THE WANDERINGS OF THE HUMAN INTELLECT; OR, A NEW DICTIONARY OF THE VARIOUS SECTS INTO WHICH THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION, IN ANCIENT AND IN MODERN TIMES, HAS BEEN DIVIDED; WITH AN IMPARTIAL DISCUSSION OF THE MERITS OF THEIR RESPECTIVE CLAIMS TO OR'tfHODOXY. TO WHICH IS PREFIXED, AN INTRODUCTORY ESSAY ON UNIVERSAL HISTORY, AS WELL CIVIL AS ECCLESIASTIC, FROM THE MUCH-ADMIRED HISTORICAL DISCOURSE OF THE LEARNED DR PLUQUET, In front of his valuable Dictionary of all Religions ; from which, and from other equally respectable Sources, the present Work is chiefly compiled. BY THE REV. JOHN BELL. " Try the Spirits" I John, iv. 1. " Prove all things : hold that which is good" I Thess. v. 21. . NEWCASTLE : PRINTED BY EDWARD WALKER, PILGRIM-STREET. *OLD BY MESSRS RIVINGTON, ST PAUL'S CHURCH YAUD, BOOKER, NEW EOND- STREET, AND KEATING AND CO. DUKE-STREET, GROSVENOR-SQUARE, LONDON J BELCHER AND SON, AND WILKS, BIRMINGHAM ; TODD, YORK ; BELL, AND CHARNLEY, NEWCASTLE; SHARBOCK, PRESTON; AND SYERS, MANCHESTER. 1814. 637 PREFACE. RELIGIOUS knowledge is, confessedly, of all other sciences, the most important Important individually to each member of society, and equally important to the well-being of society at large. Whatever, therefore, has a tendency to promote this knowledge, and to widen its diffusion, is certainly entitled to the patronage of the public, and to the notice and, I had almost said, the gratitude too, of individuals. Of this description, the Editor presumes to flatter himself the compilation now presented to the community will be deemed to partake. In it, moreover, will be found abundant matter to gratify, if not to satiate, a laudable curiosi- ty in the investigation of the various principles, as well moral as religious, of our fellow mortals, and in ascertaining, in many instances, the leading causes of those astonishing revolutions in church or state, that have contributed to diversify each epoch of profane or ecclesiastic history. It does not, indeed, possess the merit of originality ; but the method, as far as the Editor has been enabled to discover, is novel to the English press, and calculated, in his judgment, to improve and interest the generality of a 2 IV his readers. It is needless to premise, that he has no pretensions to infallibility : consequently, he acknow- ledges himself liable to oversights, and sometimes too, perhaps, to defective reasoning. This he leaves to the enlightened public to discriminate : but as he is conscious he has done his best, he will not pledge himself to do away the supercilious exceptions of il- liberal and self-conceited critics 5 of whose infallibility he thinks no better than of his own. If the tout en- semble of this performance will not furnish adequate materials to answer their objections in a religious view, and to operate conviction on their minds, he owns himself unequal to the arduous task, and, not to fatigue the attention of the reader with unmeaning verbiage Verbum non amplius addet. He will only request permission just to observe, that the advantages of an alphabetical arrangement of the respective articles constituting this work, are too obvious to require a detail ; and will leave it to its fate without further comment on its utility or merit. The historical analysis prefixed must, likewise, be content to speak its own panegyric. EPITOME OF UNIVERSAL HISTORY. IN TWO PARTS. PART I. Embraces a period of full four thousand years, from the creation of man to the establishment of Christianity by Christ our Lord. CHAPTER I. Of the antediluvian state of mankind. ANCIENT Atheistical writers have pretended that men, like mushrooms, sprang spontaneously from the earth, and owed their origin to chance ; while modern materialists very gravely inform us, that their primordial existence was a necessary effect of we know not what mysterious arrangement in their beloved chaos ; and some learned naturalists have as wisely calculated and ascertained the different epochs, wherein the primeval ele- ments of nature severally concurred in the formation of the universe, without, however, condescending to acquaint us by what mysterious influence mankind, or the animal species, or the vegetable world, could start forth from a globe of chrystal, all on fire (no matter how) from eternity. Certainly these gentlemen have each of them the merit of eccentricity. But their sublime theories will not bear the light ; they quickly dis- appear when confronted with the simple and unaffected nar- rative of the sacred historiographer of the book of Genesis. In the beginning God created heaven and earth. Pie said, let light be made, and light was made. And again he said : let us make man to our own image and likeness -, and God created man to his own image. By these few words we learn our origin ; what we owe to God and to ourselves, and what % we are to hope from the bounty of our great Creator. Is then God corporeal like man, as the Marcionites of old r the Manichees, the philosophers of the fourth age, and die infidels of the eighteenth, with those of the present day, erro- neously infer ? By no means : the principal and the most noble part of man is the soul. This soul is gifted with under- standing, with a will and memory, an. Y honourable with their fathers. (1. I.e. 1. Mach.) In :i word, to such a height of frenzy did th- their impiety, that they affected in all things to imitate the infidels, and to resemble in their whole demeanour the mortal enemies of their country igion. (Ibid. v. 16.) CHAPTER IV. Oft' \fo which the Jnvish people were, in latter times, divided. FROM this degrading epoch, the Jews began to fritter into sects. The Pharisees maintained, that Almighty God, in addition to the law given on Mount Sinai, had prescribed an infinite number of rites and dogmas, which Moses had trans- mitted to posterity without committing them to writing ; and, along with such traditions as were true, they intermingled a variety of ridiculous fables, false notions, and erroneous princi- ples, borrowed from the equally fallacious maxims of pagan philosophy. Thus they corrupted the doctrine of the law. Josephus the historian informs us, that they ascribed all con- tingencies to an over-ruling destiny, although, at the same time, they very inconsistently allowed free will to man ; because, said they, such had been the divine pleasure. They left to him the uncontrolled election of virtue, or of vice, still maintaining that all things happen in consequence of some necessitating decree or dispensation of the Supreme Being. They held, that the souls of the wicked, alter death, were confined in dungeons, and that they suffered eternal punishment ; while those of the good were 10 restored to life, and entered into bodies, different from those' which they had animated heretofore. It would be endless to detail, in full, all their visionary traditions : they are the subject of no less than two and thirty volumes in folio, which compose what is called the Talmud. In the Talmud are distinguished seven different orders of Pharisees. One of these orders, in their obedience to the law, had in view only worldly profit and earthly glory: another made perfection to consist in dragging their feet along the ground in the act of walking ; a third, in beating violently their heads against a wall, so as to stain it with their blood ; a fourth, in wearing a hood upon their head ; a fifth, in crying out with much ostentation, < show me what I am to do, and I will do it ;. or rather what is there that I have not done already' ? The sixth order observed the law through a love of virtue and hope of recompence ; but the seventh, for fear of punishment and the wrath of God. All of them recited long prayers, and refused themselves even necessary repose. They hung their head as they walked along, fearing lest otherwise they should touch the feet of the Divinity, which they superstitiously imagined not more than four feet elevated above the ground ; and, in order to appear in the eyes of the people solely occupied with the things above, they sewed to their garments the philacleria or fillets, on which were written certain sentences of the law, wore by them in order to distinguish them from the vulgar Jews. They practised more frequent ab- lutions than their neighbours, to show their extreme desire of perfect purity. Their zeal for proselytism was ardent and inde- fatigable ; and this zeal, added to the severity of their mortifi- cations, gave the people a high idea of their sanctity : the deno- mination of sage was appropriated to them by way of excellence. They kept their disciples in a kind of subjection little short of servitude, and regulated every thing appertaining to religion with absolute authority. Boundless was their influence over the minds of the populace, and of the female kind ; and they put in motion at their pleasure the stormy billows of popular insurrection, and became formidable even to their kings. Such were the men censured with peculiar severity in the gospels by our blessed Sa- viour Jesus Christ. The Sadducees, in the opposite extreme, rejected the tradi- tions of the ancients, and, like our modern Caraites, would abide by nothing but the written word. In unison with this principle, they expounded the books of Moses according to their strict and literal acceptation ; believed that the universe was the work of the Almighty, and that he continues to govern it by his provi- dence ; that he had wrought an infinite number of prodigies in favour of the Hebrew people, and in establishing its police had decreed rewards and punishments : but these penalties and these 11 recompcnces they believed to be purely temporal, and confined within the limits of the present life. These Jews, strictly attach- ed to the bare letter of the law, could discover nothing in the vrritings of Moses, which taught in express terms, that the soul would survive the dissolution of the body ; and, as they were enemies to all traditionary doctrine, they of course denied the immortality of the soul. This error of the Sadducees was not, perhaps, universally maintained by all who affected to adhere to the letter of the law : although their implacable enemies the Pharisees, imputed it to the entire sect without exception, "in or- der to render them the more odious, or, it may be, because they deemed it a consequence naturally flowing from their prin- ciples relative to tradition: a consequence, however, which, very possibly, all the Caraites would not so easily admit. A third sect among the Jews was that of the Essenians. These respected Moses as the first of legislators : they consider- ed all who spoke ill of him as blasphemers, and sentenced them to die. They differed from the Pharisees, in rejecting their traditions ; and from the Sadducees, in maintaining the immor- tality of the soul. This sublime doctrine, so essential to the happiness of man, had engrossed the whole attention of the Essenians: it constituted a part of the Jewish religion; and they sought to give to it the last degree of evidence, by argu- ment, and by examining into the nature of the properties of a human soul, with a view both to convince themselves more strongly of this truth, and to enable them with greater case to answer the objections of the Sadducees, who seemed to have adopted the principles of Epicurism. Stoicism, on the contrary, offered purer charms to the Essenians. According to the mo- rality of this philosophic sect, they concluded, that whatever was calculated to flatter the senses ; whatever served to inflame the passions, increased the slavery of the soul. Full of these impressions, they abandoned the tumultuous scenes of public life, in order more effectually to secure themselves against that corruption which generally prevails in towns, and communicates its baneful infection to the inhabitants, as epidemic disorders are propagated among those that breathe an impested air. In their retirement they formed a society apart ; amassed neither gold nor silver; and, content with simple necessaries, they sub- sisted by the labour of their hands. They applied much to the study of morality ; and their pre- cepts all bore reference to the love of God, of virtue, and their neighbour. Of their love of God, Philo says, they gave un- numbered proofs : they observed perpetual and unsullied chas- tity through life. On no occasion did they swear, and never were detected in a lie. All good they ascribed to God j and they shuddered at the idea of making Him the author of evil. They demonstrated to all that knew them, their sincere love of vir- B 2 12 tue, by their noble disinterestedness of conduct ; by their contempt of glory and ambition, their renunciation of pleasure, their patience and amiable simplicity ; by their habitual cheer- fulness and contentment, their modesty, their respect for the laws, and their firmness and evenness of mind on all occasions. Their love of their neighbour was apparent, from their glowing charity, their affability towards all mankind, their having every thing in common, and their great humanity. According to the Essenians, nature, like a common mother, brought forth and nurtured all men in the same manner, and had made them all truly brethren : concupiscence had dissolved this natural relationship ; and it was their ambition to revive it. In so favourable a light did Philo consider the Essenians ; and cer- tainly, if the picture be pcurtrayed with accuracy, who will deny their virtues to have been angelic, and their moral sanc- tity most deserving of admiration ? May not we then hope well of their salvation ; and that, although their errors were consi- derable, they were only the mistakes of human infirmity, and not the offspring of self-conceit and pride ? The Essenians established various confraternities in Pales- tine ; and all things with them were in common. They were, moreover,, interspersed among the Jews, wherever that people had made any settlements, especially in Syria and in Egypt. In this latter country in particular, near the lake Morin, on an eminence above the reach of hostile incursion, and eligible for its salubrious air, each one had a small oratory, which they called a monastery : there they had no other furniture than the writings of Moses, and of the prophets, together with a col- lection of some hymns, and a few other pious books. At the dawning of the day, they implored the divine blessing ; that true and inestimable blessing which illumines and inflames the soul. At the setting of the sun they prayed that their spirits, unincumbered by the senses and sensual objects, might be qualified in perfect recollection to discern the truth. The re- mainder of the day they employed in the study of the holy scriptures : the text they regarded as a symbol under which lay concealed the most sublime, and the most important truths. They neither eat nor drank before sunset ; and some among them, quite absorpt in contemplation, forgot for three whole days to take their usual nourishment. Six days successively they passed in their oratory, without so much as looking out at their door. On the seventh day, they were accustomed to as- semble at a common oratory, where one of the most learned of their body delivered a discourse, after which they took together their frugal repast of bread and salt. During the repast was ob- served a profound silence : as soon as it was over, one of the company proposed a question concerning certain passages of holy scripture 9 'another undertook to answer, and the president was . to deckle whether the query were duly solved, then added \v. lie. thought fit upon the subject; when all present expressed their approbation, and rose to chaunt a hymn of* thanksgiving and praise. The rest of the day was consumed in religious con- ferences, and the night in sacred psalmody until the rising of the sun. The Esseriians refused to hold communion with the Jews, because they deemed them not sufficiently perfect: they immo- lated no victims, and partook not of the sacrifices offered in the temple. To the ftbovcmentioned sects we may add, that of the Sama- ritans. The ancient kingdom of Samaria was inhabited by the ten tribes of Israel, severed from the kingdom of Jerusalem un- der Roboam, son of Solomon, by the enterprising and not less impious Jeroboam. Eventually, Salmanasar, king of the A rians, made himself master of Samaria, transported its inhabi- tants into the plains of Chahlea, and sent a colony of Cutheans to repeople Samaria. This colony, we are informed in holy writ, was devoured by lions, because it had presumed to introduce into the holy land its heathenish divinities. Kslurnddon sent thither a new colony, under the conduct of a Jewish priest, who iiad orders to re-establish there the ancient wor.sl.ip But this priest could not prevail with the new inhabitants to : abandon al- together their former superstition ; and they made up a medley of their own religion with that of the old Samaritans ; till they finally embraced the Jewish worship, and were called proselytes of the Lions, to intimate that it was the dread of these furious animals, which had effected their conversion to the Jewish reli- gion, though not in all its purity. For, In the first place, among all the writings considered by the Jews as canonical, they received the Pentateuch only, or the five books of Moses. 2. They offered sacrifice on Mount Garisim and net at Jeru- salem ; alleging, that they wished to conform to the worship of the patriarchs who preceded Moses. ?. They looked for a Messiah, like the Jews ; and believed that this Messiah was destined not only to bo a king, but a teacher too, sent from God to enlighten and instruct them. 4. They observed the law of Mo^es with great exactitude, and had not, in other instances, less respect for the Pentateuch than the Jews themselves ; although their obedience to the law was not proof against the terrors of persecution and the dread of torments. 5. The Samaritans rejected all tradition, and adhered only to the written word. As in this they agreed with the Sadducees,, the Jews imputed to them, though wrongfully, the error of that sect with reference to the immortality of the soul. When the Ptolomies had possessed themselves of Judea and H Samaria, the Samaritans like the Jews, established themselves in Egypt. Like them they contracted an inclination for philosophy and the sciences ; particularly for the Platonic philosophy joined with the Chaldaic, which consisted principally in the art of pro- ducing certain marvellous effects by the hidden virtues of plants, by the delusions of astrology, and the superstitious invocation of the genii. Some among the Samaritans had blended this kind of philosophy with the dogmas of their religion : and in Samaria were to be found certain magicians who pretended an immediate mission from Almighty God, and seduced the people by their false miracles. The histories of Dositheus and of Simon the magician, establish this fact beyond dispute. The East had been the original nursery of mankind ; there the arts and sciences were first invented and duly fostered ; there, cities were first built, states and empires formed, at a period when the Western hemisphere was inhabited by simple shepherds, or, in many instances, by savage hordes of rude barbarians. Wars, excessive population, and a variety of con- tingencies, compelled the adventurous among polished nations, to leave their original settlements, and to sail in quest of new abodes. These colonies formed different establishments in maritime countries, and particularly in Italy ; softened the man- ners of the barbarous people among whom they settled, and organized a number of small independent states, which had each their peculiar laws, religious usages and customs, and were much exposed, from their local situation, to frequent wars. Thus, while ease and luxury had corrupted and enfeebled the nations of the East, the contrary habits enured, in a corner of the West, a hardy race of men to the toils and dangers of almost perpetual warfare, and the enterprise of free booty. To charac- ters of this description, imperial Rome owed its origin and its grandeur. At its birth it resembled a kind of open plain, inhabited by a set of warriors or marauders, drawn together by the prospect of plunder, and, not unfrequently, by the hopes of impunity for their crimes. The excellence of its original con- stitution, and its advantageous situation, seemed already to prognosticate in its favour the conquest of Italy and Greece, as well as of the East, Spain and Gaul ; all which, in effect, it gradually subdued. Almost the whole of the then known world took part in the awful contest between two of its rival citizens, the renowned Julius Caesar, and Pompey surnamed the Great. With these conquests were introduced into the republic the vices of the conquered countries ; and the love of honour, liber- ty, and patriotism disappeared. In their place were substituted ambition, and a boundless thirst for riches. Thus every thing in the Roman commonwealth foreboded a revolution ; and an ab- solute monarchy was in fact established by Julius Caesar. ~ Nor did the efforts of Brutus and Cassius, who deprived him of the 15 sovereign power together with his life, restore their country to its former liberty. Augustus, triumphing over the assassins and their party, effectually suppressed the spirit of opposition, and governed in peace a mighty empire, extending from the In- dian ocean to the Danube. Augustus was succeeded by Tiberius, a prince still more powerful and more despotic. He lived without reproach as long as he remained in a private capacity, and even at the head of armies, under Augustus : but when no longer restrained by the fear or love of any man, his vices were indulged in defiance of all justice, honor or decorum ; and the world had for its ruler a prince, infamous for his shameful irregularities ; cruel, avari- cious ; extremely jealous of his power ; suspicious to a degree of frenzy. To his mad jealousy he immolated whole hecatombs, of citizens ; and to his dark suspicions thousands of innocent people were inhumanly and almost daily sacrificed. Rome was full of informers ; and to be virtuous or rich was deemed high treason : none presumed to advocate the cause of the unhappy sufferers, or even to bemoan the dead. The voice of nature was stifled in the general corruption ; and a servile fear had silenced every sympathetic murmur. The government of the provinces was confided to the hands of unprincipled and rapacious ministers ; men devoid of every virtuous feeling, without honor, without humanity ; who promoted to the dignities of the state other mis- creants as wicked as themselves, and disposed at pleasure of the life and fortunes of all within the grasp of their control. Tiberius named for his successor Caius Caligula. This prince had been educated in the midst of camps. He joined with so- vereign power the ferocity of the soldier ; a disposition violent, impetuous and sanguinary ; and he associated with none but stage-players and public debauchees. Under this monster the atrocious reign of Tiberius himself appeared desirable ; and his murderers were of course applauded by the people. From this period the soldiery conferred, and took away, the imperial dignity at their discretion : the different armies named each their em- peror ; and the horrors of civil war were added to the vices of the prince, and to that universal corruption which infected the whole body of the empire. The rage of arms continued to spread desolation over the earth until the reign of Trajan. CHAPTER V. The origin and, progress of idolatry, THUS had ambition and lawless violence, joined with the impiety of heathenism and superstition, annihilated the very phantom of true virtue, and substituted the most frightful cor- 16 ruptlon and degeneracy of morals in its place. The nations of fehe earth, indeed, had lost the knowledge of the true God at a very early period after the universal flood, and together with it, had forfeited, in great measure, their very reason ; may we not add, the privilege too, of common sense : so horribly perverted was their judgment, that there was nothing in the heavens or on earth, nay, even in hell itself, that they did not compli- ment with divine honours ; nothing in nature, whether good or evil, that they deemed not worthy of deification. The various species of idolatry in general may be classed as follows : First, the worship of angels and spirits, or pure and abstracted intelligences, who were imagined to preside over provinces and kingdoms ; and these in holy scripture are term- ed Elohim or Gods, strange Gods, the Gods of the Heathens, &c. concerning which see Exod. xviii. 11. xxii. 19. 2 Kings xvii. 7. Secondly, the worship of the heavenly bodies, the sun, moon, and stars. This in scripture is termed worshipp; the host of heaven* Thirdly, the worship of idols or statues of various forms and shapes; as of men, beasts, birds, fishes, and the Lord knows what : and this kind of worship was of all the most universally established, and what is most properly called idolatry. Fourthly, the worship of living animals in their own figure: for instance, of lions, tigers, horses, oxen, sheep, swine, goats, dogs and cats, mice, and even spiders; of the eagle, the ibis, phoenix, hawks, and other birds and fowl ; the whale, and various kinds of fish, with serpents of every species, and other reptiles ; as we read in authentic history. Fifthly, the worship of things inanimate, as fire, water, air, the winds, the earth with all sorts of herbs and plants, stones, and shapeless blocks of marble, &c. Sixthly, the heathen world worshipped not only what had substance, but also the mere modes and accidents of things, as life, death, the passions of love, anger, fear, envy, and the like : diseases* as the fever ; also health, honour, fidelity, truth, peace, money and mirth ; and, what is still more shameful, impu- dence, calumny, fraud, fury and discord, with a train of the most vicious propensities of the human heart, were all esteemed divinities, and had temples erected for their impious worship. Seventhly, another branch of idolatry was, the paying of divine honors to kings and heroes who had performed extraor- dinary feats or exploits, as if they had in them something more than human ; and therefore they were adored in quality of Demi-gods. Thus the emperors of China, India, and the Tartars, are worshipped at this day. Lastly, the most impious kind of idolatry of all was, the worshipping of devils and evil spirits, called Caco-Demons. Their wretched votaries, by way of apology, allege, that God is good, and will not hurt them"; therefore they need not pray to him : but, say they, the wicked V 27 spirits in the air, as they are inclined and have a power ta do mischief, so they most undoubtedly will do it, if not appeased with sacrifices and supplications. Such diabolical adoration is very frequent at this day in the Indies, in America, and in other parts of the yet heathen world. It is a generally received opinion among the learned, that Ninus, the first Assyrian monarch, was the original author and introducer of idol-worship. With a view to immortalize the name and memory of his father Belus, the same with the famous Nimrod mentioned in holy scripture, he impiously caused a statue representing him, to be adored by his infatuated subjects ; and the more easily to induce them to it, he declared the temple in which it stood, a sanctuary or asylum for the guilty and the oppressed. The contagion quickly spread from the Assyrians and Chaldees to the neighbouring nations, to the Egyptians, the Ethiopians, the Syrians, the Phoenicians, the Persians, Grecians and Indians, the latter of whom have been ever since obstinately addicted to the worship of false Gods ; and the secret of deification being thus early discovered, the heathen world, with inconceivable stupidity, multiplied their divinities without end or measure, according as their silly fan- cies, or the evil spirit that beguiled them, happened to suggest. PART II. Comprehends the whole intermediate period from the coming of our Redeemer in the fash, to the sixteenth century, or the fa- mous epoch of the reformation. First century of the Christian era. SUCH was the dark reign of superstition and of all iniquity, at the period of which we have just spoken ! The time was now elapsed, which had been so distinctly marked by the ancient pro- phets for the coming of the Messiah ; and the Jews, groaning under the pressure of a foreign yoke, and the tyranny of Herod whom Augustus had confirmed in the usurpation of the Jewish sceptre, were eagerly expecting their promised Redeemer. The Roman empire was just beginning to enjoy a profound peace, when this divine Saviour appeared upon our earth with all the characteristics necessary to distinguish him, and to make him It known to mortals. But the Jews, under the erroneous persua- sion that their Messiah was destined to be a famous conqueror, would not recognise him in the person of Jesus Christ, and fan- cied they had found him under the guise of certain fanatics who called themselves Messiah and kings of Israel, and excited the people to sedition and revolt. (Joseph. Antiq. 1. 17, c. 12; de Bell. 1. 2, c. 4, 5, 6.) To discharge the functions of hi& sacred ministry, our blessed Redeemer traverses Judea, and discovers to the Jews the whole extent of the corruption of lost man. He announces to them the unity of the Godhead in three persons, and assures them that he himself is one of these divine persons, made man in or- der to redeem mankind. He declares to them their religious obligations to this most blessed Trinity, and promises to all that shall believe his doctrine and practise his laws, not a temporary reward as the Jews expected, but a spiritual and eternal recom- pence ; a felicity unaltered and which knows no end. Univer- sal benevolence, simplicity of heart, a tender condescension and compassion towards our fellow creatures ; the pardon of injuries, and the love of our very enemies themselves, together with an in- violable attachment to truth, are duties which he exacts from us all, in our mutual intercourse with each other. In regard of God, he enjoins a worship tempered with love, with filial re- spect, with a certain reverential fear, and with divine hope. He then institutes his sacraments, to procure for men the succours necessary to enable them to comply with their duty ; proves the divinity of his mission, and the truth of his doctrine by incon- testible miracles; commissions his apostles to preach his doctrine over the whole earth ; consummates his course among mortals by dying upon the cross ; rises from death by the efficacy of his own power, and ascends all-glorious into heaven. The progress of Christianity ; the preaching of the apostles ; the miracles wrought by them, and even the very virtues prac- tised by the community of the faithful, inflame the hatred of the Jews to fury, and make them persecute outrageously the church of God. The Christians of Jerusalem are dispersed over all Palestine, and throughout all the provinces of the East, in which their countrymen had formed any settlements; and they quickly disseminate their doctrine among the most distant nations of the globe. Some philosophers had already, in their writings, had the courage to attack polytheism ; though with much re- serve, and without throwing any light upon the origin of man, or his final destination. But never before this extraordinary epoch, had a whole society of men, devoid of education for the most part, and unacquainted with human literature, at- tempted to explain what the philosophers had in vain endea- voured to account for, concerning the first origin of things, and the nature and destiny of man; or to teach a morality calcu- 19 iated to establish upon earth universal philanthropy, inviolable friendship, uninterrupted peace ; a morality so pure and sub- lime, as to place man under the special protection of a Supreme and All-powerful Being, who hateth iniquity, and cherisheth virtue with infinite complacency ; a Being that rewardeth with never-ending felicity, the reasonable service rendered unto him, ai:d the good offices done to our fellow-creatures for his sake, and our patience and resignation under the evils incident to huma- nity ; and who punish eth impiety with endless misery ; impiety, that most unnatural of crimes ; a vice as degrading to man, as it is baneful to the dearest interests of society. This noble mo- rality the Christians alone exemplified in their conduct, and chose rather to expire under torments, than to transgress its precepts, or to withhold its doctrines from their fellow men. Miracles and grace seconded their pious efforts ; and a prodigious 21 umber of jews and pagans embraced the Christian religion. \Ve will now proceed briefly to examine, what were the here- which first began to ruffle its tranquillity. The Messiah was to be recognised by the peculiar character- istics under which the prophets had long before announced him, not less than by the miracles which accompanied his actual appearance among men. Hence certain impostors affected to realize them in their own persons ; while others who could not v.ith the smallest semblance of probability apply them to them- selves, denied the authority of the ancient prophets, and com- bated the doctrine of Jesus Christ by the principles of die phi- losophers; vainly attempting to explain consistently with the incoherent theories which they had invented, whatever facts they could not but concede in favor of Christianity. Of this de- scription were, for instance, Simon Magus, Menander and Theodoras. Others, again, received the doctrine of the apostles, but pre- tended to reconcile it, sometimes with the Jewish religion j at other times, with the philosophy of the Chaldees. Such were those Christians whom St Paul reproaches for suffering themselves to be deluded with silly fables and endless genealogies. Many had recourse to allegorical explanations, to do away whatever did not tally with that system of religion which they had previ- ously adopted for themselves. Thus the Nazareans pretended, like many methodists of the present day, that the apostles had not understood the doctrine of Jesus Christ ; and joined to- gether the code of christianism with the ceremonious observances of the Jews : thus Hymeneus, Alexander, Philetus and Hermo- genes, rejected the dogma of the resurrection, because they deemed the union of the soul with the human body a state of degradation which, in their ideas, could not stand with the re- compence of virtue. Grounded upon these principles, some saw nothing in the /-> o c ^ 20 Christian institute but a system of morality the most excellent in its tendency, capable of elevating man above the dominion of the senses. These carried all its counsels to an extreme, and judged it criminal to be concerned for the nourishment of the body : while others, imagining that the soul is of its own nature incapable of being corrupted by bodily defilement, abandoned themselves without remorse to every kind of sensual indul- gence. Some regarded Jesus Christ as one of the genii de- scended from heaven, who had assumed humanity in outward ap- pearance only, the better to instruct mankind ; others believed him to be a man more perfect than the rest of mortals, directed and assisted by a genius from above : of this class were the Na- zareans, Cerinthus, the Ebionites, and those whom St Paul re- proves for starting questions calculated to cause disputes, rather than to administer edification in faith. (1 ep. ad Tim. 1. 4.) All these were condemned by the apostles, and separated from their, communion as the corruptors of its faith. All of them, however, had their disciples and sectarians, who, like their mas- ters, severally pretended that they taught nothing but the pure doctrines of Christ: and, to justify their pretensions, some maintained that Jesus Christ had delivered a twofold doctrine, the one in public, proportioned to the capacity of the people, and which was contained in the New Testament ; the other he had confided to a small number only, of privileged disciples, which was to be understood by none but enlightened men, and which had heen transmitted down to them by certain chosen pupils of St Matthew and St Paul. (Iren. advers. haer. 1. 1, c.25.) Others there were, who boldly retrenched from the canonical books of the New Testament, whatever ill accorded with their own particular opinions, and fabricated new gospels and epistles, which they ascribed to the apostles, or to Moses, Zoroaster, Noah and Abraham ; whose names they affixed to their supposed productions respectively. AH these various sects, abounding with fanatics and enthusi- asts, used their utmost efforts to propagate their religious re- veries, and succeeded but too well in many provinces of the East. The Pythagorean philosophers of this age regarded Jesus Christ as a superior being, who presided over the genii or de- mons by his profounder skill in the magic art j they affected to rival his mirades, and to practise a kind of morality more per- fect than that of the Christians. Of this number were Apollo- nius Thyaneus, and his disciples. (Vit. Apol. Thyan.) The Epicurean philosophers, who acknowledged no other divinity in nature than mere matter endowed with eternal motion, re- jected without any previous examination whatever they heard reported concerning Christianity. The Academics, whose sys- tem led them to doubt of every thing, troubled not their heads \ 21 about the Christian faith. The idolatrous priests and devotees ; all in a word, who gained their livelihood by the worship of false gods ; architects, musicians, perfumers, statuaries, and sculptors, to a man rose up against the Christians ; imputed to them alone every calamity, and every species of wickedness ; and left nothing unattempted to render them the objects of public hatred. Magistrates and politicians, under the erroneous idea that Christianity, by the introduction of a new doctrine, must of course disturb the peace of the state, looked upon its pro- fessors with a jealous eye. Laws were enacted against them, and executed with the utmost rigour, under the bloody reign of Nero. Galba, Otho and Vitellius, Vespasian and Titus, suspended the persecution, which again broke out with equal fierceness under the tyrant Domitian. The peaceable reign of Nerva was favourable to the christians, as well as to every other description of men. But, in the very worst of times, and in the midst of persecution itself, the church of Christ, founded by the apostles, unalterable in its doctrine, and incorruptible in its morality, had made rapid progress over the whole extent of the Roman empire, while the greatest part of the sects above-mentioned had dwindled to insignificance, and nearly sunk into oblivion. Had the Christian religion been an impos- ture, its progress, and the annihilation of the various sects which attacked it at its very birth, would have been not only an effect without any possible cause, but a fact which took place in defiance of the combined assemblage of every possible cause which, in the natural course of things, must have prevented it. The learning, the ingenuity, and the malice of its nume- rous adversaries; the terrors of persecution, the impenetrable mysteriousness of its doctrines ; its contradiction to every senti- ment of flesh and blood, and the want of all the ordinary qualifications requisite in its founders to recommend it to the veneration of mankind, are all of this nature. Among the sectaries who opposed it, many invented systems to explain in what sense Jesus Christ might be termed the only Son of God. This, then, had been an article of belief taught by Christ, and confirmed by miracles. In fact, the apostles re- trenched from the communion of the church, all those who believed that Jesus Christ was merely the most perfect among creatures. Consequently, in the very times of the apostles the faithful believed that Jesus Christ was true God, and from eternity ; and this belief was a fundamental article of christian- ism. Hence it is most evident, that all the Socinian interpreta- tions of scripture passages relative to the divinity of Jesus Christ, are in direct contradiction to the sense which the apostles affixed to them ; and one solitary instance of a single individual separated by them from the communion of the church, for maintaining that Jesus Christ was only a creature, r > and not from eternity, is abundantly sufficient to do away aH the boasted comments of the anti- Christian school of Socinus, Second century of the chrislicm The disorders which prevailed in the Roman empire, inclu- sively from the reign of Tiberius to that of Domitian, seemed to forebode its speedy dissolution. The choice of a virtuous em- peror at this crisis saved it. His reign was truly the com- mencement of a golden age ; and all his moments appeared to be employed in laying the foundations of perpetual pros- perity to the empire. He succeeded in reconciling together two things hitherto esteemed absolutely incompatible; the sovereignty of the prince, and the liberty of the subject. Nerva had relatives, and even children of his own. Never- theless he adopted for his colleague in the empire, one whose person was to him an utter stranger, save by the fame of his military and social virtues. This was Trajan ; under whose reign the power and magnificence of Rome was at its zenith. He caused the laws to be respected within the empire ; subdued the Dacii ; gave kings to the Partlrians ; conquered Armenia, the two Arabias, Felix and Petrea, Assyria, and an incredible number of nations, till then unknown. In a word, he traversed And subjected ah 1 those immense tracts over which Alexander the Great had heretofore extended his domain. But these barba- rians had imbibed a strong aversion for the Roman name ; and fear alone prevented them from rising in a mass against their haughty conquerors. Egypt, Arabia and Lybia, were on the eve of insurrection ; and the Marcomanni and Sarmatians were actually making inroads into the empire when Adrian assumed the purple. This prince, though himself a great captain, aban- doned all the conquests of his predecessor* and fixed the boun- daries of the empire within the banks of the Euphrates. He turned his whole attention towards peace, and the administra- tion of impartial justice in the interior of the state 5 he even granted pensions to several barbarian kings ; although, at the same time, he entertained a numerous body of troops, to which he gave an admirable discipline, and which he kept in constant exercise, as if preparing for immediate war. Antoninus, who succeeded him, did not recede from this wise plan ; and he too, thought more of defending, than of extending, the limits of the empire. Never had pagan Rome an emperor more strictly just, or more scrupulously virtuous ; nor did ever em- peror possess so much authority and influence over foreign na- tions, or had fewer wars to sustain than Antoninus. The reign of Marcus Aurelius was not so peaceable. In the East the Parthians and Armenians commenced hostilities, while 23 the Marcomanni, the Narisqui, the Honnonduri, the Quadi, the Moors and other barbarous hordes, in incredible numbers poured into the Roman territories, and plundered and dismantled the towns and provinces in the West : over all these enemies Mar- cus Aurelius obtained considerable advantages, but was eventu- ally constrained to allow many of them to settle in the provinces of the empire. His son Commodus exceeded, if possible, all the vicious emperors who had preceded him, in every species of profligacy, of cruelty and extravagance. Under his inauspici- ous reign, the empire was on every side assailed with a destruc- tive war. The efforts, however, of these numerous hosts of ene- mies from without, it courageously withstood ; but at home it was torn in pieces by the fury of Commodus, and the intolerable exactions of his rapacious governors. The hands of conspira- tors rid the earth of this monster, born for the calamity and the disgrace of human nature. He was succeeded by Pertinax, who himself after a short reign was assassinated by the Praetorian guards. The insolence of these bands was at the highest pitch ; and they publicly offered the empire to the best bidder. Julian, a man of pleasure and immensely rich, but equally void of prin- ciple, of talents, and of learning, made the splendid purchase, and was accordingly proclaimed emperor at Rome. The armies of the East, Illyricum, and Great Britain, severally chose their respective emperors. These were Niger, Albinus and Severus, who waged a furious war against each other till the close of this * century. Severus triumphed eventually over all his competitors, and remained sole master of the empire. Such was the political state of things during the second cen- tury. The religion universally established over the Roman em- pire, and indeed, over the whole earth till the birth of christiani- ty, was Polytheism or rank idolatry. Every where the people, as heretofore, adored dumb idols of wood and stone, and offered to their imaginary deities sacrifices of human blood. The em- peror Claudius, it is true, abolished the last mentioned impious and cruel rites. But Trajan, who affected to revere a supreme Being, permitted his infatuated subjects to immolate victims even to his own statues, and to swear by his life and immortality. Human sacrifices, notwithstanding their prohibition, were again renewed in his reign ; and two male Greeks, with two Gallic fe- males, were buried alive in the market place at Rome, in order to avert the evils impending over the empire. (Pint, quest, sur les Rom.) Adrian, though one of the most enlightened scholars of the age, had recourse on all occasions to divination and magic: he consecrated temples to his own divinity, and even deified after death his infamous favorite Antinous. (Spart. Adri- ani vit.) Antoninus, too, was a scrupulous observer of all the ceremonies of paganism : nor was his successor Marcus Aurelius a less bigotted devotee to every species of superstition. Severus ranked the monster Commodus in the number of the gods $ in- stituted festivals to his honor, and appointed a high-priest to preside over the worship of this portentous deity. Of such ex- travagant instances of deification the Christians did not fail to make a proper handle, and to infer triumphantly against idola- ters, what kind of gods those also were, whom they had deified in a similar manner in more ancient times. In the mean while Christianity had been diffused through all the provinces of the Roman empire, and among the various na- tions with which the Romans were in commerce : the temples of false gods were almost totally abandoned, and their sacrifices in great part were interrupted The populace, stirred up by the priests and those whom motives of interest still attached to their pagan superstition, loudly demanded the punishment of the chris- tians ; and the magistrates put them to the most cruel deaths. Notwithstanding ail this rigor, their numbers daily increased ; and Trajan, to prevent the depopulation of the empire, by a strange and inconsistent policy, forbade the Christians to be sought for ; while he directed them to be punished in case they w r ere denounced. An edict so replete with folly worse than infantile, did not arrest the progress of Christianity. The miracles and the zeal of its professors in announcing their religion ; the purity of their morals, and that admirable constancy with which they chose to spill their blood rather than prevaricate : the consoling truths which they proposed to the consideration of mankind j that blissful eternity which they held out to those who suffered death for the love of Jesus Christ, and the supernatural helps which they received from heaven in propagating the gospel, increased their numbers beyond all calculation. In effect, what could the infuriated mandates of tyrants do against a religion so divine ; or the fear of death, in regard of those whose sole ambition was to die ? The law which prohibited Christians to be sought for, was esteemed by many a misfortune which deprived them of the crown of martyrdom : they presented themselves before the tri- bunals of their own accord, and boldly declared that they were followers of Christ. Adrian, though superstitious in the ex- treme, admired their virtue, and ordered the tumultuary accu- sations of the populace to be disregarded ; nor would he suffer any to be put to death without the proof of some notorious crime. This edict the pagan priests arid a bigotted rabble did their utmost to have repealed. They represented the Christians in colours the most odious, and imputed to them the dreadful earthquakes which had desolated many provinces. The states of Asia, and other countries, with pious eagerness, solicited of Antoninus, the permission to search after, and to put to death, the innocent professors of the gospel. Antoninus saw the un- reasonableness, and the injustice, of persecuting men for their 25 religious principles, who had no other crime than that of dis- senting from the common opinion in their system of belief. Marcus Aurelius was not quite so delicate in his ideas of justice; nor of principles so liberal and enlightened. He involved the Christians, with the various sects of gnostics men of infamous and abandoned morals, in one common writ of persecution, and re- garded them as a set of gloomy fanatics who voluntarily rushed upon their own destruction. However, even under the reign of Commod us Christianity enjoyed some intervals of repose; also during the revolutions which convulsed the Roman empire upon the death of Pertinax, and under the rival emperors Julian, Niger and Albinus. But Severus again renewed the persecu- cution though with no better success than those who went be- fore him. While thus the whole power of the empire was employed for the destruction of the Christians, their persons and their doc- trines were at the same time furiously attacked by a numerous phalanx of philosophers ; Cynics, Epicureans, Pythagoreans, &c. Among these were Crescens, Celsus, Fronto and a crowd of sophists ; some of whom demanded with unfeeling asperity and malice the death of these pretended enemies of mankind, cont. Cels. Justin, Apol. pro Christ. 