The Rambler was a Catholic periodical which, from 1848, tried to show that English
Catholics were intellectually serious and capable of rational discussion. For decades,
until well after World War II, English Catholicism faced the constant challenged that it
was both Unenglish and intellectually and morally deficient ("the Italian mission to
the Irish"). An important issue was the degree to which lay Catholics were free of
ecclesiastical control. The problem was that more than a few bishops were indeed
interested in controlling the thoughts and actions of the laity. One result was that The
Rambler faced threats of ecclesiastical censure: this threat came to a head when a
writer in the magazine - a Catholic layman who was a schools inspector - defended the
position that Catholic schools which received state money should welcome government
inspectors. This directly contradicted the bishops' position, albeit that the bishops had
not made the position public. To save the magazine, Newman agreed to become its editor. In
an editorial Newman, apologized to the bishops for The Rambler having
contradicted them, but then went on to claim that "If even in the preparation of a
dogmatic definition, the faithful are consulted, as lately in the instance of the
Immaculate Conception, it is at least natural to anticipate such an act pf kind feeling
and sympathy in great practical questions...". In other words, Catholic bishops
should listen to the Catholic laity.*
[* Newman may have miscontrued the situation in which the pope had asked for input
about the 1856 definition on the Immaculate Conception. For all their attacks on the
modern world, the popes since Pius IX have been astute in using mass media and
popular support to bolster central Roman power. This may be thought of by some as
"consulatation"; others will see it as ecclesiastical bonapartism.]
The bishops were not happy, and Newman was asked to resign, which he did. But in
his last edition he published, unsigned, the piece On Consulting the Faithful in
Matters of Doctrine (July 1859). Everyone knew it was by Newman and the attacks on him
were so severe that he ceased to write for five years until prompted by Charles Kingsley
to write Apologia Pro Vita Sua.
The argument made by Newman in fact went beyond insisting that the laity have
abilities in their own sphere, to insist, essentially, that the consensus of the
faithful may preserve important doctrines even when the bishops fail - pointing especially
to the history of the Arian controversy. This elevated view of the position of the laity
did not become important in the wider Church until the Second Vatican Council. Newman
himself did not reprint the article (excepting the historical portion), but it became well
known after an annotated version, with introduction, was published by John Coulson in
1961.
NOTE:
Footnotes have been moved from the bottom of the page to the end of the
containing paragraph.
In Part 3 below, which was republished in 1871, words in square brakets
[ ] were omitted from the 1871 version: words in angle brackets
< > were added.
A question has arisen among persons of theological knowledge and fair and candid minds,
about the wording and the sense of a passage in the Rambler for May. It admits to
my own mind of so clear and satisfactory an explanation, that 1 should think it
unnecessary to intrude myself, an anonymous person, between the conductors and readers of
this Magazine, except that, as in dogmatic works the replies made to objections often
contain the richest matter, so here too, plain remarks on a plain subject may open to the
minds of others profitable thoughts, which are more due to their own superior intelligence
than to the very words of the writer.
The Rambler, then, has these words at p. 122: "In the preparation of a
dogmatic definition, the faithful are consulted, as lately in the instance of the
Immaculate Conception." Now two questions bearing upon doctrine have been raised on
this sentence, putting aside the question of fact as regards the particular instance
cited, which must follow the decision on the doctrinal questions: viz. first, whether it
can, with doctrinal correctness, he said that an appeal to the faithful is one of
the preliminaries of a definition of doctrine; and secondly, granting that the faithful
are taken into account, still, whether they can correctly be said to be consulted. I
shall remark on both these points, and 1 shall begin with the second.
1.
Now doubtless, if a divine were expressing himself formally, and in Latin, he
would not commonly speak of the laity being "consulted" among the preliminaries
of a dogmatic definition, because the technical, or even scientific, meaning of the word
"consult" is to "consult with," or to "take counsel." But the English word "consult," in its popular and ordinary use, is not so
precise and narrow in its meaning; it is doubtless a word expressive of trust and
deference, but not of submission. It includes the idea of inquiring into a matter of fact, as well as asking a judgment. Thus we talk of "consulting our barometer"
about the weather:-the barometer only attests the fact of the state of the
atmosphere. In like manner, we may consult a watch or a sun-dial about the time of day. A
physician consults the pulse of his patient; but not in the same sense in which his
patient consults him. It is but an index of the state of his health. Ecclesiastes
says, "Qui observat ventum, non seminat" we might translate it, "he
who consults," without meaning that we ask the wind's opinion. This being considered,
it was, I conceive, quite allowable for a writer, who was not teaching or treating
theology, but, as it were, conversing, to say, as in the passage in question, "In the
preparation of a dogmatic definition, the faithful are consulted." Doubtless their
advice, their opinion, their judgment on the question of definition is not asked; but the
matter of fact, viz. their belief, is sought for, as a testimony to that apostolical
tradition, on which alone any doctrine whatsoever can be defined. In like manner, we may
"consult" the liturgies or the rites of the Church; not that they speak, not
that can take any part whatever in the definition, for they are documents or customs; but
they are witnesses to the antiquity or universality of the doctrines which they contain,
and about which they are "consulted." And, in like manner, I certainly
understood the writer in the Rambler to mean (and I think any lay reader might so
understand him) that the fidelium sensus and consensus is a branch of
evidence which it is natural or necessary for the Church to regard and consult, before she
proceeds to any definition, from its intrinsic cogency; and by consequence, that it ever
has been so regarded and consulted. And the writer's use of the word "opinion"
in the foregoing sentence, and his omission of it in the sentence in question, seemed to
show that, though the two cases put therein were analogous, they were not identical.
Having said as much as this, I go further, and maintain that the word
"consulted," used as it was used, was in no respect unadvisable, except so far
as it distressed any learned and good men, who identified it with the Latin. I might,
indeed, even have defended the word as it was used, in the Latin sense of it. Regnier both
uses it of the laity and explains it. "Ciim receptam apud populos traditionem consulunt et sequuntur Episcopi, non illos habent pro magistris et ducibus,
&c."* (De Eccles. Christ. p. i. 51, c. i., ed. Migne, col. 234) But in my
bountifulness I will give up this use of the word as untheological; still I will maintain
that the true theological sense is unknown to all but theologians. Accordingly, the
use of it in the Rambler was in no sense dangerous to any lay reader, who, if he
knows Latin, still is not called upon, in the structure of his religious ideas, to draw
those careful lines and those fine distinctions, which in theology itself are the very
means of anticipating and repelling heresy. The laity would not have a truer, or a
clearer, or a different view of the doctrine itself, though the sentence had run, "in
the preparation of a dogmatic decree, regard is had to the sense of the
faithful;" or, "there is an appeal to the general voice of the
faithful;" or, "inquiry is made into the belief of the Christian
people;" or, "the definition is not made without a previous reference to
what the faithful will think of it and say to it;" or though any other form of words
had been used, stronger or weaker, expressive of the same general idea, viz. that the
sense of the faithful is not left out of the question by the
Holy See among the preliminary acts of defining a doctrine.
[* "When the bishops consult and follow a tradition received by the people they do
not thereby make the people into their teachers and leaders, &c."]
Now I shall go on presently to remark on the proposition itself which is conveyed in
the words on which I have been commenting; here, however, I will first observe, that such
misconceptions as I have been setting right will and must occur, from the nature of the
case, whenever we speak on theological subjects in the vernacular; and if we do not use
the vernacular, I do not see how the bulk of the Catholic people are to be catechised or
taught at all. English has innovated on the Latin sense of its own Latin words; and if we
are to speak according to the conditions of the language, and are to make ourselves
intelligible to the multitude, we shall necessarily run the risk of startling those who
are resolved to act as mere critics and scholastics in the process of popular instruction.
This divergence from a classical or ecclesiastical standard is a great inconvenience, I
grant; but we cannot remodel our mother-tongue. Crimen does not properly mean crime;
amiable does not yet convey the idea of amabilis; compassio is not compassion;
princeps is not a prince; disputatio is not a dispute; praevenire is not to prevent. Cicero imperator is not the Emperor Cicero; scriptor egregius is not an egregious writer; virgo singularis is not a singular virgin; retractare dicta is not to retract what be has said; and, as we know from the sacred passage, traducere
is not necessarily to traduce.
Now this is not merely sharp writing, for mistakes do in matter of fact occur not
unfrequently from this imperfect correspondence between theological Latin and English;
showing that readers of English are bound ever to bear in mind that they are not reading
Latin, and that learned divines must ever exercise charity in their interpretations of
vernacular religious teaching.
For instance, I know of certain English sermons which were translated into French by
some French priests. They, good and friendly men, were surprised to find in these
compositions such language as "weak evidence and strong evidence," and
"insufficient, probably, demonstrative evidence;" they read that "some
writers had depreciated the evidences of religion," and that "the last century,
when love was cold, was an age of evidences." Evidentia, they said, meant that
luminousness which attends on demonstration, conviction, certainty; how can it be more or
less? how can it be unsatisfactory? how can a sane man disparage it? how can it be
connected with religious coldness? The simple explanation of the difficulty was, that the
writer was writing for his own people, and that in English "an evidence" is not evidentia.
Another instance. An excellent Italian religious, now gone to his reward, was reading a
work of the same author; and he came upon a sentence to the effect, I think, that the
doctrine of the Holy Trinity was to be held with "implicit" faith. He was
perplexed and concerned. He thought the writer held that the Church did not explicitly
teach, had not explicitly defined, the dogma; that is, he confused the English meaning of
the word, according to which it is a sort of correlative to imperative, meaning
simple, unconditional, absolute, with its sense in theology.
It is not so exactly apposite to refer,-yet I will refer,-to another instance, as
supplying a general illustration of the point I am urging. It was in a third country that
a lecturer spoke in terms of disparagement of "Natural Theology," on the ground
of its deciding questions of revelation by reasonings from physical phenomena. It was
objected to him, that Naturalis Theologia embraced all truths and arguments
from natural reason bearing upon the Divine Being and Attributes. Certainly he would have
been the last to depreciate what he had ever made the paramount preliminary science to
Christian faith; but he spoke according to the sense of those to whom his words might
come. He considered that in the Protestant school of Paley and other popular writers, the
idea of Natural Theology had practically merged in a scientific view of the argument from
Design.
Once more. Supposing a person were to ask me whether a friend, who has told me the fact
in confidence, had written a certain book, and I were to answer, "Well, if he did, he
certainly would tell me," and the inquirer went away satisfied that he did not write
it,-I do not see that I have done any thing to incur the reproach of the English word
"equivocation;" I have but adopted a mode of turning off a difficult question,
to which any one may be obliged any day to have recourse. I am not speaking of spontaneous
and gratuitous assertions, statements on solemn occasions, or answers to formal
authorities. 1 am speaking of impertinent or unjustifiable questions; and I should like to
know the man who thinks himself bound to say every thing to every one. Physicians evade
the questions of sick persons about themselves; friends break bad news gradually, and with
temporary concealments, to those whom it may shock. Parents shuffle with their children.
