives of the Popes, cardinals, and prelates, is stronger still. Under Paul n., and still more under Sixtus v., the great clerical market was further extended, and princi- palities had to be fotmd for nephews, and fortunes for natural sons and daughters. New offices were estab- lished in order to sell them, and the cardinalitiai dignity was highly priced. Leo x. and Clement vn. sold a number of cardinal's hats, as the unbounded extravagance of the Medici had emptied even the Papal ti'easury, which before was held to be inexhaustible. From one end of Europe to the other it was again the cry, "Eveiything is made merchandise of at Eome." That had been sEud and written, indeed, in and out of Italy, for four centuries, but now, at the beginning of the * Attilio Alessio of Arezzo in Baliue and Mansi, Iv. 519. The opening of the \(ith Century. 351 sixteenth, it was the iiniversal conviction that the venality could not before have been carried on in so gross, open, and shameless a manner as it now was before the eyes of the whole world ; the art of turning everything into money could not have been worked up to such perfection. Count John Francis Pico of Mirandola, who wrote a treatise on the misfortunes of Italy as caused by Leo x., mentions, as a symptom of the extent of national demoralization and godlessness, that now ecclesiastical and religious offices were put up to for- mal and public auction to the highest bidder.^ Since 1512 a fresh source of information had been added, in the shape of an official edition, printed in Eome, of the customary taxes in the Eoman Chancery and Penitentiary. It was based throughout on the alder arrangement of taxes, dating from the time of John XXII., but it was then kept secret, whereas it was now publicly exposed for sale.^ This publication, 1 Be Veris Calamitaivm Causis nostrorum Temporum (ed. Colorius Cesius Mutinse, 1860), p. 24. 2 The composition of the Curia at the opening of the sixteenth centmy was very different from what it is now. A Promnciale of 1518, printed in Rome, contains, somewhere near the end, a list of the "officia Curise." Most of them are marked "venduntur." The purchase of such an ofBce was the most profitable investment of capital, which, of course, produced the richest interest. We learn from this Promnciale that the referen- daries "non habent numerum," that there were 101 soUicitatores, 101 masters of the archives, 8 writers of supplications, 12 registrars, 27 clerks 352 Papal Infallibility. which was soon disseminated in every country, opened men's eyes everywhere to the huge mass of Eoman reservations and prohibitions, as also to the price fixed for every transgression, and for absolution from the worst sins — murder, incest, and the like. This tariff of the Chancery was afterwards supposed to he an invention of the enemies of the Papacy, but the repeated editions prepared under Papal sanction leave no doubt about the matter.^ They show the complete feeling of security in Eome, and what the Curia believed it could safely offer to the gaze of the world. For the bitterest enemy of Eome could have invented nothing worse than this exposure of a mechanism systematically developed for centuries, wherein laws seemed to be made only for the purpose of the Penitentiary, 81 writers of briefs, 104 colUctoresflwmbi, 101 aposto- lical cler^ts. AH these ofBces were sold. There were besides 13 proctors in the " AudMntia Contradictorum," 60 ahbreviators " de minori," 12 deparco majori. Most of these also could be bought. We must add 12 Consistorial advocates, 12 auditors of the Bota, who are said to be de- pendent on gratuities, 10 notaries under the Auditor Camlerm, 29 secretaries and 7 clerics of the Camera, with 9 notaries. Think of a well-meaning Pope like Adrian VI. finding himself suddenly, in his old age, with the prospect of only a few years' reign, placed at the head of this gigantic machine, constructed in every part for money-getting ; some 800 persons all beut on making the most out of the capital they had bought their places with, and all together forming a serried phalanx united by a common interest ! A feeling of hopeless impotence to grapple with such a condition of things must steal over the very boldest heart. 1 They were afterwards put on the Index, with the comment, " ab hsere- ticis depravata," but the editions, often indeed provided by Protestants, do not differ &om the authentic Eoman issues under Leo z. and .Tulius n. opening of the \(ith Century. 353 of selling the right to break them, and both individuals and communities were only allowed the exercise of their natural rights when they had paid for it.^ The Curia cared nothing for being described by writers as the source of all the corruption in Christen- dom, the poisoner and plague-spot of the nations. There were indeed outbreaks of indignation here and there, especially when the Owria attacked some favourite popular orator. When the Carmelite Thomas Conecte, who had long been labouring in Prance, Flanders, and Italy, as a travelling missionary, had wrought numberless conversions, and had distinguished himself by the saint- liness of his life, at last lashed the vices of the Court of Eome, Eugenius iv. had him tortured by the Inquisi- tion, and burnt aUve.^ And as Eugenius treated him, Alexander vi. treated Savonarola. That famous orator and theologian had called aloud for a reformation of the polluted Church, and had urged the sovereigns to 1 Thus, e.g., cities had to pay a license at Kome for erecting a primary school, and if a school was to he remoTed, a sum of money had again to be paid for it. Nuns had to hiiy permission for having two maid-servants for the sick. Cf. Tmux CanceUar. Apost. (Romse, 1514), f. 10 seq. 2 " Adversus vitia Curise Eomanse emergentia nimio quia zelo declamabat, captus pro hsaretioo habitus est et ut talis oombustus." Cosmas de Villiers, Biblioth. Canrnl. Aurelianis 1752, ii. 814. His brother monk, Baptista Mantuanus {De Vitd BeatS) pronounces Thomas a martyr, .ind compares his death with St. Laurence's. Eugenius is said afterwards on his death- bed to have bitterly repented his share in this deed. 354 Papal Infallibility. lend their aid to the assembling of an (Ecumenical CouncU. For that the Pope excommunicated him, and threatened Florence with an interdict. Papal Com- missaries were sent there, and Savonarola, with two brethren of his Order, was executed for heresy, and their bodies burnt. Thus did the crowned theologian overcome the simple preaching monk, — the theologian, for Julius was that, in spite of his children and his "handmaidens."^ He had done, as Eodrigo Borgia, what was sure to gain him the red hat ; he had, besides a gloss on the rules of the Chancery, composed a really learned work in defence of the universal monarchy and infallibUity of the Popes.^ But Savonarola, as even his enemies must admit, was not only one of the most gifted men and best theologians of his day ; he also belonged to the most powerful of the Eeligious Orders, and had many adherents among its members. And thus he came to be honoured as a saint and martyr for the truth, and other saints, like Philip Neri and Cathe- rine Eicci, bore witness to his holiness, and even a later Pope, Benedict xiv., declared him worthy of canonization.' 1 The expression is boiTowed from MaecUavelli, " Tre sue fanugliari e care anzelle, lussoria, simonia, e crudeltade," J. Decennal. Ope/te (ed. Fiorent. 1843), p. 682. 2 Clypeuta Defens. Fid. S. Rom. Bed. Argentor. 1497. ' De JServ. Dei Canonis, iii. 25. 17. Contemporary Testimonies. 355 § XXIX. — The. State of Contemporary Opinion. Italywas still more thorougUy victimized to the Curia than Germany, but the Italians bore the burden more easily, because the sums which flowed in from all parts of tributary Europe to the Court of Eome, through a hundred different channels, were again diffused from Eome, by means of nepotism, throughout the Peniusula, and most of the cardinals and prelates were flesh of their flesh, and bone of their bone. But the very fact of this close neighbourhood and kinship made its moral effects more mischievous. All thoughtful Italians of that age who could make comparisons, regarded their nation as surpassing those of Northern Europe in corrup- tion and irreligion. Macchiavelli says : — "The Italians are iadebted to the Eoman Church and its priests for our having lost all religion and devotion through their bad examples, and having become an unbelieving and evil people."^ He adds, — "The nearer a people dwells to the Eoman Court the less religion it has. Were that Court set down among the Swiss, who stOl remain more pious, they too would soon be corrupted by its vices." Nor was a more favourable judgment given » Discord, i. 12, p. 273, ed. 1843. 356 Papal Infallibility. by Macchiavelli's fellow-citizen, Guicciardini, who for many years served the Medicean Popes in high offices, administering their provinces and commanding their army ; he observes, on MacchiavelU's words, that what- ever evil may be said of the Eoman Court must fall short of its deserts.^ What these statesmen say of the moral corruption introduced into Italy by the Ciiria is confirmed in their way by the prelates. Isidore Chiari, Bishop of Poligno, who had opportunities at Trent of becoming thoroughly acquainted with his episcopal colleagues, says that, in all Italy, among 250 bishops, one could scarcely find four who even deserved the name of spiritual shep- herds, and reaUy exercised their pastoral office. " If the Italians are so alienated from Christianity that its pro- fession may almost be said to have died out among us, the fault lies with the bishops and parish priests, for our whole life is a continuous preaching of unbelief." ^ It is worth showing, that then, in spite of the Inquisi- tion, much could be said in Italy, and many an avowal 1 Opete Inedite, i. 27 (Firenze, 1857) :— " Non si pno dire tanto malle della corte Bomana che non meriti se ne dica piu, perchd e una infamia, nno esemplo di tutti e vituperii e ohbrobrii del mondo." In his Ricordi Aulo- bwgrafiei, he says again, " A Eonia, dove le cose vanno alia grossa, ove si corrompe ognuno," etc. — Open, x. 166. ' The passage is cited by Bishop Lindanus iii his Apologet. ad German. (Antwerp. 1568), p. 19. Contemporary Testimonies. 357 made, ■whicli would not have been tolerated at a later period, when the Jesuits had got the upper hand, with their system of reticence, hushing up, and excuses. The Popes themselves did not shrink from making con- fessions which must have offended the majority of the cardinals and prelates of their Court as highly indiscreet. Adrian vi. told the Germans, by the mouth of his legate, Chieregati, that for years many abominations had disgraced the See of Eome, and everything had been perverted to evil ; from the head corruption had spread to the members, from the Pope to the prelates.^ If there was a well-meaning bishop here and there in Italy, he felt himself powerless the moment he tried in good earnest to imdertake the administration of his diocese. When Matteo Giberto, the confidant and datary of Clement vii., at last sought out his diocese of Verona, he found the city itself divided into six dif- ferent spiritual jurisdictions, and his schemes of reform hopelessly bafSed in presence of so many exemptions.^ His biographer, in describing the state of Lombardy, alleges that the people knew neither the Lord's Prayer nor the Apostles' Creed, and a great part of them did not 1 Raynald. Annal. ann. 1522, p. 66. s " Giberti Vita," prefixed to his Cyge.ra. (ed. Veron. 1733), p. xi. ' 358 Papal Infallibility. go once a year even to confession and communion, the best of them not oftener, as a rule. One evidence of the state of clergy and people in Papal dioceses may be gathered from the writings of Bishop Isi- dore Chiari, already mentioned. He found in 1550 that not above one or two priests in his diocese even knew the words of the sacramental absolution, and all the rest confused the form of absolving from excommunication with it. He had to send teachers to instruct them how to say mass properly. And they had incurred pubHc contempt by their vices as much as by their ignorance. Most of the beneficed clergy could not even read.^ In comparison with this state of things, which the Curia had produced in its own immediate neighbourhood, the condition of remoter countries was less disheartening. The great diocese of Milan, with 2500 priests, was for sixty years without a bishop. There was nothing in the houses of the clergy but arms, concubines, and children, and it had passed into a common proverb among the people that the priestly profession was the surest road to helL Here too the use of the sacraments had almost disappeared. These are some features of the terrible picture sketched a few years later by the ' Isidor. ClaT. Episc. Fulgent. In Serm. Domini (Venet. 1566), f. 101-125. Contemporary Testimonies. 359 Milanese priest, Giussano, of the condition of things there.^ When Leo x. was elected in 1513, he had a terrible inheritance to enter upon, which might have made even the boldest shudder. His predecessors since Paul 11. had done their utmost to cover the Papal See with infamy, and give up Italy to all the horrors of endless wars. But his first thought was that, now he was Pope, a life of unmixed enjoyment had begun for him.^ The Eoman prelates bore with great equanimity the knowledge that Eome and the Curia were hated all the world over. Giberto, whom we mentioned before, fore- saw that, in the event of war, the Germans "would hasten hither in troops to glut their natural hatred against us." Erasmus had repeatedly told them from the first that this hatred supplied its chief nourishment to the schism, daily increasing in strength. And the 1 Be Vit. et Reims Gestis Car. Borrom. (ed. OltroccM, Mediol. 1767), p. 69. 2 "Primo Pontifioatfta die maximam voluptatem et cupiditatem ex- pressit, dum Florentiol lingu^ palam hoc enuntiavit : ' Volo ut Pontifloatu isto quam maxime perfniamur.' " His biographer adds that this could only be understood of physical enjoyments by any one who knew him. The pas- sage is missing in Eoscoe Eossi's impression of Vita di Leone x. t. xii., but occurs in Cod. Vat, 3920, whence a friend copied it for us, with the following, which is also omitted in Eossi, "St tempestate Eomae sacra omnia venalia erant, ac nuUI habits religionis aut integrse famse ratione palam ad Pontificatum suffragia veudebantur, omniaqae ambitione cor- rapta erant." o 60 Papcd Infallibility. facts spoke loudly enough for themselves. Even so thorough-going a partisan as Comelio Musso, Bishop of Bitonto, one of the chosen speakers at Trent, did not shrink from saying that the name of Eome was hated by all nations, and its friends could only sigh over the shame and contempt of the Boman Church.^ And if at the eleventh hour, as might happen, the bishops of a coimtry took counsel with a view to stemming the double tide of corruption and secession from the Church, they found again that the Gwria had cut through the nerves and sinews of their episcopal power. At the Synod held at Paris in 1528 by the French bishops of the province of Sens, it had to be actually inserted in the canons that the bishops could not so much as keep out the incompetent and unworthy by refusing them ordination, for the rejected candidate would at once go to Eome and get ordsdned there.* Twenty years later the French prelates had again to protest, at an assembly held at Melun, against the fatal encroachments of the Curia, which had sud- denly put in a claim to dispose of the benefices in Brittany and Provence, and to transplant into France the whole simoniacal abomination of reservations, ex- ^ Sermones, U. Dom. t. Serm. 2. * Hatdmn, Cone. UL 1953. Contemporary Testimonies. 361 pectatives, and reversionary rights, with the endless processes they led to, in the teeth of the Concordat of 1517, whereby, as the bishops told the Pope bitterly enough, all hope of reformation was cut off.