23. Euseb. Hist. :cles. 1. 4. Minut. Felix.) In the midst of such alarming ob- stacles, the Christian religion pushed its conquests to the remotest quarters of the globe : it hud erected its victorious standard at Rome, at Athens, at Alexandria ; and even in the most celebrated schools of each philosophic sect, though supported by the fury of popular commotion, the authority of the laws, and the power of arbitrary rulers. This amazing growth of Christianity is attested by all Christian writers, as well as by the pagan authors of the times. Pliny re- marked it to the emperor Trajan ; and the impious Lucian is com- pelled to acknowledge, that all places at that early period, were already filled with christians. Nor were these christians a set of men remarkable for their credulity, or for their love of novelty ; or a superstitious and stupid rabble : they were persons of all ranks and descriptions, whose subtilty of understanding and depth of genius were the terror of impostors : in their presence these se- ducers forbade the pretended mysteries of their vaunted new mythology to be exhibited, for fear of their detection. (Plin. Ep. 1. 10. ep. 97. Lucian Pseudomant. Justin. Tert. Apol.) This, however, did not prevent a vast number of sectaries from propagating their extravagant theories in the second age. Sa- turninus, Basilides, Carpocrate; Valentinus, Cerdo, Marcion and Hermogenes ; Hermias, Bardesanes, Appelles ; Tatian, and Severus, and Heraclian 5 the Sethians, the Cainites, the Ophites : some, in order, as they fancied, more effectually to withdraw their hearts from earthly things, azid to fix them more 26 securely in heaven, absolutely interdicted themselves every kind of pleasure: others on the contrary, looked upon pleasures as a tribute due to the angels whom they imagined to be the creators of this lower world ; or else esteemed them things indifferent in themselves, and of course not apt to contaminate the soul. These indulged in the most scandalous immorality : some went naked, like Adam and Eve in the state of innocency ; others, in the opposite extreme, condemned as criminal whatever might have the remotest tendency to excite the passions. All alike notwithstanding, pretended sedulously to practise what Jesus Christ came down to teach mankind, in order to con- duct them safe to heaven. Some acknowledged him to be the Son of God ; others an angel ; others again, supposed him to be a mere human being, upon whom the divinity had lavished his gifts with a more liberal hand than upon any other mortal man. All without exception, acknowledged the truth of the miracles of our Lord ; and all had condescended to new-model their original system of philosophy, in order to facilitate their explanation : these miracles, therefore, must have been, in the highest degree, incontestible ; since even systematic pride owned itself unable to contest them. Thus were the dogmas of the Pythagorean, the Platonic and the Stoic philosophy combined with the superstitious practices of magic and astrology, all em- ployed in attempting to elucidate the miracles and the doctrines of Christianity j and all these fanciful inventors of new sects en- deavoured to assert the plausibility of their pretensions, in oppo- sition to their rival empirics of the day. They had every where their respective preachers, who by the affected austerity of their life, or by their loose morality and some fictitious miracles, se- duced the people, and communicated to them their own fanati- cism. Some of these sectaries found means widely to extend their society. The numerous sects of the Basilidians, the Valentinians, the Marcionites, were distinguished and upheld by the severity of their morals, which tended, they conceived, to restrain the passions, and to rid mankind of the tyranny of the senses. Such was the general enthusiasm of the age. Among Christians this system of morality produced a set of men who carried the spirit of rigorism and mortification far beyond the boundaries which religion and the church prescribed. These men did not in the ardor of their zeal, undertake to form a society apart ; but they soon began to conceive themselves to be more perfect than the rest of their Christian brethren, and their morality more sublime. Hence Montanus, a proud and self-conceited man, took occasion to style himself the Reformer of that religion taught by Jesus Christ. He pretended, that our blessed Re- deemer had promised to send down the Holy Ghost to teach a religion still more perfect than his own ; that he [Montanus] was kimself the Holy Ghost, or the prophet by whose mouth the Holy 27 Spirit caused this more perfect dispensation to be announced to men. The impostor had disciples who affected to be inspired like himself, and formed a numerous sect divided into a variety of branches, which differed from each other only in a few ridicu- lous observances. Martyrdom was the watch-word of this sect ; and hence we find a multitude of Montanists suffering death in support of their superstition. It survived the storm of persecu- tion, and continued to exist till the fifth century. Montanus and his sectaries, notwithstanding their apparent regularity of life, in a council of orthodox bishops had been re- trenched from the communion of the faithful. Thus the church, ever incorruptible in its morality as well as in its doctrine, shewed itself equally averse from all extremes and every species of excess: consequently, the establishment of the Christian reli- gion is not the result of enthusiasm, as some modern infidels vainly would have us to believe. Most heresies broached in the two first centuries, were a compound of pagan philosophy with the dogmas of Christianity : accordingly, they were combated by Christian theologists with philosophic principles, and with those of reason. The beauty of their writings ; their reputation and eventual success, attract- ed the attention of all to the study of philosophy. Religious subjects began to be treated with the nicest regard to method ; and the proofs of the Christian doctrine were supported by dint of argument, and the maxims of the most celebrated sages of antiquity. Too servile an adhesion to this rule produced effects the most mischievous in their consequences. Certain Christians affected to render the mysteries of our faith more credible by assimulating them with the ideas borrowed exclusively from rea- son. Religion suffered by the comparison ; and its doctrines were modelled according to the fancies of these conceited inno- vators. Such were Artemon and Theodotus, who eventually contested the divinity of Jesus Christ ; and the Melchisedecians, who pretended that he was inferior to Melchisedec. Artemon, Theodotus, and the Melchisedecians, were cen- sured by the church, and cut off from the communion of the faithful: their erroneous doctrines were refuted by the con- current authorities of holy scripture, the hymns and canticles com- posed at the commencement of Christianity, and the writings of ecclesiastical authors, who were more ancient than any of these sec- tarists : consequently, the divinity of Jesus Christ was distinctly taught in the church as a fundamental article, and recognised as such in the sacred hymns composed in the very infancy of our holy religion. It taught against Marcion, Cerdo, Saturninus, &c. the unity of the Divine nature, the first cause and great principle of all things; and against Cerinthus, Artemon, Theodotus, &c. that Jesus Christ was true God. Praxeas, who was oon- D2 28 temporary with Theodotus, erroneously concluded, that Jesus Christ could not be a divine person distinct from God the Father; and was him self condemned as Theodotus had been be- fore him ; though he did not form any sect. May I here be allowed to re-assert, that the Christian church taught distinctly at this early period: 1, the consubstantiality of the word ; believing, as she did, one only divine substance, eternal, existing necessarily, and infinite in its attributes ; and that Jesus Christ was truly God ; 2, that the church then as distinctly proposed the doctrine of the Blessed Trinity, and professed it as a fundamental dogma of Christianity. These are undeniable facts, which alone suffice to overturn, and at once triumphantly to do away the system of Socinus, together with those of Clark, Whiston, and their anti-trinitarian brethren, regarding the most Blessed Trinity, and the consub- stantiality of the Son of God. While thus the infant church had to contend with heresy and persecution, Judea since the death of Herod was become a province of the Roman empire. The Jews, notwithstanding, still preserved the purity of their religion ; and their very inter- course with the idolaters, as well as the tyranny of their go- vernors and collectors of the public taxes, confirmed and in- creased their hatred of the Romans, and their aversion for idol- atorsin general, even to a degree of frenzy. Their expectations of a Deliverer, who was to subdue all the nations of the earth, disposed the minds of the ignorant to insurrection; which, ac- cordingly, did not fail to burst forth into a flame both at Jeru- salem, throughout all Judea, in Syria, and in Egypt. Vespa- sian is sent against them at the head of a Roman army ; and his son Titus enters Jerusalem by storm, demolishes the temple with the greater part of that devoted city, sells its wretched inhabitants for slaves, and disperses the remainder of the Jewish people over almost the whole habitable world. With the city and the temple of Jerusalem, the Jewish reli- gion lost whatever was calculated to impress the mind with awe and veneration. The Jews themselves remained in a state of disorganization, intermixed with the inhabitants of the most distant nations of the globe. Still,' however, they universally retained an implacable aversion for the rest of mankind ; and their hopes of a Messiah, whom they vainly figured to them- selves as a mighty conqueror, seemed to increase with their misfortunes. These were circumstances which continually im- pelled the Jewish people to revolt. Nor were impostors wanting to personate the Messiah, and by some ingenious deception to induce them to believe their mission was from God. Thus did the torch of rebellion blaze out at Alexandria, over all Egypt, Thebais and Lydia, in Cyprus, and in Mes,opatamia, under the reign of the emperor Trajan. When Adrian his successor 29 in the empire, was preparing to send a colony to Jerusalem, the impostor Barcochebas stepped forth, and was anointed and re- cognised by the Jewish rabbins for their king and Saviour. The Romans at first despised him ; but when they saw him at the head of a numerous army, and upon the point of being joined by all the Jews, the imperial legions were sent against them ; and prodigious numbers on this occasion fell victims to their own infatuation. An edict was issued, forbidding them to enter Jerusalem, or even to reside in any place whence Jerusalem might be seen. This, however, did not discourage them ; and whenever circumstances seemed to promise eventual success, they failed not to rise in arms. In the close of the second cen- tury, this restless people once more, to their cost, insulted the Roman eagles, during the reign of the emperor Severus. Such was the forlorn and unsettled state of the Jews after the destruction of Jerusalem. The priests who had survived the fate of this unhappy city, lay concealed in Palestine, and there endeavoured to collect the remnant of their scattered nation. As they were better grounded than the rest of the Jews, in their religion and jurisprudence, to them their exiled countrymen had recourse for instruction. They chose out of their body the per- son whom they deemed best qualified, to regulate in the different synagogues what regarded the law, the ceremonies, and their solemn worship. This person was at the head of the college of priests who resided in Palestine, and who did not wish to re- move to a greater distance from Jerusalem, where they expected to see their temple re-established. He was the patriarch of the Jews in exile : His duty it was to visit the synagogues ; and these defrayed the expences of his journeys. Third age of the Christian era. The wars of Severus with his rivals Julian, Niger and Albi- nus ; the cruel vengeance which he exercised upon their several friends and adherents ; his avarice, his brutal inhumanity, deso- lated the state, and caused vast numbers of his subjects and of the soldiery to seek protection among barbarians. However, as he was consummately skilled in the art of war, and of superior talents for government, the empire still continued powerful during his reign, and made the surrounding nations tremble. Severus was succeeded by Caracalla, who with all the vices of his father carried to their utmost excess, joined not one of his better qualities. The seeds of disaffection and revolt which the genius of Severus had stifled in the interior of the state, now be- gan on the sudden to develope ; and the hereditary hatred which foreigners had imbibed for the Roman name, and which he had hitherto kept at bay, at once burst forth, and was inflamed to a 30 degree of fury by the unheard of perfidy of Caracal-la ; while avarice, ambition and voluptuousness, vices which even before his reign had proceeded to an alarming pitch, daily gained ground throughout the whole empire. In the course of this century (such was the anarchy and confusion of the times) more than twenty emperors were raised successively to the throne, chiefly by the hands of faction and seditious influence, or by the murder of their respective predecessors. Hardly, in effect, was an emperor assassinated, when his murderer seized the reigns of government ; and four or five competitors at once disputed with him the privilege of reigning. Often when all appeared in pro- found peace and harmony, would the flame* of sedition suddenly blaze forth in four or five different provinces at a time ; just as a dreadful storm spreads sudden desolation in its progress over the tracts in which it spends its fury. In these intestine commotions of the state three of the best and greatest emperors that Rome had ever beheld ; Alexander, Aurelian and Probus all shared a similar fate with the monsters Heliogabalus and Caracalla. Thus torn in pieces by its own hands, the empire was assailed on every side, by the Scythians, the Parthians, the Persians, the Goths, the Heruli, the Germans ; and by that confused medley of barbarians, distinguished under the appellation of Francs. These furious hordes now penetrated the empire in all directions ; and it was compelled to purchase a precarious peace of those very people, to whom heretofore it had been accustomed to grant it upon the most humiliating terms. The booty which they car- ried off on these occasions, was an allurement too tempting for these savage adventurers to resist ; and the hopes of greater plunder perpetuated a destructive war, which terminated in the eventual downfal of the Roman empire. Gross idolatry, with all its attendant horrors, still prevailed, and almost the very idea of virtue and justice seemed extinct in the pagan world. Such was the horrible degeneracy of the Roman senate, that they decreed divine honors and the title of God even to a Cara- calla, the murderer of his own father and brother, the bloody executioner of the people, and the terror and execration of all mankind. The champions of paganism, indeed, and the per- secutors of the Christians, were in general, men of abandoned characters, and notoriously wicked. The palpable absurdity, and the glaring inconsistencies of their own mythology, had been exposed by Christian writers in the brightest light of evidence ; and their philosophers were reduced to the miserable shift of new-modelling their various systems ; in order to reconcile, if possible, the discordant theories of polytheism and the different philosophic sects with some degree of plausibility and harmony in their leading principles. Ammonius was the first devisor of this hodge-podge of philosophism, which became extremely fashionable in the third age, and was termed the eclectic sect. 31 The Jews had been dispersed and intermingled with almost every nation of the globe. Thus, wherever the Christian reli- gion was announced, it found its mortal enemies ; enemies very capable of convicting it of imposture, had there been a possi- bility of substantiating the charge. To the Jews many of the Roman emperors had been favourable, and granted them cer- tain privileges, allowing them to establish academies, and to cultivate the sciences. Their school of Tiberias became very famous ; and they had some celebrated rabbinical doctors at Babylon. In the beginning of the reign of Severus, both Jewsr and Christians were tolerated ; but a cruel policy soon took place, and again subjected the professors of Christianity to the rigours of persecution, during the remainder of this emperor's reign. However, Caracalla and Hcliogabalus did not oppose the progress of christianism ; and Alexander Severus, the best of Heathen princes, patronised its professors, admitted them to his court, and even called them to his privy council. Maximin renewed the persecution ; but Gordian and Philip befriended their cause. Decius, the murderer of his master Philip, was their implacable enemy. But Gallus who succeeded him, re- stored peace to the church ; although eventually he became himself its ruthless persecutor: so did Valerian after him ; whose impiety was quickly arrested by the Divine justice, in the com- mencement of his rage, as Lactantius remarks; and in hig person was exhibited to the world a striking instance of the in- constancy of human things. Gal lien beheld with seeming in- difference his father's misery ; and whilst he suffered him to drag on in captivity a dying life, he put a stop to the persecu- tion raised by him, and caused the Christian churches and ceme- teries to be restored. After a reign of fifteen years Gallien wa assassinated, and his successor, Claudius II. published his bloody edicts against the true religion ; but his reign was short. AureKan restored tranquillity to the innocent sufferers; and after his death they were permitted to enjoy a long interval of peace, nearly till the close of this century. Their numbers had prodigiously increased, especially under those emperors who had allowed them the free exercise of their religion. They practised it in the midst of the palace, where they occupied important charges, had gained the affection and the confidence of their princes, and possessed considerable interest at court. The bishops, whose character was highly respected in the provinces, were permitted to build churches ; and their flocks were astonish- ingly numerous. Nor was Christianity confined within the precincts of the Ro- man jurisdiction ; its zealous disciples propagated its doctrines among the barbarous nations in commerce with the empire. Sometimes the enemies of the Roman name in their hostile de- predations carried off a multitude of captives : some of them 32 were Christians, who disseminated among these people the bright example of the subiimest virtues, and the admirable light of the gospel. While thus the church of Christ continued to flourish, and to increase even under the axe of persecution, it vigorously repressed and condemned every attempt at innovation in its doctrine and the purity of its morals. In the close of the foregoing century, it was fashionable to join the study of philosophy with that of religion. This philosophy was neither Platonism nor Stoi- cism ; it consisted in adopting whatever in any philosophic system reason discovered to be true ; and every one in consequence, thought himself privileged to elucidate the mysteries of religion by those maxims of the ancient sages, which appeared to him best calculated to render them intelligible. In tact, the awful obscurity of our mysteries was ever a great stumbling block to infidels, and to the wise ones of this world. The grand mysteries of our holy faith are not contrary to rea- son ; but they are exalted infinitely above it. Reason, there- fore, is not competent to suggest any idea which may render them obvious to the understanding ; and many, not aware of this, in the attempt to explain them by the common principles of reason, altered and adulterated them. Thus did Beryllus, Noetus, Sabellius, Paul of JSamosata and Hierax, give explana- tions regarding the mysteries of the blessed Trinity and the in- carnation of the Son of God, that tended absolutely to do away the mysteries themselves. The church then condemned these fatal errors, with many others of a tendency equally pernicious ; and excluded their abettors from its pale : thus we see, the Tri- nity of persons and the Divinity of Jesus Christ, the spirituali- ty and immortality of the soul, were dogmas clearly established and distinctly taught in the church of God, during the third age ; as these sentences of excommunication against their im- pugncrs abundantly demonstrate. Meanwhile, other Christian philosophers, more cautious and more discerning than the former, combated with success the various sects of Gnostics who had made their appearance in the preceding ages ; and reclaimed them from their extravagant er- rors. The church had not yet decided by any positive law, upon what terms the reclaimed should be admitted. Africa and the East classed them with the Catechumens, and re-baptised them. In the West, on the contrary, they were not re-baptised, but were received barely with the imposition of hands. This diversity of practice gave rise to much contention, and nearly caused a schism in the church. Those, too, who in the times of per- secution had renounced their faith, demanded with great ear- | nestness their re-admission to communion : some wished them to be received without the humiliating ceremony of canonical penance ; others insisted that this could not be dispensed with : J S3 others again, still more rigidly severe, pretended that they ought not to be re-admitted into the church, on any terms what- ever. This variety of opinions produced party-spirit and divi- sion, with some sects. Of this the Novatians are one instance. Fourth age. Almost all the subjugated nations ; the Persians, the Scy- thians, the Goths ; Francs, Germans, and other barbarous tribes, allured by the hopes of plunder, broke impetuously into the Roman provinces. It was therefore absolutely necessary to entertain ami keep embodied a formidable military force, with- out which the empire could not withstand the efforts of its enemies, and which itself, nevertheless, was capable of annihi- lating at once both the emperors and the empire. Dioclesian, in order to ward off inconveniences eventually so mischievous to the state, resolved to share the weight of government with Max- inius a warrior consummately qualified for the conduct of armies, as his colleague in the empire ; and with ( and Constantius Chlorus, whom he created CVsars or emperors of inferior rank. This system, he thought, would give a check to the spirit of faction in the armies, which, separately, would be- too weak to claim the privilege of raiding their respective gene- rals to the sovereignty, and would likewise counteract the am- bition of commanders, and even of the emperors themselves, by deterring them from assuming undue superiority over il.eir col- leagues. This policy, houever, far from answering the \ of l)iocle>ian, gave the Roman empire four i they all aspired equally to absolute authority, formed their ieveral alli- ances apart, and incessantly waged \\ar against each other, till Constantine became sole master of the empire. On his death- bed, he adopted the impolitic system of Dioclesian, and divided his dominions amongst his children. These did not long remain content with the partition, and made war with one another; while they were all attacked by ambitious competitors, and perished in the contest, except Constantius, who again re-united in his own person the sovereignty of the state. During the whole of the fourth century was the empire thus divided and re-united by turns under Valentinian, Gratian, Theodosius, and his sons Arcadius and Honorius. Mean- while the barbarians from without harassed the provinces with continual incursions. Incredible were the calamities which at- tended this unceasing state of warfare ; and the loss of blood was immense. Still, however, the Roman discipline maintained a decided superiority in the tumultuary attacks of these savage invaders, and still nobly asserted the integrity of the empire. Dioclesian, in the beginning of his reign, had favored the 3* Christian- religion. His palace was full of distinguished chrism tian noblemen, and many even of the Pretorian guards were of this profession, both in the capacity of officers and privates. But as the emperor was himself a bigotted pagan, and super- stitious to a degree, means were devised to alarm his bigotry and inflame his heathen zeal to madness. A dreadful persecu- tion was the consequence. Maximius and Galerius were the implacable enemies of Christianity in the East, while their rival Constantius protected it in the West. His son Constantine was equally favorable ; but Licinius, Constantine' s competitor and his most treacherous foe, persecuted the Christians in the most outrageous manner throughout the Eastern districts of the empire. Constantine marched against his frantic antagonist, fully determined to wrest from him that power which he so wantonly abused. Licinius had caused a crowd of augurs j ma- gicians, and Egyptian priests, to attend him at his camp : these vainly called upon their imaginary deities, offered to them innu- merable sacrifices, and promised him an easy victory. Con- stantine, on the other hand, environed with the Christian priest- hood, and with the banner of the cross triumphantly displayed before him, implored the succour of the Supreme God, and reposed his hopes of victory in Him alone. Heaven recom- pensed his pious expectations with the total overthrow of the impious Licinius, who had vowed, in the event of success, to immolate all the Romans meaning principally the Christians to his heathen gods. The morality of the Christian religion was pure and sublime : Constantine had no subjects more faithful, nor the empire citi- zens more virtuous, more scrupulously just, or of principles more benevolent and humane; nor were any of them ever known to have taken part in insurrection against the most in- human of their persecutors. Had Constantine been influenced merely by motives -of policy, this circumstance alone must have determined him to prefer the Christian religion before all others, to form of it the established religion of the state. In aid of motives purely human, were added miracles of the Divine power in this emperor's favour, which rendered him victorious over all his rivals. In an edict, recorded by Eusebius in his life of Constantine, this prince addresses himself to the Almigh- ty, and protests before Him his zeal to extend the Divine worship. At the same time, he declares it his intention, that even the impious shall enjoy unmolested a state of tranquillity and peace under his protection ; convinced, that this is the surest method to bring them back eventually to the right way. He forbids them to be disturbed ; exhorts his subjects mutually to support and aid each other, however opposite may be their religious sentiments ;. and to communicate their lights to their fellow-creatures without violence or compulsion -, because, says 35 he, " in the cause of religion it is noble rather to suffer death than to inflict it, notwithstanding the contrary pretensions of some Christians, influenced with an indiscreet and cruel zeal." (Vit. Const. 1. 2, c. 60.) Nevertheless he prohibited the offering of sacrifices, shut up the temples of the heathen gods, and caused them afterwards to be demolished. The power and renown of this emperor ; the translation by him of the seat of empire to Constantinople ; his triumphs over his enemies, together with the wonderful establish- ment of Christianity, and the evidence of miracles wrought in his fa- vor, attracted the attention of the most distant nations. The Goths and other barbarous people, who had long been accustomed to make inroads Upon the Roman territories, and on those occa- sions had carried off' vast multitudes of Christian captives, were by them converted to the faith, and now professed the Christian religion. The Ethiopians too, applied to Constantine for Christian bishops ; while the Jews, on the contrary, possessed with the silly idea of subjugating the rest of mankind, continued to avail themselves of every opportunity which seemed to favor their extravagant pretensions. Against them, Constantine enacted severe laws ; and after his demise his sons dispatched a military force to reduce them to submission. Valentinian and Theodosius granted them certain privileges ; and the latter of those princes forbade Christians to molest them or to pull down their synagogues. They had judges both civil and ecclesiastic of their own, whose decisions were enforced in all matters apper- taining to religion or to religious discipline ; in other instances they were subject to the laws of the empire. In the midst of the tumult of war and faction which con- vulsed the universe till the period when Constantine became ab- solute throughout the whole extent of the Roman dynasty, the arts and sciences were cultivated almost exclusively, by heathen philosophers and the Christians. The latter, in order to combat with success the arguments of sophism, the impostures of the pagan priesthood, and the infidelity of historians, applied them- selves with diligence to the study of history and chronology, and discussed profoundly the various systems of the ancient phi- losophic sects. They undertook to demonstrate the truth of the Christian religion by the most conclusive arguments which the authority of history or reason can afford ; and to show that the principles admitted by the most celebrated philosophers, either were not at variance with it, or in the points on which they disagreed, they stood self-refuted, or contradicted one ano- ther, and were inconsistent with the dictates of right reason. Sometimes indeed, in the writings of these philosophers, and those of the epoch of which we speak, amidst a thousand absur- dities we discover surprising strength of genius and much natu- ral sagacity, and not unfrequently a rich vein of the sublimest E 2 36 morality. However, in the reign of Valens the Platonic phi- losophy received a severe check. Some of its professors, by the aid of the black art, had ventured to predict, that this emperor's successor would bear a name which began with the initials Theud. The jealous emperor in revenge caused all of that sect who had the misfortune to fall into his hands, indiscriminately, to be put to death, and their writings to be committed to the flames. Such was the rigor with which this inhuman and not less stupid ordinance was executed, that an infinite number of the best productions of antiquity in every kind, were sacrificed on the occasion, and' utterly lost to posterity. Among the Christians of this age many were distinguished for their genius and erudition, whose writings would do honor to any era. Such were Pamphilus, Eusebius, Arnobius, Lac- tantius ; the Gregories, the Basils,- &c. These celebrated cha- racters employed much of their time and labors in the instruc- tion of their people : and, in the midst of the most troublesome occurrences, the bishops and the clergy, influenced by motives the most powerful that can act upon the human heart, exerted their utmost efforts in order to enlighten the minds of their fel- low creatures relative to their original destination, the grand truths of religion, the true happiness of man, and the eternal recompence which awaits the just in the life to come. The ex- traordinary merit of the bishops ensured to them the highest ve- neration throughout the church, and an authority next to abso- lute over the faithful. The honors which they every where received, excited the am- bition of the envious, and caused them to aspire with ardour to ecclesiastical preferment ; this proved, eventually, the source of much mischief, and of schisms in the church. Donatus, Collu- thus and Arms, were characters of this description. The church had condemned the errors of Sabellius, Praxeas and Noetus, who in the preceding age had pretended, that the three Divine Persons of the blessed Trinity were nothing more than simple denominations, given to the same divine substance in order to denote the various operations of the divinity : but it had not thought proper to explain in what manner the three Divine Persons actually existed in the self-same substance. Ari- us would needs undertake to elucidate the mystery. He ima- gined that the three Divine Persons of the blessed Trinity were three distinct substances, and that the Father alone was increat- ed. Consequently, the Son, according to his new system, was a mere creature ; an inference which Macedonius afterwards ex- tended to the Holy Ghost. In combating the system of Arius, Apollinaris adduced an infinite number of clear texts out of Holy Scripture, to prove the Divinity of Jesus Christ ; from which, however, he errone- ously inferred, that our blessed Saviour had not a human but 37 only a sensitive soul, the divinity in him supplying its place. This fake doctrine the church equally condemned with that of other innovators of the age; Audeus, Bonosus, Helvidius and Jovinian ; the Colly ridians, the barefooted brethren, the Mes- salians, thePriscillianists, c. These jarring sects'were the cause of great disorders in the empire, and often were engaged in intes- tine broils. Africa and the East were torn in pieces with the schism of the Donatists, and the heresy of Arius. Every reli- gious dispute under the successors of Constantine was consider- ed an affair of state; and those whom the court, whether itself orthodox or otherwise, was pleased to deem unorthodox, were exiled, dismissed from office, or forfeited their estates. An in- finite number of subjects on these occasions emigrated into Ara- bia and Persia, and among other barbarous nations which sur- rounded the Roman empire: those that remained, seemed for the most part, to center their contentment in the destruction of the adverse party. New heresies and new schisms succeeded one another in this turbulent state of things; and the church long deplored the mischiefs occasioned by those of Antioch, in which prejudice, the passions, and an ungoverned zeal, as- sumed a thousand different disguises, counterfeiting piety and the love of truth. Fifth age. The great Theodosius had in vain attempted to stem the tide of the reigning disorders in the preceding age. Unfortunately, his children were formed under the tuition of favourites ambi- tious, ill-principled and totally devoid of all exalted views. They were left by him masters of the empire very young : Ar- cadius had the East, and Honorius the West. At the head of the administration were Rufinus and Stilico. Rufinus of an art- ful, insinuating, adulatory disposition, w r hose avarice was insati- able and ambition boundless, was all-powerful in the East. He unfeelingly oppressed the people, sold the dignities of the state to men of the basest character, and rendered government odious and intolerable to the subject. His conduct could not fail of raising him many enemies, who accused him of aspiring to the empire ; and he was put to death by the order of the emperor his master. He was succeeded by another favorite court minion vicious as himself, Eutropius the eunuch. This man fell a sacrifice to the resentment of Eudocia, not for his unheard of cruelties and other crimes, by which he had brought ruin on the empire ; but for his disrespectful behaviour towards a haughty female. Eudocia in her turn became absolute. She was a wo- man whose ruling passion was avarice : her counsellors were the ladies of the court, with the eunuchs that surrounded her. Un- 38 woj'ld. 5. The INNOCENTS or IMPECCABLE held, that after their new regeneration they could with ease preserve themselves from the smallest stain of sin, and that in fact they did live entirely exempt. Hence they retrenched from the Lord's Prayer the following petition- and forgive us our trespasses ; and desired not the prayers of others in their own behalf. 6. The LIBERTINES pretended, that every kind of subjection was contrary to the spirit of Christianity. 7. The SABBATARIANS taught, that the ancient Sabbath, which was Saturday and not Sunday, ought to be observed by Christians. 8. The CLANCULARIANS maintained, that in public we ought to profess the same religious creed with our neighbours, and speak our real sentiments only in private. 9. The MANIFESTARIANS adopted exactly the reverse of this doctrine. 10. The WEEPERS fancied that continual tears were most pleasing to God, and turned all their efforts towards obtaining the art of weeping : they always mingled their tears with their bread, and were never without sighs and groans in conversation. 11. The REJOICERS on the contrary, laid it down as a prin- ciple, that merriment and good cheer were the most agreeable offering that could be made to Almighty God. 12. "The INDIFFERENT had not finally embraced any parti- cular system of religion, and thought all religions equally good. 118 .ANT 13. The SANGUINARIANS wished for nothing so ardently, as the shedding of the blood both of catholics and protestants. 14. The ANTIMARIANS refused to render any kind of religi- ous veneration to the blessed Virgin Mary. See Hist. Menno- nitarum, Descript. d' Amsterdam ; Catrou, Hist, des Anabap. in 12 sur d'excellcns memoires a Amsterdam. Kromayer, in Scrutinio Religionum Pantheon Anabaptisticum et Enthusiast!- cum 1702 in Fol. The German theologians are very copious upon this subject. (See their account in Stockman, Lexic. Hseres.) ANDRONICIANS, so named from their author Andronicus who adopted the errors of the Severians. Among other reve- ries, they maintained, that the superior part of the female was the work of God, but that the rest was the production of the devil. (Epiph. Hser. 4-5. See the article SEVERIANS.) ANGELICS were a sect of the apostolic age. Of them the apostle St Paul seems to speak in his epistle to the Colossians, 2. v. 18, Let no man seduce you , rendering, out of a false humility , a superstitious worship unto angels, like the infidel philosophers who honored their genii (or angels) as inferior divinities ; ima- gining that God was too great to be addressed by men. Some Christians, agreeably to these pagan notions, deemed the medi- atorship of the angels more powerful with God, and better cal- culated to reconcile man with his offended Maker, than even that of Jesus Christ. (See Theodoret, Theophilact. Menoch. S. Chrys. Horn. 7. Col. 2. Stockman, Lexic. &c.) The sect was in being during the reign of Severus, and down to the year 357 or 367, when Theodoret remarks, that the worship of an- gels which some false apostles had established in Phrygia and Pisidia, had there taken so deep root, that the council of Laodi- cea expressly forbade Christians to address any prayer to the an- gels. This, however, is not altogether accurate ; for the council says only, that " Christians must not abandon the church of God, to go to invoke the angels, and frequent private conventi- cles." (Calmet, Comment, sur St Paul, Ep. aux Col. 2. 