Statesmen, ministers in Parliament, baffle adversaries in every possible way short of a
direct infringement of veracity. When St. Athanasius saw that he was pursued on the Nile
by the imperial officers, he turned round his boat and met them; when they came up to his
party and hailed them, and asked whether they had seen any thing of Athanasius, Athanasius
cried out, "O yes, he is not far from you:" and off the vessels went in
different directions as swiftly as they could go, each boat on its own errand, the pursuer
and the pursued. I do not see that there is in any of these instances what is expressed by
the English word "equivocation;" but it is the equivocatio of a Latin
treatise; and when Protestants hear that aequivocamus sine scrupulo they are
shocked at the notion or our "unscrupulous equivocation."
Now, in saying all this, I must not be supposed to be forgetful of the sacred and
imperative duty of preserving with religious exactness all those theological terms which
are ecclesiastically recognised as portions of dogmatic statements, such as Trinity,
Person, Consubstantial, Nature, Transubstantiation, Sacrament, &c. It would be
unpardonable for a Catholic to teach "justification by faith only," and say that
he meant by "faith" fides formata, or "justification without
works," and say that he meant by "works" the works of the Jewish ritual;
but granting all this fully, still if our whole religious phraseology is, as a matter of
duty, to be modelled in strict conformity to theological Latin, neither the poor nor
children will understand us. I have always fancied that to preachers great license was
allowed, not only in the wording, but even in the matter of their discourses: they
exaggerate and are rhetorical, and they are understood pi~ as speaking more
praedicatorio. I have always fancied that, when Catholics were accused of hyperbolical
language towards the Blessed Virgin, it was replied that devotion was not the measure of
doctrine; nor surely is the vernacular of a magazine writer. I do not see that I am wrong
in considering that a periodical, not treating theology ex professo, but
accidentally alluding to an ecclesiastical act, commits no real offence if it uses an
unscientific word, since it speaks, not more digladiatorio, but colloquialiter.
I shall conclude this head of my subject with allusion to a passage in the history of
St. Dionysius the Great, Bishop of Alexandria, though it is beyond my purpose; but I like
to quote a saint whom, multis nominibus (not "with many names, or
"by many nouns"), I have always loved most of all the Ante-Nicene
Fathers. It relates to an attack which was made on his orthodoxy; a very serious matter.
Now I know every one will be particular on his own special science or pursuits. I am the
last man to find fault with such particularity. Drill-sergeants think much of deportment;
hard logicians come down with a sledgehammer even on a Plato who does not happen to
enumerate in his beautiful sentences all the argumentative considerations which go to make
up his conclusion; scholars are horrified, as if with sensible pain, at the perpetration
of a false quantity. I am far from ridiculing, despising, or even undervaluing such
precision; it is for the good of every art and science that it should have vigilant
guardians. Nor am I comparing such precision (far from it) with that true religious zeal
which leads theologians to keep the sacred Ark of the Covenant in every letter of its
dogma, as a tremendous deposit for which they are responsible. In this curious sceptical
world, such sensitiveness is the only human means by which the treasure of faith can be
kept inviolate. There is a woe in Scripture against the unfaithful shepherd. We do not
blame the watch-dog because he sometimes flies at the wrong person. I conceive the force,
the peremptoriness, the sternness, with which the Holy See comes down upon the vagrant or
the robber, trespassing upon the enclosure of revealed truth, is the only sufficient
antagonist to the power and subtlety of the world, to imperial comprehensiveness,
monarchical selfishness, nationalism, the liberalism of philosophy, the encroachments and
usurpations of science. I grant, I maintain all this; and after this avowal, lest I be
misunderstood, I venture to introduce my notice of St. Dionysius. He was accused on a far
worse charge, and before a far more formidable tribunal, than commonly befalls a Catholic
writer; for he was brought up before the Holy See on a denial of our Lord's divinity. He
had been controverting with the Sabellians; and he was in consequence accused of the
doctrine to which Arius afterwards gave his name, that is, of considering our Lord a
creature. He says, writing in his defence, that when he urged his opponents with the
argument that "a vine and a vine-dresser were not the same," neither, therefore,
were the "Father and the Son," these were not the only illustrations that he
made use of, nor those on which he dwelt, for he also spoke of "a root and a plant
... .. a fount and a stream," which are not only distinct from each other, but
of one and the same nature. Then he adds, "But my accusers have no eyes to see
this portion of my treatise; but they take up two little words detached from the context,
and proceed to discharge them at me as pebbles from a sling." [Athan. de Sent. Dion.
8.] If even a saint's words are not always precise enough to allow of being made a
dogmatic text, much less are those of any modern periodical.
The conclusion I would draw from all I have been saying is this: Without deciding
whether or not it is advisable to introduce points of theology into popular works, and
especially whether it is advisable for laymen to do so, still, if this actually is done,
we are not to expect in them that perfect accuracy of expression which is demanded in a
Latin treatise or a lecture ex cathedra; and if there be a want of this
exactness, we must not at once think it proceeds from self-will and undutifulness in the
writers.
2.
Now I come to the matter of what the writer in the Rambler really
said, putting aside the question of the wording; and I begin by expressing my
belief that, whatever he may be willing to admit on the score of theological Latinity in
the use of the word "consult" when applied to the faithful, yet one thing he
cannot deny, viz. that in using it, he implied, from the very force of the term, that they
are treated by the Holy See, on occasions such as that specified, with attention and
consideration.
Then follows the question, Why? and the answer is plain, viz. because the body of the
faithful is one of the witnesses to the fact of the tradition of revealed doctrine, and
because their consensus through Christendom is the voice of the Infallible Church.
I think I am right in saying that the tradition of the Apostles, committed to the whole
Church in its various constituents and functions per modum unius, manifests itself
variously at various times: sometimes by the mouth of the episocopacy, sometimes by the
doctors, sometimes by the people, sometimes by liturgies, rites, ceremonies, and customs,
by events, disputes, movements, and all those other phenomena which are comprised under
the name of history. It follows that none of these channels of tradition may be treated
with disrespect; granting at the same time fully, that the gift of discerning,
discriminating, defining, promulgating, and enforcing any portion of that tradition
resides solely in the Ecclesia docens.
One man will lay more stress on one aspect of doctrine, another on another; for
myself, I am accustomed to lay great stress on the consensus fidelium, and I will
say how it has to come about.
1. It had long been to me a difficulty, that I could not find certain portions of the
defined doctrine of the Church in ecclesiastical writers. I was at Rome in the year 1847;
and then I had the great advantage and honour of seeing Fathers Perrone and Passaglia, and
having various conversations with them on this point. The point of difficulty was this,
that up to the date of the definition of certain articles of doctrine respectively, there
was so very deficient evidence from existing documents that Bishops, doctors, theologians,
held them. I do not mean to say that I expressed my difficulty in this formal shape; but
that what passed between us in such interviews as they were kind enough to give me, ran
into or impinged upon this question. Nor would I ever dream of making them answerable for
the impression which their answers made on me; but, speaking simply on my own
responsibility, I should say that, while Father Passaglia seemed to maintain that the
AnteNicene writers were clear in their testimonies in behalf (e.g.) of the
doctrines of the Holy Trinity and justification, expressly praising and making much of the
Anglican Bishop Bull; Father Perrone, on the other hand, not speaking, indeed directly
upon those particular doctrines, but rather on such as I will presently introduce in his
own words, seemed to me to say "transeat" to the alleged fact which
constituted the difficulty, and to lay a great stress on what he considered to be the sensus and consensus fidelium, as a compensation for whatever deficiency there might
be of patristical testimony in behalf of various points of the Catholic dogma.
2. I should have been led to fancy, perhaps, that he was shaping his remarks in the
direction in which he considered he might be especially serviceable to myself, who had
been accustomed to account for the (supposed) phenomena in another way, had it not been
for his work on the Immaculate Conception, which I read the next year with great interest,
and which was passing through the press when I saw him. I am glad to have this opportunity
of expressing my gratitude and attachment to a venerable man, who never grudged me his
valuable time.
But now for his treatise, to which I have referred, so far as it speaks of the sensus
fidelium, and of its bearing upon the doctrine, of which his work treats, and upon its
definition.
(1.) He states the historical fact of such sensus. Speaking of the
."Ecclesiae sensus" on the subject, he says that, though the liturgies of the
Feast of the Conception "satis apertè patefaciant quid Ecclesia antiquitùs de hoc
senserit argumento,"* yet it may be worth while to add some direct remarks on the
sense itself of the Church. Then he says, "Ex duplici fonte eum colligi posse
arbitramur, rum scilicet ex pastorum. tum ex fidelium sese gerendi ratione" *
* (pp. 74, 75). Let it be observed, he not only joins together the pastores and fideles, but contrasts them; 1 mean (for it will bear on what is to follow), the
"faithful" do not include the "pastors."
[*"It is plain enough what the ancient Church thought about this argument."
** "We think it can be gathered from two sources, the behavior of the pastors and
that of the faithful."]
(2.) Next he goes on to describe the relation of that sensus fidelium to the sensus
Ecclesiae. He says, that to inquire into the sense of the Church on any question, is
nothing else but to investigate towards which side of it she has more inclined. And the
"indicia et manifestationes hujus propensionis" are her public acts, liturgies,
feasts, prayers, "pastorum ac fidelium in unum veluti conspiratio" (p.
101). Again, at p. 109, joining together in one this twofold consent of pastors and
people, he speaks of the "unanimis pastorum ac fidelium consensio ... per
liturgias, per festa, per euchologia, per fidei controversias, per conciones
patefacta."*
[ *"Signs and manifestations of this tendency ... a combining of pastors and
faithful ... unanimous consensus of pastors and faithful, exhibited through liturgies,
celebrations, prayers, debates, and discourses."]
(3.) These various "indicia" are also the instrumenta traditionis, and
vary one with another in the evidence which they give in favour of particular doctrines;
so that the strength of one makes up in a particular case for the deficiency of another,
and the strength of the---sensus communis fidelium" can make up (e.g.) for the
silence of the Fathers. "Istiusmodi instrumenta interdum simul conjunctè conspirare
possunt ad traditionem aliquam apostolicam atque divinam patefaciendam, interdum vero
seorsum.... Perperam nonnulli solent ad inficiandam traditionis alicujus existentiam
urgere silentium Patrum ... quid enim si silentium istud alio pacto ... compensetur?"
(p. 139). He instances this from St. Irenaeus and Tertullian in the "Successio
Episcoporurn," who transmit the doctrines "tum activi operâ ministerii, turn
usu et praxi, turn institutis ritibus ... adeò ut catholica atque apostolica doctrina
inoculata ... fuerit ... communi Ecclesiae coetui" * (p. 142).