^ "When in 1527 that judgment broke upon Eome which, like Eome itself, stands alone in history, — when the city which time out of mind had been absorbing countless sums of money from the whole West, was in its turn plundered by Germans, Italians, and Spaniards, and wrung dry like a sopping sponge, then at last the eyes of many were opened. That very Cajetan or De Vio, who had been Leo x.'s Court theologian and factotum, who had been his iastigator in the disgrace of the Lateran Synod, in his decisions against Constance and Basle, in his proclamation of the divine right of every cleric to disobey his sovereign, and had lent his pen to these objects — that same man who, as legate in Ger- many, had embittered the Lutheran business by his insolence, and who again had induced the Pope to de- clare it a heresy to disapprove of burning heretics^ — now in 1527 wrote, after the captjite-ef Eome, "Justly is the life of the pastors of th^ Church the object of 1 Balnze and' Mansi, Miieell. ii. W-ZW.l 2 [One of Luther's propositions, coiidemned by Leo x., is, " Hsereticos comburi est contra charitatem Spiritfls."-+-TK.] 362 Papal Infallibility. contempt, and their word neglected. We, the Roman prelates, now experience this, who by the righteous judgment of God have been given up as a prey, not to unbelievers, but to Christians, to be robbed and impri- soned. We are become useless for anything but exter- nal ceremonies and the enjoyment of this world's goods, and therefore are we trodden under foot and reduced to bondage."^ Whenever the influence of the Papacy on the Church and the religious administration of Eome was discussed in colloquies and conferences between Catho- lics and Protestants of that period, the Catholic spokes- men were obliged to declare : " Here our apology ceases ; we are conquered here, and can neither deny nor excuse." So spoke in 1519 Bishop Berthold of Chiemsee, Cardinal Contarini, the author of the Eoman memorial of 1538, the Abbot Blosius, the French and Belgian theologians, Claudius d'Espense, Euard Tapper, Gentian Hervet, Bishop Lindanus, and John Hoffmeister. There were moments when even the Popes were obliged to let their most approved servants say what in ordinary times would have led to a process of the Inquisition. Gaspar Contarini, whom Paul in. in his need suddenly 1 Eaynald. Amnal. ann. 1527, p. 2. Contemporary Testimonies. 363 transformed from a secular statesman into a Cardinal, ventured in substance to teU the Pope that the whole Papal system was wrong and unchristian. He said that Luther had good reason for writing his book on the Babylonish Captivity. " Nothing can be devised more opposed to the law of Christ, which is a law of freedom, than this system, which subjects Christians to the Pope, who can make, unmake, and dispense laws at his mere caprice. !N"o greater slavery than this could be imposed on the Christian people."^ Such utterances indeed produced no effect. Paul in. was not minded to swerve a hair's-breadth from his claim of absolute power, and for one Contarini there were always in Eome hundreds of Torquemadas, Cajetans, Jacobazzis, and Bellarmines. The two Councils, the Lateran in 1516, and the Tri- dentine in its earlier period, had this point in common, that the speakers made avowals and charges so out- spoken and of such overwhelming force that they cannot but amaze us. These speeches and descriptions reproduce in various forms the same idea : " "We Cardinals, Italian bishops, and officials of the Curia, are a tribe of worth- less men, who have neglected our duties. We have let 1 Spist. Duos ad Paulwm rv. (Colon. 1538), pp. 62 syj. Cf. the Collec- tion of Le Plat, li. 605. 364 Papal Infallibility. numberless souls perish through our neglect, we dis- grace our episcopal office, we are not shepherds but wolves, we are the authors of the corruption prevalent throughout the whole Church, and are in a special sense responsible for the decay of religion in Italy.'' Cardinal Antonio Pucci said publicly before the assembly of 1516, " Eome, the Eoman prelates and the bishops daily sent forth from Eome, are the joint causes of the manifold errors and corruptions in the Church; unless we recover our good fame, which is almost wholly lost, it is all up with us." And Matthias Ugoni, Bishop of Famagusta, who also took part in the Lateran Synod, describes in his work the contempt the Italian bishops had sunk into, so that there was no infamy men did not attribute to them, while they re- pelled with scorn any one who so much as hinted at the need of reform and of a true Council, as disturbers of peace, and hypocrites. And the worst that had been said before of the Italian prelacy was confirmed in 1546 by the Papal legates at Trent The German Ee- formers, when they wished to paint for public view the heinous gmlt of the Popes and Italian bishops, had no need to do more than transcribe the words of the legates, and many similar statements and avowals let fall at Contemporary Testimonies. 365 the Council. For no words could say more plainly that the ruinous condition of the whole Church, the dominant profligacy, the applause with which the ne- glected and dissatisfied people, in utter perplexity about their clergy and their Church, universally hailed every new doctrine or scheme of Church-government, was ultimately due to the Italian prelacy, concentrated in the Curia, and thence appointed over the dioceses.^ They said that all which they suffered at the hands of the heretics was only a just retribution on their vices and crimes, their bestowal of Church offices on the un- worthy, and the like. § XXX. — The Council of Trent, an,d its Results. The very first speech made at the opening of the Council by Bishop Coriolano Martorano, of San Marco, 1 See Admonit. ad Synodmn. 1646, in Le Plat, Mormm. Coll. i. 40. " Homm malorum magnl ex parte nos causa sumiis. Quod lapsam moruin disciplinam et abusua compleotitur, hie nihil attinet diu investigare, qtiinam tantorum malorum auctores fuerint, cum prseter nos ipsos ne nomi- nare quidem ullum alium auctorem possimus." Cf. Girolamo Muzzio's Lettre catoliche (Venez. 1571), p. 27, written in 1567, on the " ahominazione introdotta nella Chiesa." The bishops, themselves bad and incompetent, " danno la oura dell' anima alia feocia degli uomini." Guiociardini describes in his Ricordi how a bishopric was bought at Rome for a fixed sum, and this was the tisual provision for the younger son of an aristocratic family. His relative, Einieri Guiociardini, a bastard, but richly beneficed, bought the See of Cortona of the Pope for 4000 ducats, and with it a dis- pensation for retaining his benefices.— (^ere, x. 59. 366 Papal Infallibility. created astonishment.^ The picture he drew of the Italian cardinals and bishops, their bloodthirsty cruelty, their avarice, their pride, and the devastation they had wrought of the Church, was perfectly shocking. An unknown writer, who has described this first sittiag in a letter to a friend, thinks Luther himself never spoke more severely.^ "What he then heard at Trent gave him the notion that the Council would not indeed accept Protestant doctrine, but would assail the Papal tyranny more energetically even than the Lutherans. How utterly was he deceived in his ignorance of the Italian prelacy ! But what was then said in Trent left no doubt that the general absence of the Italian bishops from their dioceses, most of which had never even seen their chief pastor, must be regarded as fortunate, strongly as the Eoman compilers of the memorial of 1538, de- signed for Paul m., insisted on this state of things being intolerable.' There is a letter extant of the famous Antonio Flaminio, of 1545, referring to the beginnings 1 See Le Plat, i. 20 ff. "^ Fortgesetzte Sammlung von Theol. Sachen. 1747, p. 335. 3 " Omnes fere pastores recessenmt a suis gregitus, commissi sunt omnes fere mercenariis" (ed. 1671), p. 114. It was just the same sixty years later, in spite of the pretended reformation of Trent. Bellarmine says, in his memorial to Clement vin., " Video in Ecclesiis ItaliEe desolationem tantam quanta ante mnltos annos fortasse non fuit ut jam neque divini juris neque humani residentiaesse videatur." — Baron. Ep. et Opusc. (fiomae, 1770), iii. 9. The Council of Trent. 367 of the Council while in process of formation. What, he asked, will a Council, composed of such monstrous bishops, do for the Church ? There is nothing episco- pal ahout them except their long robe. He knew of but one worthy bishop in Italy, who was now dead, Giberto of Verona, but nothing was to be hoped from the existing body, who had become bishops through royal favour, through solicitation, through purchase in Eome, through criminal arts, or after long years spent in the China. If any improvement was to be effected, they must all be deposed.^ The appearance of some French and Spaniards at Trent was enough at once to convert the Italian bishops into a herd of slavish sycophants of Eome, acting simply at the beck of the legates. They quietly let themselves be described as wretched, unprincipled hirelings, rude and ignorant men, without a murmur or contradiction inter- rupting the speaker. An Italian even ventured to say — what would not have been endured from a Cismontane — that all the evils and abuses of the Church came from the Church of Eome.^ But when they had to testify their 1 See Quafro Lettere di Gasparo Contarrmi (Firenze, 1558). Cardinal Quirini ascribes this letter to Flaminio. '^ Thus, e.g., Antonio Pucoi, afterwards Cardinal Archbishop of Albano, at the Lateran Synod, called " Eome or Babylon, ejusque incolas pastores, qui 368 Papal Infallibility. devotion to the Ov/ria, they rivalled each other in their fervid zeaL " The Italian bishops," says Pallavicini, " knew of no other aim than the upholding of the Apostolic See and its greatness. They thought that in working for its interests they showed themselves at once good Italians and good Christians."^ When, on one occasion, a foreign bishop mentioned an historical fact which would not fit in with the Papal system, the storm broke out. Vosmediano, Bishop of Cadiz, had observed that formerly metropolitans used to ordain the bishops of their provinces by virtue of their own authority. Cardinal Simonetta promptly contradicted him, and then the Italian bishops raised a wild cry, and put him down by stamping and scraping with their feet. They cried out that this accursed wretch must not speak ; he should at once be brought to triaL^ That was the ConcUiar freedom of speech at Trent ! In Italy, where matters did not come, as elsewhere, to an open -breach of communion, and where the great mass of the lower orders remained Catholic, the better- minded were seized with a despondency bordering on quotidie per universum terrarum orbem animamin saluti praaficiimtur, tan- torum causam erronim." — Cone, (ed Labb4), xiv. 240. 1 " Non tendevono al altro oggetto che al sostentamento ed alia grandezza della Sede Apostolioa."— .Siorm dd Cone, di Trento, v. 425 (ed. Milan, 1844). ^ Psalmasi, Coll. Actor., in Le Plat, vii. iL 92. The Council of Trent. 369 despair. In their speeches and writings about the time of the opening of the Tridentine Council, they spoke of the decay of all religion, the last agony, or the actual burial of the Church, which the bishops were to be present at. They call the Church a corpse in process of corruption, or a house on fire, and almost reduced to ashes. So spoke Lorenzo Giustiaiani, Patriarch of Venice, the Cardinals ^gidius of Viterbo, and Antonio Pucci, and several of the bishops at Trent. That was the impression made on them by the state of things in Italy, where the nation seemed to be divided between unbelief and rude superstition, whereas the nations north of the Alps were still, on the whole, believing, though deeply shaken in their alle- giance to the Church, which presented itself to them as a tyrannical mistress, and so terribly disfigured and dis- torted that it could hardly be recognised. Soeinianism was a national product of Italy ; in Germany and Eng- land it found no place. In Germany, and generally on this side the Alps, it was long before men grasped the idea of the breach of Church communion becoming permanent. The general feeling was stiU so far Church-like, that a really free Council, independent of Papal control, was confidently looked to for at once purifying and uniting the Church, 2 A 3 7o Papal Infallibility though of course views differed as to the conditions of re-union, according to personal position and national sentiment. Here, as well as in the Scandinavian coun- tries, in England and in the Netherlands, a iond, fide reformation, by making some concessions about the use of the chalice and clerical marriage, above all, by abol- ishing the Papal system, might have saved or restored religious unity. If the more moderate Eeformers, like Melanchthon, would only recognise the primacy of the Pope as matter of human ordinance, and an institution beneficial to the Church, this was chiefly, as one sees from Luther's statements, because in their minds the notion of the primacy had become inseparably identified with its caricature in the form of an absolute monarchy, which was always held up before their eyes. Just as they could not or would not comprehend the idea of the New Testament priesthood and Eucharistic Sacri- fice, because both to their minds assumed only the shape to which they had been perverted and degraded, of a domination over the laity, and a systematic trafiic in masses, so was it with the primacy. It could not but be doubly hateful and intolerable to them, both on account of the then occupants of the office, and of the element of tyranny it contained, and the perception that formulized into a Doctrine. 371 it was precisely the Ouria which w^as the source and origin of corruption in the Church. § XXXI. — The Theory of Infallibility formulized into a Doctrine. It was above aU owing to the Italian devotion to Rome that homage was paid not only to the Papal system, hut to the theory of Papal Infallibility which is its consequence. Prom the time of Leo x. this doc- trine entered on a fresh phase of development. On the whole, during the long controversy between the Council and the Popes from 1431 till about 1450, as to their right of superiority, the question of Papal authority in matters of faith had retired into the background. At the Council of Florence, after the Greeks had summarily rejected the spurious passages of St. Cyril, the subject was not mooted again by the Papal theologians ; it was understood that there was no hope of getting that claim ♦acknowledged by the Greeks. At the Council of Basle it was openly said, as a matter of public notoriety, that the Popes, like other people, were liable to error in matters of faith. The theologians of the Papal system, like Torquemada, the Minoritic Capistrano, and the Domini- can archbishop Antoninus, who defended the pet doc- 372 Papal Infallibility trine of the Guria about the superiority of Popes to Coun- cils, between 1440 aud 1470, devised another method for exempting the Pope from subjection to a Council in matters of faith, which was afterwards adopted by Cardinal Jacobazzi also. They maintained, as Torque- mada expresses it, that the Pope can indeed lapse into heresy and propound false doctrine, but then he is vpso facto deposed by God himself before any sentence of the Church has been passed, so that the Church or Coun- cil cannot judge him, but can only announce the judg- ment of God ; and thus one cannot properly say that a Pope can become heretical, since he ceases to be Pope at the moment of passing from orthodoxy to heterodoxy. On this principle they should have said that a bishop or priest never becomes heretical, and cannot be deposed for heresy, because God has already deposed him at the moment of his internal acquiescence in a false doctrine ; for if once such a Divine act of deposition were to be assumed before any human intervention, it is impossible to limit it to the case of the Pope, and to say that God is only so severe against heretical Popes, and milder towards heretical bishops and priests. A theory so obviously devised to meet a particular difficulty could satisfy 1 Summa, iv. 2, t. 16 f. 383. formulized into a Doctrine. 