18 and dissert, sur les bons et les mauvais Anges.) ANOMIANS taught that the Son and the Holy Ghost were in all things unlike the Father. From this circumstance is derived their name which in the Greek tongue signifies unlike. See the article Eunomians. ANTHIASTSTS deemed it criminal to labor, and passed their life in indolence and inaction. Philastrius, who mentions these sec- taries, could not ascertain the period of their existence. ANT ANTHROPOMORPHITES or ANTHROPIANS, fancied that God had a human body. They grounded their opinion upon a pas- sage in the book of Genesis, in which God says Come let us make man to our own image and likeness ; also upon all the other passages of holy writ which attribute hands, eyes, feet and other human parts, to Almighty God. (Nicephorus, 1. II, c. 1 4, 1. 13, e. 1 0, Ittig. de Haer.) This heresy began to show itself as early as the fourth age, and re-appeared at the commencement of the tenth. The tenth century, branded with great reason for its peculiar ignorance and stupidity, was incapable of producing any errors but such as this. Men's intellects were too dull to con- ceive any thing which could not be represented under corporeal forms. Angels were supposed to be in fact men with wings, as seen in paintings on the walls of churches ; and the more ig- norant sort imagined, that every thing passed in much the same way above, as here below. Some believed that St Michael cele- brated mass in the presence of the divine Majesty every Mon- day 5 and on that account, they frequented his church on this day rather than on any other. (Hist. Literaire de France, 1. 5, p. 10.) ANTIMARIANITES, or Antidicomarianites a name given to those who denied the virginity of the mother of our Blessed Re- deemer, and pretended that she had other children by Joseph, because it is said in the gospel, that Jesus Christ had some bre- thren. (See HELVIDIUS. Epiph. Hser. 78.) ANTINOMIANS a term importing enemies of the law. See AGRICOLA, their first author. ANTIOCHIANISM, or the schism of Antioch continued up- wards of eighty years. Its origin was as follows : The Arians having expelled Eustathius, bishop of Antioch, intruded Eu- doxius into his see. Eudoxius was a bigotted Arian j and num- bers of zealous catholics still adhered to Eustathius. After his death, upon Eudoxius's being translated to Constantinople, much party-work and intrigue ensued at Antioch in the nomina- tion of a new bishop ; till all at length agreed to raise Meletius to the episcopal dignity. Meletius, in his sermons, reprobated Arianism, and was banished in consequence. The Arians then chose Euzoius, a furious stickler of their party ; and those ca- tholics who were attached to Meletius, from that period began to hold their assemblies apart. Thus was Antioch divided into three distinct parties ; that of the catholics who acknowledged Eustathius for their lawful pastor, and refused to communicate either with the Arians, or with the catholics attached to Mele- tius; because they considered him as intruded by the Arian faction : the second party consisted of the latter description of 120 i ANT catholics ; and the third was that of the Arians. On the ac- cession of Julian the apostate to the empire, the exiled catholic prelates were suffered to return from banishment ; and Lucifer of Cagliari, one of that number, and legate to the pope, taking Antioch in his way, ordained Paulinus bishop ; conceiving, that the catholics attached to Meletius would readily join them- selves to Paulinus. He was disappointed of his expectations ; and the schism was perpetuated though without any real difference in doctrinal points, till the year 339. The ANTITACTJE were heretics who deemed it a part of duty to practise whatever was prohibited in holy scripture. They were a branch of Cainites, and made their first appear- ance about the year 160. Their morality was of a piece with their impious and abandoned principles. (See CAINITES. Thedoret, Hasr. I. 1. c. 16. Ittigius de Haer. sect. 2, c. 16. Bibl. Aut. Eccles. seec. 2, art. 6.) ANTITRINITARIANS r contrary to the principles of sound philosophy. And this alone should abundantly suffice to do away the difficulties of protestants. For catholics it is enough to know that it is the doctrine of truth, and that the reason of a true believer is faith. The testimony of the senses against transubstantiation is an objection by no means so difficult. Our perceptions of a body we receive, only from the impressions excited in our soul. These impressions may be excited independently of the body, and by an immediate operation of the divinity on our souls : conse- quently, there subsists not any necessary connection between the testimony of the senses, and the existence of the objects which they represent. The certitude, therefore, of this testi- mony depends on the certitude which we have, that God does not excite, nor permit spirits of a higher order to excite in our soul, the impressions apt to be referred exclusively to bodies. Thus it is doubtless possible, that God may cause in our soul the impressions which we ascribe to bread and wine, although in effect there be neither the one nor the other. Nor is this supposition inconsistent with the maxim, that the testimony of our senses is, in the natural course of things, infallible, as long as we maintain (and catholics certainly do maintain in the pre- sent case) that God has admonished us not to give credit to our senses in this instance. Has he not, in effect, sufficiently fore- A B E R 153 Earned us not to lay too great a stress upon the testimony of the senses in the mystery of the blessed eucharist, by declaring be- forehand that here the bread and wine is converted into the body and blood of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ ? What pro- testant will deny that angels have appeared in the shape of men, (Gen. xix. Matth. xxviii. Mark xvi. &c.) and the Holy Ghost in the shape of a dove ? (Luke iii. 22, &c.) Neither can the senses, properly speaking, be said, even on this occasion, to be deceived ; because they truly represent what is truly here ; namely the colour, shape, taste and other properties of bread and wine. The judgment indeed, is deceived if, in consequence of this co- lour, taste and shape, it too hastily pronounces, that this is, in fact, bread and wine. In the blessed sacrament, we may at all events securely depend on the sense of hearing ; which informs us by the word of God and the authority of his church, that what appears to be bread and wine in the eucharist, is in truth the body and blood of Christ. Faith comes by hearing, saith St Paul, and hearing by the word of Christ. (Rom. x. 17.) Another difficulty against the catholic doctrine of the real presence and ir.-nsubstantiation is, to conceive how the body and blood of Christ can be contained entire in so small a space as that which is occupied by the consecrated species ; nay, even in the smallest sensible particle of them. This to human concep- tion, doubties, is inexplicable ; but not impossible to Almighty Power, any more than for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle. With men this is impossible, says our blessed Redeemer, but not with God, for with God all things are possible. (Matth. xix. 26. Mark x. 27.) THE REAL PRESENCE OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST DEMONSTRATED FROM SCRIPTURE, AND THE UNANIMOUS TES- TIMONY OF THE ANCIENT FATHERS AND DOCTORS OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. The catholic church believes, that in the eucharist after the words of consecration, are truly, really, and substantially pre- sent the body and blood, together with the soul and divinity of Jesus Christ, under the outward forms or appearances of bread and wine ; and that, by virtue of our Saviour's words pro- nounced by the priest at the consecration, is effected a true and real change of one substance into another ; which we term transubstantiation. On the contrary, the more modern adver- saries of the catholic church, with the ancient Berengarians contend, that Christ's body and blood are not truly and really present in their own substance in the sacrament, but by faith only, and in figure ; or, according to some, with Berengarius originally, if they be there at all they are accompanied with u B E R the substance of bread and wine. What then did our Blessed Redeemer actually institute, and give to his apostles at the last supper ? For the sacrament which the faithful receive at this day, is the same which the apostles then received, as both ca- tholics and their adversaries allow. In the twenty -sixth chapter of St Matthew, we read thus WHiilst they were at supper, Jesus took bread) blessed it and brake it, and gave it to his disciples, saying 3 - this is my body : and taking the chalice he gave thanks^ and gave it to them, saying ; Drink ye all of this, for this is my blood of the New Testament, which shall be shed for many unto the remission of sins. St. Mark, c. xiv. gives our Saviour's words as follows : This is my body ; this is my blood of the New Testament, which shall be shed for many : And St. Luke, to the like import This is my body which is given for you , do this for a commemoration of me : this is the chalice of the New Testa- ment in my blood, which shall be shed for you. (c. xxii.) St Paul, in his first epistle to the Corinthians (c. xi.) agrees in substance with the evangelists : and what can possibly be more plain, and more expressive of the real presence and transubstantiation ? Certainly, had our Divine Redeemer intended to give only a mere figure, excluding the reality of his body and blood, this man- ner of expressing himself would have been exceedingly obscure, or rather downright absurd, as will presently appear. 1. That the expression is very obscure in the protestant or fi- gurative acceptation, is abundantly demonstrated from the ef- fect. For every individual Christian church throughout the world actually followed the contrary sense during the lapse of many ages, and constantly held that these words implied not zfgurative, but the real presence of the body and blood of Christ in this adora- ble sacrament. It is remarkable through the whole series of the gospels, that when our Saviour spoke in parables any thing ob- scure, he carefully explained his meaning to the apostles. When they were alone, he explained all things, says St Mark, (c. iv.) Now at the institution of the blessed sacrament every circum- stance required, that he should express himself in 'the most intel- ligible terms. For when, in fact, do all prudent persons endea- vour to explain their mind in the clearest manner possible, if not while they are issuing commands of the utmost impor- tance while they are treating with, and taking leave of their nearest and dearest friends ; and above all, while they are de- vising their last will and testament? All these circumstances concur in the institution of the most blessed sacrament. On this occasion our Lord Jesus commands that clean oblation to be made, which the prophet Malachi foretold would be offered to God in all places ; when he says Do this in remembrance of me, (Luke xxii.) He institutes a sacrament, the use of which is to be daily and perpetual in his church : He is taking leave of his friends; 1 will not now call you servants, saith he, but friends. B E R 155 (John xv.) Friends indeed, and confidential ministers, whom he had appointed to teach all nations his gospel and divine law. In a word, he is forming a treaty, a covenant, an alliance which is to endure to the end of time. Can any circumstances be conceived to exist, which require greater accuracy and per- spicuity of words ? It is observable, moreover, that when our blessed Saviour designed to confer any very signal favour upon his church, he usually foretold and promised it, that it might more easily find credit when accomplished. Thus, for instance, he pro- mised the sacrament of baptism, and the power of forgiving sins : thus he foretold his passion, his death, his resurrection : thus, in a word, he foretold and promised to his church this inestimable benefit of the holy eucharist. His words are these in the sixth chapter of St John : The bread 'which I will give is my flesh for the life of the world. TJie Jews, therefore, strove amongst themselves, saying: how can this man give us his Jlesh to eat ? Then Jesus said : verily, verily, I say unto you, unless you eat the Jlesh of the Son of Man, and drink his blood, you shall not have life in you. Whosoever eateth my Jlesh and drink- eth my blood, hath life everlasting, and I will raise him up at the last day , for my Jlesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed : He that eateth my Jlesh and. drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him. From those words of the Jews How can this man give us his flesh to eat it is evident they understood our Saviour's promise was to be fulfilled by giving them in reality his flesh and blood : and our Lord, instead of explaining, as- serts in still more positive terms, that except they eat his flesh and drink his blood, they shall not have life in them ; and that his flesh is meat indeed, and his blood is drink indeed. These words were spoken in the presence of his apostles ; so that when he said at his last supper This is my body which shall be given for you ; this is my blood which shall be shed for you : they could not reasonably understand it in any other sense, than as a realiza- tion of his promise ; namely, that it was his real flesh and blood, which he had declared, both to them and to the Jews, were meat and drink in reality. Again : woald our Redeemer, who came to die for all man- kind, and who commanded his followers to avoid with all possi- ble care the least scandal ; would He if he had spoken only of a figurative eating of his flesh and drinking of his blood, have ne- glected to explain himself, when lie saw not only the Jews, but even some of his disciples so far shocked at this his promise, as immediately to forsake him ? How much less when he fore- saw, that his whole visible church upon earth, would be in- volved, on this supposition, during the lapse of many ages, in so gross an error, and so serious an inconvenience ? This can- not be admitted on any prudential ground whatever. In vaia u 2 156 B E R would protestants allege, that it is a usual thing in scripture and common discourse, to give to the sign the name of the thing signified. For when a thing neither naturally represnts ano- ther, nor is known to be used as the representation ot another, it is contrary to all the laws of discourse, and highly absurd, to give it the name of what it is intended to signify, without first preparing the mind of the hearers so to understand it. This would be evidently the case in the present instance, as the fact alone of the whole church of Christ for ages being -led astray by the supposed omission, plainly demonstrates. But, may not our Saviour's words at the last supper signify, that his body and blood are given in and with the bread and wine, conformably to the opinion of Martin Luther and Beren- garius ? By no means ; for had our blessed Lord intended to give us his body and blood in and with the bread and wine, he would assuredly, have said Here is my body, in this is my blood, ra- ther than this is my body, this is my blood ; which words could not be verified without a substantial change of the sacramental elements into his body and blood. When our Redeemer chang- ed water into wine at the marriage feast of Cana, had he said this is wine ; would not these words evidently have implied a substantial change of what was in the vessels, into wine ? TJUe present case is exactly similar. Again : it is objected that St Paul terms the sacrament after consecration bread, (1 Cor. xi.) and consequently excludes all idea of a change. > This argument is but very weak and incon- clusive. First, because the scripture sometimes calls things after their change by the name which they had before ; though it positively affirms them to have been substantially changed. Thus, though the water was changed into wine at Cana, the evangelists calls it water made wine, (John ii. 9.) Thus again, the scripture tells us (Exod. v. ii.) that Aaron's and the magicians* rods were changed into serpents : yet it calls them rods even af- ter this change. Aaron's ROD devoured the magician's RODS. Frequently also, it gives a thing the name of what it resembles. For instance, angels are called men in St Mark xvi. St Luke xxiv. and in various other passages of holy writ ; because they appear- ed under the disguise of men. It ought not therefore to seem extraordinary, if St Paul calls the sacrament bread ; as it has the outward appearance of bread, and was bread in reality before the All-powerful hand of God had wrought the change. It remains now that we briefly examine the sentiments of the primitive fathers and doctors of the church on this important subject. In the second age St Ignatius the holy bishop of An- tioch, a disciple of the apostles who suffered martyrdom about the year 107, and certainly must be presumed to have understood their doctrine, in his epistle to the Christians of Smyrna calls the\ eueharist * the flesh of our Lord Jesus Christ, which suffered for ( B E R 157 our sins, and which the father raised by his bounty." In the same age St Justin Martyr, in his apology to the heathen em- peror for the Christian religion, affirms, " That as our Saviour Jesus Christ was himself the Word made flesh, and took for our salvation both flesh and blood ; so we are taught, that the eu- charist is the flesh and blood of the same Jesus incarnate." (Apol. 2 ad Antonin.) Certainly, no man in his senses would write thus to a heathen emperor, if he understood the words of Christ only in ajigurative sense. In the same age, St. Irencus, in his fifth book against Here- sies, speaking of the sacramental bread and wine, says : " By the word of God, they arc made the eucharist which is the bo- dy and blood of Christ." In the following age, St. Cyprian, in his sermon on the Lord's supper, says : " The bread which our Lord gave to his disciples, being changed, not in appear- ance, but in substance, by the oinnipotency of the Word, is made flesh." He also affirms, that in the eucharist " we eat the body of Christ, and drink his blood." (Lib. de Orat. Dom.) A little before this, the famous Origen reminds us, (Horn. 7, in Levit.) that *< in the old law the manna was a figurative food ; but now, the flesh of God the Son made man, is meat in reality ; since he himself cries out, My Jlesh is meat indeed" Tertullian, his contemporary, says : (1. 4. contr. Marcion.) " The bread which Christ took at his last supper, and distri- buted to his disciples, he changed into his body." In the fourth age, after St. Basil, St. Gregory Nazianzen, St, Ephrem, and St James of Nisibis, with many other Fathers eminent for learning and holiness of life, who all agree in the same sentiments, the great St Chrysostom delivers himself in the fol- lowing terms: " Let us on all occasions believe Almighty God ; nor contradict Him, though what He says seem contradictory to our reason and sense. His words cannot deceive us ; our senses are easily mistaken. His words never err ; our senses frequent- ly misguide us. Since, therefore, it is He who says This is my body, let us rest convinced it is so. He who did these things at his last supper, still continues to do the same : for our part, we act only as his ministers -, it is He that sanctifies ; it is He him- self that effects the change." (Horn. 83, in Matt.) How ma- ny now exclaim ; Oh, that I could see him in his own figure, or my thing about him ! Believe me, you do more than see his person ; you eat his sacred flesh, you receive him within your bosom. How pure ought not that tongue to be, which is purpled with his adorable blood !" (Horn. 87, p. 787. T. 7. Ed. Ben.) Can any thing be stronger, or more decisive in fa- vour of the cathoic doctrine ? St. Ambrose, another luminous doctor and father of the same age, writes thus : (lib. de his quag mysteriis initiantur, c. ix.) " Perhaps you will say I see quite another thing: how can 158 B E R ou assure me that I receive the body of Christ ?" To which :e answers: " If the words of Elias were powerful enough to command fire from heaven, shall not the words of Christ be able to change the nature of the elements ? You have read of the whole creation He said and they were made, he com- manded and they were created. Cannot then the word of Christ, which made out of nothing that which was not, change the things that are, into what they were not ?" In the same age, a little before SS Chrysostom and Ambrose, St Cyril of Jerusalem had said of the blessed eucharist : (Cat. Mys. 4.) " Do not consider it as mere bread and wine ; for now it is the body and blood of Christ, according to our Lord's own words." And again : " Judge not the thing, says he, by the taste .... knowing and holding for certain, that what we see is not bread, although it tastes like bread j but is the body of Christ." Could any catholic of the present times express his faith of transubstantiation more clearly ? St Jerom, St Augus- tine, St Paulinus, Leo the Great, and all the fathers of the church in every succeeding century, with one accord profess the same doctrine ; and where shall we find more able interpreters of the word of God, than they were ? From this unanimity of the fathers in each century we may fairly collect what was the doctrine of the church in their times ? and the church itself de- cided the question in the condemnation of Berengarius, the first that openly contested it. His error was proscribed and ana- thematized by no less than fourteen councils in divers parts of Christendom while he was still living. Their decisions were afterwards confirmed by the general councils of Lateran, Con- stance and Trent : Not to mention the unanimous consent of the Greeks, and all the oriental Christians of whatever denomi- nation, demonstrated in the clearest manner by the authors of the book entitled La Perpetuite de la Foi, confirmed by the authentic testimonies of their patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, abbots, &c. by the decrees of their synods against Cyril of Lu- car ; by the writings of their ancient and modern divines, and by all their liturgies ; and acknowledged by many protestant writers. Dr Philip Nichblai a protestant, in his first book of the kingdom of Christ, p. 22, writes thus: " Let my Christian readers be assured, that not only the churches of the Greeks, but also the Russians, and the Georgians, and the Armenians, and the Indians, and the Ethiopians, as many of them as be- lieve in Christ, hold the true and real presence of the body and blood of the Lord, &c." Now what can be a more convincing evidence of this doctrine having been handed down by tradi- tion from the apostles, than to see all descriptions of christians that have any pretensions to antiquity, with one accord profess- ing and upholding it ? BOG BERNARD of THURINGIA was a hermit of the tenth century. Towards the middle of this century he announced with great energy the approaching dissolution of the world. This he col- lected from the Apocalypse which says, that after a thousand years are elapsed the old serpent shall be let loose. This old ser- pent the hermit took to be antichrist. Consequently, as the term of one thousand years, mentioned in the Apocalypse, was nearly expired, his appearance could not be very distant ; and, of course, the final dissolution must be at hand. To make his conceit appear more plausible, he supported it by a very singular kind of argument which, however, seemed conclusive to the ma- jority of his audience. When the day of the annunciation of the blessed Virgin shall fall on Good Friday ; know for certain, ex- claims the hoary enthusiast, that the day of judgment is very near. In a word, he at length persuaded himself, and proclaimed aloud in his sermons and discourse that God had actually re- vealed to him the awful circumstance. A lively picture of that dreadful day ; the passage of the Apocalypse ; and, above all, that effrontery with which the impostor announced his pretend- ed revelation, alarmed the credulity of infinite numbers of all ranks of people. Even the ministers of religion gave into the general delusion, and by their sermons contributed to diffuse a universal panic. An eclipse of the sun which happened to take place, threw all into confusion. Multitudes of people fled for refuge to the rocks, and hid themselves in caverns. Nor were they altogether tranquillized by the return of light, till theolo- gians were engaged to show, that the coming of antichrist was yet very distant. At the commencement of the eleventh century the alarm completely ceased, when people saw the world continue to subsist as in the preceding ages ; and the hermit's prophecy was no longer current. BERYLLUS, bishop of Bostra in Arabia after having worthily governed his diocese for some years, fell into the dangerous er- ror that Jesus Christ had no existence before the incarnation ; imagining that he became God only at his temporal birth of the Virgin Mary. He added, that our blessed Redeemer was no otherwise to be esteemed God, but only in as much as the Father dwelt within him, as formerly he abode in a special manner with the prophets. The famous Origen was sent to Bostra to unde- ceive him; and, having entered into conversation with him, and learnt what were his sentiments from his own mouth, happily succeeded in reclaiming him from his errors, which Beryllus without hesitation instantly renounced. BLASTUS was a Jew who embraced the sect of the Valenti- nians, and to the system of Valentinus added some Jewish prac- tices, to which he still remained attached. Such, for instance, 160 B R O was the celebration of Easter on the fourteenth day of the moon. (Vide Autor. Append, apud Tert. de Praescrip. c. 53.) BOGOMILTANS a term signifying, in the Sclavonian tongue, solicitors of the divine mercy > and appropriated to certain secta- ries of Bulgaria, the followers of one Basil a physician, who in the reigri of Alexis Comnenus renewed the errors of the Pauli- cians. The inroads of barbarians, and the persecution of the Iconoclasts, had nearly extinguished learning throughout the empire of the Greeks. It had, however, begun to revive a little under Basil the Macedonian, Leo the philosopher, and his suc- cessors. But superstition and the love of the marvellous were still almost universally predominant. In these ages of ignorance and of childish credulity, some germs of the Paulician heresy not yet extinct, began insensibly to unfold, conjointly with the errors of the Messalians. Basil made up a compound of these errors ; selected twelve disciples, whom he stiled apostles ; and commissioned them to propagate his doctrine ; although with the utmost caution and reserve. He was advanced in years, of a modest countenance, and ha- bited like a monk. The emperor Alexis Comnenus signified a wish to see him ; affected a desire of becoming his disciple ; and thus engaged him to reveal to him without disguise the whole tenor of his impious doctrines. Alexis had concealed behind a curtain in the apartment where he gave him audience, one of his amanu- enses ; who took down in writing all that Basil said. The em- peror called an assembly of the senate, the military officers, the patriarch and the clergy ; and caused the paper which contained the obnoxious system, to be read in their presence. Basil did not disavow it. He offered to maintain whatever he had said, and declared his readiness to suffer the most cruel torments, and death itself, under the delusive expectation that the angels would protect him. Every effort to undeceive him was tried in vain ; and he was ultimately condemned to the stake. The emperor ratified the sentence; and, after fresh endeavours to reclaim him, an immense pile was constructed in the middle of the Hip- podrome ; and near to it was placed a cross. Basil had his choice ; but not less obstinately than impiously preferred the flames. The populace demanded aloud that all his sectarists should un- dergo the like chastisement. But Alexis was content to order them into custody ; where some renounced their errors, while others persisted to the end incorrigible. A professor of Wir- temberg published a history of these fanatics, in the year 1711. See also Baronius, Euthymius, Anna Comnena, &c. and the ar- ticles PAULICIANS and MESSALIANS. BROWNISTS a sect of presbyterians, the followers of one Brown. See PRESBYTERIANS. CAB KJl CABALISM a word derived from the Hebrew, signifying Tradition. The Cabalistic art consists in the supposed know- ledge and explanation of the essence and the operations of the Supreme Being, of spiritual powers, &c. &c. ; and in deter- mining their energies by symbolical figures, the arrangement of the alphabet, the combination of numbers, and the pretend- ed method of discovering the hidden <:ense of scripture by the decomposition of the letters of which it is composed. The Chaldees had retained the belief of a Supreme Being whom they conceived to be self-existent, and to have originally created, as also still to govern, the universal world. As they ac- knowledged this Supreme Being to be the very source of exist- ence and fecundity, they thought he was with respect to the uni- verse, much the same thing as the heat of the sun was in regard of our earth. Hence they compared the Divinity to a fire or principle of light. But their reason not suffering them to place God on the list of material beings, they considered this light as infinitely more resplendent, more active, and more penetrating than the light of the sun. Thus does human ingenuity and systematic pride attempt to substitute a wild imagination for the dictates of right reason. Having proceeded thus far in their investigations of the first cause of all things, the Chaldees pursued their fanciful theorisms, and deemed the creation of the universe to be a kind of emana- tion from this great principle of light. The various emanations of the primitive light, in proportion as they receded from their source had forfeited, they would have it, something of their ac- tivity ; and, by the progressive decrease of this activity, they had lost their original levity, had insensibly condensed themselves, or, if we may be allowed the expression had weighed each other down. Hence, they became material, and formed the different species of beings which we see contained within the range of nature. Thus, in the system of the Chaldees, the First Cause or the Supreme Being, was environed with light, the splendor and the purity of which is inconceivable. This luminous region is full, say they, of pure and most blissful intelligences. Next in order succeeds the corporeal world, or the empyreal heaven ; which is an immense space illumined by the light immediately emanating from the Supreme Being. It is full of a fire less pure by infinite degrees than the primitive light, although infinitely more subtile and more rarefied than any matter whatever. Under the empy- reum is the ethereal expanse, or another vast region in the heavens occupied by a fire still more dense than that of the em- 162 CAB pyreum, but which nevertheless receives its heat from the empyric element. Below the ether are situated the fixed stars, scattered through an immense plain, in which the denser particles of the ethereal fire have concurred to form these heavenly lumina- ries. The planetary world comes next in succession to the re- gion of the stars ; and this is the space in which are contained the sun, the moon and the planets, together with the lowest or- der of beings compounded of matter ; which matter not only is devoid of all activity, but even resists the motions and im- pressions of the light. In the system of emanations the luminous particles were spirits, the various orders of which inhabited the spaces extend- ing from the moon to the lightsome mansions of the Supreme In- telligence. The sublunary region which enlightens the earth, the Chaldean philosophers imagined to contain those spirits ; which being united to etherial bodies descended upon earth, and constituted the human species. Thus united agreeably to the will of the Supreme Being, with human bodies, they entered in- to other animal bodies when set at liberty by death. Conse- quently the Chaldees held the transmigration of souls. They conceived moreover, that the goodness of the Supreme Being in uniting these etherial spirits to human bodies, had consulted their felicity ; and that, as matter was totally incapable of giving mo- tion to itself, it was this same order of spirits that influence 1 and regulated the course of the sun ; fertilized the earth with season- able rains ; and were the authors of all the gifts of nature. They termed them the good genii. Other spirits which they considered as the authors of thunder and lightning, of fiery volcanos, earthquakes, storms and all disasters, they denomi- nated evil genii, and supposed them to be essentially malignant. To each of these two orders of spirits they ascribed a kind of hierarchy, and a certain gradation of jurisdiction and power. But why did not the Supreme Intelligence, essentially bene- ficent and good, at once crush to atoms that multitude of evil genii by the weight of his omnipotence ? Some there were, that deemed it below the dignity of the Supreme Being, personally to encounter these malicious spirits, and fancied he had laid this charge upon the good genii : others thought, that the evil genii, naturally depraved, were indestructible ; and that the Supreme Intelligence, equally unable to annihilate or to reclaim them, had hurled them down to the centre of the earth, and confined them to the sublunary world, where they exercised their inbred pro- pensity to evil ; and that, in order to protect mankind from ene- miesso dangerous, so numberless and so formidable, he had sent into the terrestrial world friendly spirits who incessantly de- fended men against the attacks of these material demons. To \ both they allotted names expressive of their different functions , and degrees of power. These names it was sufficient to pro- C A I 163 noimee, to evoke or chace them away, as circumstances should require. To find out the proper names of each genius, the Chaldees pretended, was the result of certain combinations of the letters of the alphabet, of which they were composed. The pronunciation of the magic name was a kind of prayer which the genius was unable to withstand ; and in this the origin of Caba- lism which ascribes to certain arbitrary and enigmatical terms the virtue of raising spirits, and of working miracles through their medium, seems chiefly to consist. Sometimes the same names were used as a sort of exorcism, in consequence of the idea that the evil genii were banished to the centre of the earth, and that they could do no harm but by eluding the vigilance of the good genii, and thus escaping from their prison to the atmosphere above. When they heard the name of those spirits whose office it was to keep them shut up in the centre of the earth, they fled away like criminals who had escaped from their dungeons, up- on the calling of the watch. They moreover fancied, that the name or the motto of the genii written or engraved upon medals, obliged those spirits not to quit the person that wore them ; and hence, it is probable, originated the superstitious use of talismans. Such was the philosophic system of the Chaldees ; and it was in general estimation throughout almost all the oriental nations, as is attested by every historical monument of their theology and philosophy. These all concur in justifying our conjectures of the origin of Cabalism ; although the Jews with whom the term it- self originated, were unacquainted with this pretended art, at least till the eighth or ninth century. (See Stanley's History of Oriental Philosophy, Bergeri Cabalismus, &c.) Inferior deities or genii made a part also of the Platonic sys- tem ; while the Pythagorean philosophy ascribed a pecular vir- tue and efficacy to certain numbers. The first philosophers that acquired any knowledge of Christianity, wished to reconcile the doctrines of the apostles with the Chaldaic, the Platonic and Pythagorean opinions, and with the tenets of Judaism ; and from this heterogeneous compound originated the Eons of the Valentinians, the pretended mysteries of the Gnostics, and the black art, which the greatest part of ancient heretics were not ashamed openly to profess. This accommodating passion per- petuated itself among the eclectic philosophers of the third and fourth age : it was renewed at the period when the Arabs in- troduced into Europe the philosophy of Pythagoras and Plato $ and even in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries there have been found some learned abettors of the idle reveries of the Jewish Cabalism. (Vide Scharmii Introduct. in dialectic. Caballaeorum.) CAINITES were fanatics of the second age, who had an ex- traordinary veneration for Cain and other miscreants represent- x 2 164 C A I ed in holy scripture as the most impious of men 5 for instance, Core, Judas the Iscariote, the Sodomites, &c. They were a branch of Gnostics who, to the most abandoned morals, added errors still more execrable and impious. Besides the Creator of the universe, for whom they professed the most frantic enmity, they worshipped an imaginary Principle, a Being of superior dignity, more wise and powerful than he. They pretended that Cain was son of this Supreme divinity, while Abel was only the offspring of the former, Judas they fancied to have been endowed with extraordinary knowledge and wisdom, and that his motive for betraying our Blessed Saviour to the Jews, was his foresight of the advantages which his death would procure for mankind. Accordingly their gratitude compelled them to express a due acknowledgement of the favor, and to offer Judas extraordinary honours. They had a gospel which they ascribed to him ; and from this circumstance they were also denominated Judaites. They rejected the Mosaic law, and the dogma of a future resurrection ; exhorted mankind to demolish as far as in them lay the works of the Creator, and to commit without re- morse all sorts of crimes ; maintaining the equally absurd and impious doctrine, that evil actions were conducive to salvation. They imagined angels to preside over sin, and to assist their votaries in committing it : hence they invoked them on such oc- casions, and paid to them a kind of homage. In a word, their perfection consisted in laying aside all sense of shame, and per- petrating without a blush the most dishonest actions. Most of their abominable tenets were contained in a book which they entitled the Ascension of St Paul ; in which under the guise of revelations to that apostle in his famous rapt to heaven, they taught their blasphemous impieties. In the days of Tertullian, a woman of the sect, named Quintilla, appeared in Africa, and perverted many. Her proselytes were called Quintillianists. It appears that this abandoned woman had, if possible, improved upon the infamies of the Cainites. We should with difficulty be induced to believe, that an en- tire sect of men could have proceeded to such an excess of men- tal depravity, were it not attested by the most respectable fathers of the church. We derive our narrative concerning them from St Ireneus, Tertullian, St Epiphanius, Theodoret arid St Augustine, who all agree in their account ; and the two first on the list were contemporary with these maniacs. The extravagances of fanatics of latter times help not a little to ac- credit those of ancient heretics. Hornbec (Controv. p. 390) instances a certain Anabaptist, whose ideas, with respect k> Judas, were similar to those of the Cainites. Hence we may infer, that when once the understanding is seduced by the cor- ruption of the heart, there is no error, no impiety so wicked \ and absurd, of which our perverse nature is not capable. C A L 165 CALIXTINS See HUSSITES. CALVINISM The doctrine of John Calvin, a famous reformer, born at Noyon in France in 1509, and deceased at Geneva in i 564, The better to form a correct idea of Calvinism, it will be of service to attend a little to the spirit of its author. In- structed by one of the emissaries whom Luther and his fellow- reformers had sent into France, he undertook to form a system of theology in unison with the opinions of his teachers a task which hitherto none of the innovating apostles had attempted. This, Calvin flattered himself he should accomplish by his book entitled Institutio Christiana, which appeared in print in 1536. In this work he lays down as an uncontrovertibje maxim, that the only rule of faith to a true believer, is Holy Scripture ; and that God himself reveals to him by a particular inspiration of the holy spirit, its truth and proper meaning. But how we are infallibly to distinguish between this pretended inspiration and the fanaticism of an impostor, he has not thought proper to acquaint us. Compelled to abandon his native country, he retired to Gene- va, where Farel and Viret had already introduced the principles of the German reformers. Here he quickly forced himself into no- tice by declaiming against a decree of the synod of Berne, which had presumed to new model the public liturgy. Doubtless Cal- vin thought himself more fully inspired than this reforming synod. Unfortunately, the synod thought otherwise ; and poor Calvin was once more obliged to retreat, though not long after, upon a favourable change of system at Geneva, he was recalled ; assumed a kind of absolute religious monarchy ; established a consistory ; regulated at pleasure the form of service, the rites to be observed in the celebration of the Lord's supper, &c. and invested his consistory with full powers to issue censures and excommunications. Thus this self-commissioned preacher, after inveighing with pious zeal against that authority which the pas- tors of the catholic church challenged as essential to their ministry, himseif usurped an authority a hundred times more absolute and tyrannical, arid forced the inspiration with which he had com- plimented each individual of the faithful respectfully to ac- quiesce. The translator of Mosheim, who pretends that Calvin sur- passed all the other reformers by his erudition and talents, is obliged to own that he pushed his temerity, his morose severity and turbulent disposition to still greater lengths. (Vol. 4, p. 91, note.) And what admirable qualities are these of an apostle ! But the consistency of protestants will easily excuse in Calvin and other sectarists of the age, on account, say they, of their su- perior merit and virtues, what in the Roman pontiffs they are pleased to ascribe to ambition and lawless despotism, unpardon- 166 C A L able in them, though never carried to half the excess. In what then, it may be asked, did the extraordinary virtues of this furi- ously crabbed reformer consist ? Was it, forsooth, in that chris- tian meekness and forbearance with which, impatient of control, he persecuted even unto death men who, in dissenting from him, thought themselves inspired like himself, and by his own princi- ples had a divine right to follow what appeared to them the dic- tates of the Holy Spirit ? But, in lieH of scripture and the pri- vate inspiration of each individual, Calvin found it more conve- nient now to substitute his own tyrannical authority as the sole rule of faith at Geneva ; and condemned to the flames poor Ser- vetus his fellow reformer, because he could not recognise in the Word of God the same sense and doctrines which he (Calvir) pre- tended to discern ; while at the same time he zealously declaimed against magistrates for prosecuting heretics in France. Nor has the Calvinism of latter times ceased to be practically inconsistent. It has always taught Holy Scripture to be the sole rule of faith, and that God enlighteneth every believer to dis- cover its true meaning ; also, that the sentiments of the fathers, the decrees of councils, the decisions of the church itself, are mere human authority to which no man is obliged to yield assent ; and still it has pot ceased, in flat contradiction to all these prin- ciples to hold synods, to draw up professions of faith, to con- demn reputed errors, and to excommunicate those that professed their adhesion to them. Thus has it treated the Socinians, the Anabaptists and Arminians ; who had all an equal title, even on Calvinistic grounds, to commence reformers, as the Calvinists themselves, or their master Calvin. A deist of our times who received his education in the very focus of Calvinism, with much energy and propriety charges the whole sect with this glarin^ contradiction. " Your history," says he, " is full of facts which prove you to have exercised an inquisition most intolerant and severe ; and that, instead of suffering the persecutions of others, the reformers soon became themselves relentless persecutors The pro- testant clergy arrogated to themselves the exclusive right of de- fining, regulating and pronouncing upon every thing : each one imperiously dictated to others his own peculiar fancies as a su- preme law. . . What man was ever more sarcastic, more im- perious, more positive, and more divinely infallible in his own conceit than Calvin ? The smallest opposition, the least objec- tion was enough in his estimation to devote the rash man that made it, to the stake : it was a work of Satan, and consigned him to damnation. Servetus was not the only person whose presumption in thinking otherwise than Calvin, cost him his life." ^ " Most of his fellow reformers," continues he, " were, like him, intolerant and violent ; all of them so much the more C A L criminal, in proportion as they were inconsistent ; that bigoted orthodoxy which they affected to maintain, was itself a heresy according to the principles of the sect." (Deuxieme Lettre ecrite de la Montaigne, p. 49, 50, 68. J A protestant must be blind indeed, to imagine that holy scripture is the only rule of his faith. Before he reads this divine book, a youth is already taught by the lessons in his ca- techism and those of his instructors to predetermine the scrip- tural meaning ; and this is the inspiration which conducts hint in the perusal of the sacred book. In fact, a Lutheran never fails to recognise in scripture the sentiments of Luther ; a So- cinian, those of Socinus ; a member of the church of England, the tenets of the Episcopalians ; just as a Presbyterian thinks he there recognises the doctrines of Calvin. This fundamental de- fect in the general system of the reformation is alone sufficient to point out its absurdity. It is hard to conceive what solid ans\ver Calvin and his col- leagues would have been able to return a well instructed catholic, that should have argued with them to the following effect : ' You pretend yourselves commissioned by Almighty God to reform the church, while, in reality, you have received your mission neither from any lawful pastor, nor from any Christian church whatever. Of course your mission must be extraordinary and miraculous. Make good your claim by miracle, as Moses, Jesus Christ and his apostles all have set you the example. Lu- ther and divers others declare themselves reformers as well as you : you do not coincide with them ; you teach in many in- stances a quite different doctrine; you censure and condemn each other. Which of you am I to believe in preference ? You propose to me the sacred scripture as the only rule of my faith ; but you refuse to acknowledge as scripture, many books which the catholic church assures me are such ; and how shall we decide this important point, which scripture itself leaves un- determined ? You present me with a French translation of the bible. Give me some secure pledge of the fidelity of your translation, of which I am not qualified myself to judge. You say, I must not listen to the authority of men ; you yourselves are mortal men ; consequently I must not yield obedience to your's, in any thing that you may please to tell me. As holy scripture is the sole rule of faith, it is needless for you to preach, or to expound the word of God at all. I can read as well as you ; it is my duty there to find what God reveals, and not your's to point it out. You promise me the inspiration of the Holy Ghost to instruct me in the true sense of scripture : very well ; this inspiration itself dictates to me, that you are preach- ing falsehood ; and that the catholic church alone is privileged to teach the truth." The reasoner with his arguments Calvin would quickly have 16$ C A L ordered to execution. " Such monsters" he says, " must fa choaked with fire and smoke, as was here done in the case of Mi- chael Servetus a Spaniard " (Calvin s Letter to Mons. du Poet.) The sanctity of Calvin's doctrine or of Calvinism, consists prin- cipally in the following heads. 