[ * "Such instruments may illustrate some divine and apostolic tradition,
sometimes in combination, sometimes separately ... Some are accustomed wrongly to urge
silence on the part of the Fathers as impugning the existence of some
tradition ... But what if that silence is compensated in some other way? ... by the
exertion of an active ministry, by usage and practice, and established rituals, so as to
implant a Catholic and apostolic doctrine in the community of the Church."]
(4.) He then goes on to speak directly of the force of the "sensus fidelium,"
as distinct (not separate) from the teaching of their pastors. "Praestantissimi theologi
maximam probandi vim huic communi sensui inesse uno. ore fatentur. Etenim
Canus, 'In quaestione fidei,' inquit, I 'communis fidelis populi sensus haud levem facit
fidem'"*(p. 143). He gives another passage from him in a note, which he introduces
with the words, "Illud praeclarè addit;" what Canus adds is,
"Quaero ex te, quando de rebus Christianae fidei inter nos contendimus, non de
philosophae decretis, utrùim potius quaerendum est, quid philosophi atque ethnici,
an quid homines Christiani, et doctriná et fide instituti, sentiant? " * *
[* "The most distinguished theologians agree in attributing the
greatest probative force to this common sentiment. Cano asserts that 'in a question of
faith, common sentiment of the faithful people provides a warrant that is by no means
insignificant.' "
* * "Cano excellently adds. . . 'I ask you, when we discuss not philosophical
conclusions but matters of Christian belief, whether it is preferable to ascertain the
views of philosophers and pagans, or the thoughts of Christians formed by doctrine and
faith.' "]
Now certainly "quaerere quid sentiant homines doctrini et fide instituti,"
though not asking advice, is an act implying not a little deference on the part of the
persons addressing towards the parties addressed.
Father Perrone continues, "Gregorious verò de Valentii fusius vim ejusmodi
fidelium consensus evolvit. 'Est enim,' inquit, "in definitionibus fidei habenda ratio, quoad fieri potest, consensûs fidelium.' "* Here, again, "habere
rationem," to have regard to, is an act of respect and consideration. However,
Gregory continues, "Quoniam et ii sanè, quatenus ex ipsis constat Ecclesia, sic Spiritu Sancto assistente, divinas revelationes integrè
et purè conservant, ut omnes illi quidem aberrare non possunt.... Illud solùm
contendo; Si quando de re aliqui in materie religionis controversia (controversâ?)
constaret fidelium omnium concordem esse sententiam (solet autem id constare, vel ex: ipsi
praxi alicujus cultûs communiter apud christianos populos receptâ, vel ex scandalo
et offensione communi, quae opinione aliqui oritur, &c.) meritò posse
et debere Pontificem illi niti, ut quae esset Ecclesiae sententia
infallibilis"** (p. 144). Thus Gregory says that, in controversy about a matter of
faith, the consent of all the faithful has such a force in the proof of this side or that,
that the Supreme Pontiff is able and ought to rest upon it, as being the judgment
or sentiment of the infallible Church. These are surely exceedingly strong
words; not that I take them to mean strictly that infallibility is in the "consensus
fidelium," but that that "consensus" is an indicium or instrumentum to us of the judgement of that Church which is infallible.
[ *"Gregory of Valencia, who brought out the force of this consensus of the
faithful, says that 'as far as possible, account must be taken of the consensus of the
faithful in definitions of faith,"
** "For inasmuch as they comprise the Church, by assistance of the Holy Spirit
they so preserve divine revelations in their purity and integrity that they cannot all go
astray ... I contend only this: If a consensus of the faithful is established in some
disputed matter of religion, the Pope may and should rely upon it as the judgment of the
infallible Church. (Such consensus is usually verified either from some practice of
worship adopted universally among Christians, or by general scandal and offense caused by
some opinion.)]
Father Perrone proceeds to quote from Petavius, who supplies us with the following
striking admonition from St. Paulinus, viz. "ut de omnium fidelium ore pendeamus, quia
in onmern fidelem Spiritus Dei spirat."*
[* "We should hang upon the lips of all the faithful, because the Spirit of God
breathes into every believer."]
Petavius speaks thus, as he quotes him (p. 156): "Movet me, ut in cam (viz.
piam) sententiam sim propensior, communis maximus sensus fidelium omnium. "
* By "movet me" he means, that he attends to what the coetus
fldelium says: this is certainly not passing over the fideles, but making much
of them.
[*"The main consensus of all the faithful moves me to favor that view."]
In a later part of his work (p. 186), Father Perrone speaks of the "consensus
fidelium" under the strong image of a seal. After mentioning various arguments
in favour of the Immaculate Conception, such as the testimony of so many universities,
religious bodies, theologians, &c., he continues, "Haec demum omnia firmissimo
veluti sigillo obsignat totius christiani populi consensus." *
[* "All these are ratified by consensus of the whole Christian people as by the
most authoritative seal."]
(5.) He proceeds to give several instances, in which the definition of doctrine was
made in consequence of nothing else but the "sensus fidelium" and the "juge
et vivurn magisterium" of the Church.
For his meaning of the "juge et vivum magisteriurn Ecclesiae," he refers us
to his Praelectiones (part ii. S2, c.ii.). In that passage I do not see that he
defines the sense of the word; but I understand him to mean that high authoritative voice
or act which is the Infallible Church's prerogative, inasmuch as she is the teacher of the
nations; and which is a sufficient warrant to all men for a doctrine being true and being de
fide, by the mere fact of its formally occurring. It is distinct from, and independent
of, tradition, though never in fact separated from it. He says, "Fit ut traditio
dogmatica identificetur cum ipsi Ecclesiae doctrina, a qua separan nequit; qua propter, etsi
documenta defterent omnia, solurn hoc vivum et juge magisterium satis esset ad
cognoscendarn doctrinarn divinitus traditam, habito praesertim respectu ad solennes
Christi promissiones"* (p. 303).
[* "Dogmatic tradition is identified with the teachings of the Church, from which
it cannot be separated. Hence, even if all documentation were lacking, this living,
consistent magisterium would suffice by itself to make known the divinely transmitted
doctrine, especially in consideration of Christ's solemn promises."]
This being understood, he speaks of several points of faith which have been determined
and defined by the "magisterium" of the Church and, as to tradition, on the
"consensus fidelium," prominently, if not solely.
The most remarkable of these is the "dogma de visione Dei beatifici"
possessed by souls after purgatory and before the day of judgment; a point which
Protestants, availing themselves of the comment of the Benedictines of St. Maur upon St.
Ambrose, are accustomed to urge in controversy. "Nerno est qui nesciat," says
Father Perrone, "quot utriusque Ecclesiae, tum Graecae tum Latinae, Patres contrarium
sensisse visi sunt" * (p. 147). He quotes in a note the words of the
Benedictine editor, as follows: "Propemodum incredibile videri potest, quarn in ei
quaestione sancti Patres ab ipsis Apostolorum temporibus ad Gregorii XI. (Benedicti XII)
pontificatum florentinumque concilium, hoc est toto quatuordecim seculorum spatio, incerti
ac parùm constantes exstiterint." * * Father Perrone continues: "Certè quidem
in Ecclesiâ non deerat quoad hunc fidei articulum divina traditio; alioquin nunquam is
definiri potuisset: verùm non omnibus illa erat comperta; divina eloquia haud satis in re
sunt conspicua; Patres, ut vidimus, in varias abierunt sententias; liturgiae ipsae non modicam prae se ferunt difficultatem. His omnibus succurrit juge Ecclesiae
magisterium, communis praeterea fidelium sensus; qui altè adeò defixum ... habebant
mentibus, purgatas animas statim ad Deum videndum eoque fruendum admitti, ut non minimum
eorum animi vel ex ipsâ controversiâ fuerint offensi, quae sub Joanne XXII.
agitabatur, et cujus definitio diu nimis protrabebatur."*** Now does not
this imply that the tradition, on which the definition was made, was manifested in the consensus
fidelium with a luminousness which the succession of Bishops, though many of them
were "Sancti Patres ab ipsis Apostolorum temporibus," did not furnish? that the
definition was delayed till the fideles would bear the delay no longer? that it
was made because of them and for their sake, because of their strong feelings? If so,
surely, in plain English, most considerable deference was paid to the "sensus
fidelium;" their opinion and advice indeed was not asked, but their testimony was
taken, their feelings consulted, their impatience, I had almost said, feared.
[ * "Everyone is aware how many Fathers in both the Eastern and Western Churches
seem to have held an opposite opinion."
** "It may seem almost incredible how diffident and inconsistent the holy Fathers
were about this question, all the way from the Apostolic age to the pontificate of Gregory
X1 (Benedict XII) and the Council of Florence, that is, over a period of fully fourteen
hundred years."
*** "Certainly the Church was not without any divine tradition regarding this
article of faith; otherwise it could not have been defined. Yet it was scarcely obvious to
everyone. Divine eloquence on this subject was not abundant. The Fathers' thoughts, as
noted, strayed in different directions. Even the liturgies present considerable
difficulty. The unfailing magisteriurn of the Church came to the aid of all these along
with the consensus of the faithful. In their minds it was so deeply established that
souls, once purified, had immediate access to the vision and enjoyment of God, that they
were no little offended by the controversy that went on under John XXII, and the
unwarranted postponement of a definition."]
In like manner, as regards the doctrine, though not the definition, of the
Immaculate Conception, he says, not denying, of course, the availableness of the other
"instrumenta traditionis" in this particular case, "Ratissimum est, Christi
fideles omnes circa hunc articulum unius esse animi, idque ita, ut maximo afficerentur scandalo,
si vel minima de Immaculati Virginis Conceptione quaestio moveretur" * (p. 156).
[* "It is well established that all the Christian faithful are in such complete
agreement about this article that they would be deeply scandalized if the Virgin's
Immaculate Conception were even mildly questioned."]
3. A year had hardly passed from the appearance of Fr. Perrone's book in England, when
the Pope published his Encyclical Letter. In it he asked the Bishops of the Catholic
world, "ut nobis significare velitis, qui devotione vester clerus populusque fidelis
erga Immaculatae Virginis conceptionern sit animatus, et quo desiderio flagret, ut
ejusmodi res ab apostolici sede decernatur;"* that is, when it came to the point to
take measures for the definition of the doctrine, he did lay a special stress on this
particular preliminary, viz. the ascertainment of the feeling of the faithful both towards
the doctrine and its definition; as the Rambler stated in the passage out of which this
argument has arisen. It seems to me important to keep this in view, whatever becomes of
the word "consulted," which, I have already said, is not to be taken in its
ordinary Latin sense.
[* "Make known to us how devoted your clergy and faithful people are with respect
to the conception of the Immaculate Virgin, and how eager they are for a decision on the
matter to be issued by the Apostolic See."]