373 notody. Meanwhile Torquemada clung to this disco- very of his. He repudiates the notion that God would not allow a Pope to define anything false. What he knew from Gratian only was enough to exclude this pre- text, but then his opinion was that when the Pope acts thus he has ceased de jure, to be Pope ; he is therefore but the corpse of a Pope, and the Church can execute justice upon him at her good pleasure. The contem- poraries of Torquemada, St. Antoninus, Archbishop of Florence, and the canonist, Antonius de Eosellis, highly as they exalted Papal authority, ascribed infallibility only to the whole Church and its representative Councils. Only in union with the Church, and when advised by it — by a Council — is the Pope, according to the former, secured from error.^ And thus there was still no Papal Infallibility. The principle was too firmly rooted that the Pope may become heretical, and then the Church or the Council must first tell him to abdicate, and, if he refuses, proceed to depose him. So Cardinal Jacobazzi has laid down.^ And he also applies the prayer of Christ to the Church, and not to the successor of Peter,^ as Thomas Netter or Waldensis had done before I Sumrna, Tliml. P. iii. p. 416. 4 De Concilio (ed. Paris), p. -390. ^ lb. p. 421. 3 74 Papal Infallibility him.^ Silvester de Prierio, who was then Master of the Palace, did not go beyond him.^ " The Pope does not err," he says, " when advised by a Council." Thomas of Vio or Cajetan was the first to maintain Papal Infal- libility in its fulness. It was he who first got the authority of the decisions of Constance and Basle on the rights of Councils, which had been so solemnly acknowledged and attested by former Popes, assailed by Leo X., although the Council of Constance was not once named, even in the Pope's decree on the subject pro- mulgated at his Italian Synod. It was now time to crown the edifice of the Papal system by putting into shape the principle of Infalli- bility, first sketched out by St. Thomas in reliance on forged testimonies, which is its natural consummation. To the decrees of the two Councils were opposed the well-known forgeries, the spurious passages and canons of Eastern Fathers and Councils. The coarsest and most palpable of these forgeries, where St. Augustine is made to identify the letters of the Popes with canonical Scripture, was utilized by Cajetan for his doctrine.^ To the fictions he had borrowed from St. Thomas, he 1 Doctrinas, ii. 19. ' Snimma SUvestr. (Romie, 1516), verbo " Concilicun." » Ad Leon. X. De Div. Inst. Pont. (Romse, 1521), c. 14. formulized into a Doctrine, 375 added a new fraud of his own, by mutilating the famous censure of Wicliffe's teaching at the Council of Constance, which was very inconvenient for him.-' Cajetan was a type of that class of sycophantic Court divines afterwards stigmatized by Caraffa and the other compilers of the memorial of 1538, as deceivers of the Pope through their doctrine of absolute supremacy, and authors of the corruption and dissolution of the Church. He was the inventor of that saying, which found its practical comment in the policy of the Medicean Popes and their immediate successors, " The Catholic Church is the born handmaid of the Pope," ^ — he who had seen a Sixtus IV., an Innocent viil., an Alexander VI. One cannot say that Cajetan's new doctrine became dominant at Eome. It must have seemed suspicious to many, if at the same time Papal Infallibility had been affirmed, and the long series of Papal Bulls confirming and fixing the chief dogmatic decisions of Constance had been declared erroneous. Innocent viii. had already, in 1486, acknowledged the orthodoxy of the Paris Uni- versity, at a time when the theologians Almain and ' He suppressed the crucial words " (error' est) si per Eomanam Ecclesiam intelligat Universalem aut Concilium Generale." ^ A;gol. Iractat. de Compa/rat. Auctorit. FapoB et ConcU. (Eomaej 1512), 0.1. 376 Papal Infallibility Johannes Major declared in its name that it branded as heresy the doctrine of the superiority of the Pope to a Council, and this was universally taught in France and Germany. The Cardinal of Lorraine made a similar statement at the Council of Trent, without its provoking any contradiction. Adrian vi. was elected Pope, al- though it was notorious that, as professor of theology at Louvain, he had maintained in his principal work that several Popes had been heretical, and that it was cer- tainly possible for a Pope to establish a heresy by his decisions or decretals.^ The phenomenon of a Pope so whoUy destitute of any consciousness of infallibility that as Pope he had his work denying it reprinted in Rome, was not without its effect. Men could still venture in Italy to defend the authority and decrees of the two Councils, and reject the Papal system as un- tenable on historical and canonical grounds. This was proved by the work of Bishop Ugoni of Famagusta, which received the commendation and assent of Paul iii., in spite of his contradicting Torquemada, and maintain- ing the judicial authority of Councils over Popes.^ And ' Cmnineni. in Iv. Sent. Q. de Confirm. " Certum est quod possit errare, hjeresim per snam determinationem autDecretalem asserendo." And he says! expressly, " Evaoiiare intendo impossibilitatein errandi, qnam alii asserunt." ' De Condi. M. Ugonii Synodia (Venet. 1568). The Pope's letter is prefixed to it. formulized into a Doctrine. 377 again, it is clear from thewhole contents of the famous and outspoken memorial on the state of the Church in Eome and Italy, drawn up hy the Cardinals Caraffa, Pole, Sadolet, and Contarini, with the assistance of Tregoso, Giberto, Aleandro, Badia, and Cortese, that they had very distinctly realized the ecclesiastical errors, mistakes, and false principles of the Popes, and were by no means addicted to the hypothesis of Papal Infallibility. When they describe the misery brought upon the whole Church through the blindness of the Popes, its desolation, nay downfaV caused by the false doctrines of Papal omni- potence and absolutism, they were certainly far from supposing that Christ has bestowed on every Pope the privilege of strengthening his brethren by his dogmatic infallibility, while he is weakening and dismembering the whole Church by his perverse ordinances. The very men who were most active in disseminating the doctrine of the personal infallibility of the Popes, could not help perceiving that the corruptions and abuses in the Church, which had been introduced and confirmed by the " infallible " Popes themselves, were still further strengthened by this doctrine, and every attempt at improvement made more hopeless. Cajetan, 1 " Collapsam in priEceps Eoclesiam Chriati." 378 Papal Infallibility after he had been rewarded with a cardinal's hat for his services at the Lateran Council, afterwards, under Adrian vi., — who was open to such representations, — becoming suspicious of the simony of the Curia, ven- tured to complain of the sale of bishoprics and bene- fices, dispensations and indulgences, which would at last lose all value. Thereupon a general feeling of indigna- tion was kindled against him. What folly ! it was said, — did he want to turn Eome into an uninhabited desert, to reduce the Papacy to impotence, and deprive the Pope, who was so heavily involved in debt, of the pecu- niary resources indispensable for the discharge of his office ? What the Pope had a right to give he had a right to selL^ To protect Cajetan, he was sent as legate to Hungary. The other patron of the Infallibility theory, who laboured hard to naturalize it in Belgium, was the Lou- vain theologian, Eiiard Tapper. He returned from Trent in 1552 cruelly disillusionized. He had had a near view — as his friend Bishop Lindanus tells us — of the manners of the Eomans, and the working of the Guria, exclusively • " Quid enim aliud esset quam vastam in Urbe facere solitudiuem ? Pon- tiiicatuiii ad nihilum redigere? . . . Ridioulum est quod gratis donare possis, id ipsum vendere non posse." — Joh. B. Flavii, De Vitd Th. de Vio CoQetani, prefixed to Commentar. Cajetan in S. Script. (Lugd. 1639), t. i. formulized into a Doctrine. 3 79 directed to filling up an ever hungry and yawning chasm, of the hypocrisy of the heads of the Church, and the venality of ecclesiastical transactions. He now thought this deep-seated corruption and decay of the Church no matter to be disputed about with Protestants, but to be deplored. The third of the theological fathers of Papal Infalli- bility was Tapper's contemporary, the Spanish Melchior Canus, who, like him, was at the Council of Trent. His work on. theological principles and evidences was, up to Bellarmine's time, the great authority used by all infalhbilists. But his experience of the effects of that system on the Popes and the Ouria themselves is thus summed up in a later judgment, composed by command of the King of Spain, " He who thinks Eome can be healed, knows little of her ; the whole administration of the Church is there converted into a great trading business, a traffic forbidden by all laws human, natural, and divine."^ Out of Italy, the hypothesis of Infallibility had but few adherents even in the sixteenth century, till the Jesuits began to exercise a powerful influence. In 1 This opinion, whicli had previously been published in French by Cam- pomanes, may he seen in Spanish, in the new edition of 1855, of liizinas. Doa Informwiones, Appendix, p. 35. 380 Papal Infallibility Spain, the subjection of a Pope to a Council, in accord- ance with the decrees of Constance and Basle, had been maintained, as late as the fifteenth century, by the most distinguished theologian of his country, Alfonso Mad- rigal, named Tostado. The Spanish bishop, Andrew Escobar, went further in the same direction. It was the Inquisition which first brought the doctrine of the Roman Jesuits into universal prevalence there, by making all contradiction impossible. In Germany, before the Jesuits had gained the con- trol of the Universities and Courts, the theologians, who were contending against Protestantism, stood entirely on the side of the Councils. They saw with what terrible weapons the adoption of Papal Infallibility armed Protestantism against the Catholic Church, and how it robbed her of her prerogative of dogmatic im- mutability. Cochlaeus, Witzel, and Bishop Nausea of Vieima rejected it. " It would be too perilous," says the latter, " to make our faith dependent on the judg- ment of a single individual ; the whole earth is greater than the city." ^ In Prance, under the powerful influence of the Uni- versity of Palis, the belief in the superiority of Councils ' Rerum ConcUiar. v. 3. formulizedinto a Doctrine. 381 had been universal, nor was it changed by the aboli- tion, against the popular will, of the Pragmatic Sanction. So much the more devotedly did the Italian prelates proclaim their subservience about the time of the Council of Trent. Bishop Cornelio Musso of Bitonto preached in Eome on the Epistle to the Eomans, — " "What the Pope says we must receive as though spoken by God himself. In Divine things we hold him to be God; in matters of faith I had rather believe one Pope than a thousand Augustines, Jeromes, or Gregories."^ When Bellarmine undertook to provide a new basis for the pet doctrine of Eome, the violence of the intel- lectual tempest had driven theology into new-made paths, and compelled theologians to adopt a different method. The Eoman Curia, encouraged by the success of the Jesuits, the powerful European position of the Spanish Court, which was thoroughly devoted to it, and the submission of Henry rv., believed at that time that it could recover its dominion, at least over the West. The interdict launched against Venice showed what it was thought safe to venture upon. The favourite insti- tution of Eome was then again the Inquisition, in its new and enlarged form, with the Congregation of the 1 Condones in Mp, ad Rom. p. 606. 382 Papal Infallibility formulized : Index affiliated to it. To be an active inquisitor was the best recommendation and surest road to attaining the cardinalate, or even the Papal throne. Paul IV. had declared the Inquisition to he the one support of the Papacy in Italy. Two remarkable and important documents show what was now aimed at, and how the Gregorian ideas were intended to be adapted to the circumstances of Europe in the sixteenth century. Paul IV. issued, with peculiar solemnity, and directly ex cathedrd, his Bull, Cum ex ApostolatijLs officio. He had consulted his cardinals, and obtained their sig- natures to it, and then defined, "out of the pleni- tude of his apostolic power," the following propo- sitions : — (1.) The Pope, who as " Pontifex Maximus" is God's representative on earth,^ has fuU authority and power over nations and kingdoms ; he judges all, and can in in this world be judged by none. (2.) All princes and monarchs, as well as bishops, as soon as they fall into heresy or schism, without the need of any legal formality, are irrevocably deposed, deprived for ever of all rights of government, and incur sentence of death. In case of repentance, they are to 1 " Qui Dei et Domiui nostri Jesu Cliristi vices gerit in terris." BullofPaulIV. 38.3 be imprisoned in a monastery, and to do penance on bread and water for the remainder of their life. (3.) None may venture to give any aid to an here- tical or schismatical prince, not even the mere services of common humanity ; any monarch who does so for- feits his dominions and property, which lapse to princes obedient to the Pope, on their gaining possession of them. (4.) "When it is discovered that a Pope has at any previous time been heretically or schismatieally minded, all his subsequent acts are null and void. Such, then, is this most solemn declaration, issued as late as 1558, subscribed by the cardinals, and after- wards expressly confirmed and renewed by Pius v., that the Pope, by virtue of his absolute authority, can de- pose every monarch, hand over every country to foreign invasion, deprive every one of his property, and that without any legal formality, and not only on account of dissent from the doctrines approved at Eome, or separation from the Church, but for merely offering an asylum to such dissidents, so that no rights of dynasty or nation are respected, but nations are to be given up to all the horrors of a war of conquest. And to all this is finally subjoined the doctrine, that all 384 Papal Infallibility formulized: official and sacramental acts of a Pope or Bishop, who has ever — say twenty or thirty years before — ^been heretically minded on any single point of doctrine, are null and void ! This last definition contains so emphatic and flat a contradiction of the principles on the validity of sacraments universally received in the Church, although mistakes have sometimes been made about it at Eome, that they must have seemed to theologians utterly incomprehensible. The serious inconveniences which at former periods such doctrines had led to in the Church would have been reproduced now, had not even the most decided adherents of the infallibility theory, the Jesuit divines, shrunk from adopting the principle laid down by this Pope and his cardinals, though Paul IT. threatened all who resisted his decrees with the -wrath of God. Bellarmine himself, forty years later, said in Eome itself that a bishop or Pope did not lose his power by becoming or by having been a concealed heretic, or everything would be reduced to uncertainty, and the whole Church thrown into confusion. Far graver and more permanent consequences resulted from the other document, the Bull In Cosnd Domini, which the Popes had laboured at for centuries, and which was finally brought out in the pontificate of Bull '' In Ccena Domini." 