1. Absolute predestination and reprobation, independent of the foreknowledge which God has of the good or evil works of each particular person, purely because it is his will, without the least regard to the merits or demerits of men ! 2. According to Calvin, God gives to the predestinate faith and justice inamissi- ble y and imputes not to them their sins ! 3. In consequence of original sin, the will of man is enfeebled to such a degree, that it is incapable not only of any good work meritorious of salva- tion, but of any action whatever, that is not vicious and imputable as sin ! 4. He teaches, that it is impossible for man to resist evil concupiscence, and that free-will consists barely in being ex- empt from coaction or force, and not from necessity ! 5. That we are justified by faith alone; consequently, that good works contribute nothing to salvation ; and that the sacraments have no other virtue but that of exciting our faith ! 6. That Jesus Christ is not really present in the sacrament of the eucharist, and that we therein receive him by faith only. He admits only two sacraments, Baptism and the Lord's Supper : all exterior wor- ship, and the entire discipline of the catholic church, he abso- lutely rejects. To perfect his new system of theology, Calvin ransacked the va- rious errors of almost every sect, ancient as well as modern ; those of the Predestinarians, the Donatists, the Iconoclasts ; those of Vigilantius, of Berengarius, the Albigenses, the Waldenses, the Beguardae, the Fratricelli, the Wicklefites, the Hussites ; and finally, those of Luther, and the Anabaptists. In reference to the blessed eucharist, he does not close in with Zuinglius who took it to be a mere figure of the body and blood of Jesus Christ : on the contrary, Calvin says we verily receive both the one and the other, yet by faith only ! Nor does he admit Lu- ther's scheme of impanation or the presence of the body and blood of Christ together with the bread and wine, any more than transubstantiation with the catholics. Behold here three different and materially discordant methods of explaining what Holy Scripture says regarding the blessed sacrament, devised by the three inspired chiefs of the reformation ! According to Zuinglius, the words of Jesus Christ this is my body mean only this is the sign of my body. Calvin maintains, that they import something more ; since Jesus Christ had promised to give us his flesh to eat. (John 6. 52.) Then, resumes Luther, the body of Jesus Christ is truly present together with the \ bread and wine. Not so, cries Calvin : for if we once admit a ; real presence, we must of neceisity admit the catholic transub- C A L 169 atantiation, and the sacrifice of the mass. How admirably do these divinely commissioned and divinely instructed gospelers accord in uniformity of doctrine ! If we compare what Calvin delivers upon presdestination, with what he says of the want of free-will in man, we shall ensily con- ceive that Bolsec had great reason to reproach him with making God the author of sin ; a blasphemy which, horrible as it is, is equally the crime of Luther. What alone, in the ideas of these two champions of protestantism, constitutes the difference between the reprobate and the elect, is simply this, that God does not impute their sins to the latter, but does so with regard to the former. Is it then consistent with the divine justice to impute to men, the sins which they have it no in their power to avoid ; or to damn some, and save others, precisely because it is his pleasure ? Calvin's abuse of several passages of scrip- ture, in order to establish this execrable doctrine, itself demon- grates the absurdity of the maxim that scripture alone is the rule of our belief. The inamissibility of justice, and the inutility of good works in order to salvation, taught by this reformer and by the Lu- theran divines, also involve the most pernicious consequences. They are diametrically opposite to the most formal testimonies of holy scripture, and solely calculated to excite in chriMians a senseless presumption, and a marked contempt for all the works of piety. That Calvin's doctrine relative to the euchtirist is ab- solutely unintelligible, even Mosheim and his translator are forced to acknowledge. The Calvinists themselves seem, in general, now aware of the inconvenience, or rather the ab- surdity of their master's system : hardly have they retained one single dogma in its original purity : some they have altered 5 others they have softened and found it necessary to modify. They have almost with one accord preferred the sentiment of Zuinglius respecting the Lord's supper ; and with him consider it merely as a figure. On predestination vast numbers have adopted the system of Arminius. (See his article.) Catholic controversialists have combated with success the various tenets of Calvinism, even in its most palliated form. They have demonstrated the formal opposition of its doctrines to scriptural authority, to the most ancient and perpetual tra- dition of the church, and to the truths which every Christian, as such, is bound to admit. Calvin and his associates accused the Roman church of adulterating the religion established by Jesus Christ, and taught by his apostles. The reverse has been proved a thousand times in the fullest evidence. They them- selves were the innovators : not one solitary sect throughout the universe before the pretended reform professed Calvinism, or the religion of protestants ; they are alike detested and proscribed, in societies which have been separated from the Y 170 C A L church of Rome more than fourteen hundred years. Deism and Socinianism are, exclusively, their undoubted offspring. (See Socinianism.) Calvinism from its first establishment at Geneva, has there constantly maintained its ground : and, of the thirteen Swiss can- tons, six profess the Calvinistic doctrine. Till the year 1572 it was the dominant religion in Holland ; since that period, the republic through motives of policy has tolerated all persuasions, although rigid Calvinism is still the established religion of the state. In England it has been gradually upon the decline ever since the reign of Elizabeth, notwithstanding the lawless efforts of the Puritans or Presbyterians to promote its interests. When the church of England had discarded in great measure its origi- nal fanaticism, the Calvinists were classed among the non-con- formists, and were simply tolerated. In Scotland and in Prus- sia Calvinism is yet in all its purity. In certain districts of Ger- many it is mixed with Lutheranism, and was tolerated in France till the revocation of the edict of Nantes by order of Lewis XIV. Doubtless it will be asked, how a system so devoid of reason, a system calculated to make the most virtuous minds despair, and to confirm sinners in their wicked course; to hold up the Deity as a tyrant, rather than an amiable master ; has, neverthe- less, found its votaries almost in every department throughout Europe. What we are about to say in order to account for this phenomenon in France, may be remarked, with due pro- portion, of the other European districts. At the commence- ment of the sixteenth century a reform of morals, and, in some instances, of discipline too, was certainly much wanted. The councils of Constance and Basle had laboured hard to procure it, as well in regard of the head, as of the members of the church 5 but, unfortunately, without the desired success. With the ac- tual state of things, all were discontent, and every circumstance announced an approaching revolution. At the close of the fifteenth century, Alexander VI. had scan- dalized the church by his infamous excesses and ambition. Hig successor Julius II. more intent upon warfare and conquest than attentive to the government of the faithful, was a mortal enemy to France, and was hated in proportion. Leo X. who succeeded him, bad not too much pontifical virtue, and but little zeal for reform. In a word, it was easy to foresee that the general dis- content, and the abuses of the times, would quickly pccasion a revolt against the papal authority itself. Hence it is not surprising, that the emissaries of Luther and his fellow reformers found every where disciples eager of seduc- tion. To declaim immoderately against the pope, against the clergy both secular and regular ; and tq censure with much ] heat and pretended zeal religious abuses was an expedient C A L 171 vhich never failed to obtain attention. The practice of confes- sion, fasting, works of satisfaction ; the observance of vows, at- tendance at the public service, and the maintenance of the mi- nisters ot religion were now become a hardship no longer to be borne ; and an opportunity now presented itself of throwing off the yoke. The poison spread so rapidly among all ranks and conditions of'life, that those whom it had tainted were themselves astonished at their numbers. The books of Luther, Melanc- thon, Carlostadius and Zuinglius, and those of other reformers, lighted up the torch of fanaticism throughout the kingdom. It mattered little what principles were embraced, provided a change of religion were effected. Calvin's famous work determined the choice in favor of Calvinism. The disaffection of the people towards the actual govern- ment in France, had not been less favorable to the revolution in question than were the abuses in the ecclesiastical polity, Francis II. a feeble and inactive prince, left the administration of affairs to the Duke of Guise. The grandees jealous of this rival authority, espoused in opposition the Calvinistic cause, and iormed the conspiracy of Amboise in concert with that party ; which, though eventually defeated, did not fail to raise more ene- mies to government by 'the .punishment itself of the conspirators, and thus to hatch new projects of revolt. : Upon the accession of Charles IX. to the throne, it was his wish to reconcile the two parties ; and with this view he accord- ed a general amnesty for the past. But an unfortunate though accidental tumult at Vassi, in which several Calvinists lost their lives, was made the pretext of a civil war 5 and it was prosecut- ed by both parties with all the fury that fanaticism could in- spire ; till at length the protestants dictated to their lawful sove- reign the terms of peace. A king thus reduced to treat with his own rebel subjects, does not easily pardon the affront j and Charles IX. conceived the rueful project of ridding himself by assassination of the Huguenot chiefs. The populace thus habi- tuated to carnage, stopt not here, but proceeded in the work of blood till some thousands had been immolated to their fury. This nefarious act of treachery was followed by another civil war ; which Henry III. at length terminated by a treaty still more favourable than the former to the cause of Calvinism. The dis- contented catholics, in their turn, formed a league which they very improperly denominated sacred ; and now became as un- tractable as the Huguenots themselves. Henry IV. who had been educated in the principles of the reformation, after a long and doubtful contest with the Leaguers, was at length univer*. sally acknowledged as lawful sovereign, and granted to the Cal- vinists a new edict of pacification similar to the preceding ones, termed the pacification of Nantes. In the reign of Lewis XIIL the protestants again flew to arms ; but were unsuccessful, and y 2 172 C A L beheld their places of security ceded to them by Henry IV. dis- mantled and in ruins. Lewis XIV. more' puissant and despotic than his predecessors, revoked the edict of Nantes in 1685 ; and, from that epoch down to the late revolution, the Calvinists have not been allowed the public exercise of their religion. This narrative, short and uncircumstantial as it is, may suffice to give a tolerable idea of the lamentable evils which a pre- tended reform of the catholic religion caused to France ; a reform which, far from purifying faith and morals, has revived, as we have already noticed, a multitude of erroneous doctrines proscribed in the different ages of the church ; a reform whose principles overturn the very basis of morality centered in the liberty of man ; throw tender consciences into despair, and the wicked into a fatal security ; do away every motive of practical virtue, and from their very birth, nave inspired their fanatic votaries with a sovereign contempt, alike of civil and ecclesiastic subordination, Recovered at length from their ancient bigotry, the bulk of Calvinistic doctors easily admit, that the Romish church which they thought proper to abandon, holds no funda- mental error, either in its doctrine, its morality, or its form of worship ; and that a good catholic may work out his salvation in the profession of his own religion. Why then, may we be allowed to ask, was all Europe involved during the lapse of more than an entire century in anarchy and disorder, for its destruction and the establishment of Calvinism in its place ? The tumult and confusion consequent upon its introduction into France, (and the same may be generally asserted with truth in regard of Other nations) are fairly deducible from the avowed maxims of the chief reformers. In 1 520, before any edict had been issued against Luther, he asserted in his book on Christian Liberty^ that the Christian owes subjection to no man ; and inveighed in terms of the utmost virulence and disrespect against all crowned heads and sovereigns indiscriminately. This was a prelude to the wars of the conquering Anabaptists. In his public Theses he maintained it to be a sacred duty to dethrone alike, both popes and emperors who should espouse their cause. In his treatise, On the Common Treasury, he countenanced the rifling of churches, of monasteries, and of bishoprics ; and deemed it in the ordinary course of things that the gospel should occasion tumult, and be ushered in with blood. Such was the spirit which accompanied his turbulent emissaries into France. Calvin inculcated in his writings the charitable task of exter* minating the bigoted miscreants, as he termed them, who should dare to oppose the reformation. Lettres de Calvin a Mons. du Poet et Fidelis Expositio, &c. Ought any govern- ment whatever to extend the benefit of religious toleration to such mutinous aud violent characters as these ? Their sectarists were \, faithful imitators of their masters. Bayle, who lived in the midst C A L 17* of Calvinists, and was perfectly acquainted with their character, in his Avis aux Refugies, in 1690, reproaches them with having carried the licentiousness of envenomed satire to an excess here- tofore without example ; with having from their very birth dis- seminated over France defamatory libels, a species of composi- tion till then almost entirely unknown in that extensive kingdom. He reminds them of the edicts which their extreme audacity had extorted from the magistrates against them, in order to repress the unprincipled malignity with which their frantic mi- nisters with the bible in their hand were wont to calumniate the living and the dead. This their unchristian demeanour he contrasts with that moderation and edifying patience which the catholics in England under similar, though much more try- ing circumstances, had exhibited to the admiration of all Christendom. " There is no barrier of public tranquillity," continues Bayle, " which you have not burst in sunder ; no tye calculated to ensure obedience to the legislature, which you have not dis~ solved Thus have you verified the apprehensions conceived of you at your first appearance, and have fully justified the re- maVk that whoever disregards the authority of the church, will soon renounce submission to the civil powers ; and after equali- zing the pastors with their flock, will presently disclaim all su- periority of the magistrate over private individuals." In a word, this deistical writer, whom no one will suspect of partiality to the church of Rome, makes it appear, that even the heathens taught a doctrine more pure than was their's, regarding obedi- ence due to the laws of our country ; and he refutes with much energy and argument, the flimsy apologies by which they sought to palliate their unwarrantable propensity to rebellion. He had already shewn (response a la lettre d'un refugiej that the Cal- vinists were, and always had been, much more intolerant than the catholics, a fact which they themselves had proved both by their intemperate writings and their conduct ; and that it is an invariable principle with them, that no king has a right to reign who is not strictly orthodox in their own distorted sense of the word. He tells them that they themselves had compelled Lewis XIV. to revoke the edict of Nantes, .and that in so doing, at the very most he had only followed the example of the states of Holland, who were in the habit of violating every treaty en- tered into with catholics. He had demonstrated, that in every protestant country the law was more intolerant and severe against Catholicism, than were those of France against the Cal- vinists. Their lamentations upon the pretended persecution raised against them, he deems ridiculous; and he declares to them, that their demeanour is a complete justification of that severity, with which they have been treated. (CEuvres de Bayle, torn. 2, p. 544.) 174 CAP With respect to the doctrines which Calvin disapproves, they had already been denied and combated by a multitude of discor- dant sects. These sects had, in their turn, been all condemned in proportion as they attracted notice. Their errors, however, had been transmitted down to the sixteenth century, either by the unconnected remnants of the sects themselves, or through the medium of church history. Those of the Domitists, of the Predestinarians, of Vigilantius, Berengarius and the Iconoclasts, &c. reappeared in the Albigenses, the Valdenses, the Beguardse, the Fratricelli, in Wicklef ; Huss and the brethren of Bohemia ; and finally in Luther, the Anabaptists, Carlostadius, Zuinglius, &c. ; great part of them Calvin adopted and modelled into his own not less heterodox system of religion, the various articles of which we have refuted under the heads of REFORMATION, LU- THER, ICONOCLASTS, BERENGARIUS, VIGILANTIUS, &c. &c. CAP-MEN so called from their wearing a white cap, to which they attached a small plate of lead as the distinctive badge of their association, the purport of which was, they said, to com- pel those at war to live in peace. With this view they formed a schism both in civil and religious matters, and separated from all society with other men. The first author of this sect was a certain visionary, who about the year 1186 pretended, that the blessed Virgin had appeared to him, and had shown him her image together with that of her Divine Son on which were in- scribed the following words, Lamb of God who takest away the sins of the world, grant us peace : that she had commanded him tp form an association, whose members should always wear the image and a white cap the symbol of peace and of innocence ; should oblige themselves by oath to keep peace with one another, and force their neighbours to do the same. . The general discontent occasioned by the endless divisions, in- testine broils and universal anarchy of this unhappy age, helped to keep in countenance this humorous conceit of the Cap-men. They did not fail to meet with patrons, and every where gained proselytes to the cause, particularly in the provinces of Burgundy and Berry. Unfortunately, these pacific brethren, to propagate the work of peace, began by making war, and maintained them- selves by pillaging those that hesitated to join their party. The bishops and nobility, compelled to oppose force with force, quick- ly repressed the fanatical banditti. But their spirit of insubordi- nation and revolt was soon revived in the Stadhingi, the Circum- ceUions, the Albigenses, the Valdenses ; who were guilty of the like and worse disorders. In the succeeding century, there ap- peared in England Cap-men of a different species : they were the sectaries of Wicklef, who made it a matter of scruple and very conscientiously refused, to uncover their heads in presence of the most holy sacrament.- These enthusiastics may be consi- C A .,". 175 dered as the predecessors of Georg^ Fox, and his disciples called Quakers. CARPOCRATIANS the disciples of Carpocrates, a pretended convert and an ignorant philosopher of Alexandria in the second age. His morals were licentious ; and he fell into the same er- rors with Basilides and Saturninus, who were nearly his contem- poraries ; and also added other strange ideas of his own. He and his adherents abandoned themselves to every kind of de- bauchery and excess ; reprobated fasting and mortification, and sought in all things the gratification of their lawless passions. The honesty or dishonesty, innocence or criminality of an action, consisted, according to these immoral casuists, merely in the ima- gination. Carpocrates had a son a youth of extraordinary parts called Epiphanius. He wrote in justification of his father's principles, and soon became the idol of the sect. Dying at the age of seventeen he was worshipped as a god, and had a temple erected to him at Same, a town of Cephalonia ; where the Cephalonians assembled every first day in the month to celebrate the feast of his apotheosis. They offered sacrifice to this new divinity, in- itituted rejoicing days, arid chaunted hymns to his honor. The Carpocratians regarded Jesus Christ simply as a human being, although more perfect than the rest of his fellow mortals ; believed him to be the son of Joseph and Mary, and acknow- ledged his miracles, and the reality of his sufferings and death. Nor were they accused of denying his resurrection, but only that of other men at the last day ; and of affirming that only the soul of Jesus Christ ascended into heaven. Some of these sectaries, however, affected to esteem themselves equal, nay even superior to Christ in miracles and virtue; and, to impose upon the ignorant they practised magic, a thing very common with the pretended philosophers of those days. As the summit of their perfection was the very depth of vice, we may give them credit for their superior virtue, too. Such is the edifying portrait of these ancient heretics drawn by St Ireneus, (1. 1, c. 24,) than whom no one could be better qualified to give a correct account, contemporary as he was with the sect itself. The rest of the fathers represent them in the same light. The pagans, unable to discriminate between true and false chris- tians, attributed to the whole body the disorders of a few fana- tics, and the magical collusions employed by the latter, discre- dited in their eyes the genuine miracles wrought by the apostles and their disciples. The fathers of the church remarked this in- convenience. (Epiph. Haer, 34, &c.) CATHARI or PURITANS this name was assumed by the Mon- tanists, the Manichees, the Novatians, the Albigenses, and final- '- A T ly, in England by the Presbyterians. It is generally under tha mask of virtue and.^ pretended reform, that innovators seduce the simple* and procure patronage. But an affected regularity which originates from a spirit of contumacy and revolt, is com- monly of short duration, and often only an artifice to cover real disorders. When once they become the reigning sect, they as- sume quite a different character, and show what they really are, without disguise. So many examples of this kind of hypocrisy a thousand times renewed from the infancy of the church, ought, one would think, effectually to undeceive mankind. But, unfor- tunately, they are ever ready to take the bait anew. (Bergier Diction. Theol.) CATHOLICS are all those Christians of whatever nation or description, who live in communion with the see of Rome. The occasional eptihet Roman is totally superfluous, as no denomi- nation of Christians ever went by the name of catholics but them- selves alone. Far, however, from being a discredit to them ; was not St Paul himself a Roman catholic when he wrote his epistle to the Romans^ and commended their faith as already celebrated through every part of the globe where the gospel had yet been announced ? St Ireneus, before the year 200, calls the Roman the " greatest and the most ancient church, which is known to all, founded at Rome by the two most glorious apos- tles Peter and Paul: a church," says he, " which retains the tradition received from them, and derived through a succession of bishops down to us. Showing which," continues this learned and primitive father, " we confound all that out of self-conceit, love of applause, blindness or certain false pretences, embrace unorthodox opinions. For, to this church alone, on account of its higher presidentship, it is necessary all other churches, that is, the faithful in every place, should have recourse. In this church the tradition of the apostles is faithfully preserved. . . By following this tradition, many barbarous nations profess the faith without: the use of the written word. These," says he, " would stop their ears against the blasphemies of sectarians, who have nothing but the novelty of their doctrine to recom- mend them. For the Valentinians were not before Valentinus, nor the Marcionites before Marcion, &c. All these arose much too late." And will not the argument apply with redoubled force against the reformers of these latter times ? If Marciou and Valentinus, who appeared so early as the second age, were exccpted against by St Ireneus as the teachers of new doctrines, xyhat must be said of those who did not appear before the six- teenth, seventeenth, or even eighteenth centuries ? Whereas, the claim of catholics to antiquity can never be contested. The Douatists indeed, who separated from the catholic church at the \ Commencement of the fourth age, like its adversaries of the CAT 177 present day, maintained, that it had ceased to be the church of Christ. But the great St Augustine demonstrated with invin- cible force the unreasonableness of their exceptions, and proved against them and against modern reformists, that the church is composed of both good and bad ; but that the good are not to be found out of its pale. He allows indeed, those to be bre- thren in the eyes of God, who are of the true church in the sin- cere desire of their hearts, and use their best endeavours to dis- cover it, when deprived of its external communion merely by the circumstance of invincible or inculpable ignorance, though God alone must be the judge of this interior disposition ; while the church considers exterior acts or circumstances as the direct ob- ject of her laws of discipline. This maxim St Augustine clearly teaches in his letter to Glorius, Eleusius and other Donatists, written about the year 398 ; where he says : " They who defend their opinion, though false and perverse in itself, yet with no ob- stinate malice, as having received it from their parents ; and dili- gently seek the truth in readiness of heart to be reclaimed when they have found it, are by no means to be ranked with heretics." (Ep. 43. ol. 162. T. 2. p. 88.) Did but our pro- tcstant brethren reflect, that this is precisely the opinion of ca- tholic divines at the present day, they would not charge them with the want of charity in maintaining the doctrine of what is called exclusive salvation. For did not St Paul maintain this doctrine, when in the list of evil works which exclude their actors from the kingdom of heaven, he numbered heresies and sects ? And will any one accuse him of uncharitableness in so doing ? Roman catholics therefore, we assert, are scriptural catholics, and belong exclusively to that true church which all Christians pro- less with their lips, as often as they recite their creed : / believe the holy catholic church : Catholic in the commission addressed to her by Christ in the persons of his apostles and their success- ors in the ministry, with a promise of his personal assistance till the end of time. " Go teach all nations . . saith he, and behold I am with you all days even to the consummation of the world." Holy^ if not in all her members, at least in her doctrine and mo- rality, by which thousands of her children actually do attain to an eminent degree of holiness ; and all might do so, were they obedient to her laws. Thus much evidently, oiir common creed insinuates ; and nothing short of this can verity its import. Is it not an insult to religion and a libel upon common sense with Luther and the book of Homilies to insist, that for the long lapse of eight hundred years and more before the times of this reformer, the church of God was buried in idolatry \ and that all its members from the throne to the dunghill were involved, without exception, in the horrid guilt of so damnable a prevari- cation ? What then became of the promised aid and presence of Divine Redeemer and his Holy Spirit to ^uide its pastors 178 CAT into all truth ? The church of God, the pillar of truth uphold- ing the most execrable falsehoods and authorising practices the most impious and anti-christian ! Oh ! strange and worse than fanatic impudence ! Were there nothing but this wild sentiment alone in the blasphemous effusions of Luther's pen, this were alone sufficient, completely to discredit in the eyes of good sense, his pretended mission to reform the Christian world. From this one instance the intelligent reader will appreciate that authority > which stigmatizes the catholic for practices held by him in sove- reign abhorrence, and for wicked doctrines a thousand times with the most solemn asseveration disavowed. See under the various articles LUTHER, WICKLEF, &c. &c., the several controverted points of catholic discipline and dogmas of religious faith, vindi- cated from the odious and groundless aspersions of our much prejudiced and much misguided brethren. ^ Catholics, moreover, have the advantage of all other Chris- tian societies in point of number. They are in Europe alone com- puted to amount to near one hundred millions of souls. Conse- quently, in Europe alone they vastly outnumber the whole col- lective body of the reformed, with all their multifarious and discordant branches, divisions and subdivisions of Lutherans, Luthero-Calvinists, Calvinists, Calvino-Lutherans, Anabaptists, Socinians of five hundred different descriptions, Presbyterians, Brownists, Puritans, Independents, Fifth Monarchy-men, Church of England-men, Quakers, Methodists, Swedenburgians, and the Lord knows what countless sects of infatuated enthusiasts as much at variance among themselves, as they all are with the catholic church. Without speaking of Italy, Spain, Germany, Poland, &c. or of past ages, when England, Scotland, and the other nations now protestant, together with those vast regions of Africa and Asia that are now Mahometan, professed the ca- tholic religion ; down to the late revolution, there were more men of learning, and more universities in France alone, than in all the protestant dominions put together. Hence, as Dr Gibson rightly observes, in his conference with the late Honor- able Edmund Burkeif in any single instance the opinion of mankind should have its weight, it preponderates in favour of the catholic religion; this " having had and still having the far greatest number of supporters of all ranks and denominations, of bishops, clergymen, kings, and parliaments, &c. ; and as it is agreed on all hands, that only one religion is right in itself, it being repugnant that God should reveal opposite truths or contradictions, it is plain as demonstration on what side the balance inclines. The great St Augustine assigning his reasons for adhering to the catholic church, expresses himself in the manner following : Many motives, says he, keep me in the\ v bosom of the catholic church ; the general consent of nations ' and people ; an authority grounded upon miracles, upheld by CAT 179 hope, perfected with charity, and confirmed by antiquity ; the succession of bishops from St Peter to our time ; and the name of catholic / a name so peculiar to the true church, that though all sectaries denominate themselves catholics, yet when you ask in any country whatever where catholics meet, they have not the assurance to point to the places where themselves assemble." (L. cont. Ep. Fundamenti, c. 5.) The same in- comparable doctor of the church did not hesitate to say : " I would not believe the gospel itself, did not the authority of the church move me to it ;" and with reason too ; for how should we know infallibly what is gospel, if the church had not as- certained the important query ? In his book, On the Advantage of Believing, he says : " Why shall we feel any difficulty in throwing ourselves upon the authority of the catholic church, which always has maintained herself by the succession of bishops in the apostolical sees, in spite of all the attempts of heretics whom she condemned ; by the faith of the people ; by the decision of councils, and by the authority of miracles ? It is the proof either of great impiety or extreme arrogance not to ac- knowledge Her doctrine for a rule of Christian faith." Hence it is not through disaffection ; but through a sense of the su- perior duty which they owe to God, and to the church esta- blished by Him; a church whose faith has been professed through a long-continued series of ages by councils, parlia- ments and sovereigns, and in a word by the great majority of Christians ; that catholics cannot conscientiously embrace a different religion. " Here are fixed the boundaries of the so much boasted liberty of conscience : it cannot claim a right of superseding the repeated and uninterrupted decisions of this great majority, of this collection of the discernment, learning and virtue of all the most splendid ornaments of every Christian nation. But if any," continues Dr Gibson, " will be pre- sumptuous, and pretend to a further claim of individual sense and acuteness, and refuse a like liberty to catholics ; such, if consistent even with themselves, must admit that liberty of conscience is an empty sound, and fictitious pretext of self- creating superiority, repugnant to common reflection and the general method of deciding on other concerns ; much more so on revelation, which comes by hearing that which has been heard or seen ; not by opposition to the testimony of general or catholic acceptation. This it would be as absurd to compel a person to reject, as it would be to punish one who did not know the alphabet, for not professing the knowledge of lan- guages. Much is said against forcing the conscience of one ex- alted individual : is it then more reasonable to compel, or to im- pose restraints upon many millions who are united to the great body of Christians of the present and all preceding ages, and by such compulsion force the unlearned to prefer their own igno Z 2 rso CAT ranee and stupidity to the decisions of the most general and en- lightened councils of whole Christendom ? Why should a sin- gle individual be constrained to protest and even swear, in any case, against such authoritative decisions ? If so, may we not conclude that the supposed liberality, and the boasted liberty of conscience, of this nation consists! in despising, protesting and swearing against the judgment of the universal church, and even of its own progenitors, who all agreed in the same be- lief ! Are these extraordinary protests may we ask supposed to be the result of any solid investigation of motives of credibility, or the reverse? or are they not rash, at the best, and bi- goted in the extreme; contrived originally to answer some political or sinister view, but at present unnecessary for any purpose, and tormenting to the mind of the sincere. For how can peace be found in such a dissent from the general belief in the most important affair of man ? Is it possible to conceive, that a religious and thinking mind should not experience most ex- cruciating torment, at the idea of abjuring the highest authority upon earth ; an authority which God has sanctioned by the most credible promises of support : and, by such a deed of acting as if there were no revelation at all as if no Redeemer had ever appeared, or spoken, or given law to man !" The leading articles of catholic faith are contained in the creed promulgated by Pope Pius IV. in 1564, the year after the close of the council of Trent, and agreeably to what the council had suggested. It goes under the name of Pius, and is subscribed by catholics on several important occasions ; it runs thus : I, N. N. with a firm faith do believe and profess all and everyone of those things contained in that creed, of w,hich the holy Roman church makes use. To wit ,- I believe in one God the Father Almighty, Maker of Heaven and Earth, of all things visible and invisible : and in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, and born of the Father before all ages : God of God ; Light of Light ; true God of true God : begotten, not made ; consubstantial with the Father by whom all things were made. Who for us men, and for our salvation, came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary, and was made man: was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate, suffered and was buried : and the third day he rose again, according to the scriptures. He ascended into heaven ; sitteth at the right hand of the Father, and is to come again with glory to judge the living and the dead : of whose kingdom there shall be no end. And in the Holy Ghost the Lord and Giver of life, who proceedeth from the Father and the Son ; who together with the Father and the Son is adored and glorified ; who spoke by the prophets : and one holy, ca- tholic and apostolic church. I confess one Baptism for the re- CAT 181 mission of sins ; and I look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come. Amen. I most stedfastly admit and embrace the apostolical and eccle- siastical traditions, and all other observances and constitutions of the church. I also admit the Holy Scriptures according as our holy mother the church understands, and has always understood them j to which it belongs to judge of the true sense and inter- pretation of the Scriptures : neither will I ever take and inter- pret them otherwise than agreeably to the unanimous consent of the Fathers. I also profess, that there are truly and properly seven sacra ments of the new law, instituted by Jesus Christ our Lord, and necessary for the salvation of mankind, though not all for each one individually : namely, Baptism, Confirmation, the Eucha- rist, Penance, the Extreme Unction, Order and Matrimony : and that they confer grace ; and that of these, Baptism, Confir- mation and Order, cannot be reiterated without sacrilege. I also receive and admit the received and approved ceremo- nies of the catholic church, used in the solemn administration of the aforesaid sacraments. All and every one of the things defined and declared in the holy council of Trent, concerning Original Sin and Justification, I embrace and receive. I profess likewise, that in the Mass is offered to God, a true, proper and propitiatory sacrifice for the living and the dead. And that in the most holy sacrament of the Eucharist, there is truly, really and substantially the body and blood, together with the soul and divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ : and that there is made a conversion of the whole substance of the bread into the body, and of the whole substance of the wine into, the blood ; which conversion the catholic church calls transubstantiation. I also confess that under either kind alone, Christ is received whole and entire, and a true sacrament. I constantly hold that there is a Purgatory (or a temporary place of suffering after death) : and that the souls therein de- tained are helped by the suffrages of the faithful. Likewise, that the saints reigning together with Christ, are to be honored and invoked ; that they offer prayers to God in our behalf, and that their relics are to be had in veneration. I most firmly do maintain, that the images of Christ, of the ever- Virgin mother of God, and also of other saints, ought to be had and retained ; and that due honor and veneration is to be given them. Also