4. At length, in 1854, the definition took place, and the Pope's Bull containing it
made its appearance. In it the Holy Father speaks as he had spoken in his Encyclical, viz.
that although he already knew the sentiments of the Bishops, still he had wished to know
the sentiments of the people also: "Quamvis nobis ex receptis postulationibus de
definiendâ tandem aliquando Immaculatâ Virginis Conceptione perspectus esset
plurimorum sociorum Antistitum sensus, tamen Encyclicas literas, &c. ad onmes Ven. FF.
totius Catholici orbis sacrorum Antistites misimus, ut, adhibitis ad Deum precibus, nobis
scripto etiam significarent, quae esset suorum fidelium erga Immaculatam Deiparae
Conceptionem pietas et devotio,"* &c. And when, before the formal definition, he
enumerates the various witnesses to the apostolicity of the doctrine, he sets down
"divina eloquia, veneranda traditio, perpetuus Ecclesiae sensus, singularis
catholicorum Antistitum ac fidelium conspiratio."** Conspiratio; the two,
the Church teaching and the Church taught, are put together, as one twofold testimony,
illustrating each other, and never to be divided.
[* "Even though the requests we had received left no doubt about the opinion of
most of our fellow bishops concerning eventual definition of the Immaculate Conception of
the Virgin, we nevertheless sent encyclical letters and the like to all our venerable
brother bishops in the whole Catholic world, requesting them, after prayer, to inform us
in writing about the piety and devotion of their faithful concerning the Immaculate
Conception of the Mother of God."
* * "divine eloquence, revered tradition, the perpetual mind of the Church, and
the singular joint accord of Catholic bishops and faithful ..."]
5. A year or two passed, and the Bishop of Birmingham published his treatise on the
doctrine. I close this portion of my paper with an extract from his careful view of the
argument. "Nor should the universal conviction of pious Catholics be passed over, as
of small account in the general argument; for that pious belief, and the devotion which
springs from it, are the faithful reflection of the pastoral teaching" (p.
172). Reflection; that is, the people are a mirror, in which the Bishops see themselves.
Well, I suppose a person may consult his glass, and in that way may know things about
himself which he can learn in no other way. This is what Fr. Perrone above seems to say
has sometimes actually been the case, as in the instance of the "beatifica
visio" of the saints; at least he does not mention the "pastorum ac
fideliurn conspiratio" in reviewing the grounds of its definition, but
simply the "juge Ecclesiae magisterium" and the "communis fidelium
sensus."
His lordship proceeds: "The more devout the faithful grew, the more devoted they
showed themselves towards this mystery. And it is the devout who have the surest instinct
in discerning the mysteries of which the Holy Spirit breathes the grace through the
Church, and who, with as sure a tact, reject what is alien from her teaching. The common
accord of the faithful has weight much as an argument even with the most learned divines.
St. Augustine says, that amongst many things which most justly held him in the bosom of
the Catholic Church, was the 'accord of populations and of nations.' In another work he
says, 'It seems that I have believed nothing but the confirmed opinion and the exceedingly
wide-spread report of populations and of nations.' Elsewhere he says: 'In matters
whereupon the Scripture has not spoken clearly, the custom of the people of God, or the
institutions of our predecessors, are to be held as law.' In the same spirit St. Jerome
argues, whilst defending the use of relics against Vigilantius: 'So the people of all the
Churches who have gone out to meet holy relics, and have received them with so much joy,
are to be accounted foolish' " (pp. 172, 173).
And here I might come to an end; but, having got so far, I am induced, before
concluding, to suggest an historical instance of the same great principle, which Father
Perrone does not draw out.
3.
First, I will set down the various ways in which theologians put before us the
bearing of the Consent of the faithful upon the manifestation of the tradition of the
Church. Its consensus is to be regarded: 1. as a testimony to the fact of the
apostolical dogma; 2. as a sort of instinct, or phronema, deep in the bosom of
the mystical body of Christ; 3. as a direction of the Holy Ghost; 4. as an answer to its
prayer; 5. as a jealousy of error, which it at once feels as a scandal.
1. The first of these I need not enlarge upon, as it is illustrated in the foregoing
passages from Father Perrone.
2. The second is explained in the well-known passages of Möhler's Symbolique;
e.g. "L'esprit de Dieu, qui gouverne et vivifie L'Eglise, enfante dans l'homme, en
s'unissant à lui, un instinct, un tact éminemment chrétien,
qui le conduit à toute vraie doctrine.... Ce sentiment commun, cette conscience de
l'Eglise est la tradition dans le sens subjectif du mot. Qu'est-ce donc que la tradition
consid6r6e sous ce point de vue? C'est le sens chrétien existant dans l'Eglise, et
transmis par l'Eglise; sens, toutefois, qu'on ne peut séparer des vérités
qu'il contient, puisqu'il est formé de ces vérités et par ces vérités."*
Ap. Perrone, p. 142.
[* "The Spirit of God who directs and animates the Church, in becoming united to a
human being, engenders a distinctively Christian sensitivity which shows the way to all
true doctrine. This common sensibility, this consciousness of the Church, is tradition in
the subjective sense of that word. What, from that point of view, is tradition? It is the
Christian mentality, existing in the Church and transmitted by the Church; a mentality,
however, inseparable from the truths it contains, because it is formed out of and by those
very truths."]
3. Cardinal Fisher seems to speak of the third, as he is quoted by Petavius, De
Incarn. xiv. 2; that is, he speaks of a custom imperceptibly gaining a position,
"nulli praeceptorurn vi, sed consensu quodarn tacito tam populi quàm cleri, quasi
tacitis omnium suffragiis recepta fuit, priusquàm ullo conciliorum decreto legimus earn
fuisse firmatam." And then he adds, "This custom has its birth in that
people which is ruled by the Holy Ghost,"* &c.
[* "Not compelled by any precepts, but carried forward by a kind of tacit
consensus of clergy and people, as though silent votes had come in from them all, long
before we read of its confirmation by conciliar decree."]
4. Petavius speaks of a fourth aspect of it. "It is well said by St. Augustine,
that to the minds of individuals certain things are revealed by God, not only by
extraordinary means, as in visions, &c., but also in those usual ways, according to
which what is unknown to them is opened in answer to their prayer. After this
manner it is to be believed that God has revealed to Christians the sinless Conception of
the Immaculate Virgin." De Incarn. xiv. 2, 11.
5. The fifth is enlarged upon in Dr. Newman's second Lecture on Anglican
Difficulties, from which I quote a few lines: "We know that it is the
property of life to be impatient of any foreign substance in the body to which it belongs.
It will be sovereign in its own domain, and it conflicts with what it cannot assimilate
into itself, and is irritated and disordered till it has expelled it. Such
expulsion, then, is emphatically a test of uncongeniality, for it shows that the substance
ejected, not only is not one with the body that rejects it, but cannot be made one with
it; that its introduction is not only useless, or superfluous, or adventitious, but that
it is intolerable." Presently he continues: "The religious life of a people is
of a certain quality and direction, and these are tested by the mode in which it
encounters the various opinions, customs, and institutions which are submitted to it.
Drive a stake into a river's bed, and you will at once ascertain which way it is running,
and at what speed; throw up even a straw upon the air, and you will see which way the wind
blows; submit your heretical and Catholic principle to the action of the multitude, and
you will be able to pronounce at once whether it is imbued with Catholic truth or with
heretical falsehood." And then he proceeds to exemplify this by a passage in the
history of Arianism, the very history which I intend now to take, as illustrative of the
truth and importance of the thesis on which I am insisting.
It is not a little remarkable, that, though, historically speaking, the fourth century
is the age of doctors, illustrated, as it was, by the saints Athanasius, Hilary, the two
Gregories, Basil, Chrysostom, Ambrose, Jerome, and Augustine, and all of these saints
bishops also, except one, nevertheless in that very day the divine tradition committed to
the infallible Church was proclaimed and maintained far more by the faithful than by the
Episcopate.
Here, of course, I must explain:-in saying this, then, undoubtedly I am not denying
that the great body of the Bishops were in their internal belief orthodox; nor that there
were numbers of clergy who stood by the laity, and acted as their centres and guides; nor
that the laity actually received their faith, in the first instance, from the Bishops and
clergy; nor that some portions of the laity were ignorant, and other portions at length
corrupted by the Arian teachers, who got possession of the sees and ordained an heretical
clergy;-but I mean still, that in that time of immense confusion the divine dogma of our
Lord's divinity was proclaimed, enforced, maintained, and (humanly speaking) preserved,
far more by the "Ecclesia docta" than by the "Ecclesia docens;" that
the body of the episcopate was unfaithful to its commission, while the body of the laity
was faithful to its baptism; that at one time the Pope, at other times the patriarchal,
metropolitan, and other great sees, at other times general councils, said what they should
not have said, or did what obscured and compromised revealed truth; while, on the other
hand, it was the Christian people who, under Providence, were the ecclesiastical strength
of Athanasius, Hilary, Eusebius of Vercellae, and other great solitary confessors, who
would have failed without them.
I see, then, in the Arian history a palmary example of a state of the Church, during
which, in order to know the tradition of the Apostles, we must have recourse to the
faithful; for I fairly own, that if I go to writers, since I must adjust the letter of
Justin, Clement, and Hippolytus with the Nicene Doctors, I get confused; and what revives
and reinstates me, as far as history goes, is the faith of the people. For I argue that,
unless they had been catechised, as St. Hilary says, in the orthodox faith from the time
of their baptism, they never could have had that horror, which they show, of the heterodox
Arian doctrine. Their voice, then, is the voice of tradition; and the instance comes to us
with still greater emphasis, when we consider -1. that it occurs in the very beginning of
the history of the "Ecclesia docens," for there can scarcely be said to be any
history of her teaching till the age of martyrs was over; 2. that the doctrine in
controversy was so momentous, being the very foundation-of the Christian system; 3. that
the state of controversy and disorder lasted over the long space of sixty years; and 4.
that it involved serious persecutions, in life, limb, and property, to the faithful whose
loyal perseverance decided it.
It seems, then, as striking an instance as I could take in fulfilment of Father
Perrone's statement, that the voice of tradition may in certain cases express itself, not
by Councils, nor Fathers, nor Bishops, but the "communis fidelium sensus."
I shall set down some authorities for the two points successively, which I have to
enforce, viz. that the Nicene dogma was maintained during the greater part of the 4th
century,
1. not by the unswerving firmness of the Holy See, Councils, or
Bishops, but
2. by the "consensus fidelium."