385 Urban viii. in 1 6 2 7. It had appeared first in its broader outlines under Gregory xi. in 1372. Gregory xii., in 1411, renewed it, and under Pius v.,in 1568, it preserved its substantial identity with certain additions. Accord- ing to his decision it was to remain as an eternal law in Christendom, and above all to be imposed on bishops, penitentiaries, and confessors, as a rule they were to impress in the confessional on the consciences of the faithful. If ever any document bore the stamp of an ex cathedrd decision, it is this, which has been over and over again confirmed by so many Popes. This Bull excommunicates and curses all heretics and schismatics, as well as aU who favour or defend them — all princes and magistrates, therefore, who allow the residence of heterodox persons in their country. It excommunicates and curses all who keep or print the books of heretics without Papal permission, all-^ whether private individuals or universities, or other corporations — who appeal from a Papal decree to a future General Council. It encroaches on the independence and sovereign rights of States in the imposition of taxes, the exercise of judicial authority, and the punish- ment of the crimes of clerics, by threatening with ex- communication and anathema those who perform such 2b 386 Papal Infallibility formulized : acts without special Papal permission ; and these penal- ties faU not only on the supreme authorities of the State, but on the whole body of civil functionaries, down to scribes, jailers, and executioners. The Pope alone can absolve from these censures, except m ariiculo mortis. No wonder that Sovereigns and States resisted such a manifesto, forbade its publication, and declared it null and void. The French Parliament ordered, in 1580, that all bishops and archbishops who promulgated the Bull should have their goods confiscated, and be pronounced guilty of high treason. The bishops them- selves opposed it in the Netherlands. Nor was the King of Spain, who saw in it an encroachment on his rights, any readier to allow its introduction into his territories, nor the Viceroy of Naples. Eudolph □. protested solemnly against its publication in Germany, and especially in Bohemia. Nor could the Archbishop of Mayence be induced to admit it, nor Venice. But the theologians and canonists, above all the Jesuits, iaserted the Bull ia their doctrinal treatises, and wrote commentaries on it; many confessors went so far as to make it a ground for refusing absolution. Even in 1707, Clement XI. ventured to excommunicate Joseph II. Bull " In Ccena Domini." 387 ' and all his adherents on the strength of this Bull, for his proceedings abont Parma and Piacenza, oyer which Eome claimed rights of suzerainty; but the Emperor strenuously resisted, and the Pope had to yield. When, stiU later, in 1768, Clement xiii. once again invaded the sovereign rights of the Duke of Parma by excommuni- cation, it caused a general commotion in the Catholic States. Even so rigid a Catholic as Maria Theresa energetically repulsed the Papal encroachments from Austrian Lombardy, and forbade the Bull being acted upon, remarking in her edict that it contained decisions unsuited to the priestly character, wholly incapable of justification, and very prejudicial to the royal power. As this Bull was annually published in Eome on Maundy-Thursday for 200 years, the ambassadors of the Catholic Powers who were present could each time report that their Sovereigns and Governments, who did not allow the Papal claims to be carried out in practice, had been excommunicated on that day. And if it has ceased to be read out on Holy Thursday, as before, since Clement xrv.'s time, still it is always treated, as Cretineau-Joly states, in the Eoman tribunals and con- gregations, as having legal force. It was wholly inconsistent with the character and 388 Papal Infallibility formulized : objects of the Jesuit Order to acquiesce in any half- and-half views on the question of Papal infallibility, or, like the older infaUibilists from St. Thomas to Cajetan, to oscillate between the possibility of an heretical Pope and the duty of unconditional submission to his deci- sions. The Jesuit sees the perfection of piety in the renunciation of one's own judgment, the passive sur- render of intelligence and will alike to those whom he recognises as his rulers. The sacrifice of one's own understanding to that of another man is, according to the teaching of the Order, the noblest and most accept- able sacrifice a Christian can offer to God.^ The Jesuit who is entering upon his novitiate is at once admo- nished to quench the light of his understanding so far as it may interfere with blind obedience. He is there- fore to be tempted by the novice-master as God tempted Abraham.^ In the Exercises it is inculcated that if the Church decides anything to be black which to our eyes looks white, we must say that it is black.^ The Order considers itself the most exact copy of the ' " Obedientla turn in execntlone, tnm in Tolnntate, tran in intellectn sit in nobis semper omni ex parte perfecta omnia justa esse nobis persnadendo, otnnem sententiam ac judicium nostrum contrarinm caec4 qucidam obedi- entiS abnegando." — Instit. Soc. Jesu, (Pragae, 1757), i. 408. Here come the well-known comparisons of a corpse and of a staff. » h'^tit. i. 376. 3 ExercU. iSpirit. (ed. Eeg. 16i4), pp. 290, 291. The Jesuits. 389 ecclesiastical hierarchy, the General being for it what the Pope is for the whole Church.^ As the Jesuit oheys his General, every Christian should obey the Pope — as bliadly, and with as complete a sacrifice of his own judgment. Every Jesuit therefore must be the advocate of the extremest absolutism in the Church. In his eyes every restriction is an abomination, every legal ordinance attempting to maintain itself against any one arbitrary act of the one almighty lord and master is an assault on him, and matter of high treason. "When the Pope speaks on a doctrinal (Question every one must sacrifice his understanding and submit blindly, and first of all the bishops, singly or in union, as patterns to their flocks. And yet this is but little ; the Jesuit, as the most perfect being, makes the offering twice. He first sacrifices his judgment to the Pope, and secondly to his General For, according to the notion which had haunted some minds previously, but was first reduced to consistency by the Jesuits, and expressed by Cardiual Pallavicini, the collective Church is a body, inanimate when alone and without the Pope, but informed by the 1 "In h^o religione quae hierarohiam ecolesiasticam maxime imitatur." — Suarez, De Rel. Soc. Jesu, pp. 629, 725. 3 go Papal Infallibility formulized : Pope witt a soul.^ To this soul therefore, i.e., to the Pope, belongs dominion over the whole Christian world ; he is its monarch and lord, and his authority is the foundation, the uniting bond and moving intelli- gence of all ecclesiastical government.^ And Gregory XIV., in his Bull of 1591, recognised the pre-eminence of the Jesuit Order as an excellent instrument, which, from the despotic power of its General, can the more easily be applied to various purposes by the Pope. The Papal system, when raised to this level, displays itseK with a perfection and consistency even Trionfo and Pelayo had not conceived of The absolutists of the fourteenth century had not yet risen to the idea of the whole Christian world having but one thinking, knowing, and willing soul, and that soul the Pope. Such a notion could only be formed in the minds of men who had grown up under the discipline of the Holy Office. Bellarmine further developed the ideas of Cajetan, in which he generally concurs, but he rejects decisively Cajetan's hypothesis of an heretical Pope being deposed 1 " Non meriterebbe pii la Chiesa nome di CMesa, ciofe di Congregazione, mentre fosse disgregata per tante membra senza aver Tunit^ di un anima che le infonnasse e le regesse." — Staria. del Con. di Tr. i. 103 (ed. 1843). > 76. i. 107. Bellarmine. 391 vpio facto by the judgment of God. An heretical Pope is legitimate so long as the Church has not deposed him. If Cajetan said the Church was the handmaid of the Pope, Bellarmine adds that whatever doctrine it pleases the Pope to prescribe, the Church must receive ; there can be no question raised about proving it ; she must bliadly renounce all judgment of her own, and firmly believe that all the Pope teaches is absolutely true, all he commands absolutely good, and all he forbids simply evil and noxious. Por the Pope can as little err in moral as in dogmatic questions. ISTay, he goes so far as to maintain that if the Pope were to err by prescrib- ing sins and forbidding virtues, the Church would be bound to consider sins good and virtues evU, unless she chose to sin against conscience •} so that if the Pope absolve the subjects of a prince from their oath of alle- giance — which, according to Bellarmine, he has a full right to do — the Church must believe that what he has done is good, and every Christian must hold it a sin to remain any longer loyal and obedient to his sovereign. In Bellarmine's eyes it must have been a perverse act of presumption in Councils to submit 1 "Si autem Papa eiraret priedpiendo vitia vel prohibendo virtntes, teneretur Ecclesia credere vitia esse bona et virtutes mala, nisi vellet contra conscientiam peccare."— De Rom. Pont. iv. 5 (ed. Paris, 1643), p. 456. 392 Papal Infallibility formulized : Papal declarations on matters of faith to their own examination.^ After Cajetan and Canus, BeUarmine so widely ex- tended the range of Papal Infallibility, and so com- pletely subordinated Councils, and indeed the whole Church, to the Pope, that only one method of conceiv- ing the relations between them was possible. God does nothing superfluous. He does not give the Christian world the infallible authority it requires twice over, once to the whole body of the Church, and again speci- fically to the Pope. And as it is certain that it belongs to the Pope, it follows that the Church has not received it for herself, but only through the Pope, as an illumi- nation proceeding &om him and residing in his person, — ^in other words, that active infaUibUity belongs to the Pope, and only passive infaUibility to the Church. Hence, according to the teaching of this party, every decision of a Council is doubtful till it has received the Papal confirmation, which first imparts to it complete certainty. On the other hand, a Papal utterance cannot be confirmed by any earthly power or community, — it is in itself of binding force and divine certainty. The spurious character of the Isidorian decretals had 1 [As, e.g., St. Leo's Tome on the Incarnation was examined in detail, and finally approved by the CouncU of Chaloedon. Of. supr. p. 72.— Tr.] Bellanmne. 393 been exposed by the Magdeburg Centuriators, and no one with any knowledge of Christian antiquity could retain a doubt of their being a later fabrication. But the growth of the Papal system had been so inseparably associated with these forgeries, that the theologians of the Ciiria and the Jesuit Order were resolved to defend them, and make further use of them for proving the infallibility and monarchy of the Popes. The Jesuit Turrianus composed an elaborate apology for the decre- tals. Bellarmine acknowledged that without the for- geries of the pseudo-Isidore, and of the later anonymous Dominican writers, it would be impossible to make out even a semblance of traditional evidence ; the three leading authors of the new doctriae — St. Thomas, Caje- tan, and Melchior Canus — had grounded it exclusively on these fictions. Moreover, the new and extremely vigilant censorship had now been established, and hopes were entertained in Eome that by its aid in suppress- ing and condemning every work which pointed out or admitted that these testimonies were spurious, their authority and influence might be upheld. BeUarmine then made copious use of the Isidorian fictions. To his mind, enlightened by these letters of the earliest Popes, it is abundantly clear that all the 394 Papal Infallibility formulized: principles of the Papal system were in full Moom in the first and second centuries of the Church, that Christen- dom already formed an absolute monarchy, and that even then the Popes had exempted the clergy from the jurisdiction of civil courts.^ St. Thomas's favourite wit- ness, the spurious Cyril, is also an invaluable authority with Bellarmine, and he thinks the Greek text exists, only it has not yet been discovered and printed. What Greek testimonies for Papal monarchy and infallibility could have been cited from the first thousand years of Church history if aU the forged or corrupted passages had been set aside ? It is impossible to maintain the entire good faith and sincerity of Bellarmine, for such blind credulity would be inconceivable in a man like him, the more so as Eishton states that he is reported to have said in his lectures at Eome that he considered the Isidorian decretals spurious in spite of Turrianus's defence -f and in fact, in a moment of forgetfulness, he has distinctly hinted, in his great work on the Pope, his disbelief in their genuineness.^ But of course the most transparent 1 Cf. especially De Rom. Pont. i. 2. u. 14. ^ Colloq, Rcdnold. cum Harto. p. 94. 3 De Rmn. Pont. ii. 14, in spealdng of the second epistle of Calixtus and Pius. He says he dares not affirm that they are undoubtedly genuine. Bellarmine, 395 fictions were welcome to him if they served the great end of supporting the nniversal monarchy of the Pope. Even Pope Innocent's letter excommunicating the Em- peror Arcadius was accredited, and the legend of the Popes appointing the German Electors was expressly vindicated. This dishonesty is shown again in his attempts to get rid of the fact he was perfectly ac- quainted with, that the whole Church, with all univer- sities and theologians of any weight in the sixteenth century, had rejected the Papal system in its two lead- ing principles of absolute monarchy and infallibility. He knew from the writings of Pius 11. (^neas Silvius) that in his time the superiority of Councils was the dominant view;^ yet he spares no pains to make his readers believe that this doctrine was represented only by two isolated theologians, who were universally con- demned. It seems to have been really believed in Eome that the Curia, with the help of the Inquisition, which had been more effectively organized since Paul v.'s time, and the Index prohibitorum Librorum, could again suppress 1 Hist. Cone. Basil, p. 773 : " Illud imprimis cupio notum, quod Eomanum Papam oraiies, qui aliquo numero sunt, Concilio subjiciunt." Only some, " sive avidi gloriae, sive quod adulando prssmia expectant," then defended tlie opposite opinion, according to Jineas Silvius. 396 Papal Infallibility formulized : criticism and Church history, or at least keep the mass of the clergy in ignorance of them. The Index was just then so rigorously worked that scholars were reduced to despair, and many had to abandon their theological studies. In Germany, matters had come to such a pass, under the influence of the Jesuits in 1599, that Catho- lics had to give up studying altogether, for they could no longer venture to use lexicons, compendiums, or indexes.^ Even the bishops were forbidden to read any book condemned at Eome ; they too were to be kept in ignorance of the true state of things on so many points which had been now cleared up. The publication of works revealing the very different condition of the Church and the Eoman See in earlier days, like the iifter Diurnus and AgneUus' History of the Bishops of Eavenna, was forbidden under the severest penalties, and impressions of them already in print were destroyed. This explains how it was that in the new edition of the Breviary a whole series of Popes of the first three centuries was introduced, with proper offices and lec- tions, of whom no one knew anything, and who have left no trace behind them, who are found in none of the 1 Jodocus Grses wrote to Baronius, " Prseter infinitos alios libros neque Lexico aut Thesauro aut Indice aliquo tute licet uti."