I affirm, that the power of indulgences was left by Christ in the church ; and that the use of them is most whole- some to Christian people. The holy, catholic, apostolic Roman church I acknowledge for tlie mother and mistress of all churches ; and I promise true CAT obedience (in matters of religion) to the bishop of Rome, as successor to St Peter, prince of the apostles, and vicar of Jesus Christ. I likewise undoubtedly receive and profess all other things delivered, defined and declared by the sacred canons and gene- ral councils, and particularly by the holy council of Trent : and I condemn, reject and anathematize all things contrary thereto, and all heresies which the church hath condemned, rejected and anathematized. I. N. N. do at this present freely profess, and sincerely hold this, true catholic faith, without which (at least in desire and the sincere disposition of the heart) no one can be saved : and I promise most constantly to retain and confess the same entire and inviolate with God's assistance to the end of my life. The rule of catholic faith is all that, and that only, which God hath revealed, and the catholic church proposes to the belief of all. Catholic faith concerning justification through Christ, and the merit of good works, teacheth 1. That when man has sinned, the remission or pardon of sin is not attainable by him, otherwise than in and by the merits of the sufferings and death of Jesus Christ, who freely purchased our redemption. II. That it is only through the same merits of Jesus Christ, that the just man can obtain either an increase of holiness in this life, or eternal happiness in the next. III. That the good works of the just man proceeding from grace and charity, are so far acceptable to God, through his goodness and his sacred promises, as to be truly deserving of an eternal reward : " God crowning his own gifts, when he crowns the good works of his servants." On faith in Christ, the catholic church maintains that the merits of Jesus Christ, though infinite in themselves, are not applied to us, otherwise than by a right faith in him. This faith is one, entire, and conformable to its object ; which object is divine revelation, that is the truths taught by Christ 5 and to that revelation, or to those truths, faith gives an undoubt- ing assent. On the Divine Revelation the catholic maxim is that in it are contained many mysterious doctrines, surpassing the natural reach of the human understanding : for which reason it became the wisdom and goodness of God to provide some way or means, whereby man might be enabled to learn what those mysterious doctrines were. II. That the way or means to arrive at the knowledge of these divine truths, is attention and submission to the voice of the legitimate pastors of the church established by Christ for the instruction of all the faithful ; spread for that end, in a greater or a less degree, through the remotest regions of the C A T 103 earth ; visibly continued in the succession of pastors and people through all ages. Whence the marks of this church are uni- ty, visibility, indefectibility ; uninterrupted succession from the apostles ; universality or catholicity, and sanctity. III. That the church designated by these distinctive charac- ters ; thus established, thus continued, thus guided in one uni- form faith and subordination of government is that which is termed the Roman catholic church ; the qualities just mentioned being, evidently and exclusively, applicable to her alone. From the testimony and authority of the catholic church we receive the scriptures, and believe them to contain the revealed word of God : and as the church can assuredly tell us what par- ticular book is the word of God ; so can she, with like assurance, tell us the true sense and meaning of it in controverted points of faith ; the same spirit of truth which directed the writing of the scriptures, directing also the church to understand them aright, and to teach all such mysteries and duties as are necessary to sal- vation. He that believeth not, shall be condemned, Mark. xvi. v. 16, and he that will not hear the church, let him be to thee as the Heathen man and the Publican, Matt, xviii. v. 17. Away then with private sense and interpretation, as directly contrary to the express injunction of our blessed Saviour, and to his most faithful apostle St Peter who says, that scripture is not to be ex- pounded by private interpretation, 2 Peter i. v. 20. Catholics hold that faith is unchangeable, and that of course the pastors of the church, who are, in a certain sense, the body representative, either dispersed or convened in council, have received no commission from Christ to frame new articles of faith articles of faith being, exclusively, divine revelations ; but to explain and to define to the faithful what anciently was, and still is, received and retained as of faith in the church, when debates and controversies arise concerning them. These definitions in matters of faith only, and proposed as such, ob- lige under pain of heresy all' the faithful to a submission of their judgment. Nor is it an article of catholic faith, that the church cannot err in bare matters of fact ; or in matters of speculation or civil policy, depending merely on human judgment or testimony. These things are not revelations deposited in the church ; in regard of which alone she has the promised assistance of the Holy Spirit. With regard to the contested primacy of St Peter and his successors in the see of Rome catholics believe, that superior and peculiar powers were given to St Peter, and that the Bishop of Rome, as his successor, is the Head of the whole catholic- church ; in which sense, as already stated, this church may therefore be fitly styled Roman catholic, being a universal body united under one visible head. 184 CAT It is no article of catholic belief, that the pope is in himself infallible, as separate from the church, even in expounding ar- ticles of faith : by consequence, papal definitions or decrees, in whatever form pronounced, considered independently of a gene- ral council, or the acceptance of the church, oblige none under pain of heresy to an interior assent. Nor do catholics, as catholics, believe, that the pope has any direct or indirect authority over the temporal concerns of states, of the jurisdiction of princes. Hence, should the pope pretend to absolve or to release his majesty's subjects from their allegi- ance on any pretext whatever, such dispensation they would view as frivolous and null. Neither, in the belief of catholics, can any licence be given to men to lie, to forswear or perjure themselves ; to massa- cre their neighbours, or disturb their country, on pretence of promoting the catholic cause : furthermore, they believe, that all pardons or dispensations granted or pretended to be granted, in order to such ends or designs, would have no other validity or effect, than to add sacrilege and blasphemy to the above crimes. Detesting the immoral doctrine of equivocation and mental reservation, the catholic church inculcates and ever did incul- cate, that simplicity and godly sincerity are truly Christian vir- tues, necessary to the conservation of justice, of truth, and the common security. Catholics believe, that there are seven sacraments, or sacred rites, instituted by our Saviour Jesus Christ, whereby the merits of his passion are applied to the soul of the worthy receiver 1. That in the most holy sacrament of the eucharist, there is- truly and really contained the body of Christ, which was deli- vered for us, and the blood which was shed for the remission of sins : the substance of the bread and wine being, by the power of God, converted into the substance of his blessed body and blood; the species or appearances of bread and wine, remaining as they were. This change has been properly called Transub- stantiation. 2. That Christ is not present in this sacrament according to his natural manner of existence; that is, as bodies exist natural-, ly : but in a manner proper to the character of his exalted and glorified body. His presence then, is real and substantial, but sacramental ; not exposed to the external senses, nor obnoxious to corporal contingencies. 3. That the body of Christ in this holy sacrament, is not se- parated from his blood, nor his blood from his body ; nor is either of them disjoined from his soul and his divinity : but all and the whole living Christ is entirely contained under each species : so that whoever receives under one kind, becomes truly C A T 185 partakers of the whole sacrament : he is not deprived either of the life-giving body or blood. 4. That our blessed Lord, in bequeathing to us his body and blood under two distinct species or kinds, instituted not only a sacrament, but also a sacrifice ; a commemorative sacrifice dis- tinctly shewing his passion and death until he come. For, as the sacrifice of the cross was performed by a distinct effusion of his blood ; so is that sacrifice commemorated in this of the altar, by a distinction of the symbols. Jesus, therefore, is here given not to us only, but for us ; and the church is hereby enriched with a true, proper and propitiatory sacrifice, usually termed the Mass : propitiatory, we say ; because, representing in a lively manner, the passion and death of our Lord, it is peculiarly pleasing to our eternal Father, and thus more effectually applies to us the all-sufficient merits of the sacrifice of the cross. The catholic church also teaches, that sincere repentance or sorrow of mind, joined to a firm resolution of amendment, was at all times so necessary, that without it there could be no remis- sion of sin : but that, when a sinner repents of his sins from his heart, and acknowledges his transgressions to God and to his ministers the dispensers of the mysteries of Christ, resolving to turn from his evil ways and to bring forth worthy fruits of peni- tence, there is then, and not otherwise, an authority left by Christ to absolve such a penitential sinner from his sins : which authority, catholics believe, Christ gave to his apostles and their successors the bishops and priests of his church in these words : Receive ye the Holy Ghost, whose sins you shall remit 9 they are remitted unto them, &c. John xx. 22, 23. The essential parts of penitence considered as a sacrament, are three Contrition, (or a supernatural sorrow of mind) Con- fession, and Satisfaction without which, in the case of grievous sin, unless from unavoidable obstacles the two last, confession and satisfation, cannot be complied with, the sinner according to the catholic doctrine cannot obtain forgiveness from God. By Confession is understood the declaration which the peni- tent sinner makes of his sins, to the minister of God: the obliga- tion of which evidently follows from the words of Christ (John xx. 22, 23.) above quoted. For, to what purpose was this power given to the apostles and their successors in the ministry, if it imposed not on the sinner the obligation of making known his sins ? Or how could the power be exercised, if no sins werr manifested to the priest ? Although with protestants it is generally neglected, and even ridiculed by many, it is notwith- standing sanctioned and recommended by the church of England in the book of Common Prayer ( Visitation of the Sick) precise- ly as now practised in the catholic church. On the doctrine of satisfaction, catholics believe that although no creature can make what is termed condign satis- A a 186 CAT faction, either for the guilt of sin, or for the pain eternal due to it this kind of satisfaction being proper to Christ our Sa- viour only, yet penitent sinners, as members of Christ, may in some measure satisfy by prayer, fasting, alms deeds, and other works of piety, for the temporal pain which, in the order of the divine justice, sometimes remains due after the guilt of sin and pain eternal have been remitted, as in the case of Da- vid (II. Kings, alias II. Samuel, c. xii.) Such penitential works, notwithstanding, are no otherwise satisfactory, than as joined and applied to that satisfaction which Jesus made upon the cross, in virtue* of which alone all our good works find a grateful acceptance in the sight of God. By that dispensation of mercy which in the catholic church is called an indulgence^ such temporal punishment only, is remitted, as in the order of diyine justice may remain due after the guilt has been forgiven. Catholics also maintain the doctrine of purgatory, that is to say, a place or state where souls departing this life with re- mission of their sins as to the guilt or eternal pain, but yet liable to some temporal punishment still remaining due, or not per- fectly freed from the blemish of some defects which are called venial sins, are purged before their admittance into heaven, where nothing that is defiled can enter. (Rev. xxi. 27.) They moreover believe, that souls so detained in purgatory, being the living members of Christ Jesus, are relieved by the prayers and suffrages of their fellow members here on earth. But where this place may be of what nature or quality the pains how long souls may be there detained in what manner the suffrages offered in their behalf are applied whether by way of satisfaction or intercession, &c. are questions superfluous and impertinent as to faith. The extreme unction, so called from the oil used on the occa- sion, catholics believe to be a sacrament administered to dying persons to strengthen them in their passage out of this life into a better: and they maintain it to be divinely instituted. (See James v. 14.) Order too, they believe to be a sacrament, by which the ministers of the church are consecrated, and power is given to them to perform such public offices, as regard the service of God, and the salvation of souls. Catholics likewise hold matrimony to be a sacrament of the new law, instituted by Christ, whereby a new dignity is added to the indissoluble contract of marriage, and grace is given to those who worthily receive it. The catholic Christian is taught also to believe, that Christ has given to the pastors of his church power to enact religious\ j laws, which all the faithful are bound to obey. Such, for in- \ ] CAT 187 stance, as are those of Lent, Ember-days, the vigils of saints, abstinence at certain times, and the like. Nor are catholics ashamed to pay due honour to the relics of saints ; and they place holy images and pictures in their churches, the more easily to recollect their wandering thoughts, and to fix their memories on heavenly things ; although God alone is the object of their worship and supreme adoration. They shew moreover, a respect for the representations of Christ the myterious facts of their religion, and the saints of God beyond what is due to any profane figure ; not that they imagine any virtue to reside in them, for which they ought to be ho- nored ; but because the honor exhibited to pictures is referred to the prototypes, or the things represented by them. They maintain also, that honor and respect are due to the bible, to the cross, to the name of Jesus, to churches, &c. as things peculiarly appertaining to God, without any danger whatever of idolatry ; and to kings, magistrates and superiors : to whom honor is due, honor may be given without the smallest derogation from the majesty of God, or that divine worship which is exclusively appropriate to Him. Finally, catholics believe, that the angels and the saints in heaven, replenished with charity, pray for us their fellow mem- bers here on earth, and rejoice in our conversion 5 that seeing God, they see and know in Him all things suitable to their happy state ; and that God may be inclined to hear their re- quests in our behalf, and for their sakes may grant us many favors : therefore, they believe it is good arid profitable to in- voke their intercession. Can this manner of invocation be in fact more injurious to Christ our Mediator^ than it is for one Christian to beg the prayers of another here on earth ? How- ever, catholics are not taught so to rely on the prayers of others, as to neglect their own duty to God in imploring for themselves his divine mercy and goodness ; in mortifying the deeds of the flesh ; in despising the world ; in loving and serving God and their neighbour ; in following the footsteps of Christ our Lord, who is the way, the truth, and the life. The ortho- doxy as well as the antiquity of the above and other articles and approved ceremonies of' the catholic religion, are exhibited in their noon-day evidence by the Rev. Joseph Berrington, in his late learned and useful publication, inscribed The Faith of catholics confirmed by Scripture, and attested by the Fathers pf the five first centuries of the church ; whence hath been bor- rowed the sketch which 1 have just given of the catholic belief. They will also in their proper places be found to be satisfacto- rily discussed in the course of the present compilation. See the articles LUTHER, VIGILANTIUS, WICKLIFF, LIUS, &c. &c. A a 2 188 CAT Ceremonies. In the administration of the sacraments and in other parts of her religious offices, the catholic church uses many rites and ce- remonies which have been derived from the most ancient times. This alone would be a sufficient plea for their retention ; as from this circumstance arises an additional proof of the antiquity of her faith and discipline. But these ceremonies, as they had in their primitive introduction ; so in their retention they still pos- sess other advantages : they excite attention ; they impress the mind with a certain awe : to the unlearned they convey instruc- tion ; and on all occasions, departing from the usages of common life, they give a peculiar dignity and character to whatever action is connected with the service of the Almighty. Nor does this ceremonial part of our religion, enforced by what God himself commanded in the old law, any more than the rich dresses of its ministers, the decorations of its churches, and the general pomp of service accompanied with incense, lights and music where circumstances will allow it, in any degree affect that Christian simplicity inculcated by the gospel ; the seat of which is in the heart ; or that adoration of the Father in spirit and in truth, (Jo. iv. 23.) which Christ demands from his followers. For each particular practice in the catholic church, which falls under the head of ceremonies, the authority, were it neces- sary, might be adduced of primitive times ; as each is recorded in the writings of the fathers. Of antiquity the badge and glory t>f their church, even in things seemingly of small importance, or not always agreeable to modern notions, catholics are solicitously retentive. One of these usages the retention in the Divine service of the Latin tongue protestants particularly disapprove. On this subject it may suffice with the learned author of the faith of ca- tholics confirmed by scripture and attested by the fathers, &c. to remark, that the Deposite of catholic faith being intimately in- terwoven with the primitive expressions of the liturgies in an- cient use, when the Greek language ceased to be spoken in the many nations which formerly constituted what was called the Greek church ; and even, as at present, was not understood ; the language of the liturgy remained unaltered, as was and is the case among the Syrians, Cophts, Armenians and Ethiopians. Every where the service is celebrated in a tongue no longer in- telligible to the vulgar. On what grounds then is it required, that the Latin or Western church should have followed another rule, particularly as in this church, in all the countries within its pale, the Latin language in the early ages was every where sufficiently understood, if not spoken ? And when the Northern CAT 189 nations were reclaimed to the Christian faith, the established rule was not altered for this additional reason, that the use of the same tongue in the public service might help to unite them more closely to the old church, and tend in some degree by this ap- proximation, to soften and civilize their manners. The general accord among all nations professing the catholic faith not to admit any change in the language of their litur- gies, though in many other points of discipline they were much divided, is a curious and important fact. And it must have rested on some general motives equally obvious to all, Doubt- less they saw what daily experience confirmed that modern languages were liable to change, while those that were no longer spoken, from this very circumstance, and because, from the va- luable works written in them, they were cultivated by the learned were become permanently stable. They saw that the majesty and decorum of religious worship would be best maintained, v/hen no vulgar phraseology debased its expression ; that the use of the same language which a Chrysostom spoke at Constan- tinople, and a Jerom at Rome, would unite in a suitable recol- lection modern with ancient times ; and that the mere fact of the identity of language would be a convincing proof of the anti- quity of the catholic faith : and although it may be objected, that the people do not understand the words of the liturgy the supposed inconvenience which equally prevailed in the Jewish worship without a censure from our Divine Redeemer, is done away ; since all instruction in sermons and catechism, is deliver- ed to them in their own tongue ; every part of the service is di- ligently explained, and not a single shade of darkness is permitted to remain, It is certainly most gratifying, and highly profitable when a catholic travels into distant countries, every where to find a ser- vice performed, to the language and the ceremonies of which his ears and eyes have always been habituated. He can join in the offering without embarrassment ; and though removed, per- haps, a thousand miles from home, the moment he enters a church, in the principal offices of religion he ceases to be a stranger. The council of Trent, the more effectually to pre- vent this ancient usage from proving an occasion of ignorance in the people, orders all pastors and such as have the cure of souls, frequently, and especially on Sundays and holidays, to expound some portion of what is read, and some mystery of the holy sacrifice, (Sess. xxii. c. viii.) Moreover the whole of the church service is translated into the language of each country, and together with a variety of prayers for all occasions and all states of life, put into the hands of the people. If with all this caution ignorance should still be found as it will be found in many every ingenuous mind will ascribe it to the usual causes of ignorance to neglect and inattention, and not to any want of 190 C E R knowledge of the Greek or Latin tongues. This ought abun- dantly to suffice to reconcile the candid reader to the catholic practice in this instance : the bigoted, prejudiced, and the in- sincere will still find cause to cavil. CATHARI See the article MANICHEES. CERDONIANS Sectaries who followed the opinions of Cerdo the Syrian. Cerdo adopted the errors of Simon Magus, tra- velled to Rome in the days of Pope Hyginus, and there dis- seminated his errors, sometimes privately, at other times in public and without reserve. When reproved for his temerity, he affected to be penitent, and pretended a desire to return to the communion of the church. His repeated relapses mani- fested his hypocrisy, and eventually procured his absolute ex- clusion. Like the greater part of the heretics of the second age, Cerdo maintained, that the universe was not the production of a God all-powerful and wise ; and to him the law of Moses appeared imperfect, too severe to originate with a Being infinitely good. To do away the imaginary inconvenience, he admitted two principles as the efficient causes of all things ; the one good, the other evil. The latter he supposed author of this visible world, and of the law of Moses. The former, which he called the un- known principle, was according to him, the father of Jesus Christ. But the humanity, the nativity, the sufferings and death of the Son of God, he said, were all in appearance only, not real. He believed the resurrection of the souls of men, but not their bodies : consequently, he held that the soul died to- gether with the body. All the books of the Old Testament he rejected, and with regard to the New, he thought proper to admit a part only of the gospel of St Luke, retrenching all the rest. Marcion and his disciples held the same erroneous tenets. (See MARCIONITES.) CERINTHIANS were the disciples of Cerinthus, who after a course of philosophy at Alexandria, towards the close of the first century, propagated his heterodox opinions principally in Asia minor. The apostle St John undertook the writing of his gospel in order to refute him, with other false teachers of that early period. Conformably to the ideas of Plato, Cerinthus ima- gined, that God was not himself the immediate author of this vi- sible world ; but that he had created spirits or intelligences one more or less perfect than another ; that one of them had framed the universe, and that they all had a part in its government and administration. Like Basilides he pretended, that the God of the Jews was one of these intelligences, the author of their law, and of the various events which had attended them. Their C I R 191 religious code he wished partially to preserve, and blended it in many points with Christianity. Jesus Christ, he said, was bora like other men of Joseph and Mary, although gifted with a wisdom and perfection more than human : that at the moment of his baptism, the Son of God or Christ had come down upon him in the form of a dove ; had revealed to him God the Father, till then unknown to man, whom he was destined to instruct ; and had impart- ed to him the power of working miracles : that at the hour of his passion, Christ had taken his departure to his heavenly Fa- ther ; and that Jesus alone had suffered ; had expired upon the cross ; had risen from the dead : but that the Christ, who was a pure spirit, was altogether incapable of suffering. Such were too, the errors of Carpocrates ; but the disciples of Ccrinthus improved upon their master's reveries. The Cerinthians seem not to have long subsisted as a distinct sect, nor to have survived even to the times of the famous Origen. Probably they had been confounded and identified with some other sect of the second age. CHALDEANS or NESTORIANS of SYRIA. See the article NES- TORIUS. CHILIASTS. See MILLENARIANS. CIRCUMCELLIONS a branch of Donatists in Africa of the fourth age. See the article DONATISTS. This name was given also to certain enthusiasts who appeared in Germany about the middle of the thirteenth century. In the heat of the famous contests between the emperor Frederic and the popes, under the specious pretext of defending the cause of their sovereign, they complimented the Roman pontiffs with the title of heretics, and the bishops and other prelates their adherents with the addi- tional epithet of Simoniacs : they pretended too, that the entire body of the priesthood being in the state of mortal sin, no longer possessed the privilege of consecrating the eucharist ; and that they were mere impostors : that neither the pope, nor bishops nor any man living had a right to impose an interdict upon their flock : that the Franciscan and Dominican friars seduced the church of God by their false teaching and their sermons 5 and that, in a word, out of the Circumcellion society no one lived according to the gospel. In the close of their harangue they informed their auditors, that they were going to impart to them the benefit of an indulgence not like those which the pope and the bishops had devised, but one which came immedi- ately from the throne of God. (Dupin 1 5 e. siecle. D' Argentre* loc. cit.) Part of their errors have been since revived by some of our modern reformers. 192 C CE L CLANCULARIANS a sect of Anabaptists. See the article. CLAUDIUS of TURIN with a variety of other heterodox opi- nions, adopted at the commencement of the ninth age, the errors of the Iconoclasts and Vigilantius. Some abuses which he ob- served in the devotion of the faithful with respect to images and the relics of saints, determined him to contest the lawfulness of the devotion itself. He was a person, it would seem, of singu- lar exemplarity of life, but destitute of proper discernment; and his zeal was not tempered with prudence and moderation. Ho was refuted by Dungal, Walafridus Strabo, and by Jonas of Orleans, and condemned by the council of Paris which de- clared, that images were to be retained in the Churches for the instruction of the ignorant ; but by no means adored, or vene- rated with any superstitious worship. (Mabil. Annal. Ord. Ben. 1. 29. n. 52, &c. Cone. T. 7, p. 194-3.) See ICONOCLASTS, VIGILANTIUS, &c. CLEMENT a native of Scotland, rejected alike both canons and councils, together with the religious writings of the fathers, and their explications of holy scripture. He pretended that Jesus Christ, descending into hell, had delivered thence the souls of all the damned, even those of infidels and idolaters ; and maintained many other erroneous doctrines concerning predestination. He was condemned with Adalbert in the coun- cil of Soissons, and in another synod held at Rome. Cone. T. 4. Bonif. Ep. 135. In Clement, as in many others, we may remark a striking instance of the abuse of learning, to which, for the age in which he lived, he had considerable pretensions. When not influenced by humility, learning itself becomes a snare, against which the apostle admonishes us, when he says, that science puffs up ; and with great reason he exhorts us to be 'wise according to sobriety. CLEOBIUS, or CLEOBULUS was contemporary with Simon Magus, and like him undertook to combat Christianity. He denied the authority of the prophets, the omnipotence of the Divine Being, and the resurrection. The formation of the universe he ascribed to angels ; maintained that Jesus Christ was not born of a virgin ; and was author of a sect called from him Cleobians. (Euseb. Hist. Eccles. 1. 4, c. 21. Theodoret, Hseret. Fab. 1. 3.) COELICOIJE worshippers of the firmament, or of the stars were condemned as pagans and proscribed in that capacity by special rescripts of the emperor Honorius. As they were ranked among the Jews in the Theodosian code, they were probably apostates from Christianity to Judaism^ but did not adopt the COL 193 ntire system, and were not subject to the high priest or the Sanhedrim, as were the rest of the Jews. They had however their superiors whom they termed elders like our modern pres- byterians. But we do not know in what precisely their errors consisted. The heathens called the Jews Crelicolse ; and of them Juvenal says : nil prater nubes et cceli numen adorant. Other pagan authors accuse them of worshipping the angels, meaning the genii or intelligences which, they imagined, animated the stars. The ancient prophets had frequently reproached them with this superstition ; and it was, in fact, a species of ido- latry most generally diffused among the Oriental nations. To this St Jerom refers the passage of St Paul to the Colossians, c. 2, v. 1 8, where he supposes the apostle understood by the angels the spirits which presided over the firmament, and the heavenly bodies. According to him, the Jews and Pagans were both involved in this form of heathenish worship. (Epist. 151, n. 10, Cod. Theod. 1. 12, de Judais et Ccdicolis.) Pro- testants have thought fit to retort the charge upon St Jerom himself, no less than upon the catholics in their legitimate vene- ration of the angels and saints. COLARBASSUS a celebrated Valentinian, who appears to have applied to the system of Valentinus the principles of Cabalism and judicial astrology. Men, he pretended, received the benefit of life from the seven planets ; and he ascribed all perfection and the plenitude of truth to the Greek alphabet, because Christ was named Alpha and Omega. (Autor. Append, ad Tert. de Prescript, c. 53.) COLLEGIANS a sect of Arminians and Anabaptists in Hol- land, so called from their assembling every first Sunday in the month : on which occasions each individual assistant has the privilege of speaking and expounding the Holy Scripture, of praying and singing psalms. These collegians are now all So- cinians, or Arians. They do not take the communion at their meeting-house or college, but convene from every part of Hol- land twice in the year at a village called Rinsbourg,^ two leagues rom Leyden, where they receive their eucharist. The celebrant is the person who accidentally sits down first at the table : he ad- ministers indiscriminately to all the attendants without enquir- ing what may be their system of religion. Baptism is given by immersing the whole body of the party in water. To speak with accuracy, this is the only society of protestants who act consistently with the grand maxim of the reformation, constituting each private person the arbiter of his own belief, of the kind of worship which he thinks fit to render to the Deity, and the discipline which he chooses to adopt. In fact, their communion establishes among the members a union merely Bb COP nominal and external, not that harmony of faith and sentiments which St Paul so energetically recommended to the faithful. (Philipp. i. 27, ii. 2, &c.) Jews and even Pagans themselves, without prejudice to their conscience, might fraternize with this society of protestants. COLLUTHIANS were sectaries of the fourth age, the disciples of Colluthus a priest and curate of Alexandria. This priest, scandalized at the condescension with which St Alexander, pa- triarch of that see, at first had treated Arius, in order the more effectually to reclaim him, formed a schism, and even presumed himself to ordain priests without having ever received the epis- copal character ; arrogating to himself this power to enable him, he said, to oppose with effect the progress of Arianism. He moreover held, that Almighty God had not created the wicked ; and denied that human afflictions originated from Him. Col- luthus was condemned in a council convoked by Osius at Alex- andria in 3 1 9. COLLYRIDIANS were a kind of devotees to the blessed Vir- gin. They paid her a very fanciful sort of religious veneration, which consisted in offering cakes termed in Greek COLLYRIDES ; and hence the sect derived its name. In this ceremony the wo- men performed the office of priesthood. They had a chariot with a quadrangular table in it, which they covered with a cloth ; and at a stated season of the year they presented a loaf; offered it up in the name of the Virgin Mary ; and then each of them partook of the oblation. This practice St Epiphanius justly censured as idolatrous, and also as contrary to the prohibition of the apostle, who formally excludes the sex from discharging any sacerdotal function. THE CONSCIENTIOUS an ancient sect of religionists, so called from their acknowledging no other law, no other rule of con- duct, but the dictate of their own conscience. This doctrine was renewed in the seventeenth century by Matthew Thoutsen a German, who exchanged this error for the more impious system of Atheism. (See Fatalism discussed, vol. 1.) COPHTS or EGYPTIANS a sect of Jacobites or Monophusites, who admit only one nature in Jesus Christ. They are subject to the patriarch of Alexandria. Dioscorus patriarch of that see, a man of great influence, and much respected in Egypt, not- withstanding the condemnation of Eutyches in the council of Chalcedon in 41, remained obstinately attached to his cause and erroneous doctrine. He succeeded in persuading his clergy and the people, that the council of Chalcedon by condemning \ Eutyches, had justified and adopted the heresy of Nestorius j COP 195 although in fact this council equally reprobated and anathema- tized them both. The severities and the violence which the em- perors of Constantinople employed, in order to enforce the de- crees of the council, alienated the affections of the people in Egypt ; who were excluded in consequence, from all civil, eccle- siastic and military dignities ; and conceived the most violent hatred against their persecutors, and even against catholicity it- self. Great numbers retired with their schismatical patriarch at their head, into Upper Egypt 5 and when the Saracens or Ma- hometan Arabs undertook about the year 660 the invasion of Egypt, the Cophts or schismatic Egyptians treacherously sur- rendered into their hands the fortified places, and thus obtained of them the public exercise of their religion. The Mahome- tans, however, quickly forgot their services, and deprived them of this privilege, which they were compelled to redeem by dint of money. They are now reduced to the inconsiderable number of about fifteen thousand ; though they are said to have amount- ed to no less than six hundred thousand at the period of the Sa- racen conquest. Ever since the Arabic became the vulgar language in Egypt, the nations have wholly laid aside their original Cophtic tongue, which is a compound of the Greek and ancient Egyptian. Ne- vertheless, they continue to celebrate the divine office in that language, and have it translated into the vulgar tongue, in or- der to prevent their being ignorant of what is said. They have three different liturgies ; those of St Basil, St Gregory Na- zianzen, and St Cyril of Alexandria : they were all translated into the Cophtic language from the original Greek. The last of the above liturgies bears the nearest resemblance with that of St Mark, which is supposed to be the same in use before the schism of Dioscorus, or anterior to the fifth age. The catholics of Egypt continued to use it, as long as they subsisted under the united persecutions of the Cophts and infidel Mahometans. The schismatics corrupted their liturgies in one instance only, by inserting their error of the unity of nature in Jesus Christ. It is the only doctrinal error with which they have been charged : in every other point of Christian doctrine, they hold precisely the same articles with the church of Rome. In their liturgies and their confessions of faith, they acknowledge seven sacraments. Immediately after baptism, they give the child confirmation, as also the communion under the species of wine alone. The real presence of Jesus Christ in the eucharist, and transubstantiation, they with equal ardor uphold ; and the sacri- fice of the mass. This is a fact which their liturgies abundantly demonstrate. Confession is not in frequent use among them ; once or twice in the year at most, suffices. However, they ascribe to penitence and absolution the efficacy of pardon, and generally accompany them with certain unctions. In their 19S COP liturgies are mentioned also the invocation of saints, and prayer for the dead. Nor have there ever been any other changes introduced into these liturgies, but that alluded to above 5 as is manifest from their perfect agreement in all other points with those of the Greeks, the Syrians, the Armenians and Nestorians ; with whom the Cophts have had as little communi- cation, as with the church of Rome. Consequently, with the reserve of one single article, namely, the unity of nature in Jesus Christ, the Cophtic church has preserved exactly the same religious creed with the Roman catholic ; and before the council of Chalcedon, and the schism of Dioscorus, this belief was that of the universal church. It is then without foundation that protestants accuse this faith of novelty, and as the inven- tion of more modern times. Its doctrines, we beg leave to re- peat, are fairly recognisable in the different schismatical churches of the Greeks, of the Syrian Jacobites, and the Nestorians in Persia and the Indies, as well as those of the Egyptians and Ethiopians. These churches equally, for the most part, at enmity with each other, as with the church of Rome, cannot with any semblance of probability be suspected to have changed by common consent their faith, their litur- gies and their discipline. Providence seems to have preserved them, only to attest the antiquity of those doctrines, which protestants have made the pretended motives of their separation from the catholic church. The latter are, in fact, the only sec- taries in the universe, who profess that creed which they vainly affect to stile the ancient and primitive belief ! This circum- stance alone ought to have its weight with sober minded protes- tants, and make them re-examine, with modest diffidence, their very feeble claim to church antiquity. If it were true, that the faith which catholics profess at the present day, was not always the faith of the true church, the change must have taken place before the days of Eutyches. But we have proved under the article NESTORIUS, that this faith was general before the first council of Ephesus, and even anterior to that of Nice ; and that even at that early period it could not be of recent date. Consequently, the faith of the church of Rome is the faith of the primitive Christians. Why then, may we ask, did the first reformers cause a schism ? And why should not the protestants of our times return to the communion of that church which, in reality, professes no other creed than that of primitive Christianity ? How frivolous, how void of common decency and of common sense, is Dr Tillot- son's apology for separation ; resting it, as he does, upon the pretended difficulty of salvation in the Roman church ! Let our readers judge impartially, and seriously consider on what ground they stand. C U L 197 CYNICS were a sect of philosophers the followers of Antis- thenes who discarded every rule of morality and decorum. The name was given also to the Turlupins, who abandoned themselves publicly and without remorse, to the most shameful enormities. CULDEES if we may credit Mr Brewster (see the article in the British Encyclopedia) were a sect of perfect Christians esta- blished in our British isles, who held at an early period the doctrines of protestantism, and particularly Presbyterianism. This fanciful progeniture of the reformation we shall not so easily concede to the learned, and not much less prejudiced in- genuity of its author ; although we conceive, that even should we grant him what he wishes to make good, it would follow only, that he had discovered an invisible society, brought down almost from the apostolic ages through the medium of a few scattered individuals, probably, perhaps, by no means certain- ly, existing in different parts of Christendom, nearly till the dawn of the reformation. What kind of a church by the bye, would this constitute ? Such a one, at the very best, as the great St Augustine was willing to allow the Donatists to be; cooped up, as he observes, in a corner of the Roman empire, while the true church of Christ embraced within its pale a large proportion of the then known world. But the most probable account of the Culdees states, that they were monks who flourished in Ireland and Scotland in the middle ages. They were called Culdees, that is, servants of God, from the Latin words cultores Dei because they employ- ed much of their time in preaching and teaching, and in prayer. No mention is made of them by Nennius in the seventh, or by Bede in the eighth age notwithstanding the confident asser- tions of Mr Brewster. They seem not to have been known before the ninth century, when we find them at St Andrew's : though we are not ignorant that Hector Boetius, and other Scottish writers, pretend them to have been as ancient as Chris- tianity itself, in Scotland. In England, they appear never to have had any settlement, except at St Peter's, in York. Their rule was borrowed from that of St Basil who, every body knows, was no Presbyterian. (See Usher's Antiq. Eccl. Brit, fol. 333, 334-, 346, 638, 659. Collier Eccl. Hist. vol. 1, p. 180; and Tanner's Preface to Notitia Monast. Butler's Lives of SS. vol. 5, p. 174. Ed. Edin.) In the latter ages, the Benedictine and other religious orders had several monasteries and provinces in Ireland : but the re- gular canons of St Augustine were far the most flourishing in that country, as the Benedictines were in England. The bishops and parsons of Ireland were mostly taken out of their body. (Butler, ibid.) What then becomes of Mr Brewster's 198 C U L grand succession of Presbyterians ? The latter gentlemen, moreover, do not appear to have had any mighty veneration for their supposed monkish ancestry ; since they have uniformly treated every thing that had the slightest vestige in it of mona- chism with indignity and contempt. Bede indeed, informs us, (1. 