I. On the one hand, then, I say, that there was a temporary suspense of the functions
of the "Ecclesia docens." The body of Bishops failed in their confession of the
faith. They spoke variously, one against another; there was nothing, after Nicaea, of
firm, unvarying, consistent testimony, for nearly sixty years. There were untrustworthy
Councils, unfaithful Bishops; there was weakness, fear of consequences, misguidance,
delusion, hallucination, endless, hopeless, extending itself into nearly every corner of
the Catholic Church. The comparatively few who remained faithful were discredited and
driven into exile; the rest were either deceivers or were deceived.
1. A.D. 325. The great council of Nicaea, of 318 Bishops, chiefly from the eastern
provinces of Christendom, under the presidency of Hosius of Cordova, as the Pope's Legate.
It was convoked against Arianism, which it once for all anathematized; and it inserted the
formula of the "Consubstantial" into the Creed, with the view of .establishing
the fundamental dogma which Arianism impugned. It is the first Oecumenical Council, and
recognised at the time its own authority as the voice of the infallible Church. It is so
received by the orbis terrarum at this day. <A.D. 326. St. Athanasius, the great
champion of the Homoilison, was elected Bishop of Alexandria.>
[The history of the Arian controversy, from its date, A.D. 325, to the date of the
second Oecumenical Council, A.D. 381, is the history of the struggle through Christendom
for the universal acceptance or the repudiation of the formula of the
"Consubstantial."]
2. A.D. 334, 335. The synods of Caesarea and Tyre <sixty Bishops> against
Athanasius, who was therein accused and formally condemned of rebellion, sedition, and
ecclesiastical tyranny; of murder, sacrilege, and magic; deposed from his see, forbidden
to set foot in Alexandria for life, and banished to Gaul. [Constantine confirmed the
sentence.] <Also, they received Arius into communion.>
3. A.D. 341. Council of Rome of fifty Bishops, attended by the exiles from Thrace,
Syria, &c., by Athanasius, &c., in which Athanasius was pronounced innocent.
4. A.D. 341. Great Council of the Dedication at Antioch, attended by ninety or a
hundred Bishops. The council ratified the proceedings of the councils of Caesarea and
Tyre, and placed an Arian in the see of Athanasius. Then it proceeded to pass a dogmatic
decree in reversal of the formula of the "Consubstantial." Four or five creeds,
instead of the Nicene, were successively adopted by the assembled fathers. [The first was
a creed which they ascribed to Lucian, a martyr and saint of the preceding century, in
whom the Arians always gloried as their master. The second was fuller and stronger in its
language, and made more pretension to orthodoxy. The third was more feeble again. These
three creeds]* were circulated in the neighbourhood; but, as they wished to send one to
Rome, they directed a fourth to be drawn up. This, too, apparently failed. [So little was
known at the time of the real history of this synod and its creeds, that St. Hilary calls
it "sanctorum synodus."]
* [These three creeds] Three of these
5. A.D. 345. Council of the creed called Macrostich. This creed suppresses, as did the
third, the word "substance." The eastern Bishops sent this to the Bishops of
[the West]*, who rejected it.
* [the West] France
6. A.D. 347. The great council of Sardica, attended by [380]* Bishops. Before it
commenced, the division between its members broke out on the question whether or not
Athanasius should have a seat in it. In consequence, seventy-six retired to Philippopolis,
on the Thracian side of Mount Haemus, and there excommunicated the Pope and the Sardican
fathers. These seceders published a sixth confession of faith. The synod of Sardica,
including Bishops from Italy, Gaul, Africa, Egypt, Cyprus, and Palestine, confirmed the
act of the Roman council, and restored Athanasius and the other exiles to their sees. The
synod of Philippopolis, on the contrary, sent letters to the civil magistrates of those
cities, forbidding them to admit the exiles into them. The imperial power took part with
the Sardican fathers, and Athanasius went back to Alexandria.
* [380] more than 300
7. A.D. 351. [Before many years had run out, the great eastern party was up again.]
<The Bishops of the East met at Sirmium. The semi-Arian Bishops began to detach
themselves from the Arians, and to form a separate party.>
Under pretence of putting down a kind of Sabellianism, they drew up a new creed, into
which they introduced [certain inadvisable expressions]* of some of the ante-Nicene
writers, on the subject of our Lord's divinity, and dropped the word -substance."
[St. Hilary thought this creed also Catholic; and other Catholic writers style its fathers
"holy Bishops."]
*'Certain inadvisable expressions] the language
[8. There is considerable confusion of dates here. Anyhow, there was a second Sirmian
creed, in which the eastern party first came to a division among themselves. St. Hilary at
length gives up these creeds as indefensible, and calls this one a "blasphemy."
It is the first creed which criticises the words "substance," &c., as
unscriptural. Some years afterwards this "blasphemia" seems to have been
interpolated, and sent into the East in the name of Hosius. At a later date, there was a
third Sirmian creed; and a second edition of it, with alterations, was published at Nice
in Thrace.]
9. A.D. 353. The council of Arles.* [I cannot find how many Bishops attended it. As the
Pope sent several Bishops as legates, it must have been one of great importance. The
Bishop of Arles was an Arian, and managed to seduce, or to force, a number of orthodox
Bishops, including the Pope's legate, Vincent, to subscribe the condemnation of
Athanasius. Paulinus, Bishop of Trêves, was nearly the only champion of the Nicene faith
and of Athanasius.] He was accordingly banished into Phrygia, where he died.
* The Council of Aries <The Pope sent to it several Bishops as legates. The Fathers
of the Council, including the Pope's legate, Vincent, subscribed the condemnation of
Athanasius. Paulinus, Bishop of Tr~ves, was nearly the only one who stood up for the
Nicene faith and for Athanasius.>
10. A.D. 355. The council of Milan, of more than 300 Bishops of the West. Nearly all of
them, subscribed the condemnation of Athanasius; whether they generally subscribed the
heretical creed, which was brought forward, does not appear. The Pope's four legates
remained firm, and St. Dionysius of Milan, who died an exile in Asia Minor. An Arian was
put into his see. Saturninus, the Bishop of Arles, proceeded to hold a council at Beziers;
and its fathers banished St. Hilary to Phrygia.
<A.D. 357-9. The Arians and Semi-Arians successively drew up fresh creeds at
Sirmium.>
11. A.D. 357< - 8.> Hosius falls. "Constantius used such violence towards
the old man, and confined him so straitly, that at last, broken by suffering, he was
brought, though hardly, to hold communion with Valens and Ursacius (the Arian leaders),
though he would not subscribe against Athanasius." Athan. Arian. Hist. 45.
12. <And> Liberius. A.D. 357 < - 8> "The tragedy was not ended in the
lapse of Hosius, but in the evil which befell Liberius, the Roman Pontiff, it became far
more dreadful and mournful, considering that he was Bishop of so great a city, and of the
whole Catholic Church, and that he had so bravely resisted Constantius two years
previously. There is nothing, whether in the historians and holy fathers, or in his own
letters, to prevent our coming to the conclusion, that Liberius communicated with the
Arians, and confirmed the sentence passed against Athanasius; but he is not at all on that
account to be called a heretic." Baron. Ann. 357, 38-45. Athanasius says:
"Liberius, after he had been in banishment <for> two years, gave way, and from
fear of threatened death was induced to subscribe." Arian. Hist. S41. St.
Jerome says: "Liberius, taedio victus exilii, in haereticam pravitatern subscribens,
Roman quasi victor intraverat."* Chron. <ed. Val. p. 797>
[* "Liberius, worn out by the tedium of exile and subscribing to the heretical
error, had entered Rome almost as a conqueror."]
13. A.D. 359. The great councils of Seleucia and Ariminum, being one bi-partite
council, representing the East and West respectively. At Seleucia there were 150 Bishops,
of which only the twelve or thirteen from Egypt were champions of the Nicene
"Consubstantial." At Ariminum there were as many as 400 Bishops, who, worn out
by the artifice of long delay on the part of the Arians, abandoned the
"Consubstantial," and subscribed the ambiguous formula which the heretics had
substituted for it.
[14. A.D. 361. The death of Constantius; the Catholic Bishops breathe again, and begin
at once to remedy the miseries of the Church, though troubles were soon to break out
anew.]
15. A.D. 362. State of the Church of Antioch at this time. There were four Bishops or
communions of Antioch; first, the old succession and communion, which had possession
before the Arian troubles; secondly, the Arian succession, which had lately conformed to
orthodoxy in the person of Meletius; thirdly, the new Latin succession, lately created by
Lucifer, whom some have thought the Pope's legate there; and, fourthly, the new Arian
succession, which was [begun]* upon the recantation of Meletius. At length, as Arianism
was brought under, the evil reduced itself to two <Episcopal> successions, that of
Meletius and the Latin, which went on for many years, the West and Egypt holding communion
with the latter, and the East with the former.
* [begun] started
[16. A.D. 370-379. St. Basil was Bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia through these years.
The judgments formed about this great doctor in his lifetime show us vividly the extreme
confusion which prevailed. He was accused by one party of being a follower of Apollinaris,
and lost in consequence some of the sees over which he was metropolitan. He was accused by
the monks in his friend Gregory's diocese of favouring the semi-Arians. He was accused by
the Neocaesareans of inclining towards Arianism. And he was treated with suspicion and
coldness by Pope Damasus].
17. About A.D. 360, St. Hilary says: "I am not speaking of things foreign to my
knowledge; I am not writing about what I am ignorant of; I have heard and I have seen the
shortcomings of persons who are [present to]* me, not of laymen <merely>, but of
Bishops. For, excepting the Bishop Eleusius and a few with him, for the most part the ten
Asian provinces, within whose boundaries I am situate, are truly ignorant of God."
<De Syn. 63.> It is observable, that even Eleusius, who is here spoken of as
somewhat better than the rest, was a semi-Arian, according to Socrates, and even a
persecutor of Catholics at Constantinople; and, according to Sozomen, one of those who
[urged]** Pope Liberius to give up the Nicene formula of the "Consubstantial."
By the ten Asian provinces is meant the east and south provinces of Asia Minor, pretty
nearly as cut off by a line passing from Cyzicus to Seleucia through Synnada.
*[present to] round about
*[urged] were active in causing
18. A.D. 360. St. Gregory Nazianzen says, about this date: "Surely the pastors
have done foolishly; for, excepting a very few, who, either on account of their
insignificance were passed over, or who by reason of their virtue resisted, and who were
to be left as a seed and root for the springing up again and revival of Israel by the
influences of the Spirit, all temporised, only differing from each other in this, that
some succumbed earlier, and others later; some were foremost champions and leaders in the
impiety, and others joined the second rank of the battle, being overcome by fear, or by
interest, or by flattery, or, what was the most excusable, by their own ignorance." Orat. xxi. 24.
19. A.D. 363. About this time, St. Jerome says: "Nearly all the churches in the
whole world, under the pretence of peace and the emperor, are polluted with the communion
of the Arians." Chron. Of the same date, that is, upon the council of
Ariminum, are his famous words, "Ingernuit totus orbis et se esse Arianum miratus
est." In Lucif. *<19.> [That is,] the Catholics of
Christendom were surprised indeed to find that [their rulers]** had made Arians of them.