— See Briefe des Car- dvmls, i. 474 (ed. Alberic. Eom. ]759). Corruptions of Breviary. 397 ancient martyrologies, and were taken no particular notice of in Kome for 1500 years. The only ante- Mcene Popes in the ancient nnreformed Breviaries ■were Clement, Urban, Marcus, and Marcellus. But Bellarmine and Baronius introduced into the new Bre- viary, under Clement viii.. Popes Zephyrinus, Soter, Caius, Pius, Calixtiis, Anacletus, Pontianus, and Eva- ristus, with lections taken from the pseudo-Isidorian decretals. The older lections, taken from the legends, were even turned out to make room for the pseudo- Isidorian, and the clergy were obliged to nourish their devotion on the reading of such fables as that without the Pope no Council could be held, that he is the sole judge of all bishops, that no clergyman can be cited before a civil court, and the like. And Cardinal Baro- nius, the author of the Annals, co-operated in this work, although he had there spoken with indignation of the fraud of the pseudo-Isidore. The new Breviary, moreover, was mutUated as well as interpolated. The name of Pope Honorius was struck out of the lection for Leo n.'s feast, in the passage where his condemnation by the sixth (Ecumenical Council had been related, for since the Popes wanted to be infallible, this inconvenient fact ought at least to 398 Papal Infallibility formulized: be obliterated from tbe memory of the clergy.^ Even the fable of the apostasy of Pope Marcellinus and the Synod of Sinuessa was now for the first time incor- porated in full into the Breviary, in order to keep con- stantly before the eyes of bishops and priests that dar- ling maxim, in support of which so many fictions had already been invented at Eome, that no Council can judge a Pope. Then the word " souls " had to be ex- punged from the Missal and Breviary in the collect for the feast of St. Peter's Chair. It was now held scan- dalous at Eome, that the ancient Eoman Church should have restricted Peter's power of binding to souls only, whereas the full right was claimed for the Pope to bind bodies also, and to put them to death.^ One of these enrichments of the Breviary was the putting Satan's words to our Lord in the Temptation, " I wiU give thee all the kingdoms of the world," into the mouth of Christ, who is made to address them to ^ The Breviaries we have compared are a Boman edition printed at Venice in 1489, the Augshurg Breviary printed in Venice in 1519, and the new re- fonned edition printed at Antwerp in 1719. ^ " Dens, qui B. Petro . . . animas ligandi et scilvendi pontiiicinm tra- didisti " (Jan. 18, Fest. Cath. S. Petr.) " Animas " is now struck out. In tlie old Eoman missal of the eleventh century, edited by Azavedo in 1754, it occurs at p. 188. BeUarmine maintained that the reformers of the Breviary had mutilated this collect under Divine inspiration. Resp. ad Ep. de MrniU. contr, Venet. rasp, ad 3. prop. Martyrology corrupted. 399 Peter.^ These forgeries and mutilations in the interest of the Papal system were so astonishing, that the Vene- tian Marsiglio thought in course of time no faith would be reposed in any documents at all, and so the Church would be undermined.^ Thus Baronius and Bellarmine worked together to pour out a new stream of inventions and corruptions of history, in the interest of the Papal system, from Eome, over the countries and Churches of the West which had retained their allegiance to her, or had been forcibly reclaimed. Besides his Annals, which contain a vast repertory of spurious passages and fictions, Baronius availed himself for this purpose of his commission to re-edit the Eoman martyrology. His object here was to attest the fables that Peter, as bishop of Eome, had sent out bishops to the cities of the West, and that thus Eome was strictly the Mother Church of all the rest. It was merely stated, for instance, in the older editions of the Eoman martyrology, for August 5, that Memmius was the first bishop in Chalons. Baronius made him into a Eoman citizen whom St. Peter had himself con- secrated for that See. So again with Julian of Le Mans, • Brev. Rom. Fest Petr. et Pauli resp. ad leot. 6. ' Defens. contr. Bellarm. o. 6. 400 Papal Infallibility formulized : on January 27. Baronius knew wTiat the ancient Eoman martyrology was ignorant of, that St. Peter had conse- crated him to that See. His treatment of Bishop Diony- sius of Paris is still more audacious. The oldest accounts, which were well known to him, represented Dionysius as i5rst preaching in Gaul after the middle of the third century, but Baronius relates that he was first conse- crated bishop of Athens by the Apostle Paul, and after- wards sent from Eome by Pope Clement as bishop to GauL And thus two points were gained for Eome : first, it was proved that the Pope could remove a bishop appointed even by the apostle Paul; and, secondly, that Paris was the immediate spiritual daugh- ter of Eome. And as with interpolations and inven- tions, so it fared with criticism at Eome. Baronius and Bellarmine pronounced all documents concerning the sixth Council fabricated or falsified which men- tioned the condemnation of Pope Honorius. It is clear that within a few decades after the spread of the Jesuit Order, the Infallibility hypothesis had made immense strides. The Jesuits had from the first made it their special business to suppress the spirit of historical criticism, and the investigation of Church history. They had rivalled one another in taking under their charge Martyrology corrupted. 401 the psexido-Isidorian decretals, as well as both the earlier and later Eoman fabrications. Thus Maldonatus, Suarez, Gretser, Possevin, Yalentia, and others. That same Turrianus, who expressly defended the decretals, had come to the aid of the Eoman system with fresh patristic forgeries, for which he appealed to manuscripts no human eye had seen. At the same time the Jesuit AKonsus Pisanus composed a purely apocryphal history of the Mcene Council, adapted simply to the exaltation of Papal authority. Others, like Bellarmine, Delrio, and HaUoix, defended the writings of the pseudo- Dionysius as genuine ; Peter Canisius produced forged letters of the Virgin Mary. But the chief affair was the maintenance of the authority of the Isidorian decretals, Gratian, and the forgeries accepted by St. Thomas. For a long while no one in the Catholic Church dared to expose the latter. French scholars were the first, about 1660, to tell the truth about them. Gratian's Becretum had gained new authority through the revision and correction ordered by the Popes, in the course of which many forgeries must doubtless have been detected. The pseudo-Isidore was still for a long time protected by the Index. When the famous canonist, Contius, brought forward the evi- 2c 402 Papal Infallibility formulized : dence of its spuriousness, the Preface in which this is contained was suppressed by the censorship. On the appearance of the famous work of Blondel, which com- pletely dissected the pseudo-Isidore, the last doubts about the true nature of the fraud were exploded. But it too was placed on the Index. About the time of the Declaration of 1682,^ the Spanish Benedictine, Aguirre, made the last attempt worth mentioning to rehabilitate the pseudo-Isidore. It could now no longer be denied that with this forgery disappeared the whole historical foundation of the Papal system for any one acquainted with • history. Aguirre was rewarded with a cardinal's hat. But in the course of the eighteenth century it came to be perceived at Eome that it was impossible to maintain any longer the genuineness of this compila- tion, and thus at last the fraud was admitted in the answer given by Pius VI., in ] 789, to the demands of the German archbishops. In recent times the Jesuits in Paris have gone stOl further. Father Eegnon now confesses that " the impostor reaUy gained his end, and altered the whole discipline of the Church as he desired, but did not hinder the imiversal decay. God blesses no fraud ; the false decretals have done nothing but 1 [The Dedaxation of the French cleigy containing the Four GaUican Artiolea.— Tb.] Definitions " ex catkedrd," 403 mischief." ^ The crucial importance of this admission does not seem to have heen understood in the Order. One difficulty resulted from the formulization of the doctrine of Infallibility, for the solution of which a variety of hypotheses have heen invented, without any unanimity among theologians in accepting some one of them being secured. Every theologian, on closer in- spection, found Papal decisions which contradicted other doctrines laid down by Popes or generally received in the Church, or which appeared to him doubtful ; and it seemed impossible to declare aU these to be products of an infallible authority. It became necessary, there- fore, to specify some distinctive marks by which a really infallible decision of a Pope might be recognised, or to fix certain conditions in the absence of which the pronouncement is not to be regarded as infallible. And thus, since the sixteenth century, there grew up the famous distinction of Papal decisions promulgated ex cathedrd, and therefore dogmatically, and without any possibility of error. The distinction between a judgment pronounced ex cathedrd and a merely occasional or casual utterance is, indeed, a perfectly reasonable one, not only in the 1 Mtvdes de Theol., pm les PP. Jesuites d Paris, Nov. 1866. 404 Papal Infallibility formulized : case of the Pope, but of any bishop or professor. In other -words, every one whose office it is to teach can, and will at times, speak off-hand and loosely on dogmatic and ethical questions, whereas, in his capacity of a pub- lic and official teacher, he pronounces deliberately, and with serious regard to the consequences of his teaching. No reasonable man will pretend that the remarks made by a Pope in conversation are definitions of faith. But beyond this the distinction has no meaning. "When a Pope speaks publicly on a point of doctrine, either of his own accord, or in answer to questions addressed to him, he has spoken ex cafhedrd, for he was questioned as Pope, and successor of other Popes, and the mere fact that he has made his declaration publicly and in writing makes it an ex cathedrd judgment. This holds good equally of every bishop. The moment any accidental or arbitrary condition is fixed on which the ex cathedrd nature of a Papal decision is to de- pend, we enter the sphere of the private crotchets of theologians, such as are wont to be devised simply to meet the difficulties of the system. Of such notions, one is as good as another ; they come and go, and axe afterwards noted down. It is just as if one chose to say afterwards of a physician who had been consulted, and Decisions " ex cathedrd.^' 405 had given his opinion on a disease, that he had formed his diagnosis or prescribed his remedies as a private person, and not as a physician. As soon, therefore, as limitations are introduced, and the dogmatic judgments of the Popes are divided into two classes, the ex cathe- drd and the personal ones, it is obvious that the sole, ground for this arbitrary distinction lies in the fact that there are sure to be some inconvenient decisions of Popes which it is desirable to except from the privilege of infallibility generally asserted in other cases. Thus, for instance, Orsi maintains that Honorius composed the dogmatic letter he issued in reply to the Eastern Patriarchs, and which was afterwards condemned as heretical by the sixth (Ecumenical Council,^ only as " a private teacher," but the expression doctor ;privatus, when used of a Pope, is like talking of wooden iron. Others, like Gonet, have pronounced the decision addressed by Mcolas I. to the Bulgarian Church, that baptism admi- nistered simply in the name of Jesus is valid, to be a judgment given by him as a private person only.^ Several theologians said that for the Pope to be infal- lible, he must understand something of the things he is 1 [Of. mpr. p. 74.] ^ Cwrms Tlieol. Disput. I. No. 105. 4o6 Papal Infallibility formulized : to pronounce sentence upon infallibly, and it must therefore be made a condition of Ids infallibility that he shoidd first have been duly informed about the matter in hand, and should have consulted bishops and theologians. " For it is notorious," said the Spaniard Alphonsus de Castro, " that many of the Popes knew nothing of grammar, not to speak of the Bible. But one cannot decide on dogma without a knowledge of the Bible." ^ That is to say, the Pope is infallible when he decides ex eathedrd, but that implies that he should first have made careful inquiry, and have informed himself, and acquired certainty by his own study, and by consulting others. Others, especially Jesuits, replied that the Church would be ill served with such an infallibility as this. Most of the Popes have attained this supreme dignity as jurists or administrators, or sons of distinguished families, and would no longer be able, even if they wished it, to prosecute theological studies at so advanced an age. Most of them do not even know how to set about it. The spiritual gift of infallibility must be so regulated as to enlighten for the moment even the most ignorant Pope, 1 " Constat plures eoruin adeo illiteratos esse nt grammatioam penitns ignorent. Qui fit, ut Sacras literas interpretari possent !" — Adversus Bce- reses (ei 1639), f. 8b. Decisions " ex calkedrd." 407 and secure him from any error. When a Pope pro- claims a doctrine, when he decides on dogmatic and moral questions, his decision is final, whether it be the result of lengthened deliberation or pronounced at once. The seat of infaUibnity is only in the innermost work- shop of his mind. Why consult others, who are liable to error, while he is not ? Why bring in the feeble light of a few oil-lamps, when he himself possesses the full radiance of the spiritual sunlight streaming from the Holy Ghost ? Bellarmine most strictly limited the Papal prerogative of dogmatic infallibUity. He would know nothing in- deed of the concurrence of a Council, or of consulting the episcopate ; only when the Pope issues a decree addressed to the whole Catholic Church, or when he proclaims a moral law to the whole Church, is he to be held infallible.^ This limitation seemed rather to be framed with a view to the future than the past, for no single decree of a Pope addressed to the whole Church is known for the first thousand years of Christian his- tory, and even after the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the Popes usually decided at Councils on doctrinal questions. Boniface viii.'s Bull Tlnam Sandam, in 1303, 1 De Horn. Pont. iv. 3, 5. So his fellow-Jesuit, Eudsemon Johannes. 4o8 Papal Infallibility formulized r is the first addressed to the whole Church. Why the Pope should be held fallible when addressing himself to a part of the Church, but infallible when he addresses himself to the whole, the Cardinal has omitted to state. His opinion therefore has been almost suffered to drop. Other theologians of his Order, Hke Tanner and Compton, assumed that a Papal decree was to be con- sidered ex cathedrd and infallible only when certain formalities had been complied with, when it had been affixed for some time to the door of St. Peter's, and in the Campofiore. But most were not satisfied with this. Some, like Duval and Cellot, maintained that the Pope was only infallible when he anathematized all who re- jected his teaching.^ The general opinion was that very Little depended on such points, but yet they could not make up their minds to affirm an absolute and simply unconditional infallibility. The Jesuits Francis Torrensis and Bagot thought the infallibility of a Papal decree could not be reckoned on without a Council, including at least the cardinals, prelates, and theologians resident at Eome. So, again, Driedo, Lupus, and Hosius wanted to make 1 Duval, De Supr. R. P. in Ecd. Potest. (Paris, 1614), Q. 5 ; Cellot, De Hierarch. (Eothora. 