3, c. 4, Hist. Eccl.) that from St Columba, who never was himself made bishop, the whole island of Hy its bishops not excepted by an unusual law was subject to the abbot. Of this passage the Calvinists avail them- selves ; as if it made against the superiority of bishops in the church. But Usher (Antiq. Eccl. Brit. c. 16) justly observes, that this superiority was only of civil jurisdiction not of order. For the Ulster annals mention, that this little island had always a bishop, resident either in or near the monastery. Also Adam- nan, in his life of St Columba (1. 3) says, that St Colurnba him- self refused to officiate at the altar in the presence of a bishop, who out of humility had concealed his character ; nor would he receive the communion with him ; but through respect for his dignity compelled him to celebrate the divine mysteries alone. And Bishop Lloyd, in his historical account of church-govern- ment, demonstrates, (c. 5, 67) that no other than the episcopal was ever established among the Picts, Scots, or Saxons. Vene- ration for St Columba introduced a superiority of civil jurisdic- tion over the bishops ; who were chosen from amongst his monks- and disciples, and retained their former respect lor their old superior the abbot. Perhaps his princely extraction too, may have contributed something towards this extraordinary privilege j which was continued to be enjoyed also by succeeding abbots. The unimportance of keeping Easter with these suppositions Culdees at an undue season, in opposition to the practice of the universal church, Mr Brewster, doubtless, is better qualified to appreciate, than the first general council of Nice, which deemed; it necessary to require of all Christians an acquiescence in this particular, under pain of retrenchment from catholic communion. Obedience to lawful superiors, Mr Brewster cannot be ignorant, is better than sacrifice, and that it is grievous as the sin ofmtch- craft to rebel. Contumacy in this one point without insisting on the many other still more important charges against these fa- vorite Culdees, enumerated by Mr Brewster without a proof, would have sufficed completely to do away the merit of their otherwise exemplary virtues. If they were not canonically con- demned by the catholic church, it was either because their er- rors were not known, or far more probably because they have existed only in the inventive imagination of late reformers. Nor are the words of Bede in his approbation of the maxim by which he says, the disciples of St Columba regulated their practice, to be taken in their literal protestant sense ; otherwise he would never have blamed, as in fact he did even in the great D A V 199 % St Aidan, (1. 3, Hist. Eccl.) a deviation from the catholic cus- tom in keeping Easter. This he is willing to excuse in him, only on the ground of inculpable ignorance and unintentional insubordination. See more upon the subject in the article QUARTO-DECJMANS ; also upon episcopacy, in that of AERIUS. CYRENAICS appeared about the middle of the second cen- tury. They pretended, that we ought not to pray ; because our blessed Saviour had assured us, he knew what each one stood in need of. (Hofman's Lexicon.) D DADOES head of the Messalians. (See that article.) DAVID of DINANT disciple of Amauri whose principles he wrote a book to defend. At that time there were still in France some remnants of the Cathari or Manichees, who denied the au- thority of churchmen and rejected the ceremonial institutions toge- ther with the sacraments; they called in question the resurrection, the distinction of virtiif and vice, and other points of faith; and thought they recognised the proofs of their opinions in the sys- tem of Amauri, which they accordingly embraced. They pre- tended that God the Father had assumed our human nature in the person of Abraham, and God the Son in the person of Jesus Christ : that the kingdom of Jesus Christ was at an end, and by consequence the sacraments were now deprived of their former efficacy, and the ministers of God were left without jurisdiction and lawful authority, in as much as the reign of the Holy Spirit was now come ; and, finally, that religion ought henceforth to be confined wholly to the interior. Hence these sectaries concluded, that all the actions of the body were in themselves indifferent. Indeed, sectarists in gene- ralmen for the most part of a character ardent and impetu- ous, and of strong and untamed passions, never fail to deduce these consequences from principles like those of Amauri ; and, with them, have never been at a loss to justify their most lawless excesses. Accordingly the Davidians indulged without restraint in every species of licentiousness, and formed a sect which for some time practised its infamies in secret, but was at length detected by the depositions of some of its supposed proselytes, and quickly suppressed by the severity of the laws enforced against these lawless miscreants. The memory of Amauri was justly stigmatized ; and his bones were taken from the tomb, 200 DEI and burnt to ashes. The works of David of Dinant were also committed to the flames. DAVID-GEORGIANS the followers of one David George, a glazier, or according to some, a painter of Gand, who after the example of other reformers began to dogmatise in 1525. He was first an Anabaptist, and then proclaimed himself the Mes- siah, commissioned from above to people heaven which, for want of persons qualified by their virtues to be admitted there, remained empty. This maniac reprobated marriage with the Adamites ; denied the resurrection with the Saducees, and with Manes, held that sin did not defile the soul. The law of self- renunciation established by Jesus Christ, he ridiculed ; esteem- ing all pious exercises useless, and reducing all religion to a kind of pretended contemplation. He died at Basil, where he went by the name of John Bruch, in the year 1556. He left behind him some disciples, to whom he had promised, that after three years he would rise again 5 at the expiration of which term, the protestant magistrates of Basil, informed, of the pernicious tendency of his errors, caused him in fact to rise again., and ordered his remains, together with his impious writings, to be burnt by the hands of the common hangman. Some remnants of this ridiculous and impure sect are said still to subsist in Holstein, particularly at Friderichstadt. The pretended spirit of reform produced many other sects equally extravagant and impious, and shews what ignorance, combined with hypocrisy and fanaticism, is capable of attempting under the sacred plea of correcting abuses in religion. DEISTS From the Deists themselves we look in vain for an adequate definition of Deism. They tell us, that a Deist is one who acknowledges the existence of a God, and believes in na- tural religion. 1. To this mutilated definition they should add and who rejects all revelation. . Whoever admits any revelation in reli- gion, no longer classes among Deists. 2. The Deist acknowledges the existence of a God ,- but of what description ? Is it the universal nature of Spinosa, or the soul of the universe admitted by the Stoics ; an indolent and passive divinity like those of Epicurus, or a vicious one like the Pagan gods ; a God without Providence, or a Supreme Being who is the great Creator, the Legislator, and the Judge of men ? Hardly shall we find two individual Deists, who are agreed upon this solitary article of their very meagre creed. 3. What do they understand by their natural religion? Why, they will tell you that form of worship which human \ reason left to itself, teaches us to render unto God. But, un- fortunately for their fine-spun system, human reason, in fact, DEI 201 never is left to itself, unless perhaps in the fictitious hypothesis of some poor savage abandoned from his very birth by the cruelty of an unnatural parent, to herd with the beasts of the forest ; will then the Deist have the goodness to inform us ; what religion in particular would a human creature thus bruti- fied adopt? Most probably his ideas on this head, if any at all, would be eccentric as the circumstances of his education. If there exist a' religion exclusively entitled to the epithet of natural, why did not Plato, Socrates, Epicure, and Cicero, recognise it equally with the Deists of our day ? For our part, we acknowledge ourselves too dull to comprehend why a religion which never had a being upon earth, and never could have been devised but by pfiilosophers, enlightened from their early infancy through the medium of Christian revelation, should of excellence be denominated natural. 4. This chimerical religion consists, say they, in adoring God, and living a life of honour and integrity. But how are we to adore God ! Merely by an interior worship, or by sensible signs ; by the Jewish sacrifices, or those of the heathens; ac- cording to the caprice of individuals, or agreeably to some stated form ? All this, it would seem, is matter of indifference in the eyes of Deisst ; and in this hypothesis, all the absurdities, and all the crimes perpetrated through a motive of religion by an- cient or more modern infidels, constitute this natural religion of Deism. Moreover, all are reputed men of integrity and ho- nor, with die Deists, that observe the laws of their country, how- ever unjust and unnatural these maybe. The Chinese, for instance, in selling, in exposing, and even murdering his children ; the Arabian in plundering and ill-treating strangers ; the Alge- rine in pirating on the open seas. If all this is consistent with Deistical integrity, their morality is as pliant as their symbol of belief. Deism, therefore, may fairly be defined the doctrine of those who admit the existence of a God without explaining their no- tions of the divinity ; a worship without determining its form ; a natural law without any knowledge of its precepts : and who reject revelation without so much as investigating the proofs of its existence. In a word, it is a system of irreligion without the semblance of conviction, the unhallowed privilege of believing and of acting as one pleases. If it be pretended, that the system is backed with argument, this is mere delusion ; It all consists in sophistical objections against revelation, in so- phistry as shallow and inconclusive, as its doctrine is devoid of reason and destitute of truth. The Deists acknowledge protestants to be their progenitors ; but think them timid reasoners in not daring to advance when there was no obstacle to impede their progress on their way to truth. The first Deists appeared, in fact, immediately after the Sociniaws, and were previously protestants. In England, they began to shew themselves under the protectorship of Crom- well, in the midst of the contests between High-churchmen, the Puritans and Independents. Their irreligious system passed thence into Holland and France, where it quickly generated Atheism. For it is a well-known fact, that all the fashionable infidels in those countries, after preaching Deism for fifty years, ultimately professed the still more impious code of Atheism in almost all their succeeding publications. OBSTRUCTIONISTS maintain that the wicked shall not b tormentedybr ever, but only for a limited duration till they shall have suffered punishment apportioned to their crimes; after which they shall be finally destroyed. The protestant self-inter- preting principle will easily bear them out against the not less arbitrary expositions of their brother reformists. They have an equal right to put what gloss they please, on those scriptural texts which militate in opposition to their respective systems : and here we will take our leave of them, and leave them to wrangfe with each other for the superiority of their individual private sense, without the possibility of ever solving the question in de- bate by appealing to their so much boasted rule of faith ; a rule, indeed, confessedly inadequate to establish uniformity of doctrine, or to settle the unstable mind in any thing like a well grounded security with reference to the vital concern of religious orthodoxy. It gives a latitude which every sectarian is at liberty to abuse to the evident endangering of Christianity itself! Its votaries are perpetually tossed to and fro 'with every 'wind of doc- trine ever wavering in faith, and adulterating the gospel maxims which they once revered as the oracles of truth. If then it be asked what is the rule of faith to Christians ? The answer is very plain and obvious : Hear the church : for, if he 'will not hear the church it is the precept of our Lord and Saviour (Matt xviii. 17.) let him be to the thee as the heathen and the publican. But how must I recognise this true church in order to submit to its unerring guidance ? Its distinctive marks are unity of faith, sanctity of doctrine and morals, catholicity and succession from the apostles. ' These peculiar characters of the church of Christ are luminous as the light of heaven : open your eyes ; and, in despight of prejudice itself, you must behold it. Consult your common creed wherein this church is designated under the odi- ous epithet of catholic. In the Nicene symbol too, you profess that you believe one holy, catholic and apostolic church ! Oh ! frightful ; bigotry will exclaim ! Do you then refer us to the long exploded religion of Roman catholics ? I say not so, unless it\ v can be fairly proved that these two epithets are inseparable. Set ' the article CATHOLICS. DON 203 ^ BOCETES those sectaries in globo, who maintained that Jesus Christ had not assumed any real body, but only a fantastic one. (Clem. Alex. Strom. 1. 7, Theodoret, 1. 5, Hseret. Fab.) DONATISTS commenced a schism in Africa in the year 311, and were so called from their leader Donatus. The pretended plea for their separation from the catholic church, was the election of CeciJian to the episcopal see of Carthage upon the demise of Mensurius. Although the election had been perfectly regular, a powerful intrigue set on foot by the silly resentment of a cer- tain lady called Lucilla, and supported by the disappointed am- bition of Botrus and Cclcsius who had themselves aspired to that dignity, intruded one Majorinus in his place. This extraordi- nary procedure they endeavoured to accredit by the plea, that the ordination of Cecilian having been performed by Felix of Aptongum, whom the schismatical party falsely charged with having delivered up the Holy Scriptures and sacred vessels to the persecutors, was consequently null and invalid. The bishops who espoused the cause of Majorinus, were headed by Donatus of Casae-^igrae. Pope Melchiades in a council held at Rome, at which assisted Matcrnus of Cologne, Neticius of Autun, andMarinus of Aries, together with fifteen Italian bishops; as also Cecilian and Dona- tus, each of them accompanied by ten bishops of their party, pronounced in favor of Cecilian. This took place in 313. In 314- the Donatists were again condemned in a synod at Aries, and finally, by an imperial edict of Constantine*in 316. They now became more obstinate in their schism ; and, to palliate their obstinacy, they adopted certain doctrinal errors. In the first place, they contended, that the true church had absolutely perished, except in those districts of Africa where Donatism was professed ; complimenting the catholic church, like our modern sectarists, with the honorable epithet of whore of Babylon. 2. That baptism and the other sacraments, administered out of the true church, that is, out of their own society, were void and of no effect ; and, in conformity with this maxim, they rebaptised their proselytes from catholicity. To propagate the sect, every species of seduction was employed : dark insinuations, captious arguments, open violence ; the most atrocious cruelty i persecution and imposture till such lawless methods of proceeding were ultimately suppressed by the just severity of the imperial edicts under Oonstantine and succeeding emperors. The Donatists are also designated in ecclesiastial history under the names - of Circumcellions, of Urbanists, Petilianists, &c. &c. either from some characterizing peculiarities, or from the va- rious leaders of the sect who occasionally distinguished them- selves. The Circumcellions were likewise denominated Rock- men, Mountaineers, &c, and were chiefly wild and ignorant cc2 20* DON country clowns, who, pretending to devote themselves to mar- tyrdom, wandered and roamed up and down the country for a certain time, pampering themselves as victims fed for the sa- crifice, and at length precipitated headlong from the rocks, or into rivers, or otherwise put an end to their own existence ; which they called martyrdom. Many of them would needs compel travellers whom they happened to fall in with, to murder them. Some catholics who met them in this strange frenzy, to save their own lives, and not imbrue their hands in the blood of these fanatics, insisted first upon their being bound, before they would proceed to make them martyrs ; and when they were se- cured, they beat them soundly till they returned to their senses, and were content to live. (See Theodoret, Hseret. Fab.) Such are the extravagances into which men are liable to fall, when once they have abandoned the paths of truth, and follow in its stead the guidance of error and their passions. The errors of the sect were combated with success, chiefly by St Optatus of Milevtim, and the great St Augustine. The former observes, that passion was the mother of 'the schism , ambition the nurse, and avarice the champion in the cause : and St Augustine remarks in general, on this occasion, that, all who disturb the peace of the church , do it either blinded by pride, distracted with envy, or seduced by worldly interest, soft passions and unruly lust. The united efforts of these two great men and most enlighten- ed pastors of the church, had given a mortal blow to the Dona- tist faction. But it was not totally extinct till after the Vandal conquest of Africa, nor even before the seventh century. Against these sectaries St Augustine lays down the true prin- ciples of the unity, extent and perpetuity of the church. He demonstrates, 1st, the falsehood of that doctrine that sinners are not members of the church ; since Jesus Christ compares the church to a net in which are enclosed all kinds of fish, both good and bad ; to a field in which tares are mixed with the good grain 5 to a barn- floor on which is found chaff together with the wheat : and he tells us it shall so remain till the last day, when he will separate the good from the bad grain, the chaff from the wheat, &c. The sacraments which he instituted for the reconciliation of sinners, are themselves a striking proof that the latter are within the pale of the church. 2nd. He shows that the Donatists were palpably in error to suppose that the catholic and universal church could be cooped up in a corner of Africa, confined within the limits of their own sect, and not diffused, more or less, over the whole Christian world, as it was in fact at the period in question ; the greater part of Europe, Asia, and even Africa itself, being then catholic. 3rd. He shews the absurdity of the idea that the sacraments were null\ when administered by prevaricating priests or bishops. For the efficacy of the sacraments depends not upon the interior dispe- DUN 205 si tions of the person who confers them : it is Jesus Christ him- self that baptises and absolves by the organ even of a wicked minister. 4th. St Augustine teaches, that the unity of the church consists in the profession of one and the same faith ; in the par- ticipation of the same sacraments ; in submission to its legiti- mate pastors. This unity, he says, it is never lawful to disturb by schism. And these principles are applicable equally to every age ; they alike condemn all the various sects that ever have relinquished the communion of the catholic church. Nothing but inculpable ignorance can excuse any one that refuses to cm- brace it. DOSITHEUS See SIMON the MAGICIAN. DUALISTS a name given to those who maintained, that in the universe there are two eternal and necessary principles ; one of them the eiHcient cause of all good, the other author of all evil. See the articles MARCION and MANES. DULCINUS the disciple of the infamous Segarel, and, after his master's death, himself the leader of the sect called APOSTO- Lics. (Seethe article.) . DUNKERS (or Tunkers) first appeared about the year 1721, chiefly in Pennsylvania. Their dress resembles that of the Do- minican friars: they never shave their beard, have different apartments for the sexes, and live principally on roots and vege- tables, except at their love feasts when they eat only mutton. No bed is allowed them but in case of sickness, having in their respective cells a bench to lie upon, and a block of wood for their pillow. Their principal tenet is the mortification of the body ; and they deny the eternity of punishment. They are commonly called the harmless Bunkers. This account is given of them in the Sketch of Mr Evans. They seem to be ambitions of rival- ling in austerity of life some of the religious orders in the Roman catholic church : it would be well if they copied also their ortho- doxy of belief. As to what regards the eternity of punishment it is one of those articles which, being incomprehensible to human rea- son, our faith commands us to receive with an humble submis- sion of our understanding to revealed truth. Here to reason is to risk our being lost in the unfathomable abyss of the Divine immensity; and it is our only secure way to follow in this, as in all other doctrines of revelation, the unerring guid- ance of that church, which Christ himself enjoins us all to hear > under pain of being looked upon as heathens or incorrigible sinners. Thus we shall avoid the rash presumption of too curi- ously prying into the unsearchable ways of God. 206 E L C stble are his judgments , and w/zo, exclaims the royal psalmist, shajl be able to recount the mightiness of thy wrath ! (Ps. 89.) E EBIONITES a word which in Hebrew signifies poor, and was appropriated to a sect of men who had adopted the sentiments of the Nazareans, adding certain practices and doctrines peculiar to themselves. For instance, the Nazareans received all the books of the ancient Testament comprised in the canon of the Jews ; while the Ebionites rejected all the prophets ; held in abomination the names of David, of Solomon, of Jeremy and Ezechiel; and, of all the books of holy scripture, they admitted only the Pentateuch. Origen distinguishes two sorts of Ebio- nites, and informs us, that some among them held with the Nazareans, that Christ was born of a virgin ; the rest maintain- ed, that he had been brought into the world in the same man- ner precisely, as were other men. One branch of the Ebionites were strictly temperate and chaste, while another refused to admit into their communion any person unmarried, although not yet arrived at the age of puberty. These moreover prac- tised polygamy, though they scrupled to touch any animal food, or even any thing derived from animals, as milk, eggs,' &c. They received, in common with the Nazareans, the gospel ac- cording to St Matthew, but in many places adulterated 5 and among a variety of other corruptions, they had retrenched the genealogy of Christ, which the Nazareans had retained. Be- sides the Hebrew gospel of St Matthew, the Ebionites had adopted many other books as scripture under the names of James, John and other apostles, and also the apocryphal voyages of St Peter. (Origen con. Cels. Epiph. Haer. 20. Iren. 1. c. 20. Euseb. Hist. Eccles. 1. 3, c. 27.) ELCESAITES, Ossonians or Sampseans were a sect of fanatic* who jumbled together a few ideas of Christianity with the errors of the Ebionites, the principles of judicial astrology, and the practice of the black art ; the invocation of demons, witchcraft, and the observance of the Jewish ceremonial law. With them, we must not look for consistency or connection. They adored- after all only one God, and thought they did him mighty honor by plunging into the bath several times in the day : they acknowledged one Christ, one Messiah whom they called the Great King. It is not known whether they held Jesus to be this Messiah, or some other not yet arrived. But they attribut- EON d to him a human form, although invisible, and a stature of about thirty-eight leagues. They concluded, that the Holy Ghost was a female, because the word in Hebrew is of the fe- minine gender, and for fear they should otherwise be obliged to ascribe two fathers to Jesus Christ. Under the emperor Trajan a Jew named Elxai embraced their sect, and composed a book of prophecies, which, he assured thorn, contained wisdom divine. The Elcesaites imagined it had dropped from heaven. Elxai himself was honored by the sect as a Puissance revealed, and predicted by the prophets; his name in the Hebrew tongue signifying revealed : they revered all his progeny even to adoration, and deemed it a sacred duty to die for them. So low as the reign of Valens two sisters of the race of Elxai, or the blessed race, still survived : their names were Martha and Martcnna ; and they were worshipped by the Elcesaites as goddesses. When they went abroad they were at- tended in crouds by these ridiculous enthusiasts, who industri- ously collected the dust of their feet, and even caught the spittle from their mouth : these precious relics they preserved with reli- gious veneration, and carried them about with them in boxes as sovereign preservatives against misfortune. (Epiph. Haer. 19.) ENCRATITES. See TATIAN. EON DE L'ETOILE was a native of Britanny, and flourished in the twelfth age. At that epoch the Latin word EUM was pronounced EON, and the choir, instead of singing Per EUM qui venturus est judicare vivos et merinos, intoned Per EON qui venturus est judicare vivos et mortuos. This pronunciation at- tracted the notice of Eon de 1'Etoile ; and it struck him very forcibly, that he was himself the identical character alluded to, and that of course he should come again to judge the quick and the dead, and by consequence, was the Son of God. He pub- lishes this ridiculous conceit ; and the silly vulgar gives it full credit; attends him in crouds through divers provinces of France, and marks its progress with the despoliation, both of pri- vate property and, particularly, of religious communities. Eon allotted to his disciples their respective rank and dignity. Some were angels ; others apostles. One was denominated Wisdom , another Judgment ; a third Domination or Science ; and why not a fourth, as in Cromwell's religious army, Praise-God-Bare* bones ? Several puissant lords had repeatedly dispatched a force to apprehend this infatuated enthusiast, but to little pur- pose. For Eon had the address, by courteous treatment and well timed liberalities, to avert the danger. It was confidently given out and generally credited, that he was a conjurer and a magician ; and that it was not in the power of man to seize his person. However, the archbishop of Rheims succeeded in the 20$ E P I desperate attempt 5 and then, it was supposed the demons had forsaken him. This prelate caused him to appear before the council convoked at Rheims by Eugenius III. against the novel doctrines of Gilbert of Porea. Eon was declared lunatic, and sent to the asylum. But Judgment and Science, and some few more of his disciples who remained incorrigible in their folly, were sentenced to the stake. (See d'Argentre Collect. Jud, Natal. Alex, in ssec. 12. Dup. bibliot. douzieme siecle.) In this ignorant and besotted age, while one part of the peo- ple was seduced by Eon de 1'Etoile, Peter Bruys, Tanchelin, and a croud of other fanatics propagated their respective errors, and excited the flock against their lawful pastors ; and theologians were busily employed in their schools in discussing subtle ques- tions of divinity, and disputed with much asperity on points ol trifling significance and metaphysical minutiae. The people, too ignorant to interfere in these scholastic contests, were in other respects very ill instructed in religious knowledge, and ever open to the seduction of the first impostor who thought it worth his while to mislead them ; and unfortunately, of characters of this description, in an age of ignorance there is seldom any scarcity. EPIPHANIUS See CARPOCRATIANS. EPISCOPALIANS an appellation appropriated chiefly to the members of the church of England. They insist much on the divine origin of their bishops, and clerical ordination. Their present doctrines are set forth in thirty-nine articles established in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and ordinarily to be found in their book of Common Prayer ; although their sister episcopalian church of America has curtailed the number to twenty. In Scotland, since the revolution in favour of William III. and the house of Brunswick, a large proportion of Episcopalians, and no small number of them even in England, through their firm attachment to the Stuart family, long refused to acknowledge the new settlement, and were denominated non-jurors until the decease of the Pretender whom they stiled Prince Charles, in 1788 ; when they thought fit to tender their allegiance to the reigning sovereign. Since that period the odious distinction of non-juror has been done away. Of the Episcopalians, or the church of England, the king is recognised as supreme head : there are two archbishops and twenty-four bishops : each prelate has a seat in the house of peers, with the exception only, of the bishop of Sodor and Man, The established church in Ireland is the same with that in, England. Four only, out of eighteen bishops and four arch- bishops, who constitute the protestant prelacy in that kingdom since its union with Great Britain, sit in the house of lords, assembled at Westminster. E U S 209 Of the conflicts, the vicissitudes and variations of Episcopa- lianism, we will here say nothing $ and shall only beg leave to refer our readers to the articles LUTHER, the REFORMATION, Ward's Cantos, &c. Sac. The peculiar merits of the church of England above the other reformed churches, a well-known poet accurately discriminates. It is in his ideas The least de- formed, because re-formed the least, ESCHINISTS See the article MONTANUS. EUCHITES, or EUTYCHITES disciples of Simon Magus, who pretended that the human soul had assumed a material body, for no other end than -the gratification of the most infamous voluptuousness. This was the impious conceit of the Antitactae also, and the Cainites. See their respective articles. (Theodo- ret, Haer. Fab. 1. 5, c. 9.) The MESSALIANS also were termed Euchites. See that article. EUNOMIANS, called also ANOMIANS the disciples of Euno- mius, a noted Arian bishop, who denied the divinity both of the Son and the Holy Ghost. Baptism he ordered to be con- ferred in the name of the Father unbegotten, of the Son who isoas begotten, and of the Holy Ghost, the creature of the se- cond person. He rejected the triple immersion then customary in the church, and caused the head and breast only of the party baptised to be dipped in the font, esteeming the remainder of the body as infamous, and absolutely unworthy of the sacrament. To his other principles he added the very commodious one im- porting that those who should faithfully observe his doctrine, were not liable to forfeit grace, whatever guilt they might incur, even that of final impenitence. (Theodoret, Haeret. Fab. 1. 4, c. 3. Aug. de Hagr. Epiph. Her. 76. Baron, ad ann. 356.) Did then this right reverend of old prognosticate in the spirit the justification inamissible of Mr Calvin ? The sect did not survive the reign of Theodosius II. (Codex Theod. 1. 8.) EUPHRATESIANS (See PEREANS.) EUSEBIANS Arians, so called from Eusebius of Nicomedia, one of the most zealous partisans of Arius. See ARIANS. EUSTATHIANS sectarists of the fourth age who, like their master Eustathius, denied salvation to be attainable in any other but the monastic state. In the council of Gangres, held to- wards the beginning of the fourth century, these sectaries are cen- P d E U T sured 1. For condemning matrimony, and encouraging wives to forsake their husbands. 2. For abandoning the churches to resort to their private conventicles. 3. For engaging servants to quit their masters, and children their parents, under the spe- cious pretence of embracing a more austere method of life. 4. For obliging their followers to renounce all property as incompa- table with salvation. 5. For condemning the honor paid to martyrs in the oratories erected to their memory ; with other erroneous doctrines, prescribed and anathematized by the council in twenty canons inserted in Dupin's Collection of the Canons of the universal Church. (See also Fleury, t. 4, 1. 17.) What a pity these enthusiasts did not agree , with our modern reformers in other articles, as well as that relating to the honor exhibited to martyrs ! Had they been so fortunate, they would have figured among the foremost in the protestant calendar of reformers, or among Mr Brewster's presbyterian Culdees. EUTYCHIANS Mowers of Eutyches, who, in the fifth age, pretended that in Jesus Christ there was only one nature. The intemperate zeal of this monk against Nestorianism, hurried him into the opposite extreme ; and, for fear of admitting two dis- tinct persons in Christ, he held only one nature or a species of compound of the Divinity and the humanity combined. He would not allow the body of Jesus Christ to be of the same sub- stance with ours ; and, of course, he attributed to the Son of God, with the Valentinians and the Marcionites, only a fantastic body. Sometimes, indeed, he seemed to recognise two natures before the incarnation, and to suppose, that the soul of our Re- deemer was united to the Divinity previously to his assuming a human body : but he constantly refused to acknowledge a dis- tinction of the two natures after the incarnation had taken place, pretending that the human nature was absorbed by the divinity, as a drop of honey falling into the sea might be said not indeed to be annihilated, but to be swallowed up, and no longer distinguishable from the watery element. In a council held by St Flavian patriarch of Constantinople in 448, this error was condemned. Eutyches appeared before the council attended by two of the principal officers of the court, and a troop of the imperial guards. To all reasoning and authority produced against his novel doctrine, he replied, that he was come thither not to dispute, but to profess his faith. The council proceeded to separate him from the communion of the faithful ; arid the sentence was subscribed by thirty-two bishops, and eighteen priests. Eutyches said privately to his guards, that he appealed from their judgment to that of the bishops of Rome, Alexandria and Jerusalem ; and by letter endeavoured to impose upon the pope. But his holiness St Leo the Great, being in- V formed of the true state of the affair by St Flavian, wrote to him ' an ample declaration of the orthodox faith upon the article in E U T 211 question, which was afterwards read and inserted in the acts of the council of Chalcedon ; and in which the errors of Eutyches were solemnly condemned. The false council of Ephesus commonly called Latrocinale, or the cabal, by court intrigue was opened on the eighth of August, in 449. Eutyches was there ; as were also two officers from the emperor, with a band of soldiers. Every thing was carried by violence and open faction in favour of Eutyches ; and the pope's legates were not allowed to read his letters to the assem- bly. By Eutyches's partisans a sentence of deposition was pro- nounced against St Flavian and Eusebius of Dorylceum. The legates protested against the lawless sentence. Hilarius the deacon cried out aloud, contradicitur importing opposition is made ; which Latin word was inserted in the Greek acts of the synod. Several of the bishops, prostrate at the feet of Diosco- rus the wicked patriarch of Alexandria, while he was reading up the sentence, besought him in the most submissive terms to proceed no farther in so unwarrantable an affair. He called aloud for the imperial commissioners Elpidius and Eulogius, who instantly set open the church doors ; when Proclus, the pro-consul of Asia, rushed in surrounded with a troop of sol- diers, and followed by a confused multitude with chains, clubs and swords. Few or none of the faint-hearted prelates had now the courage to withhold their subscription to the mea- sures of Dioscorus, except the pope's legates, who protested aloud against his violent proceedings. One of them was hurried off to prison ; the other (Hilarius) with much difficulty effected his escape, and arrived safe at Rome. Flavian appealed from the unjust sentence pronounced against him, to the holy see ; and delivered his appeal in writing to the legates, with his own hand. The impious Dioscorus, and others of his faction, after throwing the holy bishop on the ground, so kicked and bruised him, that he died of his wounds in the course of a few days, in his exile at Ephippus, two days journey from Ephesus. After this, Dioscorus, with two of his Egyptian bishops, had the insolence to excommunicate St Leo. But violence and injustice did not triumph long ; and the emperor's eyes being opened to discern the fatal consequences of his own credulity, he disgraced those who had so grossly abused his confidence, and patronised the cause of truth. The wicked Dioscorus was anathematized by the general council of Chalcedon in 451, and died impeni- tent in the Eutychian heresy and his other crimes, in his banishment at Gangres, in 454. With regard to Eutyches himself, he passed some time in exile, obstinately attached to his erroneous system. History speaks of him no more from the period just mentioned ; but his sectaries long survived the exit of their author. The emperor Zeno suffering himself to be se- duced by the Eutychians, the three first patriarchates of the Dd 2 212 E U T East, in 482 fell a prey to intruders of that sect. Alexandria was occupied by Peter Mongus, Antioch by Peter the Fuller, and Constantinople by Acacius. These men indeed did not exactly coincide with Eutyches, but professed a kind of quali- fied Eutychianism ; teaching that the divine and human nature were so intimately united, as to form in reality but one compound nature, perfectly simple and inconfused ! This doctrine, un- intelligible and inconsistent as it was, the major part of the Euty- chians adopted ; and, from this epoch they are generally de- nominated Monophusites ; reprobating alike the doctrine of Eutyches, and that of the council of Chalcedon. Zeno, by the advice of Acacius, with the specious pretence of reconciling all parties, published in the course of the same year, 482, his famous decree of union termed the Henoticon, addressed to the bishops, clergy and people of Egypt and Lybia. As this decree insinuated a charge injurious to the council of Chalcedon, it was universally rejected by the catholics, and condemned by Pope Felix III. in the ensuing year. A party of Monophusites relinquished the communion of their fellow- sectaries, and were termed Acephali, or without a leader. But It was not long before they found a patron and defender, in the person of Anastasius the emperor. The monk Severus was placed in the patriarchal see of Antioch $ and from him the faction took the name of Severians. In 518 Anastasius was succeeded in the empire by Justin, a catholic prince ; who ex- erted himself to the utmost in extinguishing the entire sect of the Monophusites. The latter, notwithstanding, found means not long afterwards to repair with advantage the losses of their party. A small number of bishops still adhered to it, and placed a monk called Jacob Baradseus, an ignorant but enterprising bigot to the cause, in the episcopal see of Edessa. This new apostle traversed in his fanaticism the provinces of the East ; united the jarring partisans of Eutychianism, animated their drooping spirits, and established among them bishops and a clergy. Thus by his extraordinary exertions in favour of this heresy, it regained its former influence in Syria, Mesopotamia, Armenia ; in Egypt, Nubia and Ethiopia. Ever since this epoch, the Monophusites have honored Jacob Baradaaus (alias Zanzala) as their second founder ; and from him they derive their name of Jacobites. Patronised by the Persians, out of enmity to the Constantinopolitan emperors their persecutors, and afterwards by the Mahometans on the same account, their spread was both rapid and extensive. Before their regeneration, they were di- vided into ten or twelve discordant branches, and were various- ly denominated Caianists, Incorrupticolae, Aphthartodocetse, \ Damianites, Severians, Agnoetaa, Philoponists, &c. from their < several enthusiastic leaders, or the circumstances of their dis- agreement. After the death of Severus, Baradaeus ordained one E U T 215 Paul bishop of Antioch, from whom a regular series of Jacobite bishops have borne that title to the present period. The pa- triarchate of Antioch included all Cilicia, the two Phcenicias, Mesopatamia, Isauria, Euphratissia and Osroenia; and in all these provinces the Jacobin party was the most numerous, al- though the imperial decrees enforced among them under the severest penalties the doctrine of the council of Chalcedon. Vast numbers, in consequence, emigrated into Persia and Ara- bia, where every sect indiscriminately, which had been perse- cuted by the Roman emperors, found a secure asylum and un- limited toleration. Many who still remained and had sub- scribed to the articles of the synod, embraced externally the communion of the church, while they inwardly abhorred it, and formed in the very heart of the empire a formidable party of concealed enemies. The Persians took advantage of their dis- affection, and broke impetuously into the Roman territories ; from which they severed many extensive provinces. The Jaco- bites on this occasion were patronised by the conquerors ; nor were the Saracens less favourable, when they subverted the em- pire of the Persians. Thus the Jacobites became the trium- phant party under these new masters, while the catholics were every where discountenanced and oppressed. The Mono- phusite patriarch established missions throughout the oriental provinces, and thus perpetuated in those nations the doctrines of his sect. The same causes operated similar effects in Egypt and in Abyssinia. See the articles ABYSSINIANS and COPHTS. The Jacobites however, sometimes had their share of persecu- tion, in common with the professors of Christianity in general, even under the Persian and Saracen autocracy ; just as the ava- rice or fanaticism of their despotic masters inclined : and great numbers of both Jacobites and catholics apostatized to Maho- metism. In fact, there exists not at this day one single Christian family in all Nubia. The pope iiad established a patriarch at Antioch, while the princes of the West were in possession of Syria, during which period the Jacobites seemed disposed to a reconciliation with the church of Rome ; although it did not actually take place. The Latin patriarchs resided at Antioch till its subjugation by the Mussulmans in the year 1267. At this day there are two patri- archs of Antioch ; the one catholic, the other monophysist ; each of whom have their respective suffragans. The Jacobites have likewise churches wherever the Nestorians are established ; and these two sects, for so many ages at drawn daggers with each other, now fraternize, and seem to have forgot the origin of their former animosity. The Jacobites acknowledge only one nature in Jesus Christ, reject the council of Chalcedon, and condemn the letter of St Leo ; though they do not hold with Eutyches, that the divine and 214. E U T liuman nature are confounded in the person of our blessed Re- -deemer ; and are rather to be classed with the Acephali, whose peculiar merit was violent opposition to the council. They ad- mit all the sacraments of the Roman catholic church, with the variation only of certain practices in the mode of administration* Some have falsely charged them with errors respecting the blessed Trinity, the origin of human souls, and other articles ; and though they have precisely the same faith which the council of Chalcedon proposes for their rule, mere prejudice obliges them rather to suffer death than subscribe to its decrees. They are great fasters ; and, in the austerity of their fasts they seem to make a great part of the gospel perfection to consist. Many of them have been known, for a long succession of years, to have eaten nothing during Lent, but the leaves of the olive. Some of their monks live in communities ; others in deserts, and others again, like certain ancient saints, on the tops of pillars. Their superi- ors are themselves subordinate to the bishops. Assemanni in his Oriental Library, t. 2, has given us a list of their most eminent writers, philosophers and theologians ; among whom many have attained to excellence. The sect itself formerly so numerous, is at the present day, very inconsiderable, except in Abyssinia. See the article ABYSS INI ANS. It will not be denied, that in the council of Chalcedon the sessions were attended with some tumult and disorder. But, if the Holy Ghost presided not over its decisions, we should be glad to be informed how men, infuriated by passion and divid- ed into factions, all intent upon enforcing their own respective opinions, and devoting their adversaries to damnation, eventual- ly united in condemning the intrigues of party, and in reprobat- ing unanimously the opposite errors of Eutychianism andNesto- rianism ! In this instance, so clearly recognisable are the influ- ences of the Holy Spirit, that any other reply to the impassioned declamations of Basnage and other enemies of the Chalcedonian synod, would be perfectly superfluous. The council declares that, conformably to the writings of the holy fathers, it professes a belief in one Jesus Christ our Lord, the Son of God ; perfect God* and perfect man $ consubstantial with the Father according to the Godhead, and with us men according to the humanity : that in him are two natures with- out division, without separation, without change ; for as much as the properties of the two natures subsist and harmonize in one and the same person ; who is not divided into two, but is one only Jesus Christ the Son of God, as it is declared in the Nicene creed. This formula was approved unanimously by the whole council ; in which the church taught against Nestorius, that in Jesus Christ there was but one person ; and against Eutyches, that in the same divine person were united two distinct natures. I F 215 F FAMILTSTS or FAMILY OF LOVE the name of a sect whiclr pretended that perfection and religion consisted in charity alone, independently of faith and hope, which they considered as im- perfections. This charity, according to them, exalted men above the laws and rendered them incapable of sinning. One Henry Nicolas of Munster was author of the sect. At first he modest- ly assumed the character of prophet, but soon proclaimed him- self to be a person deified. Nor would this suffice ; he deemed himself a greater personage than Jesus Christ who, he said, was nothing more than a type or figure of himself. About the year 1540, he attempted to seduce the famous Theodore Volkart, with whom he had many unsuccessful interviews. When Theo- dore's arguments were like to prove too strong, he appealed to the Spirit which, he said, commanded him to hold his peace. The enthusiast, notwithstanding, made many silly proselytes, who all like their master were willing to be accounted of divine ori- gin. ' Henry composed some books; for instance those entitled The Gospel of the Kingdom, The Land of Peace, &c. The sect was admitted into our Island of Saints towards the com- mencement of the seventeenth century, and in 1604 presented to King James a Confession of Faith, in which they declare they do not hold communion with the Brownists, and profess a rea- diness to obey the magistracy whatever may be their religious principles. George Fox, himself the very fanatic author of Qua- kerism, inveighed aloud against this Family of Love, and compli- mented them with the title of Fanatics , because, said he, they did not scruple to take oaths, to dance, to sing, and to be mer- ry. Serious charges these, and very scandalous to their rivals in fanaticism at the present day I FELIX of URGEL. See ADOPTIONISTS. FIFTH-MONARCHY-MEN a turbulent sect in the days of Oliver Cromwell. They pretended, that Jesus Christ was on the point of establishing upon earth &Jifth monarchy r , alluded to by the prophet Daniel j and, with this persuasion,, they resolved to overturn the existing government, and to substitute in lieu of it absolute anarchy. (Mosheim, Eccles. Hist.) A striking in- stance, among so many others equally extravagant of the dangerous fanaticism produced in England by the unrestricted liberty of reading and interpreting Holy Scripture according to each one's fancy or private spirit. 