[*"The whole world groaned, and marveled to see itself Arian."]
** [their rulers] the Council
[20. A.D. 364. And St. Hilary: "Up to this date, the only cause why Christ's
people is not murdered by the priests of Anti-christ, with this deceit of impiety, is,
that they take the words which the heretics use, to denote the faith which they themselves
hold. Sanctiores aures plebis quàm corda sunt sacerdotum." * In Aux. 6.]
[* "There is more holiness in the ears of the people than in the hearts of the
priests."]
21. St. Hilary speaks of the series of ecclesiastical councils of that time in the
following well-known passage: ["It is most dangerous to us, and it is lamentable,
that there are at Present as many creeds as there are sentiments, and as many doctrines
among us as dispositions, while we write creeds and explain them according to our fancy.]
Since the Nicene council, we have done nothing but write the creed. While we fight about
words, inquire about novelties, take advantage of ambiguities, criticise authors, fight on
party questions, have difficulties in agreeing, and prepare to anathernatise each other,
there is scarce a man who belongs to Christ. Take, for instance, last year's creed, what
alteration is there not in it already? First, we have the creed, which bids us not to use
the Nicene 'consubstantial;' then comes another, which decrees and preaches it; next, the
third, excuses the word 'substance,' as adopted by the fathers in their simplicity;
lastly, the fourth, <which> instead of excusing, condemns. We [impose]* creeds by
the year or by the month, we change our [minds about our own imposition of them, then]**
we prohibit our changes, [then] we anathernatise our prohibitions. Thus, we either condemn
others in our own persons, or ourselves in the instance of others, and while we bite and
devour one another, are like to be consumed one of another." <Ad Const. ii. 4,
5.>
* [impose] determine
** [minds about ... of them, then] own determinations,
22. A.D. 382. St. Gregory writes: "If I must speak the truth, I feel disposed to
shun every conference of Bishops; for never saw I synod brought to a happy issue, and
remedying, and not rather aggravating, existing evils. For rivalry and ambition are
stronger than reason,-do not think me extravagant for saying so,-and a mediator is more
likely to incur some imputation himself than to clear up the imputations which others lie
under." Ep. 129. [It must ever be kept in mind that a passage like this only relates,
and is here quoted as only relating, to that miserable time of which it is spoken. Nothing
more can be argued from it than that the "Ecclesia docens" is not at every time
the active instrument of the Church's infallibility.]
II. Now we come secondly to the proofs of the fidelity of the laity, and the
effectiveness of that fidelity, during that domination of imperial heresy to which the
foregoing passages have related. I have abridged t e extracts w ic o ow, ut not, I ope, to
t e injury o t eir sense.
1. ALEXANDRIA. "We suppose," says Athanasius, "you are not ignorant what
outrages they (the Arian Bishops) committed at Alexandria, for they are reported
everywhere. They attacked the holy virgins and brethren with naked swords; they
beat with scourges their persons, esteemed honourable in God's sight, so
that their feet were lamed by the stripes, whose souls were whole and sound in purity and
all good works." Athan. Op. c. Arian. 15, [Oxf: tr.]
"Accordingly Constantius writes letters, and commences a persecution against
all. Gathering together a multitude of herdsmen and shepherds, and dissolute
youths belonging to the town, armed with swords and clubs, they attacked in a body the
Church of Quirinus: and some they slew, some they trampled under
foot, others they beat with stripes and cast into prison or banished. They hauled
away many women also, and dragged them openly into the court, and insulted them, dragging
them by the hair. Some they proscribed; from some they took away their
bread, for no other reason but that they might be induced to join the Arians, and receive
Gregory (the Arian Bishop), who had been sent by the Emperor." Athan. Hist. Arian.
$10.
"On the week that succeeded the holy Pentecost, when the people, after
their fast, had gone out to the cemetery to pray, because that all refused
communion with George (the Arian Bishop), the commander, Sebastian, straightway with a
multitude of soldiers proceeded to attack the people, though it was the Lord's day;
and finding a few praying, (for the greater part had already retired on account of the
lateness of the hourJ having lighted a pile, he placed certain virgins near the
fire, and endeavoured to force them to say that they were of the Arian faith. And having
seized on forty men, he cut some fresh twigs of the palm-tree, with the thorns upon
them, and scourged them on the back so severely that some of them were for a long time
under medical treatment, on account of the thorns which had entered their flesh, and
others, unable to bear up under their sufferings, died. All those whom they had taken,
both the men and the virgins, they sent away into banishment to the great oasis. Moreover,
they immediately banished out of Egypt and Libya the following Bishops (sixteen), and the
presbyters, Hierax and Dioscorus: some of them died on the way, others in the place of
their banishment. They caused also more than thirty Bishops to take to flight." Apol.
de Fug. 7.
2. EGYPT. "The Emperor Valens having issued an edict commanding that the
orthodox should be expelled both from Alexandria and the rest of Egypt, depopulation
and ruin to an immense extent immediately followed; some were dragged before the
tribunals, others cast into prison, and many tortured in various ways; all sorts of
punishment being inflicted upon persons who aimed only at peace and quiet." Socr. Hist.
iv. 24, [Bohn.]
3. THE MONKS OF EGYPT. "Antony left the solitude of the desert to go
about every part of the city (Alexandria), warning the inhabitants that the Arians were
opposing the truth, and that the doctrines of the Apostles were preached only by
Athanasius." Theod. Hist. iv. 27, [Bohn.]
"Lucius, the Arian, with a considerable body of troops, proceeded to the monasteries of Egypt, where he in person assailed the assemblage of holy men with greater fury
than the ruthless soldiery. When these excellent persons remained unmoved by all the
violence, in despair he advised the military chief to send the fathers of the monks, the
Egyptian Macarius and his namesake of Alexandria, into exile." Socr. iv. 24.
OF CONSTANTINOPLE. "Isaac, on seeing the emperor depart at the head of his
army, exclaimed, 'You who have declared war against God cannot gain His aid. Cease from
fighting against Him, and He will terminate the war. Restore the pastors to their flocks,
and then you will obtain a bloodless victory." [Ibid 34.]*
* [ibid. 34] Theod. iv.
OF SYRIA, &c. "That these heretical doctrines (Apollinarian and Eunomian) did
not finally become predominant is mainly to be attributed to the zeal of the monks of
this period; for all the monks of Syria, Cappadocia, and the neighbouring provinces were sincerely attached to the Nicene faith. The same fate awaited them which had
been experienced by the Arians; for they incurred the full weight of the popular odium and
aversion, when it was observed that their sentiments were regarded with suspicion, by the
monks." Sozom. [Hist. vii.]* 27, [Bohn.]
* [Hist. vii] vi.
OF CAPPADOCIA. "Gregory, the father of Gregory Theologus, otherwise a most
excellent man and a zealous defender of the true and Catholic religion, not being on his
guard against the artifices of the Arians, such was his simplicity, received with kindness
certain men who were contaminated with the poison, and subscribed an impious proposition
of theirs. This moved the monks to such indignation, that they withdrew forthwith from
his communion, and took with them, after their example, a considerable part of his
flock." Ed. Bened. Monit. in Greg. Naz. Orat. 6.
[4. SYRIA. "Syria and the neighbouring provinces were plunged into confusion
and disorder, for the Arians were very numerous in these parts, and had possession of the
churches. The members of the Catholic Church were not, however, few in numbers. It
was through their instrumentality that the Church of Antioch was preserved from the
encroachments of the Arians, and enabled to resist the power of Valens. Indeed, it appears
that all the Churches which were governed by men who were firmly attached to the faith did
not deviate from the form of doctrine which they had originally embraced." Sozom. vi.
21]
5. ANTIOCH. "Whereas he (the Bishop Leontius) took part in the blasphemy of Arius,
he made a point of concealing this disease, partly for fear of the multitude, partly
for the menaces of Constantius; so those who followed the apostolical dogmas gained from
him neither patronage nor ordination, but those who held Arianism were allowed the fullest
liberty of speech, and were placed in the ranks of the sacred ministry. But Flavian and
Diodorus, who had embraced the ascetical life, and maintained the apostolical dogmas, openly withstood Leontius's machinations against religious doctrine. They
threatened that they would retire from the communion of his Church, and would go to the
West, and reveal his intrigues. Though they were not as yet in the sacred ministry, but
were in the ranks of the laity, night and day they used to excite all the
people to zeal for religion. They were the first to divide the singers into two choirs,
and to teach them to sing [alternately]* the strains of David. They too, assembling the
devout at the shrines of the martyrs, passed the whole night there in hymns to God. These
things Leontius seeing, did not think it safe to hinder them, for he saw that the
multitude was especially well affected towards those excellent persons. Nothing,
however, could persuade Leontius to correct his wickedness. It follows, that among the
clergy were many who were infected with the heresy: but the mass of the people were
champions of orthodoxy." Theodor. Hist. ii. 24.
* [alternately] in alternate parts
6. EDESSA. "There is in that city a magnificent church, dedicated to St. Thomas
the Apostle, wherein, on account of the sanctity of the place, religious assemblies are
continually held. The Emperor Valens wished to inspect this edifice; when, having learned
that all who usually congregated there were opposed to the heresy which he
favoured, he is said to have struck the prefect with his own hand, because he had
neglected to expel them thence. The prefect, to prevent the slaughter of so great a
number of persons, privately warned them against resorting thither. But his
admonitions and menaces were alike unheeded; for on the following day they all crowded
to the church. When the prefect was going towards it with a large military force, a
poor woman, leading her own little child by the hand, hurried hastily by on her way to the
church, breaking through the ranks of the soldiery. The prefect, irritated at this,
ordered her to be brought to him, and thus addressed her: 'Wretched woman, whither are you
running in so disorderly a manner?' She replied, 'To the same place that others are
hastening.' 'Have you not heard,' said he, 'that the prefect is about to put to death all
that shall be found there?' 'Yes,' said the woman, 'and therefore I hasten, that I may be
found there."And whither are you dragging that little child?' said the prefect. The
woman answered, 'That he also may be vouchsafed the honour of martyrdom.' The prefect went back and informed the emperor that all were ready to die in
behalf of their own faith; and added that it would be preposterous to destroy
so many persons at one time, and thus succeeded in restraining the emperor's wrath."
Socr. iv. 18. "Thus was the Christian faith confessed by the whole city of
Edessa." Sozom. vi. 18.