1641), iv. 10. Decisions " ex cathedra," 409 infallibility dependent at least on a Council being pre- viously consulted. And hence arose a fresh controversy, as to whether the assent of the Council were required for a decision ex cathedrd, or whether it were enough for the Pope to hear the assembly, and then decide accord- ing to his own good pleasure. To make the assent of the Council a condition were in fact to overthrow the principle of Papal infallibility. Why call an assembly of bishops, said others, when the cardinals are there for that very purpose, who, as belonging to the Curia, out- weigh a whole host of bishops ? But then a new diffi- culty came in, — is it of the essence of an ex caihedrd judgment that the Pope should first take the opinions of the whole college of cardinals ? or does it suffice, as Gravina and Cherubini maintain, if he consults two cardinals only, and leaves the rest unnoticed, among whom he presumes a contrary opinion to prevail ? This question has become a crucial one since 1713, when Clement xi. issued his famous Bull JJnigenitus, which he had drawn up with the assistance of two cardinals only, like-minded with himself. This gave the Jesuits a new light on the knotty point of how to differentiate a definition of faith ex cathedrd. They seem to have perceived that it was better to set aside altogether the 4IO Papal Infallibility. conditions of a previous consultation and questioning of others, and to make the Pope alone the immediate organ of the Divine Spirit; but to introduce two other limita- tions, viz., Bellarmine's, that his decree must be addressed to the whole Church, and CeUot's, that he must anathe- matize aU who dissent from his teaching. According to this doctrine, which is taught by Perrone,^ and re- ceived by pretty well the whole Order, the Pope is liable to err when he addresses an instruction to the French or German Church only, and, moreover, his infallibility becomes very questionable whenever he omits to de- nounce an anathema on aU dissentients. Meanwhile, as Perrone's theology has not obtained the character of a confession of faith in the Church, nor even attained equal authority with the Summa of St. Thomas, there is no hope of his exposition of the term ex cathedra forming a common point of agreement. And thus, notwithstanding the immense importance ascribed to it, the meaning of the term is still among the dark and inexplicable problems of dogmatic theology. It remains open to every infaUibilist to make his own definition of an ex cathedrd decision for his own private use. 1 Prcelect. Theol. (Lov. 1843), viii. 497. Infallibility of tfie Church. 4 1 1 § XXXII. — Infallibility of the Church and the Popes compared. A personal iufaUibiHty evidently extends far teyond the inerrancy of a great corporation, like the Catholic Church, or of a Council representing it. The Church in its totality is secured against false doctrine ; it will not fall away from Christ and the Apostles, and will not repudiate the doctrine it has once received, and which has been handed down within it. When a Council passes sentence on doctrine, it thereby gives testimony to its truth. The bishops attest, each for his own portion of the Church, that a certain defined doctrine has hitherto been taught and believed there ; or they bear witness that the doctrines hitherto believed involve, as then- logical and necessary consequence, some truth which may not yet have been expressly formulized. As to whether this testimony has been rightly given, whether freedom and unbiassed truthfulness have prevailed among the assembled bishops, — on that point the Church herself is the ultimate judge, by her acceptance or rejection of the Council or its decision. Here, therefore, the certainty and infallibility rest entirely on the solid ground of facts. The Church does 4 1 2 Papal Infallibility not go on to disclose new doctrines, — she does not want to create anything, but only to protect and keep the deposit she has inherited. The meaning of a judgment passed by the assembled bishops is simply this, — thus have our predecessors believed, thus do we believe, and thus will they that come after us believe. A great community, a whole Chuich, is not exposed to the danger of self- exaltation and presumptuous pretensions to special Divine Olumination. It makes no attempt to establish some particular subjective view or opinion of its own. Being left to itself, it naturally keeps within the limits of the traditional faith which has been constantly and everywhere received. But matters assume a very different shape when a single indi- vidual is made the organ of infallibility. The whole Church, as long as its representatives at a Council preserve their apostolic independence, cannot be forced or cajoled into giving a wrong testimony, or proclaim- ing the view or doctrine of a particular school or party as the constant and universal belief of all Catholic Christendom ; but an individual Pope is always ex- posed to the danger of falling under the influence of sycophants and intriguers, and thus being forced into giving dogmatic decisions. Advantage is taken of his in its Influence on the Popes. 4 1 3 predilection for some theological opinion, or for some Religious Order and its favourite doctrines, or of his ignorance of the history of dogma, or of his vanity and ambition, for signalizing his pontificate by a memorable decision, and one supposed to be in the interest of the Eoman See, and thus associating his name with a great dogmatic event which may constitute an epoch in the Church. Nor is anything easier for a Pope than to keep all contradiction at arm's length ; as a rule, no one who is not expressly consulted ventures even to make any re- presentation or suggest any doubts to him. The flatter- ing conviction, so welcome to the old Adam, grows up easily within his soul, that his wishes and thoughts are Divine inspirations, that he is under the special grace and guidance of Heaven, and that by virtue of his ofi&ce the fulness of truth and knowledge, as of power, is his, without effort of his own. He will the more believe, and the more quickly catch at this idea, the smaller is his information and the less suspicion or knowledge he has of the doubts and difficulties which restrain learned theologians from adopting a particular doctrinal opinion. And thus even a well-meaning Pope may come to imagine that he is far removed from aU self-exaltation, and is simply the humble organ of the Holy Ghost, who speaks through him. 414 Papal Infallibility One of the Popes whose government is of most inauspicious memory. Innocent x., himself confessed that, having been all his life engaged in legal affairs and processes, he understood nothing of theology. But that did not hinder him from originating, by his con- demnation of the Five Propositions on grace, a contro- versy which lasted above a century, and has never found a solution.^ He told the Bishop of MontpeUier that he had received so great an enlightenment of soul from God, that the sense of Holy Writ had become clear to him, and he had suddenly attained a compre- hension of the intricate subtleties of scholasticism. The presence of the Holy Ghost, as he expressed it to another clergyman (Aubigni), had become palpable to hiTn He needed no Synod, nor even any advice of the cardinals, but only the opinion of some regular clergy selected by himself. " All this depends on the inspira- tion of the Holy Ghost," he said to the theologians who had come to him from Paris.^ To speak of a Pope of very recent date, a statesman ' [The Five PropositionB, said to te extracted from Jansen's Augvstvmix, and condemned by Innocent X. in 1653. His successor, Alexander vn., pronounced further, that they were condemned '*in sensu auctoris," which gave rise to a fresh dispute ahout infallibility extending to " dogmatic facts." Clement rx. somewhat modified the sentence. — ^Tr.] 2 "Tutto questo dipende dall' inspirazione deUo Spirito Santo."— Amauld, (Evmres, xxii. p. 210. in its Influence on the Popes. 415 resident in Eome related "that Gregory XYI., in his naive manner, enjoyed his high position on the express grojind that he believed by virtue of it he must always be in the right. When Capaecini discoursed with him on financial affairs, and neither the refined and inge- nious statesman could convince his master, nor he with his home -baked arguments convince his minister, Gregory used to exclaim from time to time that he was Pope, and could not err, and must know every- thing best."^ All absolute power demoralizes its possessor. To that aU history bears witness. And if it be a spiritual power, which rules men's consciences, the danger of self- exaltation is only so much the greater, for the posses- sion of such a power exercises a specially treacherous fascination, while it is peculiarly conducive to self- deceit, — because the lust of dominion, when it has be- come a passion, is only too easily in this case excused under the plea of zeal for the salvation of others. And if the man iato whose hands this absolute power has fallen cherishes the further opinion that he is infallible, and an organ of the Holy Ghost, — if he knows that a decision of his on moral and religious questions will be 1 PoUtische Briefe und CharaJct. (Berlin, 1849), p. 248. 4 1 6 Papal Infallibility received witli the general, and, what is more, ex animo submission of millions, — ^it seems almost impossible that his sobriety of mind should always be proof against so in- toxicating a sense of power. To this must be added the notion, sedulously fostered by Eome for centuries, that every conclave is the scene of the eventual triumph of the Holy Ghost, who guides the election in spite of the artifices of rival parties, and that the newly elected Pope is the special and chosen instrument of Divine grace for carrying out the purposes of God towards the Church and the world. The whole life of such a man, from the moment when he is placed on the altar to receive the first homage by the kissing of his feet, will be an imbroken chain of adorations. Everything is expressly calculated for strengthening him in the belief that between himself and other mortals there is an im- passable gulf, and when involved in the cloud and fumes of a perpetual incense, the firmest character must yield at last to a temptation beyond human strength to resist. It is related of MarceUus n. that at his election he was full of alarm, lest that should also happen in his case, which had been observed in most of his prede- cessors, who had been completely changed after their accession, and had carried out nothing of their previous in its Influence on the Popes. 4 1 7 good intentions. So injurious, he thought, was the in- fluence on a Pope's character of the change of position, the swarm of sycophants, and the spirit of partisan- ship.' Even the Jesuit General Oliva, about 1670, observes that the character of the newly elected Pope is generally so deteriorated by his elevation, that no one desires such an elevation for a good man, and no one expects that the very best cardinal will retain as Pope the good and holy resolutions he cherished at the time of his accession.^ Cardinal Sadolet, who was his intimate friend, said of Clement vii., that he had the Bible constantly in his hands, and thus entertained good resolutions, yet his pontificate was but a series of mistakes, a perpetual dodging to evade the Council which he hated and feared. Sadolet is obliged to admit that Clement, " misled by his minister," departed widely from his former charac- ter, and the goodness of his nature.^ Paul IV. (Caraffa) before his election was a warm friend of Church reformation, and left the Papal Court because there was no hope of obtaining any help to- wards it under Clement Vli. When he became Pope 1 PolMor. Be Vit. MarceU: II. (Rom. 1744), p. 132. 2 Lettere (Bologna, 1705), ii. '214. 3 Epistoloe Sadoleti, Omphalii et Stwmii (Argentorati, 1539), p. 9. 2 D 4 1 8 Papal Infallibility himseK nothing was to be seen of his former zeal for reforming the Chiirch. At a time when almost every post brought fresh news of the advance of Protestant- ism, he left the Church in its helpless condition; he did not so much as think of continuing the Council which had for some years been suspended. His chief concerns were the advancement and enrichment of his nephews ; his favourite institution, the Inquisition ; and the quarrel with the two only champions the Papal sys- tem then had, Charles v. and Philip n., for it is the ofi&ce of the Papacy to tread under foot kings and emperors.^ His contemporary, Onufrio Panvinio, paints in the most glaring colours the complete transformation which took place in Pius iv. (John Angelo de Medici, Pope from 1559 to 1565). Before his elevation he had shown himself humane, tolerant, beneficent, gentle, and un- selfish ; but as Pope he was just the reverse — ^passionate, covetous, and jealous. Especially after he had freed himself from the hated Council of Trent, he abandoned himself to viilgar sensuality and lusts, ate and drank immoderately, became imperious and crafty, and with- drew himself from Divine service in the chapel.^ 1 Rdas. di Bernardo Navagero, in RdazionidegliAmbasdadori Veneti, vii. 380. • Panrin. Vit. PmUif. post Platinam (Colon. 1593), pp. 463, 477. With in its lujiuence on the Popes, 419 So was it afterwards with Innocent x. (Pamfili), who had previously passed for a blameless and honest man, but who as Pope gave the world the spectacle of an administration guided and made pecuniary capital out of by an imperious and covetous woman, his sister. So again with Alexander vii. (Flavio Chigi), who as Cardi- nal was an able and gifted man of business, but as Pope soon let himself be readily persuaded by the fawning Jesuit Oliva that it was a mortal sin not to bring his nephews to Eome and make them rich and great.^ His chief care was to get rid of all business, and lead an easy and quiet life. Of later Popes we say nothing here. § XXXIII. — What is meant 63/ a Free Council. The experiences of the non- Italian bishops at the Council of Trent, its results, which fell so far short of the reforms desired and expected, the conduct of Eome in strictly prohibiting any explanations or commentaries on the decrees of the Council being written, and reserv- this agrees the statement of tlie Venetian ambassador Tiepolo, Kdazimi, X. 171. 1 What has so often been ohserved of the Popes, that in audiences and official intercourse they had behaved without any scruple, and with habi- tual dissimulation, the Florentine ambassador expresses sliortly in these words, in his report about Alexander Tli. : " We have a Pope who never spealcs a word of truth."— See the aironol. Hist. cUs Papes of the Bene- dictines of St. Maur (Paris, 1783), p. 314. 420 Papal Infallibility. ing to herself the interpretation of them, while she quietly shelved many of its most important decisions [e.g., on indulgences, and many others), without even any semblance of carrying them out — all this led to the call for a new Council, so often repeated previously, heing sUenced from that time forward. In countries subjected to the Inquisition, the mere wish for another Council would have been declared penal, and have ex- posed to danger those who uttered it. The Eoman See had no doubt suffered considerable losses of privilege and income in consequence of the Tridentine decrees, and still more from the opposition of the different Governments ; but, on the other hand, those decrees, the activity of the Jesuits, and the establishment of standing congregations and of the nunciatures, which had been previously unknown, had very materially increased the power and influence of Eome. But at Eome Councils were always held in abomination ; the very name was strictly forbidden under penalties there. When ia the controversy about grace in 1602 the Molinists spoke of its being decided by a Council, the Dominican PeHa wrote that in Eome the word CouncU, at least in matters of dogma, was regarded as sacrilegious, and excom- municated.