21(5 F K A FLAGELLANTS a name given to a kind of penitentialists wno' pretended, that self-discipline OP flagellation remitted sin equally with baptism. The sect originated in 1260, from one Reined us at Perusia. This man undertook to preach up penance to the people, and taught them with that view to use the discipline. In 1349, .on occasion of the black pestilence which had desolated Europe, the sect was propagated through Poland, Germany, France, Italy and England. They had crosses in their hands and a cowl upon their head, and went naked to the waist ; lashed themselves publicly twice a-day, and once in the night with knotted cords stuck with the points of pins ; and then fell prostrate ?on the ground, imploring aloud the Divine Mercy. From this singularity which, doubtless, at first proceeded from a true spirit of penitence, they fell into a gross heresy, affirming that their blood united with that of Christ in such a manner, as to have the same efficacy ; that after thirty days whipping, they were acquitted from the guilt and punishment of sin, and needed not the sacraments ; persuading the deluded multitude that the gospel had ceased \ with other similar impieties. This phrensy continued a long time, notwithstanding the censures of the church, and the edicts of Christian princes for its suppression: In Italy, Spain and Germany, there still exist certain con~ fraternities, in which the discipline is used as an instrument of penance, but which bear no resemblance in any other respect, with the sectaries just mentioned. When this practice is adopt- ed purely through a sincere regret for having offended Almighty God, and with the desire of appeasing the divine justice, be- yond all doubt it is innocent, and, in due circumstances, even commendable : but if performed in public, there is great danger of its degenerating into bare ceremony and hypocrisy, instead of contributing in any degree to the reformation of morals. FRATRICELLI, or FREROTS names given indiscriminately to a multitude of sects which inundated Europe in the thirteenth century. These sects fell into the most horrid disorders ; re- newed the infamies of the Gnostics and the Adamites ; pretend- ed that neither Christ himself nor his apostles had observed continence ; and that they all had wives of their own, or, what is still more blasphemous, those of other people. Some of these fanatics were not ashamed to maintain, that incest and adultery were no crimes when perpetrated by their fellow sectaries. The greater part, extremely ignorant, imagined the whole perfection of a Christian to consist in a state of absolute poverty and men- dicity ; the profession of which was the distinctive character of the sect. Their original authors were certain refractory Fran- ciscans, who, with the specious plea of practising more perfect- \ ly the religious institutes of St Francis, separated from their brethren, and lived an idle vagabond life, John XXII. repro- G R E 217 bated their pretensions, and fulminated a sentence of excommu- nication against themselves and their abettors. In revenge, they spurned the pope's authority, and leagued themselves with those princes who happened to be at variance with the spiritual head of the church. On this account, we suppose, have pro- testants been induced to adopt these wretched libertines as the predecessors of their reformation. Nor do catholics envy them ihe honour. FREROTS See the above article, FRATRICELLI. G GNOSIMACHI Sectaries of the seventh age, who reprobated every kind of useful research after knowledge and the sciences, even to the study of the holy scriptures ; because, said they, God requires virtuous actions in the faithful, and not science. This conceit was renewed by the Abecedarians. See their ar- ticle- GNOSTICS, or the ILLUMINED were an impious sect of the first or second age, divided into various branches ; some of which were denominated from their respective authors, Simonians, Vcdentinians, Basilidians, Carpocratians, Sethians, Nicolaites, Ophites, &c. &c. To these sectarists, St Paul seems to allude in different parts of his epistles. (See, for instance, 1 Tim. c. 6, v. 20.) They believed in two first principles ; the one good and the principle of good ; the other bad, and the author of evil. They held the human soul to be the very substance of the Divinity ; while they denied Christ to be God, although they acknowledged that the Divinity resided in him. They justified the most criminal excesses, and practised them without a blush ; defiling their nocturnal assemblies with every species of obscene gratification. GODESCALCUS See PREDESTINARIANISM. GOMARISTS See ARMINIANS. GREEK CHURCH consists of those Christians who still ad- here to the schism first commenced by the ambitious patriarch of Constantinople, Photius ; and afterwards renewed in 1053 by the no less ambitious Cerularius, one of his successors in that patriarchate, on pretences equally frivolous and capricious. 218 ORE Cerularius, and Leo Bishop of Acrida, wrote a joint letter to John bishop of Trani in Apulia, in which they objected against the catholics of the Western or Latin church, that they celebrated the holy eucharist in unleavened bread ; fasted on the Saturdays in Lent ; scrupled not to eat blood ; omitted the Alleluias during the Lenten term ; and other trivial points of dis- cipline. (See Cerularius's letter, and Sigeb. de Script, c. 349.) Malice must be to the last degree extravagant, to ground a schism and defection from the catholic communion, upon such trifling exceptions ! St Leo IX. who then sate in St Peter's chair, answered by an exhortation to peace; alleging for these practices of discipline the ancient law and tradition from St Peter, especially for the use of unleavened bread in the eucha- rist. He dispatched a legate to Constantinople, with a learned and ample apology, composed by himself against the excep- tions of the Greeks, in order to preserve them in union with the Latin church ; but was not able to overcome the obstinacy of Cerularius, whose influence and intrigues drew the greater part of the Oriental churches into his schism ; in which, barring some short intervals of re-union, they have continued to the present day. Cerularius himself having also, by his factious spirit, embroiled the state, was driven into exile; and closed a criminal and restless life in misery and despair. (See Ba- ronius, Curopallat. Psellus. Zonar. &c.) The Greek church professes, with the exception only of the spiritual supremacy of the pope, and the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son, all the articles of faith maintained by the Latin or the Roman church. (See Petri Arcudii Concordia Eccles. Oriental, et Occidental. Allatius, de Eccles. Occidental, et Oriental, perpetua consensione. Censura Oriental. Eccles. de preecipuis nostri sasculi hsereticorum dog- matibus. Perpet. de la Foi, t. 3, 1. 9. Ricot. Hist, of the pre- sent state of the Greek church, c. 3, p. 91, &c.) Some protestant theologists of the seventeenth century scrupled not to affirm, that the Greeks exactly coincided in sentiment with themselves in regard of the divers points of controversy be- tween protestants and catholics. The learned authors of the work entitled La Perpetuite de la Foi de VEglise Catholique touchant PEucharistie, 5 vol. in-4-to, have with much diligence and fidelity collected the various monuments ascertaining the religious creed of the Greek church. Such are, for instance, in the first place the testimony of the different authors of that communion, who have flourished since the ninth century, when the schism first commenced ; secondly, the professions of faith of many bishops, metropolitans and patriarchs ; the definitions of two or three synods held expressly for the purpose, and the attestations of several Russian prelates : and in the third place iKe liturgies, euchologies and other ecclesiastic records of th^ ORE 219 Greeks. By all these authentic documents they have triumph- antly demonstrated, that in every age, as at the present day, the Greeks have constantly admitted with the church of Rome seven sacraments, and ascribed to them the same efficacy of con- ferring grace to the worthy receiver ; that they maintain the real presence in the most blessed sacrament ; transubslantiation not consubstantiation, as some have erroneously asserted ; and the sacrifice of the mass : that they practise the invocation of saints ; honor their relics, and their images ; approve the custom of praying for the dead ; observe religious vows, &c. This fact amounts to an unquestionable proof, that the articles of religious dispute between the protestants and Roman catholics, have not originated in the latter ages, as they affect to believe ; since these very doctrines are professed and maintained by the Greeks their inveterate enemies ; whose rancorous animosity, most certainly, would never have permitted them to borrow from the Latin church any part of their system of belief. The realization of such an hypothesis would be attended with equal difficulty, as would their total reconciliation ; nor have they been ever known to sacrifice the most trivial point of difference to promote the cause of peace, and Christian charity. The unanimity of these and other ancient schismatics in condemning the protestant doctrines, evinces this truth ; that the tenets of their respective religions which at this present time so strikingly accord with those of the church of Rome, were the genuine doctrines of the universal church twelve hundred years ago ; a prescription, one would imagine, more than sufficient to command the respect of every thinking Christian. With regard to the contested doctrine of the papal supremacy, we must beg leave to observe that the church is a society ; that she has her peculiar laws and form of worship, and regular discipline; her ministers to teach them, and to enforce their execution ; a tribunal to determine all disputes concerning faith, morality and discipline. Such is the church established by Jesus Christ ; and every such society must have a head. In fact, Jesus Christ, in constituting his church, actually did ap- point St Peter and his successors the spiritual heads of all the faithful. This is a truth avowed by the fathers and by the coun- cils of every age ; and the universal voice of catholic tradition proclaims it. Holy scripture informs us, that our Divine Re- deemer gave this pre-eminence to Peter with respect to the rest of the apostles ; as most evidently appears from Matt. xvi. 1 8, 19, where in reward of his faith and confession he confirmed to him the name of Peter, which signifies a Rock , and promised that upon this rock he would build his church, and that the gates of hell should not prevail against it ; and, moreover, that he would give to him the keys of the kingdom of heaven, fyc. And againfrom St John xxi. 15, &c. where our Lord, after having E e2 220 G R E asked St Peter dost thou love me more than these ? thrice com- mitted to him the charge of all his lambs and sheep, without exception ; that is, the special care of his whole church. Hence St Matthew (chap. x. 2) giving the names of the twelve apostles, says The jirst, Simon who is called Peter. On no other ac- count could he with propriety be styled the Jirst of the sacred college, but solely by reason of his supremacy : for, that he was first in age, does not appear ; and that he was first in calling, is not true ; since St Andrew came to Christ before Peter, and was probably the elder brother. Certain it is, that the evan- gelists in reckoning up the names of the apostles upon several occasions, neither follow the order of their age, nor of their calling ; nevertheless, they always place Peter the first on the list, and sometimes, the more plainly to intimate his pre-emi- nence, name him alone, as chief or prince over all his fellow- apostles. It is said, for instance, in St Mark, (i. 36) Simon, and they that were with him ; in St Luke (ix. 32) Peter , and they that were with him ; in the Acts (ii. 14) Peter standing with the eleven ; and again (v. 29) Peter, and the apostles answered and said, &c. Here the protestant translation has substituted other apostles ; the former expression too clearly denoting St Peter's being something more than the rest. In this place it may not be impertinent to remark, that our Lord was pleased to instruct the people out of Peter's ship (St Luke, v. 3) ; that he ordered the same tribute to be paid for Peter, as for himself, (Matt. xvii. 27) ; that he prayed for Peter in particular, that his faith might not fail ; and ordered him to coiifirm, or strengthen his brethren. (Luke xxii. 32, &c.) Hence St Peter's supremacy has been ever acknowledged by the unanimous suffrage of the holy fathers. (See Origen on the 6th chapter to the Romans, and in his 5th homily upon Exodus ; St Basil of the judgment of God, T. 2, P. 402 ; St Cyril of Jerusalem in his 2d Catechesis ; St Epiphanius, Haer. 51. 17, &c. 5 St John Chrysostom in his 2d homily on the 50th psalm, &c. ; St Cyril of Alexandria in his 12th book of St John 5 St Asterius bishop of Amasea in his sermon upon SS. Peter and Paul ; and, among the Latins, St Cyprian Ep. 70th to Januarius ; St Optatus of Milevis, L. 2, 3 ; St Ambrose, L. 10, upon StLuke; St Jerome in his first book against Jovinian ; St Augustine, L. 2, de Baptismo, c. 1 ; St Leo, Ep. 85 to Anastasius ; St Gregory the Great, L. 4, Ep. 32, &c. &c. Now as Christ established his church to remain till the end of the world ; (Matt, xxviii. 20) so, most certainly, he designed that the form of government which he established in this church, should remain to the end of time. Hence it cannot be question- ed but that our blessed Lord intended, that the supremacy which jj he originally appointed for the better government of his church, and the preservation of unity, should not die with Peter any ORE 221 more than the church itself, with which he promised to remain for ever ; but that it should descend after Peter's decease, to his successors. For, in proportion as the danger of schism in suc- ceeding ages must of course increase, the greater must be the necessity of one Head in order to preserve all in one faith and in one communion. Nor did the church ever acknowledge any other for her chief pastor than the bishop of Rome ; and no other does, or ever did, put in a claim to the spiritual suprema- cy, in quality of successor to St Peter. Even the Greeks them- selvesdown to the period of their first separation from the Latin church, respected his authority ; and ecclesiastic history is full of instances, in which the primacy of the pope was exer- cised even over the church of Constantinople. St Gregory ex- pressly alttnns, that both the emperor, and the bishop of that see, always recognised the superiority of the Roman church, (Ep. p. 94-1.) The patriarchates of Antioch, Alexandria and Jerusalem acknowledged also the papal jurisdiction ; as facts ofincontested notoriety prove tp demonstration. When Cerularitis renounced the communion of the Western church, all his efforts to engage Peter of Antioch in his schism were ineffectual ; and he con- stantly maintained against that schismatical patriarch the prima- cy of the Roman chair. Nor was Africa a stranger to this doc- trine; of which the history of the Donatists and the Pelagians affords innumerable proofs. At the commencement of the re- forming era the supremacy of the pope was universally admitted. Huss himself appealed from the sentence of his own pastor the archbishop of Prague, to the see apostolic of Rome ; and Luther at first thought fit to disavow the charge of disaffection to the papal authority. " I cast myself," says he to Leo X. " at your holincss's feet, resolved as I am to obey Jesus Christ who speaks by your mouth." (Op. Tom. 5, p. 10.) He entreats the pope to listen to him as to a sheep committed to his charge ; protests, .that he acknowledges the supremacy of the Roman church ; and allows, that in every age the popes have held the first rank amoBg her pastors, (ibid. p. 28.5, T. 2, p. 1.) Melancthon too, was for leaving to the pope his spiritual authority, and was of opi- nion it might be of service to religion. The learned protestant writer Grotius declares, that the "bishop of Rome has a right to preside over the universal church ; and does away the objec- tion, that the pope may possibly make an ill use of his preroga- tive by observing, that in such case, when his mandates are in opposition to the canons, they must not be obeyed ; but that, notwithstanding, his authority ought not to be denied, nor obe- dience to be witholden, when his commands are just: " Had due attention," continues he, " been given to this maxim, we should at this moment have had a church both united and re- formed:' The clergy of France, and all its universities, main- tained the same opinion ; neither admitting infallibility in the H E L pope nor any power Inherent in him, over the temporalities of .princes. The superiority then of the Roman pontiff, is a superiority of honor and jurisdiction : it is his province to cause the canons of the church to be duly observed throughout the Christian world ; to assemble synods, and excommunicate the refractory. His decisions, though not infallible, are of great weight, and ought to be respected, rfe can devise and propose to the church new Jaws ; but they are not generally binding, independently of the general acceptation of the church. This primacy is of Divine right ; and the Gallican clergy also maintained the bishop of Rome to be metropolitan and patriarch of his own diocese ; and to have particular prerogatives, and a temporal power over what is called the ecclesiastic state, though not of Divine right, but only by right of acquisition. They held him, likewise, to be inferior to a general council, and liable to deposition by its su- perior authority ; and that the pope could neither absolve a subject from his allegiance to the king, nor even depose bishops in virtue of his primary jurisdiction. The Transalpine divines have different ideas of the papal supremacy ; but their preten- sions have nothing to do with faith. In answer to the objection against the use of unleavened bread in the eucharist, we will just remark, that it was the constant opinion of all the ancient fathers, that our Lord himself had used it in the institution of this divine sacrament; and that its use was general in the Western church before the times of Pho- tius. Nor do we find any thing in holy scripture, in tradition, or in the sacred liturgies, which tends to reprobate this prac- tice. It would appear, that the fathers had adopted it after the example of our Blessed Redeemer, and for greater uni- formity ; and that, on the contrary, the Greeks had preferred leavened bread, not to seem too much attached to a practice which had originated from an ordinance of the Jewish law. Both the one and the other proceeded in this point upon war- rantable grounds ; nor could their varying in matters of disci- pline only, justify a schismatical division. The controversy concerning the procession of the Holy Ghost will be discussed under the article MACEDONIUS. H HELVIDIUS was an Arian who wrote a book against the per- \ petuai virginity of the mother of God ; his followers were termed Antidicomarianites. (See this article.) He was so profoundly H I learned as not to know, that in the scripture style cousins nre de- nominated brethren. (Hieron. cont. Helvid. Aug. Haer. 84. Epiph. Hser. 78.) HENRY of BRUYS was by profession a hermit who, about the commencement of the eleventh age, adopted many of the errors of his master Peter ofBruys. (See the article.) He denied with the latter the utility of infant baptism, condemned the use of churches and oratories, and rejected the mass, together with the practice of praying for the dead, &c. An affected singularity and austerity of life obtained for Henry the reputation of a saint. He was young; wore his hair and heard short; went barefoot even in the severest seasons ; was tall of stature, and ill clad ; his eyes and countenance were wild as the aspect of a stormy ocean, and his voice terrific as the thunder. 1 1 is rest he ordinarily took on the top of some eminence in the open air, and passed the day in the public resorts of the lower classes. The female part of his admirers affirmed, that he was gifted with the spirit of prophecy, and knew the secrets of their consciences, and their most hidden sins. llonry was now solicited to favor with his presence the diocese of Mans; whither he dispatched two of his disciples who were received with the veneration due to angels. Henry afterwards repaired thither in person ; obtained surrep- titiously leave to preach ; and the clergy themselves exhorted the people to attend his sermons. The hermit was endowed with a surprising natural eloquence ; and he soon convinced the populace that he was an apostolic man. He then began boldly to inculcate his erroneous and equally seditious doctrines. Widely different was the effect of his discourses from what had been expected : the people were incited to acts of violence against the clergy, and were taught to treat them as excommunicated persons: they threatened to pull down their houses, to rifle their property, and to stone or hang their persons. Some were actually dragged in the mire, and beaten in the most outrageous manner. In the absence of the bishop of Mans, who was then at Rome, the chapter proceeded to excommunicate the new evangelist : the sentence was received with insult ; and Henry continued his seditious harangues. Meanwhile, the pious and enlightened bishop Hildebert return- ing, caused the hermit to appear before the people ; put some questions to him to expose his ignorance, and then forbade him to preach, with an order that he should quit his diocese. Hen- ry left Mans accordingly ; and travelling. through Languedoc and Provence, collected there some few disciples. Pope Euge- nius III. dispatched a legate into those provinces ; and St Ber- nard also repaired thither, in order to preserve the faithful from the multifarious errors and fanaticism which desolated that part of France. Henry took to flight, but was arrested in his retreat, HER and confined for life in close custody at Toulouse. His follow^ ers dispersed themselves over the southern provinces of France, mixed with the Albigenses, and were annihilated together with them. Thus terminated the pretended perpetuity of the pro- testant system of religion of those enlightened times ; and such was the end of another of Mr Basnage's famed patriarchs of the reformation. (Hist, des Egl. Ref. t. 1, Period 4, c. 6, p. 145, See PETER OF BRUYS.) To his other claims of veneration from protestants, let it be added, that Henry of Bruys was convicted of adultery and other grievous crimes ; and that he was ordina- rily attended by crowds of profligate women, to whom he preached up the most execrable immorality. These he per- suaded to atone for past sins by public immodesties in the church, &c. (Acta. Episcop. Cenonlan. in Vita Hildeberti.) Moslieim, who quotes these acts, has not thought fit to repel the imputation. HERACLEONITES sectarists of the second age, and a branch of Valentinians. Their author was one Heracleon, who appear- ed about the year 140, and disseminated his erroneous princi- ples chiefly in Sicily. St Epiphnnius tells us, (Haer. 36) that to the reveries of Valentinus, Heracleon had superadded his own visionary conceits. He admitted two worlds j the one visi- ble and corporeal, the other spiritual and invisible. The last of which only, according to him, was the work of the Divine Word. He labored hard to justify his system by forced and allegorical explications of Holy Scripture, unwarranted either by reason OP tradition. Thus did he impose upon the credulity of many, and form the sect denominated from him Heracleonites. His com- mentaries on the gospels of St John, and of St Luke, were re- futed by the famous Origen, and are full of allegories destitute alike of probability and good sense ; always arbitrary, and fre- quently ridiculous. (Philostorg. de Hser. c. 41. Autor. Append, apud Tert. 4. 49. Aug. de Hasr. c. 16. Epiph. Hser. 36. Grabe Spicileg. secundi ssec. p. 80.) HERMIANS the followers of one Hermias who flourished in the second age, and adopted the sentiments of Hermogenes. He held the eternity of matter ; that God was the soul of the universe, and that consequently he was incumbered with a ma- terial body, agreeably to the opinion of the Stoics. Jesus Christ, he said, rising again from the dead had not taken with him into heaven his sacred body, but had reposited it in the sun whence he had originally assumed it. The soul of man, accord- ing to the ideas of this new doctor, is composed of elementary^ fire and subtil air ; the birth of children he identifies with the ( resurrection, and this world he ridiculously supposes to be hell. Thus did Hermias attempt to adulterate the doctrines of chris- HER 225 tianity, in order to make them tally with the system of the iStoics ; which, beyond all doubt, neither he nor other philo- sophers of the second age would have deemed worth while, had they esteemed the Christian religion, as our modern infidels affect to do, one continued series of chicanery and imposture. (Vide rhilastrium, de Haer. c. 55, 56. Tillemont, t. 3, p. 67, &e. See also the ensuing article.) HERMOGENiANs-^-rcceived their tenets and their name from Hermogenes, who after having applied himself to the Stoic philosophy, embraced the Christian religion ; but without aban- doning his former erroneous notions. The Stoic philosophers admitted a Supreme Being, infinitely perfect. This Being they supposed to be what they termed the soid of the universe, intermingled and confounded with matter, imprisoned as it were in a vast variety of bodies, and subject to the blind impetuosity of the elements. While the Christians, on the contrary, held an eternal and sen-existing principle, sove- reignly perfect and uncompounded with matter; which by a simple act of its own will, had brought all things into being ; had commanded every thing that now exists to come forth out of nothing, and was instantly obeyed. The principal error retained by Hermogenes after his con- version to Christianity, was with the Stoics to suppose matter to be eternal and increated, the more easily to account for the origin of evil. He rested his system on the false hypothesis that evil is a substance, or an absolute entity ; and, to render it more plausible, he endeavoured to persuade his followers, that Moses himself, like the Stoic sages, had taught the eternity of matter. Tertullian wrote a book against Hermogenes, in which he combats his adversary's arguments with great energy and success. If, says he, matter be eternal and increated, it is equal with God himself; like him it is a necessary Being, and independent of all others. God is sovereignly perfect, precisely because he is a necessary principle ; self-existent, eternal, and, consequently, immutable. It is therefore an absurdity to sup- pose matter to be eternal, yet pregnant with evil ; necessa- ry, yet limited and imperfect. With just as much consistency might it be said, that God himself, although a necessary and self-existing principle, is imperfect, limited and feeble. Second- ly, it is alike absurd to say, that matter is an eternal and ne- cessary entity, but that its attributes are not so ; and that God could alter its state, and give to it a different arrangement from TV hat it had originally. For, eternity or necessary existence implies immutability, and is incompatible with any change. Tertullian also proves, that an eternal and increated being, such as Hermogenes will have matter to be, cannot be es- sentially evil j consequently, the hypothesis of the eternity of rf 226 H E T matter, would not account for the origin of evil the grand ob- ject which Hermogenes, in maintaining the co-eternity of matter, had in view. HESYCASTES, that is to say, QUIETISTS were pretended con* templatives among the Greeks, originating with their monks in the eleventh century. In the fervour of their meditation they imagined themselves in ectasy, and fancied that they beheld a heavenly light, which they took to be an emanation from the Divine substance, and the very same with that which the apos- tles had beheld on occasion of our Blessed Redeemer's transfi- guration upon Mount Thabor. This ridiculous conceit was renewed with greater zeal in the fourteenth century, especially at Constantinople 5 where it excited much disquisition, occasioned synodical convocations of bishops, produced ecclesiastical censures, and a variety of treatises written pro and con by the contending parties. From this silly fanaticism of the Grecian monks, many pro- testants have taken occasion to declaim against the contempla- tive life. But a paroxysm of folly in the mystics of Mount Athos, demonstrates only the weakness of their own brain. Certainly, a person may acquire a habit of meditating upon holy things, without forfeiting the use of reason ; and one may be a fool, without the gift of contemplation. The church in ap*- proving the religious institute of monks and nuns, does not ap- prove fanaticism or superstition. HETERODOX, or DIFFERING IN OPINION is an epithet equally applicable to false doctrines and false teachers in matters of reli- gion. A false teacher is one, who disseminates and maintains sentiments not according with the truths which God hath re- vealed. In a religion of which the Divinity himself is the author, we cannot beat variance with revelation without falling into error. Revelation, notwithstanding, is not witness in its own cause ; nor does Almighty God any longer make known to us immediately and personally, what he requires us to be- lieve. What then is the medium through which we are to attain the perfect certitude of any doctrine being revealed ? This in effect, is the principal and fundamental point, in which catholics and protestants are at issue with each other. The latter, with some semblance of plausibility, maintain that holy scripture is the medium by which Almighty God has been pleased to instruct us concerning revelation ; that whoever be- lieves holy scripture, which is the word of God, believes in factV all that God has revealed ; and that, consequently, he cannot ' be guilty of heterodoxy, or of culpable error. Catholics on the Other hand, contend, that holy scripture, which they equally believe to be the word of God, cannot possibly be the organ of H I 227 revelation to all. In fact, this divine book docs not actually go in quest of infidels who are utter strangers to it; it instructs, nor so much as speaks to those tl Let us make the supposition that an infidel by some lucky .umtcr, lights upon a bible translated into his own languu whence mu>: ive his conviction of its being the word of ; that whatever is c< in this book is true, and that he is bound to believe it with divine faith ? If he is so persua- it is because some missionary has assured him of it ; in which case his faith rests upon the word of the missionary, and not upon the written word of God. From the times *of the apostles down to the present day, there is no instance of a sin- nfidcl being brought to the" faith solely by read ing the holy MM. Hence, St Paul affirms, that faith comes not by reading, but by the hearing : Jtdes ex audit u. m ilit above prsemissae catholics conclude, that the mean established by Almighty God of coming to the knowledge of what he has revealed, is the testimony of his church, or the con- stant and uniform instruction of pastors divinely commissioned, and whose mission is authentic and incontestible. Such, in fact, is the method by which Almighty God has enlightened and con- . (1 all those infidel nations that have at any time embraced the Christian religion. Hence again, they infer, that whatever dogma is contrary to what this church teaches and maintains is lieter :ul an error which excludes its authors and abettors from all rational hope of salvation. Common sense, I think, must give the verdict in favour of the catholic system, however prejudice and the bigotry of education may incline another way. HUSSITES followers of John Huss, and of Jerome of Prague. They were both condemned to the stake, and executed at Constance for their seditious opinions, in 14-15. Huss, deeply tainted with the doctrines of Wicklef, taught that the church consisted exclusively, of the just and predestinate; reprobates and sinners, according to him, making no part of this society. Hence he concluded, that a bad pope, for instance, was no longer the vicar of Jesus Christ ; that bishops and priests living in the state of sin, forfeited of course, all claim to jurisdiction and ministerial power. This doctrine he extends even to the persons of civil magistrates and princes : those that are vicious and govern ill, he says, are ipso facto stript of 'all authority. Vast numbers adopted his sentiments in Bohemia and Moravia. The consequences of such pernicious tenets are obvious. The moment any subject establishes himself judge of the conduct of his superiors as well spiritual as temporal, and that jt appears to him exceptionable, he has nothing to do but rise in arms to effect their extirpation. F f 2 228 H U S Thus did this pretender to reform, under the specious plea of opposing the abuses to which the authority of the Roman pon- tiffs, sometimes carried to excess, gave occasion, aim a mortal blow at the very vitals of all subordination in church and state. He held that christians were not obliged to obey their prelates, but when their orders appeared to themselves reasonable and just ; that their rule of faith was scripture alone ; with other doc- trinal innovations since adopted by the protestants. From the censures of the archbishop of Prague, and of the pope, he ap- pealed to the general council of Constance ; to which the king of Bohemia commanded him to give an account of his doctrine, after first obtaining for him of the emperor Sigismund a pro- mise of a free and safe passage through his dominions on his way to Constance, as well as on his return from the council ; provided he should be there found orthodox, or retract his errors. Huss, on the contrary, obstinately refused to obey the council, and continued openly to disseminate his seditious principles. For this treasonable and inflammatory conduct he was by the civil magistrate of Constance and not by the council sentenced to the flames. Neither the emperor nor the council on this occa- sion did any thing inconsistent with good faith. The council condemned his errors and left to the emperor the part of inflict- ing on the criminal the punishment awarded by the law ; and the emperor did no more than avenge his own cause and that of every crowned head, in directing him to be legally punished when found guilty and pertinacious in his treasonable maxims. This is a right inalienable in all sovereigns, and it is an absurdity to imagine, that Sigismund ever had the most distant idea of despoiling himself of it. Mosheim, the great advocate and admirer of John Huss, him- self acknowledges, that the declaration which he made against the infallibility of the catholic church, was sufficient to entitle him to the epithet of false teacher. Was then the catholic church to alter its belief, in order with consistency to absolve a, person of that description? Mosheim again, allows (Hist. Eccles.) that the Hussites of Bohemia rebelled against the empe- ror Sigismund after he became their lawful sovereign ; and chose to take up arms rather than submit to the decrees of the council of Constance ; pretending that Huss had been condemn- ed unjustly. Was it then in character for an ignorant banditti, as they certainly were, to undertake to decide as judges what was orthodox doctrine and what not ? They did not long agree even among themselves; and soon formed two independent parties ; the one denominated Calixtins because they insisted upon being allowed the privilege of the chalice at communion ; requiring, moreover, that the clergy should imitate the conduct of the apostles, and that mortal sins should be punished in a H U S manner apportioned to their enormir arty was called Thabv \\\ a mountain in the . of Prague, which they fortified, and to which they gave the name . bar: these were more fanatic than tin- . ;*nd carried their nsions Hill farther. Primitive simpl. abolitu, the papal authority, the absolute change ot and i eit ot having none to preside over their society but Jesu < in person, who, they said, was about personal 1 revihit the earth, with a flambeau in one hand, and a sword in r, in order to exti rety and to purify his church. this class of Hussites, exclusively, Mosheim wishes to ascribe all the acts of cruelty and barbarity committed in Bohemia during the course of a bloody war which lasted sixteen years: but, he observes, it is difficult to decide whether the Hussites or the catholics pushed their excesses to greater lengths. Let us >r a moi: ! 'he Hussites, at least, ag- gressors : they did not await the martyrdom of John Huss, be- fore r outrages upon ; md, iliniM/li i ht exist abuses in tli , a troop of i rant were not the fittest instrument* to n : tli, MI. M.Micim admits, that their maxims were abominable^ and that from such men it was not natural to expect any thing save acts of cruelty and injustice. In the year 1483, the lathers of the council of Basil succeeded in reconciling the Calixtins to the catholic church, and indulged them in the use of the cup at the sacred communion. The Tha- Imrites, on the contrary, remained incorrigible; though Mo- sheim tells us that, on this occasion for the first time, they began to examine into the grounds of their religion, and to give to it a reasonable form. It was indeed high time they should do so, r sixteen years of blood and carnage. These reformed sec- tarians of John Huss, now took the name of Brethren of Bohe- mia, and were also called Picards or rather Begards : they espoused the cause of Luther when he commenced reformer, and were his precursors before they became his disciples. Hence we may account for that partiality which protestants have always shown in favor of the Hussites. Of this so glorious an alliance catholics do not envy them the honor. 1. It is granted by the protestants, that these their fellow brethren in Christ were influenced not by their zeal for religion, but by a blind and furious fanaticism ; since they never thought of any plan of worship before the lapse of sixteen years at least, after the death of their proto-martyr Huss ! 