7. SAMOSATA. "The Arians, having deprived this exemplary flock of their
shepherd, elected in his place an individual with whom none of the
inhabitants of the city, whether poor or rich, servants or mechanics,
husbandmen or gardeners, men or women, young or old, would hold communion. He was left
quite alone; no one even calling to see him, or exchanging a word with him. It is,
however, said that his disposition was extremely gentle; and this is proved by what I am
about to relate. One day, when he went to bathe in the public baths, the attendants closed
the doors; but he ordered the doors to be thrown open, that the people might be admitted
to bathe with himself. Perceiving that they remained in a standing posture before him,
imagining that great deference towards himself was the cause of this conduct, he arose and
left the bath. These people believed that the water had been contaminated by his
heresy, and ordered it to be let out and fresh water to be supplied. When he heard of
this circumstance, he left the city, thinking that he ought no longer to remain in a place where he was the object of public aversion and hatred. Upon
this retirement of Eunomius, Lucius was elected as his successor by the Arians. Some young
persons were amusing themselves with playing at ball in the marketplace; Lucius was
passing by at the time, and the ball happened to fall beneath the feet of the ass on which
he was mounted. The youths uttered loud exclamations, believing that the ball was
contaminated. They lighted a fire, and hurled the ball through it, believing that by
this process the ball would be purified. Although this was only a childish deed, and
although it exhibits the remains of ancient superstition, yet it is sufficient to show
the odium which the Arian faction bad incurred in this city. Lucius was far from
imitating the mildness of Eunomius, and he persuaded the heads of government to exile most
of the clergy." Theodor. iv. 15.
8. OSRHOENE. "Arianism met with similar opposition at the same period in OsrhoEne
and Cappadocia. Basil, Bishop of Caesarea, and Gregory, Bishop of Nazianzus, were held in
high admiration and esteem throughout these regions." Sozom. vi. 21.
9. CAPPADOCIA. "Valens, in passing through Cappadocia, did all in his power to
injure the orthodox, and to deliver up the churches to the Arians. He thought to
accomplish his designs more easily on account of a dispute which was then pending between
Basil and Eusebius, who governed the Church of Caesarea. This dissension had been the
cause of Basil's departing to Pontus. The people, and some of the most powerful and
wisest men of the city, began to regard Eusebius with suspicion, and to meditate a
secession from his communion. The emperor and the Arian Bishops regarded the absence of
Basil, and the hatred of the people towards Eusebius, as circumstances that would tend
greatly to the success of their designs. But their expectations were utterly
frustrated. On the first intelligence of the intention of the emperor to pass through
Cappadocia, Basil returned to Caesarea, where he effected a reconciliation with Eusebius.
The projects of Valens were thus defeated, and he returned with his Bishops." Sozom.
vi. 15.
10. PONTUS. "It is said that when Eulahus, Bishop of Amasia in Pontus, returned
from exile, he found that his Church had passed into the hands of an Arian, and that scarcely
fifty inhabitants of the city had submitted to the control of their new Bishop."
Sozom. vii. 2.
11. ARMENIA. "That company of Arians, who came with Eustathius to Nicopolis, had
promised that they would bring over this city to compliance with the commands of the
imperial vicar. This city had great ecclesiastical importance, both because it was the
metropolis of Armenia, and because it had been ennobled by the blood of martyrs, and
governed hitherto by Bishops of great reputation, and thus, as Basil calls it, was the
nurse of religion and the metropolis of sound doctrine. Fronto, one of the city
presbyters, who had hitherto shown himself as a champion of the truth, through ambition
gave himself up to the enemies of Christ, and purchased the bishopric of the Arians at the
price of renouncing the Catholic faith. This wicked proceeding of Eustathius and the
Arians brought a new glory instead of evil to the Nicopolitans, since it gave them an
opportunity of defending the faith. Fronto, indeed, the Arians consecrated, but there
was a remarkable unanimity of clergy and people in rejecting him. Scarcely one or two
clerks sided with him; on the contrary, he became the execration of all Armenia."
Vita S. Basil., Bened. pp. clvii, clviii.
12. NICOMEDIA. "Eighty pious clergy proceeded to Nicomedia, and there presented to
the emperor a supplicatory petition complaining of the ill-usage to which they had been
subjected. Valens, dissembling his displeasure in their presence, gave Modestus, the
prefect, a secret order to apprehend these persons and put them to death. The prefect, fearing
that he should excite the populace to a seditious movement against himself, if he
attempted the public execution of so many, pretended to send them away into exile,"
&c. Socr. iv. 16.
13. [ASIA MINOR]* St. Basil says, about the year 372: "Religious
people keep silence, but every blaspherning tongue is let loose. Sacred things are
profaned; those of the laity who are sound in faith avoid the places of worship as
schools of impiety, and raise their hands in solitude, with groans and tears, to the Lord
in heaven." Ep. 92. Four years after he writes: "Matters have
come to this pass; the people have left their houses of prayer, and assemble in
deserts: a pitiable sight; women and children, old men, and [others]** infirm, wretchedly
faring in the open air, amid the most profuse rains and snow-storms, and winds, and
frost<s> of winter; and again in summer under a scorching sun. To this they submit,
because they will have no part in the wicked Arian leaven." Ep. 242. Again:
"Only one offence is now vigorously punished, an accurate observance of our fathers'
traditions. For this cause the pious are driven from their countries, and transported into
deserts. The people are in lamentation, in continual tears at home and abroad.
There is a cry in the city, a cry in the country, in the roads, in the deserts. joy and
spiritual cheerfulness are no more; our feasts are turned into mourning; our houses of
prayer are shut up, our altars deprived of the spiritual worship." Ep.
243.
*[ASIA MINOR] CAPPADOCIA
** [others] men otherwise
<PAPHLAGONIA, &c. "I thought," says Julian in one of his Epistles,
"that the leaders of the Galilaeans would feel more grateful to me than to my
predecessor. For in his time they were in great numbers turned out of their homes, and
persecuted, and imprisoned; moreover, multitudes of so-called heretics" (the
Novatians who were with the Catholics against the Arians) "were slaughtered, so that
in Samosata, Paphlagonia, Bithynia, and Galatia, and many other nations, villages were
utterly sacked and destroyed." Ep. 52.>
14. SCYTHIA. "There are in this country a great number of cities, of towns, and of
fortresses. According to an ancient custom which still prevails, all the churches of the
whole country are under the sway of one Bishop. Valens (the emperor) repaired to the
church, and strove to gain over the Bishop to the heresy of Arius; but this latter
manfully opposed his arguments, and, after a courageous defence of the Nicene doctrines,
quitted the emperor, and proceeded to another church, whither he was followed by the
people. Valens was extremely offended at being left alone in a
church with his attendants, and, in resentment, condemned Vetranio (the Bishop) to
banishment. Not long after, however, he recalled him, because, I believe, he
apprehended an insurrection." Sozom. vi. 21.
15. CONSTANTINOPLE. "Those who acknowledged the doctrine of consubstantiality were
not only expelled from the churches, but also from the cities. But although expulsion at
first satisfied them (the Arians), they soon proceeded to the worse extremity of inducing
compulsory communion with them, caring little for such a desecration of the churches. They
resorted to all kinds of scourgings, a variety of tortures, and confiscation of property.
Many were punished with exile, some died under the torture, and others were put to death
while being driven from their country. These atrocities were exercised throughout all
the eastern cities, but especially at Constantinople." Socr. ii. 27.
[The following passage is quoted for the substantial fact which it contains, viz. the
testimony of popular tradition to the Catholic doctrine: "At this period a union was
nearly effected between the Novatian and Catholic Churches; for, as they both held the
same sentiments concerning the Divinity, and were subjected to a common persecution,
the members of both Churches assembled and prayed together. The Catholics then possessed
no houses of prayer, for the Arians had wrested them from them." Sozom. iv 20.]
16. ILLYRIA. "The parents of Theodosius were Christians, and were attached to the
Nicene doctrine, hence he took pleasure in the ministration of Ascholius (Bishop of
Thessalonica). He also rejoiced at finding that the Arian heresy had not been received
in Illyria." Sozom. vii. 4.
17. NEIGHBOURHOOD OF MACEDONIA. "Theodosius inquired concerning the religious
sentiments which were prevalent in the other provinces, and ascertained that, as far as
Macedonia, one form of belief was universally predominant," &c. Ibid.
18. ROME. "With respect to doctrine no dissension arose either at Rome or in any
other of the Western Churches. The people unanimously adhered to the form of belief
established at Nicaea." Sozom. vi. 23. ["Not long after, Liberius (the Pope)
was recalled and reinstated in his see; for the people of Rome, having raised a
sedition, and expelled Felix (whom the Arian party had intruded) from their Church,
Constantius deemed it inexpedient to provoke the popular fury." Socr. ii. 37.]
"Liberius, returning to Rome, found the mind of the mass of men alienated from
him, because he had so shamefully yielded to Constantius. And thus it came to pass,
that those persons who had hitherto kept aloof from Felix (the rival Pope), and had
avoided his communion in favour of Liberius, on hearing what had happened, left him for
Felix, who raised the Catholic standard. [Among others, Damasus (afterwards Pope) took
the side of Felix. Such had been, even from the times of the Apostles, the love of
Catholic discipline in the Roman people."] Baron. arm. 357. <56> He tells
us besides <57>, that the people would not even go to the public baths, lest they
should bathe with the party of Liberius.
19. MILAN. "At the council of Milan, Eusebius of Vercellae, when it was proposed
to draw up a declaration against Athanasius, said that the council ought first to be sure
of the faith of the Bishops attending it, for he had found out that some of them were
polluted with heresy. Accordingly he brought before the Fathers the Nicene creed, and said
he was willing to comply with all their demands, after they had subscribed that
confession. Dionysius, Bishop of Milan, at once took up the paper and began to write his
assent; but Valens (the Arian) violently pulled pen and paper out of his hands, crying out
that such a course of proceeding was impossible. Whereupon, after much tumult, the
question came before the people, and great was the distress of all of them; the faith
of the Church was [impugned]* by the Bishops. They then, dreading the judgment of the
people, transfer their meeting from the church to the imperial palace." Hilar. ad
Const. i. <8>.
*[impugned] attacked
"As the feast of Easter approached, the empress sent to St. Ambrose to ask a
church of him, where the Arians who attended her might meet together. He replied, that a
Bishop could not give up the temple of God. The pretorian prefect came into the church,
where St. Ambrose was, attended by the people, and endeavoured to persuade him to
yield up at least the Portian Basilica. The people were clamorous against the
proposal;" and the prefect retired to report how matters stood to the emperor.
The Sunday following, St. Ambrose was explaining the creed, when he was informed that the
officers were hanging up the imperial hangings in the Portian Basilica, and that upon this
news the people were repairing thither. While he was offering up the holy sacrifice, a
second message came that the people had seized an Arian priest as he was passing
through the street. He despatched a number of his clergy to the spot to rescue the
Arian from his danger. The court looked on this resistance of the people as seditious,
and immediately laid considerable fines upon the whole body of the tradesmen of the
city. Several were thrown into prison. In three days' time these tradesmen were fined two
hundred pounds weight of gold, and they said that they were ready to give as much
again, on condition that they might retain their faith. The prisons were filled with
tradesmen: all the officers of the household, secretaries, agents of the emperor,
and dependent officers who served under various counts, were kept within doors, and were
forbidden to appear in public under pretence that they should bear no part in (the]
sedition. Men of higher rank were menaced with severe consequences, unless the
Basilica were surrendered....