^ ' In the letter in Serry, Hist. Cong, de Grat, (Antwerp, 1709), p. 270. Freedom in Council. 421 And thus it has come to pass that three centuries have elapsed without any earnest desire for a Council making itself heard anywhere — a thing wholly unpre- cedented in the past history of the Church. It is com- monly taught in theological manuals, schools, and sys- tems, that the Councils of the Church are not only useful hut necessary. But this, like so much else in the ordinary teaching, was held only in the abstract. It was at bottom universally felt that CouncUs as little fitted into a Church organized under an absolute Papal monarchy, as the States-General into the monarchy of Louis xiT. The most faithful interpreter of the Eoman view of things, Cardinal Pallavicini, put this feehng into words, when he said, " To hold another Council would be to tempt God, so extremely dangerous and so threatening to the very existence of the Church would such an assembly be." In that point, he thinks his History of the Council of Trent wDl make the same im- pression on the reader as Sarpi's.^ Even National Synods, he says, the Popes have always detested.^ But the chief reason why nobody any longer desired a Council, lay in the conviction that, if it met, the first and most essential condition, freedom of deliberation and voting, would be wanting. The latest history 1 St(ma del Cone, di Tr. iv. p. 331, ed. 1843. « 2j_ p_ 74, 422 Papal Infallibility. showed this as rmich as the theory. In the Papal system, which knows nothing of true bishops ruling independently by vii'tue of the Divine institution, but only recognises subjects and vicars or officials of the Pope, who exercise a power lent them merely during his pleasure, there is no room for an assembly which would be called a Council in the sense of the ancient Church.^ If the bishops know the view and will of the Pope on any question, it would be presumptuous and idle to vote against it ; and if they do not, their first duty at the Council would be to ascertain it and vote accord- ingly. An oecumenical assembly of the Church can have no existence, properly speaking, in presence of an ordinarius ordinariorum and infallible teacher of faith, though, of course, the pomp, ceremonial, speeches, and votings of a Council may be displayed to the gaze of the world. And therefore the Papal legates at Trent used at once to rebuke bishops as heretics and 1 Cardinal de Lnca says (Rdat. Oarice Horn. Diss. iv. n. 10), it is the " opinio in hae G\m& recepta " that the Pope is " Ordinarius Ordinarionim, habens uuiversum mundum pro diceoesi," so that bishops and archbishops are only his " officiales," or, as Benedict xiv. observes (De Synod. Dioces. A. 14 ; V. 7), the Pope is " in tota Ecclesia proprius sacerdos — potest ab omni juiisdiotione episcopi subtrahere quamlibet Ecclesiam." In Merlini's Decis. Rot. Rom. ed. 1660 (Dec. 830), we read, "Papa est dominus omnimn beneficionim." In a word, this system leaves nothing which can be said to belong to bishops of right. The Roman theory allows the Oaria to rob them, wholly or in part, of their rights, to hand over their rights to others, etc. Freedom in Council. 423 rebels who ever dared to express any view of their own.^ Bishops who have been obliged to swear " to maintain, defend, increase, and advance the rights,. honours, privi- leges, and authority of their lord the Pope "—and every bishop takes this oath — cannot regard themselves, or be regarded by the Christian world, as free members of a free Council ; natural justice and equity requires that. These men neither will nor can be held responsible for decisions or omissions which do not depend on them. There have certainly been the weightiest reasons for holding no Council for three hundred years, and avoid- ing such a " useless hubbub," as the infallibilist Car- dinal Orsi calls Councils.^ Complete and real freedom for every one, freedom from moral constraint, from fear and intimidation, and from corruption, belongs to the essence of a Council. An assembly of men bound in conscience by their oaths ^ Numberless instances of this may be found in the letters of the Spanish ambassador Vargas, and the autobiography of Bishop Martin Perez de Ayalas, in the appendix to Villanueva, Vida Liter, ii. 420. 2 Bossuet has brought forward the question, so often asked and never answered : to what purpose were so many Councils held in the Church, with so much trouble and expense, if the infallible Popes could have finally set- tled every doctrinal controversy by a single utterance of their own ? To this Orsi answers, and we have his reply in Count de Maistre's trans- lation, " Ne le demandez point aux Papes qui n'ont jamais imaging qu'il fat besoin de conciles oecumeniques pour reprimer (les heresies d'Arius, etc.) Demandez le aux empereurs qui ont absolument voulu les conciles, qui les ont convoques, qui ont exig^ I'assentiment des Papes, qui ont excite ivmiiie- ment tout ce fracas dans I'^glise," 424 Papal Infallibility. to consider the maintenance and increase of Papal power their main object,^ — men Hving in fear of incur- ring the displeasure of the Curia, and with it the charge of perjury, and the most burdensome hindrances in the discharge of their office — cannot certainly be called free in all those questions which concern the authority and claims of the See of Eome, and very few at most of the questions that would have to be dis- cussed at a Council do not come under this category. None of our bishops have sworn to make the good of the Church and of religion the supreme object of their actions and endeavours ; the terms of the oath provide only for the advantage of the Curia. How the oath is understood at Eome, and to what reproaches a bishop exposes himself who once chooses to follow his own conviction against the tradition of the Curia, there are plenty of examples to show. In Eimini and Seleucia (359), at Ephesus (449) and at Vienne (1312), and at many other times, even at Trent, the results of a want of real freedom have been displayed. In early times, when the Popes were as yet 1 The more important passages of the oath are : — " Jura, honores, privi- legia et auotoritatem S. Eom. Bcolesis3 Domini nostri Papse et sucessorum prffidictorum oonservare, defendere, aiigere et promovere oiiraho. . . . Re- gulas sanctorum Patrum, decreta, ordinationes sen dispositiones, reserva- tiones, provisiones et mandata apostolioa totis vlribus observabo et faoiam ab aliis observari." Freedom in Council. 425 in no position to exercise compulsion or intimidation upon Synods, it was the Emperors who sometimes trenched too closely on this freedom. But from Gregory vii.'s time the weight of Papal power has pressed ten times more heavily upon them than ever did the Imperial authority. With abundant reason were the two demands urged throughout half Europe in the sixteenth century, in the negotiations about the Council, — first, that it should not be held in Eome, or even in Italy, and secondly, that the bishops should be absolved from their oath of obedience. 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Selections from Modern French Au- thors. With English Notes and Introductory Notice. By Henri Tan Laun, French Master at Cheltenham College. Part I. — Honore de Balzac. Crown 8vo. 3^. bd. A Course of Lectures delivered to Can- didates for Holy Orders, comprising a Summary of the whole System of Theology. To which is prefixed an Inaugural Address. By John Eandolph, D.D. (sometime Bishop of London). Vol. I. Natural and Revealed. Is. 6d. Vol. II. Historical. |(^^^^,,^^^^_^ In 3 Vols. 8vo. XonBon, ©iforS, anS fiCambtftat jIMtssrs. UCbCngton's iSftii ^nfilicatfons Farewell Counsels of a Pastor to his Flock, on the Topics of the Day. Nine Sermons preached at St. John's, Paddington. Third Edition. Small 8vo. 4r. The Greek Testament. With a Critically revised Text ; a Digest of Various Read- ings ; Maiginal References to Verbal and Idiomatic Usage ; Prolegomena ; and a Critical and Exegetical Commentary. For the use of Theological Students and Ministers. By Henry AUord, D.D., Dean of Canterbury. 4 Vols. 8vo. I02J. The Volumes are sold separately as follows : — Vol. I.— The Four Gospels. Sixth Edition. i%s. Vol. II.— Acts to II. Corinthians. Fifth Edition. 24s. Vol. III. — Galatians to Philemon. Fmirth Edition. \%s. Vol. IV. — Hebrews to Revelation. Third Edition. 32J. The New Testament for English Readers ; containing the Authorized Version, with a jevised English Text ; Marginal References ; and a Critical and Explanatory Commentary. By Henry Alford, D.D., Dean of Canterbury. NsHV complete in 2 Vols, or 4 Parts, price S4f. ^• Separately, VoL I, Part I. — The three first Gospels, with a Map. Second Edition. 1 2.r. Vol. i. Part II. — :St John and the Acts. Second Edition. Vol. 2, Part I.— The Epistles of St Paul, with a Map. Secottd Edition, ids. Vol.2, Part IL — Hebrews to Revelation. 8vo. \6s. XoBHon, ®ifot1i, anH CambriDgc ittessrs. 3Rli)lnBtDtt'a iBtin pufiUcationa 13 The Sword and the Keys. The Civil Power in its Relations to The Church ; considered with Special Reference to the Court of Final Ecclesiastical Appeal in England. With Appendix containing all Statutes on which the Jurisdiction of that Tribunal over Spiritual Causes is Founded, and also, all Ecclesiastical Judgmeiits delivered by it since those published by the Lord Bishop of London in 1865. By James Wayland Joyce, M.A., Rector of Burford, Salop. 8vo. loj. 6(/. An Attempt to determine yohn Wes- ley's place in Church History, with the aid of Facts and Documents unknown to, or unnoticed by, his Biographers. By E. Denny -TJrlin, M.R.I. A., of the Middle Temple, Barrister- at-Law. Small 8vo. (In the Press.) Consoling Thoughts in Sickness. Edited by Henry Bailey, B.D., Warden of St. Augustine's College, Canterbury. Large type. Small 8vo. ^s. 6d. Thoughts on Personal Religion ; being a Treatise on the Christian Life in its Two Chief Elements, Devotion and Practice. By Edward Meyrick Cronlburn, D. D. , Dean of Norwich. New Edition. Small 8vo. 6j. 6d. An Edition for Presentation, Two Volumes, small 8vo. los. 6d. Also a cheap Edition. Small 8vo. 3^. dd. On Miracles; being the Bampton Lectures for 1865. By J. B. Mozley, B.D., Canon of Worcester, late Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. Second Edition. 8vo. ioj'. dd. 'Xontron, (^xforK, ann eTambritrse 24 iWeaisrB. ^Riblngton'g iBeto publications Nearly ready, in imperial 8\ro. PART I. (containing A— K). A DICTIONARY OF DOCTRINAL AND HISTORICAL THEOLOGY, BY VARIOUS WRITERS. EDITED BY THE Rev. JOHN HENRY BLUNT, M.A., F.S.A., EDITOR OF "the ANNOTATED BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER." THIS is the first portion of the " Su7nmary of Theology and Ecclesiastical History^' which Messrs. Rivington pro- pose to publish in eight volumes as a " Thesaurus Theo- logicus" for the Clergy and Reading Laity of the Church of England. It consists of original articles on all the important Doc- trines of Theology, and on other questions tucessary for their further illustration, the articles being carefully written with a view to modern thought, as well as a respect for ancient authority. The Dictionary will be completed in two parts. lonBon, ©ifora, anB fflamfirttiat iWtssrs. IRibington's ^tto publications 25 2V£W PAMPHLETS BY THE BISHOP OF ST. DAVID'S. The Spirit of Truth the Holy Spirit: a Sermon, preached before the University of Cambridge, on Whitsunday, May i6, 1869. 8vo. I J. BY ARCHDEACON BICKERSTETH. Christian Moii7'ners not Hopeless Mourners : a Sermon, preached in the Parish Church of Monks' Risborough, on Sunday, June 27, i86g, on the occasion of the Death of Mrs. Evetts, wife of the Rector of that parish. 8vo. xs. The Filling of all Things by our Ascended Lord: a Sermon, preached in Westminster Abbey, on St. Matthias' Day, Feb. 24, 1869, on the occasion of the Consecration pf Dr. Wordsworth, Bishop Elect of Lincoln ; Dr. Hatchard, Bishop Designate of Mauritius ; and Dr. Turner, Bishop Designate -of Grafton and Armidale. 8vo. u. BY THE REV. H. P. LIDDON. L ife in Death : a Sermon, preached in Salisbury Cathedral, on the nth Sunday after Trinity, August 8, 1869, being the day after the Funeral of Walter Kerr Hamilton, D.D., Lord Bishop of Salisbury. 8vo. IS. A Sisters Work: a Sermon, preached in substance at All Saints', Margaret Street, on the Second Sunday after Trinity, 1869. 8vo. \s. Christ and Human Law : a Sermon, preached he- fore the University, the Hon. Mr. Justice Hannen, and the Hon. Mr. Justice Keating, Her Majesty's learned Judges of Assize, in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Oxford, on the Third Sunday in Lent, February 28, 1869. Second Edition. With a Note on Divorce. 8vo. u. Christ and Education : a Sermon, preached at St. James's, Piccadilly, on the Third Sunday after Trinity, 1869. 8vo. is. "Contjon, ^xiox'a, mti CDamfirilrge 26 jVltssrs. ^ibingtan'8 i^tn ^SublicaUons j\^jEW pamphlets BY THE REV. R. W. BARNES. Three Sermons, preached in Exeter Cathedral, on the 7th, 8th, and gth Sundays after Trinity, July nth, i8th, and 2Sth, 1869. 8vo. If. (}d. BY THE REV. C. N. GRAY. Statement on Confession. With full Catena of Anglican Divines. Third Edition. 6d. BY THE REV. JAMES GERALD JOYCE. Can the L iturgy be used to attach tlie People to tJie Church? a Paper, read before the Churchman's Association for the Rural Deaneries of Andover, Basingstoke, and Chilbolton. 8vo. ir. BY THE REV. GEORGE HENRY SUMNER. Peace, Christ's Legacy to His Church: a Sermon preached in Westminster Abbey, at the Consecration of the Rev. Ashton Oxenden, D.D., to the Metropolitan See of Montreal, on Sunday, August z, 1869. 8vo. If. EY THE REV. G. I. PELLEW. A Sermon, preached at St. Marys Church, Putney, in the Defence of the Athanasian Creed, on the first Sunday after Trinity, i86g. 8vo. bd. BY THE REV. W. E. JELF. A Review of Mariolatry, Liturgical, Devotional, Doctrinal, as exhibited in the Offices, the Devotional and Dogmatic Books, at present used in the Romish Communion. By William Edward J elf, B.D. Sometime Censor of Christ Church, Oxford : Bampton lecturer, and Whitehall Preacher. 8vo. w. bd. The Reformation of the Church of England. [a.d. 1514 — 1547.] A Review, Reprinted by Permission from the "Times," of February 27th and March zst, 1869. 8vo. .6d. A PERSII FLACCI SATIRARUM LIBER, Edited by A. Pretor, M.A., of Trinity College, Cambridge, Classical Lecturer of Trinity Hall. 3s. 6d. TEonBon, ®ifi)rt, ano eDambitsat 28 i^cssrs. ^(bfngton's J^ctn ^ublicattons CA TEN A CLA SSICOR UM— Opinions of the Press. Mr. Jebb^s Sophocles. "The Introduction proves that Mr. Jebb is something more than a mere scholar, — a man of real taste and feeline. His criticism upon Schlegel's remarks on the Electra are, we believe, new, and certainly just. As we have often had occasion to say in this Review, it is impossible to pass any reliable criticism upon school-books until they have been tested by experience. The notes, however, in this case appear to be clear and sensible, and direct at- tention to the points where attention is most needed." — Westminster Review. "We have no hesitation in saying that in style and manner Mr. Jebb's notes are admirably suited for their purpose. The explanations of gram- matical points are singularly lucid, the parallel passages generally well chosen, the translations bright and graceful, the analysis of arguments terse and luminous. Mr. Jebb has clearly shown that he possesses some of the qualities most essential for a commentator." — Spectator, " If, as we are fain to believe, the editors of the Catena Chissicoruin have got together such a pick of scholars as have no need to play their best card first, there is a bright promise of success to their series m the first sample of it wluch has come to hand — Mr. Jebb's 'Electra.' We have seen it suggested that it is unsafe to pro- nounce on the merits of a Greek Play edited for educational purposes until it has been tested in the hands of pupils and tutors. But our examination of the instalment of, we hope, a complete * Sophocles,' which Mr. Jebb has put forth, has assured us that this is a needless suspension of judgment, and prompted us to commit the justifiable rashness of pronouncing upon its con- tents, and of asserting after due perusal that it is calculated to be admirably serviceable to every class of scholars and learners. And this assertion is based upon the fact that it is a by no means one-sided edition, and that it looks as with the himdred eyes of Argus, here, there, and everywhere, to keep the reader from straying. In a concise and succinct style of English annotation, forming the best substitute for the time-honoured Latin notes which had so much to do with making good scholars in days of yore, Mr. Jebb keeps a steady eye for all qaestions of grammar, construction, scholarship, and philology, and handles these as they arise with a helpful and sufficient pre- cision. In matters of grammar and syntax his practice for the most part is to refer his reader to the proper section of Madvig's * Manual of Greek Syn- tax ;' nor does he ever waste space and time in explaining a construction, unless it be such an one as is not satis- factorily dealt with in the grammars of Madvig or Jelf. Experience as a pupil and a teacher has probably taught him the value of the wholesome task of hunting out a grammar reference for oneself, instead of finding it, handy for slurring over, amidst the hundred and one pieces of information in a voluminous foot-note. But whenever there occurs any peculiarity of con- struction, which is hard to reconcile to the accepted usage, it is Mr. Jebb's general practice to be ready at hand with manful assistance." — Contempo- rary Revie-w. ''Mr. Jebb has produced a work which will be read with interest and profit by the most advanced scholar, as it contains, in a compact form, not only a careful summary of the labours of preceding editors, but also many acute and ingenious original remarks. We do not know whether the matter or the manner of this excellent com- mentary is deserving of the higher praise : the skill with which Mr. Jebb has avoided, on the one hand, the wearisome prolixity of the Germans, and on the other the jejune brevity of the Porsonian critics, or the versatility which has enabled him in turn to elucidate the plots, to explain the verbal diflSculties, and to illustrate the idioms of his author. All this, by a studious economy of space and a re- markable precision of expression, he has done for the 'Ajax' in a volume of some 200 pages." — Aikenetum, IConlron, ©xfnra, an^ ©amfiritjse JWcssrss. IRibington's J^eto publications 29 CA TEN A CLA SSICOR UM—Oi>inions of the Press. Mr, Simcox^s JuvenaL "Of Mr. Simcox's 'Juvenal' we can only speak in terms of the highest com- mendation, as a simple, unpretending' work, admirably adapted to the wants of the school-boy or of a college pass- man. It is clear, concise, and scru- pulously honest in shirking no real difficulty. The pointed epigrammatic hits of the satirist are every where well brought out, and the notes really are what they profess to be, explanatory in the best sense of the term." — Lotidon Review . " This is a link in the Catena Classi- corunt to which the attention of otir readers has been more than once di- rected as a good Series of Classical works for School and College piuposes. The Introduction is a very comprehen- sive and able account of Juvenal, his satires, and the manuscripts." — AtJie- ntBujn. "This is a very original and en- joyable Edition of one of our favourite classics. " — Spectator. " Every class of readers — those who use Mr. Simcox as their sole inter- fireter, and those who supplement arger editions by his concise matter — will alike find interest and careful research in his able Preface. This indeed we should call the great feature of his book. The three facts which sum up Juvenal's history so far as we know It are soon despatched ; but the internal evidence both as to the dates of his writing and publishing his Sa- tires, and as to his character as a writer, occupy some fifteen or twenty pages, which will repay methodical study." — Ckurchtnan. Mr. Bigg's Thucydides. "Mr. Bigg in his 'Thucydides' prefixes an analysis to each book, and an admirable introduction to the whole work, containing full information as to all that is known or related of Thucy- dides, and the date at which he wrote, followed by a very masterly critique on some of his characteristics as a writer. —A tlteiupum. *' While discl^ming absolute on- giuality in his book, Mr. Bigg has so thoroughly digested the works of so many eminent predecessors in the same field, and is evidently on terms of such intimacy with his author as perforce to inspire confidence. A well-pondered and well-written introduction has formed a part of each Hnk in the Catena hitherto published, and Mr. Bigg^ m addition to a general introduction, has given us an essay on Some Cha- racteristics of Thucydides,' which no one can read without being impressed with the learningandjudgmentbrought to bear on the subject." — Standard. " We need hardly say that these books are carefully edited ; the reputa- tion of the editor is an assurance on this point. If the rest of the history is edited with equal care, it must become the standard book for school and college purposes." — ^oAn Bull. *' Mr. Bigg first discusses the facts of the life of Thucydides, then passes to an examination into the date at which Thucydides wrote ; and in the third section expatiates on some cha- racteristics of Thucydides. These essays are remarkably well written, are judicious in their opinions, and are calculated to give the student much insight into the work of Thucydides, and its relation to his own times, and to the works of subsequent historians," — Mttseuvt, 'Condon, ©xforti, anlr Cam6ril(ge 30 JWcssrs. IRifainfftnn's J^to publications CA TENA CLASSICORUM— Opinions of the Press, Mr. Heslofs Demosthenes, ** The usual introduction has in this case been dispensed ■with. The reader is referred to the works of Grote and Thirlwall for information on such points of history as arise out of these famous orations, and on points of critical scholarship to * Madvig's Grammar/ where that is available, while copious acknowledgments are made to those commentators on whose works Mr. Heslop has based his own. Mr. Heslop's editions are^ however, no mere compilations. That the points required in an oratorical style differ materially from those in an historical style, will scarcely be questioned, and accordingly we And tluit Mr. Heslop has given special care to those cha- racteristics of style as well as of -lan- guage, which constitute Demosthenes the very lirst of classic orators."— Standard. We must call attention to New Editions of various classics, in the excellent Catena ClassicorwH series. The reputation and high standing of the editors are the best guarantees for the accuracy and scholarship of the notes." — Westtnitister Review. *' The notes are thoroughly good, so far as they go. Mr. HesTop has care- fully digested the best foreign com- mentaries, and his notes are forthemost part judicious extracts from them." — Miiseutn. "The annotations arc scarcely less to be commended for the exclusion -of superfluous matter than for the excel- lence of what is supplied. Well-known works are not quoted, but simply re- ferred to, and information which ought to have been previously acquired is omitted." — Athsneeum. Mr. Sandy's Isocrates. " Isocrates has not received the attention to which the simplicity of his style and the purity of his Attic language entitle him as a means of education. Now that we have so ad- mirable an edition of two of his Works best adapted for such a purpose, there will no longer be any excuse for this neglect. For carefulness and thorough- ness of editing, it will bear comparison with the best, whether English or foreign. Besides an ample supply of exhaustive notes of rare excellence, we find in it valuable remarks on the style of Isocrates and the state of the text, a table of various readings, a list of editions, and a special introduction to each piece. As in other editions of this series, short summaries of the argument are inserted in suitable places, and will be found of great service to the student. The commen- tary embraces explanations of difficult passages, with instructive remarks on ^ammatical usages, and the deriva- tion and meanings of words illus- trated by quotations and references." — A tkefueutn. "Tlus Work deserves the warmest welcome for several reasons. In the first place, it is an attempt to introduce Isocrates into our schools, and this attempt deserves encouragement. The Ad Detnonicunt is very easy Greek. It is good Greek And it is reading of a healthy nature for boys. The prac- tical wisdom of the Greeks is in man y respects fitted to the capacities of boys; and if books containing this wisdom ai« read in schools, along with others of a historical and poetical nature, they will be felt to be far from dry. Then the Editor has done every thing that an editor should do- We have a series of short introductory essays ; on the style of Isocrates, on the text, on the Ad Demcnicum^ and on the Panegyricus. These are characterized by sound sense, wide and thorough learning, and the capability of presenting thoughts clearly and well." — Museum. " By editing Isocrates Mr. Sandys does good service to students and teachers of Greek Prose He places in our hands in a convenient form an author who will be found of great use in public schools, where he has been hitherto almost unknown- . . , Mr. Sandys worthily sustains as a com- mentator the name which he has already won. The historic^ notes are good, clear, and concise ; the gram- matical notes scholar-like and practi- cally useful Many will be welcome alike to master and pupil. " — Cambridge University Gazette. IContion, <&xforti, antr CambriDge JWcssrs. iaib(nflton'a jScto pubUcatfons 3^ CATENA CLASSICORUM— Opinions of the Press. Mr. Greenes Aristophanes. and lucid, and the volume will be found " Mr. Green has discharged his part t of the work with uncommon skilt and ability. The notes show a thorough study of the two Plays, an independent judgment in the interpretation of the poet, and a wealth of illustration, from which the Editor draws whenever it is necessary. " — Mtiseum.. "Mr. Green's admirable Introduction to *The Clouds' pf the celebrated comic poet deserves a careful perusal, as it contains an accurate analysis and many original comments on this re- iJiarkable play. The text is prefaced by a table of readings of Dindorf and Meineke, which will be of great service to students who wish to indulge in verbal criticism. The notes are copious useful for school and college purposes, and admirably adapted for private reading. "—Exammer. "Mr. Green furnishes an excellent Introduction to ' The Clouds ' of Aristophanes, explaining the circum- stances under which it was produced, and ably discussing the probable object of the author in writing it, which he considers to have been to put down the Sophists, a class whom Aristo- phanes thought dangerous to the morals of the community, and therefore ca- ricatured in the person of Socrates, — not unnaturally, though irreverently, choosing him as their representative." — A theneeujn. Mr. Pretor's Persius. "This is one of the ablest editions published in the Catena Classicorum under the superintendence of Mr. Holmes and Mr. Bigg. Mr Pretor has adopted in his edition a plan which he defends on a general principle, but which has really its true defence in the special peculiarities of his author. Mr. Pretor has given his readers trans- lations of almost all the difficult pas- sages. We think he has done so wisely in this case ; for the allusions and con- structions are so obscure that help is absolutely necessary. He has also been particularly full in his notes. He has thought and written with great independence. He has used every means to get at the meaning of his author. He has gone to many sources ■ for illustration. And altogether he has produced what we may fairlj^ regard as the best edition of Persius in Eng- lish." — Mtiseum ■ "In undertaking to edit for the Catena Classicorutn an author so obscure as Persius confessedly is, Mr. Pretor has boldly grappled with a most difficult task. He has, however, performed it very well, because he has begun, as his Introduction shows, by making himself thoroughly acquainted with the mind and temper— a suffi- ciently cynical one— of the poet, and thus laying a good basis for his judg- ment on the conflicting opmions and varying interpretations of previous editors. The bulk of his commentary is from Jahn ; and if we were disposed to object, we should say that some por- tion^ of the matter he has transferred to his pages might as well have been omitted. To explain Persius satis- factorily, i. e. to make^ him really intelligible, it is necessary rather to keep before the reader the thread of the story, and to point out the less obvious, because purposely obscured, allusions and the sudden changes of the characters in the dialogues, than to dwell too much on the explanation of the words. If the satires of Persius are difficult, they are also very short ; and the more a commentary can be kept within reasonable limits, the more willing students will try to master the matter. All that can be required by the student of Persius, including an elaborate introduction, a preliminary exposition of each satire, and a very copious index verborum, is now com- pressed in a volume of less than 150 pages. It is a most useful book, and will be welcome in proportion as such an edition was really very much wanted. The good sense and sound judgment shown by the editor on con- troverted points give promise of ex- cellent literary work in future under- takings of the like kind." — Cambridge University Gazette. IConUon, ^xfora, anU CCambritisc 32 JWeasrs. 1R(6(ngton's igeta ^ubUtatfons CATENA CLASSICORUM. The following Parts are in conrse of preparation:— PLATONIS PHAEDO, Edited by Alfred Barry, D. D. late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge ; Principal of King's College, London. DEMOSTHENIS ORATIONES PUBLICAE, Edited by G. H. Heslop, M.A. late Fellow and Assistant Tutor of Queen's College, Orford ; Head Master of St. Bees. [Part III. De Falsa Legatione. MARTIALIS EPIGRAMMATA, Edited by George Butler, M.A. Principal of Liverpool College ; late Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. DEMOSTHENIS ORATIONES PRIVATAE, Edited by Arthur Holmes, M.A. Fellow and Lecturer of Clare College, Cambridge. [Part I. De Corona. HOMERI ILIAS, Edited by S. H. Reynolds, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of Brasenose College, Oxford. [Vol. I. Books I. to XII. HORATI OPERA, Edited by J. M. Marshall, M.A. Fellow and late Lecturer of Brasenose College, Oxford ; one of the Masters in Clifton College. TERENTI COMOEDIAE, Edited by T. L. Papillon, M. A Fellow and Classical Lecturer of Merton College, Oxford. [Part I. Andria et Eunuchus. HERODOTI HISTORIA, Edited by H. G. Woods, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, Oxford. TACITI HISTORIAE, Edited by W. H. SiMCOx, M.A. Fellow and Lecturer of Queen's College, Oxford. OVIDI TRISTIA, Edited by Oscar Browning, M.A. Fellow of King's College, Cambridge ; and Assistant Master at Eton College. CICERONIS ORATIONES, Edited by Charles Edward Graves, M.A. Classical Lecturer and late Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. [Part I. Pro P. Sextio. THEOPHRASTI CHARACTERES, Edited by A. Pretor, M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge; Classical Lecturer of Trinity Hall. XonDon, ®xfottr, ann eDambtfoge