"Next morning the Basilica was surrounded by soldiers; but it was reported, that these
soldiers had sent to the emperor to tell him that if he wished to come abroad he
might, and that they would attend him, if he was going to the assembly of the Catholics;
otherwise, that they would go to that which would be held by St. Ambrose. Indeed,
the soldiers were all Catholics, as well as the citizens of Milan; there were no
heretics there, except a few officers of the emperor and some Goths....
"St. Ambrose was continuing his discourse when he was told that the emperor had
withdrawn the soldiers from the Basilica, and that he had restored to the tradesmen the
fines which he had exacted from them. This news gave joy to the people, who
expressed their delight with applauses and thanksgivings; the soldiers themselves were
eager to bring the news, throwing themselves on the altars, and kissing them in token
of peace." Fleury's Hist. xviii. 41, 42, Oxf. trans.
[20. THE SOLDIERY. Soldiers having been mentioned in the foregoing extract, I add
the following passage. "Terentius, a general distinguished by his valour and by his
piety, was able, on his return from Armenia, to erect trophies of victory. Valens promised
to give him everything that he might desire. But he asked not for gold or silver, for
lands, power, of honours; he requested that a church might be iven to those who
preached the apostolical doctrines." Theodor. iv. 32.
"Valens sent Trajan, the general, against the barbarians. Trajan was defeated,
and, on his return, the emperor reproached him severely, and accused him of weakness and
cowardice. But Trajan replied with great boldness, 'It is not 1, 0 emperor, who have been
defeated; for you, by fighting against God, have thrown the barbarians upon His
protection. Do you not know who those are whom you have driven from the churches, and
who are those to whom you have given them up?' Arintheus and Victor, the other commanders, accorded in what he had said, and brought the emperor to reflect on the truth of
their remonstrances." Ibid. 33.]
21. CHRISTENDOM GENERALLY. St. Hilary to Constantius: "Not only in words, but
in tears, we beseech you to save the Catholic Churches from any longer continuance of
these most grievous injuries, and of their present intolerable persecutions and insults,
which moreover they are enduring, which is monstrous, from our brethren. Surely your
clemency should listen to the voice of those who cry out so loudly, 'I am a
Catholic, I have no wish to be a heretic.' It should seem equitable to your sanctity, most
glorious Augustus, that they who fear the Lord God and His judgment should not be polluted
and contaminated with execrable blasphemies, but should have liberty to follow those
Bishops and prelates who observe inviolate the laws of charity, and who desire a
perpetual and sincere peace. It is impossible, it is unreasonable, to mix true and false,
to confuse light and darkness, and bring into a union, of whatever kind, night and day. Give
permission to the populations to hear the teaching of the pastors whom they have wished, whom
they fixed on, whom they have chosen, to attend their celebration of the divine mysteries,
to offer prayers through them for your safety and prosperity." ad Const. i.
<i.2.>
Now I know quite well what will be said to so elaborate a collection of instances as I
have been making. The "lector benevolus" will quote against me the words of
Cicero, "Utitur in re non dubii testibus non necessariis. " * This is sure to
befall a man when he directs the attention of a friend to any truth which hitherto he has
thought little of. At first, he seems to be hazarding a paradox, and at length to be
committing a truism. The hearer is first of all startled, and then disappointed; he ends
by asking, "is this all?" It is a curious phenomenon in the philosophy of the
human mind, that we often do not know whether we hold a point or not, though we hold it;
but when our attention is once drawn to it, then forthwith we find it so much part of
ourselves, that we cannot recollect when we began to hold it, and we conclude (with
truth), and we declare, that it has always been our belief. Now it strikes me as worth
noticing, that, though Father Perrone is so clear upon the point of doctrine which I have
been urging in 1847, yet in 1842, which is the date of my own copy of his Praelectiones, he has not given the consensus fidelium any distinct place in his Loci Theologici, though he has even given "heretici" a place there. Among the Media
Traditionis, he enumerates the magisterium of the Church, the Acts of the
Martyrs, the Liturgy, usages and rites of worship, the Fathers, heretics, Church history;
but not a word, that I can find, directly and separately, about the sensus fldelium. This
is the more remarkable, because, speaking of the Acta Martyrum, he gives a reason
for the force of the testimony of the martyrs which belongs quite as fully to the faithful
generally; viz. that, as not being theologians, they can only repeat that objective truth,
which, on the other hand, Fathers and theologians do but present subjectively, and thereby
coloured with their own mental peculiarities. "We learn from them," he says,
"what was the traditionary doctrine in both domestic and public assemblies of the
Church, without any admixture of private and (so to say) subjective explanation, such as
at times creates a difficulty in ascertaining the real meaning of the Fathers; and so much
the more, because many of them were either women or ordinary and untaught laymen, who
brought out and avowed just what they believed in a straightforward inartificial
way." May we not conjecture that the argument from the Consent of the Faithful was
but dimly written among the Loci on the tablets of his intellect, till the necessities, or
rather the requirements, of the contemplated definition of the Immaculate Conception
brought the argument before him with great force? Yet who will therefore for an instant
suppose that he did not always hold it? Perhaps I have overlooked some passage of his
treatises, and am in consequence interpreting his course of thought wrongly; but, at any
rate, what I seem to see in him, is what actually does occur from time to time in myself
and others. A man holds an opinion or a truth, yet without holding it with a simple
consciousness and a direct recognition; and thus, though he had never denied, he has never
gone so far as to profess it.
* "He invokes, in a matter that is not in doubt, witnesses for whom there is no
need."
As to the particular doctrine to which I have here been directing my view, and the
passage in history by which I have been illustrating it, I am not supposing that such
times as the Arian will ever come again. As to the present, certainly, if there ever was
an age which might dispense with the testimony of the faithful, and leave the maintenance
of the truth to the pastors of the Church, it is the age in which we live. Never was the
Episcopate of Christendom so devoted to the Holy See, so religious, so earnest in the
discharge of its special duties, so little disposed to innovate, so superior to the
temptation of theological sophistry. And perhaps this is the reason why the
"consensus fidelium" has, in the minds of many, fallen into the background. Yet
each constituent portion of the Church has its proper functions, and no portion can safely
be neglected. Though the laity be but the reflection or echo of the clergy in matters of
faith, yet there is something in the "pastorum et fidelium conspiratio," which
is not in the pastors alone. The history of the definition of the Immaculate Conception
shows us this; and it will be one among the blessings which the Holy Mother, who is the
subject of it, will gain for us, in repayment of the definition, that by that very
definition we are all reminded of the part which the laity have had in the preliminaries
of its promulgation. Pope Pius has given us a pattern, in his manner of defining, of the
duty of considering the sentiments of the laity upon a point of tradition, in spite of
whatever fullness of evidence the Bishops had already thrown upon it.
In most cases when a definition is contemplated, the laity will have a testimony to
give; but if ever there be an instance when they ought to be consulted, it is in the case
of doctrines which bear directly upon devotional sentiments. Such is the Immaculate
Conception, of which the Rambler was speaking in the sentence which has occasioned
these remarks. The faithful people have ever a special function in regard to those
doctrinal truths which relate to the Objects of worship. Hence it is, that, while the
Councils of the fourth century were traitors to our Lord's divinity, the laity vehemently
protested against its impugners. Hence it is, that, in a later age, when the learned
Benedictines of Germany and France were perplexed in their enunciation of the doctrine of
the Real Presence, Paschasius was supported by the faithful in his maintenance of it. The
saints, again, are the object of a religious cultus; and therefore it was the
faithful, again, who urged on the Holy See, in the time of John XXII., to declare their
beatitude in heaven, though so many Fathers spoke variously. And the Blessed Virgin is
preEminently an object of devotion; and therefore it is, I repeat, that though Bishops had
already spoken in favour of her absolute sinlessness, the Pope was not content without
knowing the feelings of the faithful.
Father Dalgairns gives us another case in point; and with his words I conclude:
"While devotion in the shape of a dogma issues from the high places of the Church, in
the shape of devotion ... it starts from below.... Place yourselves, in imagination, in a
vast city of the East in the fifth century. Ephesus, the capital of Asia Minor, is all in
commotion; for a council is to be held there, and Bishops are flocking in from all parts
of the world. There is anxiety painted on every face; so that you may easily see that the
question is one of general interest.... Ask the very children in the streets what is the
matter; they will tell you that wicked men are coming to make out that their own mother is
not the Mother of God. And so, during a livelong day of June, they crowd around the gates
of the old cathedral-church of St. Mary, and watch with anxious faces each Bishop as he
goes in. Well might they be anxious; for it is well known that Nestorius has won the court
over to his side. It was only the other day that he entered the town, with banners
displayed and trumpets sounding, surrounded by the glittering files of the emperor's
body-guard, with Count Candidianus, their general and his own partisan, at their head.
Besides which, it is known for certain, that at least eighty-four Bishops are ready to
vote with him; and who knows how many more? He is himself the patriarch of Constantinople,
the rival of Rome, the imperial city of the East; and then John of Antioch is hourly
expected with his quota of votes; and he, the patriarch of the see next in influence to
that of Nestorius, is, if not a heretic, at least of that wretched party which, in
ecclesiastical disputes, ever hovers between the two camps of the devil and of God. The
day wears on, and still nothing issues from the church; it proves, at least, that there is
a difference of opinion; and as the shades of evening close around them, the weary
watchers grow more anxious still. At length the great gates of the Basilica are thrown
open; and oh, what a cry of joy bursts from the assembled crowd, as it is announced to
them that Mary has been proclaimed to be, what every one with a Catholic heart knew that
she was before, the Mother of God! ... Men, women, and children, the noble and the
low-born, the stately matron and the modest maiden, all crowd round the Bishops with
acclamations. They will not leave them; they accompany them to their homes with a long
procession of lighted torches; they burn incense before them, after the eastern fashion,
to do them honour. There was but little sleep in Ephesus that night; for very joy they
remained awake; the whole town was one blaze of light, for each window was
illuminated."'
My own drift is somewhat different from that which has dictated this glowing
description; but the substance of the argument of each of us is one and the same. I think
certainly that the Ecclesia docens is more happy when she has such enthusiastic
partisans about her as are here represented, than when she cuts off the faithful from the
study of her divine doctrines and the sympathy of her divine contemplations, and requires
from them a fides implicita in her word, which in the educated classes will
terminate in indifference, and in the poorer in superstition.