2. Mosheim has not condescended to inform the world, in what consisted that pre- tended reasonable religion, which so naturally formed a coalition with protestantism. Indeed, that a religion orthodox in its principles and rational in its creed should have been the work 230 ICO of a frantic and infuriated rabble, is somewhat paradoxical. Luther himself had sucked in from the writings of Wicklef and John Huss, not only his heterodox opinions, but also those san- guinary maxims which disgrace his own writings, and renewed in Germany, through the instrumentality of the Anabaptists, a part of the horrid scenes of blood and devastation, of which the Hussites had already set the example in Bohemia. I& J .JACOBITES. See the article EUTYCHIANS. ICONOCLASTS, or IMAGE-BREAKERS enemies to the catholic practice of venerating holy images. The catholic church then maintains that " sovereign or divine honour is due to God alone, and cannot be given to any creature without sacrilege and gross idolatry : much less to images or relics which, our catechism admonishes us from our infancy, can neither see, nor hear, nor help us. But as protestants do reverence to the name of Jesus in compliance with what their church enjoins, and bow to the altar, (see Archbishop Laud's speech in the Star Chamber, June 14-, 1637) without giving divine worship either to the sound or to the wood (the action of bowing being of itself in- different, and not always an indication of divine excellency in the thing or person towards whom it is used) ; so we believe, that Christians have the liberty of using such actions, as are not by the gospel appropriated solely to God, in respect of the images of Christ and his saints, without giving divine worship to any thing save to God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost. For where there is no law, there is no transgression. (Rom. iv. v. 15.) Bowing and kneeling are not actions appropriated by the gospel, exclusively, to God alone. They are among the *&* That every man shall be saved by the law or sect which he profess- ethy so that he be diligent to frame his life according to that law and the light of nature. For holy scripture doth set out unto us only the name of Jesus Christ, whereby men must be saved. And will protestants still forget their own creed, however at defi- ance with the grand reforming maxim in order to calumniate more wantonly their fellow Christians ! LOLLARDS sectarians of the fourteenth century, thus named from one Walter Lolhard a German, who commenced his apostleship in 1315. The greater part of his erroneous opinions he borrowed from the Albigenses : he taught that the devils had been banished heaven unjustly ; that they would one day be re- admitted there, and that on the contrary, Michael and the other angels, authors of this pretended injustice, would be eter- nally damned, as well as all those who should refuse to embrace his doctrine. It spread very rapidly in Austria, Bohemia and other places. This sect rejected the ceremonies of the church ; the invocation of saints ; the Blessed Eucharist, and the sacri- fice of the mass, as well as extreme-unction, and satisfactory works of penance. They maintained that baptism was of no avail, confession useless, and matrimony a professed whoredom. Lolhard was condemned to the flames at Cologne in 1322, and at his execution betrayed no symptoms either of fear, or of re- pentance. In England the Wicklefites were denominated Lollards, be- cause these two sects, by reason of the similarity of most of their opinions, had formed a junction ; and they were both condemn-Vj ed by Thomas Arundel, archbishop of Canterbury, in the ' council of London 1396, and in that of Oxford in 1408. It has been very justly observed, that the Wicklefites had predis- L U T 243 posed the minds of the people for the schism of Henry VIII. in England, and that the Lollards had prepared the way for John IIuss in Bohemia. Mosheim gives a different account of the prigin of these fana- tics, who, he says, under the garb of religion concealed their immoralities ; and on this account were the heretics of the four- teenth and fifteenth centuries called indiscriminately Lollards. LUTHER the great apostle of protestantism, was born at Isleb, a town of Saxony, towards the close of the fifteenth cen- tury, 1-1-83. He studied his course of theology at proceeded doctor and commenced professor in that university, after having first embraced the religious institute of the Augus- tinians. Europe at that time lived in peaceable subjection to the see of Rome while Leo X. a person of extraordinary qua- lifications, and a munificent patron of merit, occupied the pon- tifical chair. He formed the project of erecting a magnificent church in honor of St Peter, and granted indulgences to all that should contribute towards the expences of the edifice. Lu- ther's zeal was awakened at the abuses which are said to have been practised in the collection of these charities. He entered warmly into iho merits of the cause, and soon contested the effi- ,\H v of the indulgences themselves. The dispute was maintained with much heat by the papal commissioners and the theologians of Francfort ; while Luther on his side, indulged in intemperate i\bu>i, and quite forgot the modest reserve of religious subordi- nation. He was cited to appear before his Holiness at Rome 5 and Leo X. issued forth a bull, in which he declared the valid- ity of the indulgences, and pronounced that, in quality of suc- cessor to St Peter, and vicar of Jesus Christ, he had an un- doubted right to grant them ; that this was the doctrine of the catholic church, and an essential article of her communion. He published another bull, proscribing Luther's opinions, and commanding him to burn his books and to retract his errors ; which if he neglected to do within a given time, he was to be esteemed a heretic. Luther resolved to appeal from the papal bull to a general council, and as the elector of Saxony had began to patronise his senjimefits, be had the boldness publicly to burn the bull at WrttgntrargT^' iJujfaction was perfectly congenial with Luther's violent temper ; but it proved, eventually, in his regard, an act also, of policy. The people on the sudden lost that reverential awe which hitherto had impressed them, for every decree pro- ceeding from the Roman pontiff; and the confidence which they had always reposed in the efficacy of indulgences. Luther him- self, protected by his great admirer and patron the elector of Saxony, disregarded both the ordinances of the emperor Charles V. and the censures of Rome fulminated against him in Hh2 L U T 1520. Previous to his excommunication he had appealed to the pope, and promised submission to his judgment : but when he found himself condemned, and his opinions proscribed, he no longer observed any bounds. Nor did the condemnation of many celebrated universities make the least impression on his haughty mind. When first this innovator declaimed againt the abuse of in- dulgences, it is probable he was not himself aware how far the impetuosity of his character would impel him ; else, we presume, his mind would have recoiled with horror from the view of that chaos of errors and false doctrines, into which he was about to plunge. He began with censuring the abuse of indulgences, next maintained their inefficacy, then denied to the church the power of absolving sinners, the necessity or utility of contrition for sin, and of whatever we term satisfactory works of penance ; fasting, repentance, celibacy, corporal austerities, alms-giving, and the like. Luther did not hesitate to pronounce them all absolutely useless, and thus to condemn of folly, at least, the saints of every preceding age, together with St Paul and all his fellow-apostles. Monastic vows he also reprobated, and the continency of priests j and proved he was in earnest by taking to wife a nun. So unaccountable was the perversity of his maxims, that he taught on one side, that all human actions were sins, and still with Inconceivable infatuation insisted, that a man justified by faith, could never sin at all ; because, according to him, God will not impute sin to one thus justified. Mons. Bossuet has placed this absurdity in its most glaring light. (Hist. Variat. 1. 1, n. 9, &c.) Luther moreover rejects free-will, which he terms a slave ; and says, that God operates alike in man both sin and virtue ! He pretends that the sacraments possess no other efficacy than that of exciting us to faith, and maintains only two sacra- ments baptism and the eucharist, as exclusively producing this effect: the confession of Augsbourg indeed, added penance; although the Lutherans seem in practice not to have insisted much upon this article of their confession. The Ana- baptists and Socinians infer from Luther's sacramental system, that infants are incapable of baptism, because incapable of actual faith. Transubstantiation Luther also discarded, though he defended with invincible obstinacy against the Sacramentarians the real presence of the body and blood of our Saviour Christ in tl^jJiajgsk. Carlostad, his colleague in the university of maintained that if the real presence was to be de- fended, tramubstantiation must equally be admitted. He and his adherents in the doctrine of ajfigumtive presence only, were j nick-named Sacramentarians, and excommunicated by Luther ; although it was embraced by Zuinglius and Calvin, the other two great Fathers of the reformation : nor could he ever be iii~ L U T 245 duced to mitigate the sentence. After his decease, when de- sired to explain how the body of Jesus Christ could be in the consecrated host together 'with the bread, some Lutherans replied by impanation ; others by ubiquity ; others again by con- comitance or a sacramental union. Whence it appears, they did not rightly comprehend the meaning of their master in respect of this important article. Luther moreover denied the sacrifice of the mass, purgatory, and the utility of praying for the dead : he rejected the invoca- tion and intercession of the saints ; and maintained that ordina- tion conferred upon the ministers of God neither any character nor supernatural power ; consequently, according to Luther's principles, there is no hierarchy, no true priesthood : this con- sequence too, lit- did not disavow. With regard to the indissolu- bility of mntrimony his scruples were but trifling j and he granted to the Landgrave of Hesse the extraordinary privilege of having two wives: nor were his sentiments extremely delicate- with refe- rence to the very pardonable crime of adultery of which himself was more than once, perhaps wrongfully, suspected ; although his singular method or explaining the ten commandments, par- ticularly the sixth (or as some arrange them, the seventh in the catalogue) may well account for such a rude suspicion. Enraged that the pope should have presumed to condemn his doctrine and excommunicate his person, Luther in revenge proclaim- ed him antichrist, denied that the church had any right to inflict censures or to proscribe errors, and defined Holy Scripture alone to be the rule of faith to Christians. But, by the most re- volting inconsistency, he himself condemned the Sacramentarians -and the Anabaptists ; exercised among his followers all the au- thority of a sovereign pontiff'; excommunicated, and would wil- lingly have exterminated, had it been in his power, all that dif- fered with him in opinion. In his new version of the scripture, which he compelled his sectarists exclusively to adopt, he thought fit to retrench the epistle of St James, because it taught too clearly the necessity of good works. In this however, his dis- ciples and our English protestants have not imitated their daring patriarch ; they have restored it to its rank in the sacred canon, as well as the Apocalypse of St John which is not admitted by the Calvinists. The principle by which Luther repudiated all the ordinances and institutions of the church, as inventions merely human, led him to maintain, that in virtue of that liberty of the children of God which Christians had acquired in baptism, none were sub- ject to any human law. No sooner had he published his treatise upon Christian Liberty, than a part of the German peasantry took up arms against their lawful princes, and committed the most atrocious acts of insubordination and rebellion. But such -disorders, it would seem, did not alarm the piety of Luther : L U T they were what he expected, and endeavoured to promote ; for it was a maxim with him, that the gospel must be promulgated through torrents of blood. Consistently with this evangelical principle, he passed his life in the midst of tumult, actuated with the most furious passions of hatred and vengeance against ail that ventured to oppose him. It was the character given him by his most intimate friends and confidents ; and to be con- vinced of its correctness, we have only to consult his own writings. Such was the boasted hero of the reformation ; and such, ori- ginally, were the prominent features of Protestantism ; which with astonishing rapidity was soon diffused over a great part of Germany, Prussia, Pomerania, and partially, of Poland : so early as the year 1525 two of Luther's disciples travelled into Sweden. Gustavus Vasa had newly mounted the Swedish throne, and through motives of self interest and ambition, himself became a Lutheran. This prince soon made Lutheranism the established religion of that kingdom rin order to reduce the power of the clergy, and to vest at once all ecclesiastic property as well as influence, in his own person. Christiern III. king of Denmark, entered into similar views j and, aided by the counsels and by the arms of Gustavus, he also, became absolute in 1536, and caused the confession of Augsbourg to be received as the rule of faith in Denmark. Under the reign of Sigismund I. Lutheran- ism had only a few private sectarists in Poland. But after his decease in 1548, under his son and successor Sigismund Au- gustus a feeble and notoriously voluptuous prince, that king- dom presently swarmed, with Lutherans, Hussites, Sacramenta- rians, Calvinists, Anabaptists, Unitarians or Socinians, Greek schismatics, and a numberless variety of other sects. Lutheranism had also penetrated into Hungary and Transyl- vania, during the tumults which had agitated those two king- doms 5 but since their annexation to the Austrian domains, it has gradually declined. In France, the emissaries of Luther made at first some proselytes, till the legislature interfered ; those of Calvin were more successful, and ushered in the most dread- ful state convulsions together with their novel doctrines. Near- ly similar was the fate of England. Neither Luther however, nor his disciples, had any share in the meritorious schism of Henry VIII. barring perhaps, the influence of their bad example upon the mind of that tyrannical prince. While a catholic, he had published a book against Luther, and persisted till his dying day in his hatred of Lutheranism. The new form of religion which he obtruded upon the nation, disgusted equally both pro- testants and catholics. But under the infant king Edward VI. Peter Martyr and Bernardin Okinus introduced the Calvinistic principles. To the more attentive of our readers the rapid progress of L U T 217 LulTicranism will not appear astonishing. In 1521 Charles V. in the diet of Worms, had indeed proscribed its author, and issued a decree unfavorable to his adherents: but Frederic's protection and partiality for Luther's system rendered it of no avail. The members of the diet of Nuremburg in 1 523 were more eager to redress their own real or pretended grievances, than those of the church ; and the two succeeding diets held at Spire, the one in 1525, the other in 1529, were not less friendly to the new religion, because it promoted their several avaricious or ambitious views. The princes of the empire that had em- braced the sentiments of Luther, here protested against the im- perial decrees ; and from this circumstance is derived the name of Protestant. In 1530, at the diet of Auorsbourg, the princes above mentioned signed a confession of their faith, which from this diet was deno- minated the Confession of Augsbourg. Here they pledged their future submission to the decrees of a general council to be as- sembled by the pope. This solemn engagement they did not eventually " think proper to make good. They afterwards at Smalcald made a league against the emperor, and all that should adhere to his interests. Luther himself approved it, and coun- selled moreover a general war against the pope and whoever^ might presume, like him, to oppose the promulgation of his new gospel. Paul III. in concert with the emperor and the king of France, in 154-2 convoked a general council at Trent to terminate the re- ligious contests which compromised the tranquillity of the empire and that of Europe. The synod was not closed before the year 1563 ; nor would the protestants be ruled by its decisions, not- withstanding their repeated promises to that effect. Luther in- deed, was now no more. The pacification concluded at Passaw between Charles V. and the princes of the empire, and subse- quently that of Augsbourg, had secured to the protestants reli- gious toleration and liberty of conscience; but their mutual dissentions, and their quarrels with the Zuinglians and Calvinists as well as with the catholic^, continued ; till the treaty of Mun- ster, called also the treaty of Osnabourg and of Westphalia, in 1648 placed things nearly on the same footing as at the com- mencement of the French revolution. It was guaranteed by all the potentates of Europe. This peace however, was by no means adequate to produce either harmony of sentiment or union of heart. Confusion is the natural result of the very principles of the reformation. ( this assertion we shall soon behold a striking proof in the short narrative of one of the most zealous champions of Protestant- ism, the Ecclesiastical and Political History of Hornius : " Luther having established," says this learned protestant, " the right which each individual possesses of interpreting the U T sacred scriptures, asserted too, that aided by the light of heaven/ he possessed also the privilege of affixing to them their true iii-^ terpretation. Admitting with Luther, at least the former of these principles, Zuinglius presents himself; and boldly declares that not Luther, but himself long before Luther- had explored' their genuine interpretation. Carlostad, with equal intrepidity proclaims, that he has made a more accurate discovery of their real signification than either of the above apostles ; and without demur, in defiance of his master's authority, he breaks in pieces the images which the latter had suffered to remain in the churches at Wfttenburg, and stirs up great commotions in that city. Not long after, these three leaders of the reformation commenced their dispute respecting the holy eucharist ; a dis- pute in which were often blended circumstances the most ludi- crous, with acts of violence the most atrocious. The champions on each side, drew after them individually an immense multi- tude of followers in different kingdoms, provinces and districts ; just as the pretended evidence of the sense of the scriptures, or their pretended inspiration, actuated them j or rather, just as their ignorance, and their passions, in unison with those of their fanatic leaders, misguided them." . " During the contestation between Luther, Zuinglius and Car- lostadius, a Silesian gentleman of the name of Schwenckfeld,. discovered another interpretation of the text this is* my body, extremely different both from that of Luther, and from that of his two antagonists. He maintained, that the word this ex-' presses not elemental, but purely spiritual bread and wine ; and proceeding from error to error, contended soon, that the letter of the scripture is useless, and that all exterior ministry in the church is superfluous. Schwenckfeld drew after him a considerable number of partisans, whose descendants still sub- sist unmolested, in certain villages of Silesia." " Beginning with the same maxims as the first reformers* and raising upon them the fabric of their singular institution, Stork and Munster, both of them the disciples, and the latter the great favourite of Luther, about the same period commenced teaching a variety of tenets, in opposition to the dictates of their master. The most prominent of these tenets were the necessi- ty of rebaptising all that had been baptised in their infancy and the establishment of a new kingdom foretold in the apoca- lypse ; which was to last a thousand years, and to originate with their mission. Fired with the ambition, and convinced of the necessity of forming and completing this new empire, they taught that it was pious, expedient, and even necessary, to de- pose and murder all princes and magistrates, who should ven-\ ture to oppose its establishment. Munster assured his followers, \ that God had given him in a vision the sword of Gideon, and even commissioned the archangel Michael to assist him. Suffice LUX 249 it to say, that soon above 100,000 deluded creatures believed and followed the impostor ; upwards of 50,000 of whom perished in the field, the wretched victims of his ambition, and the dupes of their own credulity. The greater part of them fell without cither fighting, or attempting to run away ; for Munster had i red them, that he would stop the balls in the foldings of his robe, or catch them ; so that no one should be wounded." " After the death of Munster who met with the fate which his crimes had amply merited, his sect far from decreasing, con- tinued to multiply, and counted an immense herd of adherents in every country where the seeds of the reformation had been sown. He had several successors, some of them as ambitious, and many of them as frantic as himself; Rotman, Knipper- doling, Matthews, and John of Leyden who from the hono- rable profession of a taylor aspired to the supreme dignity, and was in fact proclaimed by his fanatic party the Universal Mo- narch of the Earth ; and this religious ruffian breathing nothing but inspiration, spread wide around him slaughter and devasta- tion. Fortunately, however, for mankind, the dreadful pow- er which these men possessed, and the more dreadful effects which it produced, were but transient The states in which the sect was most numerous, alarmed for their own security, adopt- ed measures to repress it ; and these measures, in proportion to their rigor, were in general, effectual. The consequence was that, as they could no longer be seditious with impunity, they gradually became more moderate; and, chiefly by die influence of Menno, abandoned the idea of recurring any more to arms. Having, therefore, sunk to a state of indolence or inaction; and instead of contending with princes for their kingdoms, disputing with themselves about words, they soon began to fritter into dis- tinct societies, which have very little resemblance with each other, except in the general appellation of Anabaptists. They are di- vided into Mennonites, Hutterians, Gabrielites, Moravians, &c. &c. among whom there prevails a degree of confusion, equal to that which reigned at Babel. Some deny the Trinity ; some the distinction of persons ; some maintain that all learn- ing, particularly that of the languages, is derived from Satan ; with other like absurdities. Such in a word is the multiplicity of their discordant opinions, that it is difficult if not impossible, to unravel their religious system." " From the school of the Anabaptists came forth several new heresiarchs George Delpht, who called himself the true Mes- siah, and was followed by great numbers of disciples in several parts of Holland Henry surnamed House of Charity, who ranked himself above Moses and Jesus Christ William Postel, who taught that himself had delivered men from eternal death, while his wife had done the same good turn in favor of the man kind," th 250 L U T About this period began to appear on the theatre of the reformation the sect of the Socinians. Their doctrines are a compound of those of Ebion, Arius, Sabellius, Photinus, Abe- lard ; and of several other heresiarchs. With a boldness, says our protestant historian, which Christianity should not tolerate, and which is dangerous to civil governments, they began to cor- rupt and undermine all the truths of revelation. Servetus was the first founder of the sect : Gentilis gave it some celebrity ; but Lselius Socinus the bosom friend of Calvin, diffused it ; while Faustus the nephew of Laclius, organised it into system." " To the aid of impiety in 1552 rose up also the heresy of the "biquitarians, who in addition to many other errors maintained, at the body of Jesus Christ is every where personally present; and that all the properties of the Divine nature were infused into his human nature by the hypostatic union. Hence they taught, that the body of Christ is contained in a glass of beer, in a sack of corn, in the rope with which the criminal is hanged. Their first apostle was John Westphalus, a minister of Hambourg, succeeded by Brehtius, Wigard, Illyricus, Oseander, Schmid- ling and several others, the greatness of whose learning was ex- ceeded, only by the greatness of their impiety." " In Holland the reformation had hardly superseded catholi- city when its tranquillity began to be disturbed by the new and formidable society of the Arminians. These, treading in the foot- steps of the Socinians, or more properly real Socinians them- selves not only entertain the most impious tenets respecting grace and predestination ; (though not half so impious in fact, as those of either Luther or Calvin) they also teach that it is wrong to worship the Holy Ghost, and that the Trinity is merely an object of speculation, &c. Armed with these errors, the Ar- minians formed a schism in the churches of the Low Countries, the suppression of which excited fresh seditions and disturbances throughout the nation. At length, however, the arm of perse- cution, aided by the synod of Dort, did re-establish peace, though nothing like unanimity." " Among the reformed churches, frequent attempts were made to bring about a reconciliation : but such was the turbulence of their respective leaders, and such their ardor for error and inno- vation, that every attempt proved fruitless and abortive. Hulse- man, Calovius, Danhauwer, with a crowd of other reformers and particularly those of Wfttenburg, armed themselves with new violence to create divisions." " In England," continues Hornius, " as in all other coun- tries,, the introduction of the reformation was the introductions \ of discord, disorder and division. The passions of Henry had \ altered many of the ancient doctrines of the church. Edward added fresh changes to those of Henry ; and Elizabeth improved upon the innovations of the infant king. However, along with L U T 251 changes, there was still permitted to subsist a multi- tude of popish ceremonies, and the tyrant anti-christian institu- tion of episcopacy. All these in general, but particularly the latter, I remely obnoxious to the followers of Calvin, who at this period were become very numerous, and very for- midable to the nation under the name of Puritans. The con- test bet\\ c and the established sect forms a very striking epoch in the annals of English hist< " The Puritans early began to marshal themselves into va- rious classes of Brownists, Separatists, Semi-separatists, Ro- binsonians, and the numerous sects of Independents: the number exeeeds forty. In short, England was infected with the venom of every species of corrupted opinion. There was nothing sa- cred that was not reprobated as profane ; nor hardly any thing me which was not held up as sacred. Even the most igno- rant, and the very dregs of the populace became preachers. They preached (the case is precisely the same with the Metho- dists at present) ; and the mob was all credulity and attention. How well, to use the words of the commentators of the English bible on the 25th verse of the 10th chapter of Genesis how well does the name of Phaleg become our times ? How \vellmightwegivethis name (it signifies division) to every, child that comes into the world ! How easy would it be to fill up our annals with this name ; so deplorable are our divisions. ,T since the creation of the world did there exist so many monstrous opinions, as there are at present in England." " From the body of the Independents, as from the Trojan horse, there issued, as already has been noticed, more than forty dif- ferent sects. Some of them rejected the scriptures ; some taught that there was no longer any church of God whatever upon earth, these were called Waiters: some maintained, that there was indeed a church, but that it was hidden ; and these were called Seekers. The opinions of some of these sectaries are too horrible to be related. For my own part, 1 think as those do, who say that England is the great nursery of error, and the grand theatre where reigns the most dreadful licentiousness of believing, writing, and of teaching too, whatever passion or folly is pleased to dictate. The history of the heresies and schisms of other nations presents nothing to be compared with the scenes of horror, which it exhibits." Here, I think, Hornius shews some partiality, and would willingly have his readers overlook the equally impious and unaccountably absurd opinions of his fellow-countrymen, from whom this nation borrowed its unorthodoxy. He goes on : " At periods also, still more recent than those to which I have alluded, Great Britain continued to hold out to the rest of Europe (now indeed somewhat recovered from its late insanity) nearly the same exemplifications of extravagance * I i 2 252 L U T and impiety with the above. You might often find in one family as many religions as there were individuals that composed it. The pretext and the apology for all this was liberty of conscience, and the privilege of universal toleration. Nothing in reality is more flattering to vanity and self-love, than to be the arbiter of one's own belief." HORNIUS. Such is the description given by this enlightened protestant of the errors and confusion resulting from the reformation ; and such the concluding reflections which he makes upon the principle from which they emanated. It is contained in the fol- lowing words of Luther Judge for yourselves : this is the sole rule of truth, and the sole rule of gospel liberty. What a prolific source of errors and impieties is here laid open to the human mind ; and how easy is it by it to account for all the heresies and abuses, the disorders and the horrors of the reformation ! " Surely," exclaims the author of the Sermons for the Sundays after Pentecost, from whom I have copied the above 5 " surely if truth be divine and essentially one ; and if the profession of truth, as undoubtedly it is, be essential to salvation ; then should the path which conducts to it be more secure, and the means of attaining it, more easy. To permit all in matters of religion yea, to command all to follow their individual private judgement, this appears to me worse than nonsense. It would, I think, be just equally wise to command the ignorant and unexperienced landsman without sail or rudder, without helm or compass to sail amid storms and darkness, to the pole ; just equally wise to bid the populace be temperate and sober, and yet open pipes of wine, or oceans of liquor, to their intemperance !" " Since the period when Hornius drew up his genealogy of the errori of the reformation, it is well known how much the fright- ful generation has increased. Error since that epoch has been daily begetting error, and fancy and fanaticism producing folly and superstition. Each parent sect has, with portentous fe- cundity, generated an offspring too numerous, in some in- stances, for industry to account an offspring soon, like its parent heresy, producing another offspring, innumerable as itself, and equally positive of its own exclusive claim to orthodoxy. But why look for unity and order where individuals have all an equal share ofliberty where each one has the right to judge and decide, and none the power to control his decision ? Ad- mit only a similar system of civil liberty into politics, how soon would society exhibit a scene of anarchy and discord ? But, the fact is, protestant governments understand much better the nature of civil liberty, and regulate much more wisely, its in^ fluences, than their churches fix the boundaries of their religious liberty." (Ibid. Serm.) But enough of Lutheranism and the effects of Lutheran fana- ticism. We have refuted its erroneous tenets respecting the hierarchy of the church, under the article AERIUS $ respecting L U T 253 TOWS and the celibacy of the priesthood, under that of VIGI- LANTIUS ; its errors regarding the nature of the catholic church, under the article DONATISTS ; those on transubstantiation, under the article BERENGARIUS ; on laical communion in both kinds, under that of the HUSSITES, and the pope's supremacy, under the article GREEKS. We will examine in few words the catho- lic doctrine concerning indulgences, the sacraments, the sacri- fice of the mass, the Christian's rule of faith, and lastly, the in- fallibility of the church of Christ. Meanwhile we will just pre- mise, that if the whole body of the church of Christ did err in faith, as Luther asserts it did, but as we shall prove by and bye, it neither did nor could, consistently with the promises of Christ and with our creed ; Luther and his jarring fellow-gospellers too, were much more liable themselve to error, and consequently, to follow their ne&-im -en fed system of religion ,much more unsafe. Of Indulgences. An indulgence, in the ecclesiastical acceptation of the term, means a remission of the temporal punishment due to sin after the Divine pardon has been obtained by the sacrament of pen- ance as to the eternal punishment which awaited it in the life to come. This is a distinction which we find exemplified in the person of King David, and of the Israelites who perished in the v.-ilderness, in consequence of their infidelities, which God had pardoned upon their repentance and at the instance of his ser- vant Moses, but still rigorously executed upon them his threat of a general exclusion from the Land of Promise, on account of the self-same prevarications, &c. As our Blessed Redeemer imparted only to the pastors of the church the power of remitting sin, to them exclusively it apper- tains, to enjoin to sinners appropriate works of penitence or sa- tisfaction in proportion to their wants, or the grievousness of their crimes ; and there may exist also, sufficient reasons for oc- casionally diminishing the severity, or limiting the duration of such penalties. Hence it becomes the duty of the sovereign pontiff and the other prelates of the church to accord indul- gences. Of this we have a remarkable instance in the conduct of St Paul towards the incestuous Corinthian, c. 5, 1 Cor. and ii. Cor. c. 2, v. 10. The church through every succeeding age has continued to adopt in practice the condescendence of the apostle. This fact is too notorious to admit being called in question ; and even protestants have approved it in the primitive church, while they aftect to reprobate it in the church of Rome. They reason ill. For the very establishment of canonical injunc- tions, is an invincible argument against them of the belief which the church had ever retained, that after the remission of the eternal guilt of sin, together with its eternal punishment, tha sinner notwithstanding, is obliged to satisfy the Divine justice by L U T temporary expiations. If then he should neglect to discharge the obligation here, he must of course pay off the debt here- after. Consequently, he cannot be acquitted valid Jy on earth, without reaping the advantage of this indulgence also in a fu- ture state. If once you grant that the sinner, at his departure hence indebted to the Divine justice for venial offences, is liable to suffer temporary pain, (for none can enter heaven defiled with the smallest stain of sin) and that he may be relieved by the prayers and suffrages of the church, why not allow -that they may prove beneficial to his soul, and release him eventually from his sufferings ? Nor have the popes, as some have misconceived, deprived the bishops of the privilege of granting indulgences ; but the church has wisely reserved to them exclusively, the power of according plenary indulgences in favor of the entire body of the faithful; because they alone have jurisdiction over the universal church. There are circumstances in which it is meet, that all true be- lievers throughout the universe, concur unanimously in offering prayers and good works, with a view to obtain of Almighty God his abundant graces, in behalf of the whole catholic com- munity. To whom, we wish to know, does it more properly appertain to invite them to this pious harmony, than to the Fa- ther and Pastor of the universal church ? We do not deny, that there have existed abuses in these latter ages, greater than existed in the primitive times. But, to correct abuses, we must not combat them with the arguments of sophism and false reasoning, nor with observations equally devoid of piety, of justice, and of truth. These, in fact, were the unhallowed weapons with which Luther and Calvin, in declaiming against abuses attempted to subvert the the unity of the catholic faith. Indulgences, it is true, had been too lavishly dispensed : it was easy to retrench the redundancy : but as their origin was laudable, the things themselves should have been suffered to remain inviolate. Gene- ral indulgences, like those termed Jubilees, which powerfully re- commend to the faithful the worthy participation of the sacra- ments, the doing of alms, fasting and similar public acts of virtue, are indisputably a public good. Even at Paris, the very centre of incredulity and vice, infidel philosophy itself was com- pelled to acknowledge the salutary effects of the last Christian jubilee. Nothing can be more reasonable than the decree of the council of Trent relating to indulgences (Sess. 25.) " As the power of according indulgences," says the synod, " was by Jesus Christ entrusted to his church which, from its very origin, has been always in the habit of using this divine commission, the sacred council declares and formally defines, that this usage ought to be preserved as beneficial to Christian people, and confirmed by preceding councils ; and it pronounces anathema to all those who pretend that indulgences are unprofitable, or that the L U T 255 cliurch is not authorised to grant them. It desires nevertheless, that in granting them due moderation be observed, conformably with the laudable practice established from time immemorial in the church ; lest a too great facility in granting them should en- feeble ecclesiastic discipline. In regard of the abuses \vhich have crept in, and have given a handle to false teachers to declaim against indulgences, the sacred council with the design to correct them, ordains by the present decree, in the first place that every species of sordid profit be removed : it enjoins the bishops to no- tice whatever abuses they shall discover in their dioceses, to de- nounce them to their provincial council, and afterwards to the sovereign pontiff'," &c. By an indulgence of forty days, Sec. we understand the remis- sion of a penalty e jiii i course of penitence for forty days, &c. prescribed by the ancient canons ; and by a plenary indul- gence the remission of all the punishment prescribed by these penitential canons for every kind of spiritual delinquency. But it is not by any means a releasement from the obligation of doing penance; which is universally binding upon all the faithful unless you do penance, you shall all alike perish. (St Matt.) Luther and those who adhere to the confession of Augsbourg, pretend, that the effiacy of the sacraments depends on the faith of the receiver ; that they were instituted solely to nourish our faith, and that they do not confer grace even upon those that oppose no obstacle to prevent it. The catholic church has al- ways taught the reverse of this doctrine, and has invariably ascribed to the sacraments a real efficacy ; a virtue productive of sanctification : whoever is acquainted with the writings of the fathers, must allow this to be incontestible. Nor is it hard to comprehend that, as the grace which sanctifieth, is a gift of the Holy Ghost, God should have decreed to grant this grace, this gift of the Holy Ghost to none but the worthy receivers of the sacraments. Thus would sanctifying grace be attached to the application of the sign ; and consequently, this sign would of it- self produce a sanctifying grace as its instrumental cause whether morally or physically, is a mere scholastic dispute. The church, however, does not teach that proper dispositions are unnecessary in the receiver, but that these dispositions are no more than the conditions required in a person actually to receive grace, and not that grace is annexed to the conditions themselves as to its cause : thus in order to see, it is a necessary condition to have eyes ; but although a person have eyes, he sees not in the dark ; he must have light too, which alone is properly the cause of vision. This is precisely what we understand by the school terms ex opere operate in centra-distinction to those others equal- ly in use with theologians ex opcre operanlis. Such is the doctrine of Christian antiquity regarding the holy sacraments. The catholic church has always numbered seven ; 256 L U T Luther and his Augsbourg confessionalists only three ; the pro-- testants of England two. All the schismatical churches separat- ed from the church of Rome ever since the birth of Arianism y to this present day, maintain seven sacraments with the catholics of all ages, as may be seen in the articles of EUTYCHIANS, NESTO- RIANS, GREEKS, ARMENIANS, COPHTS, ABYSSINIANS, &c. Con- sequently, the doctrine of the catholic church touching the sa- craments was not introduced by the Roman pontiffs, as the enemies of catholicity would fain persuade their readers. Catholics, moreover, ascribe to three of the sacraments, namely, baptism, confirmation and order a character, or kind of indelible mark in the soul, permanently inherent. The dis- putes of theologians respecting the nature of this character, da not render its existence dubious, as Fra Paolo would insinuate- With equal reason might one call in question the existence of any phenomenon in nature, though universally admitted ; mere- ly because naturalists disagree in their mode of explaining it Catholic antiquity also has ever taught the reverse of the re- forming doctrine concerning the proper minister of the sacra- ments. Luther and his followers pretend not only that each individual among the faithful is the legitimate minister of all the sacraments indiscriminately, but even that those which were administered only in jest, and upon the stage, were not less true and valid sacraments than those conferred with due solem- nity in the churches. This palpable absurdity the catholic church in like manner rejected and condemned. The controversy relating to the sacrifice of the mass, accord- ing to the just remark of the great Bossuet, should stand or fall with that of the real presence. For as the votaries of the re- formation scruple not to offer to God the Father, his Son Jesus Christ as present to their faith ; if they believed him present in reality, they surely would not hesitate to offer him to his eternal Father as really present. Now this true and real presence of our Redeemer in the eucharist is actually admitted by the Lu- therans in opposition to the Sacramentarians : against whom see the article BERENGARIUS. Luther, in abolishing private masses, did not suppress the mass itself. He did no more than introduce a few alterations. The abolition of private masses, if we are to credit Luther himself, was the fruit of a conference which he had with the devil, who, he candidly acknowledges, con- vinced him of the necessity of abolishing them. See this ex- traordinary adventure related at large in Luther's own words in his work Upon the Private Mass. If any of our readers wish to have the doctrine of the Real Presence as professed even by the church of England, more fully discussed, the learned Dr Hawarden will give them complete satisfaction in his second volume of the Church of Christy on the article TRANSUBSTAN- TIATION. L U T 257 tlic ca- The grounds upon which protestants have separated from tholic church inadmissible. The errors and corruptions which Luther and his fellow re- formers alleged against the church of Rome, as the causes of their separation, we have fully proved, were false charges and the grossest misrepresentations ; as will appear from the perusal of the present article and those of CATHOLICS, BERENGARIUS, ZUINGLIUS, AEUIUS, JOVINIANISTS, ICONOCLASTS, &C. &C. Even the most enlightened among the protestant writers them- selves, have been compelled to acknowledge, that this church taught no fundamental error. See Tillotson's Serm. ii. p. 71 ; Chillingworth's Protestant Religion, &c. " But although, by an impossible supposition, it could be proved that the catholic church was heretical and idolatrous, the reformers still would not be justified in the attempt to esta- blish a new ministry, or to usurp the functions of the ministry already established ; the usurpation of the pastoral charge without mission either ordinary or extraordinary being always criminal, and in all circumstances absolutely inexcusable. It is presumptuously arrogating to oneself that which is the gift of God alone, and which none can lawfully receive but from his hand. Nor has he any where revealed that in the new law, nfter the first establishment of his church, he would ever com- municate the pastoral power by any other way, than by the chan- nel of succession. Consequently, none can be assured of ever having received it, but through the medium of this legitimate succession ; and those who have assumed it otherwise, are noto- riously usurpers. To be forcibly convinced of this truth, we have only to take a retrospective view of the predicament, in which the reformed were placed, in the ideas of their very ministers : it was no other than that of converts from lieresy. They had been adorers of the Host : they had invoked the saints, and venerated their relics ; they had afterwards relin- quished this practice : they were by consequence become ortho- dox by a change of sentiment ; and such precisely are denomi- nated converted heretics. But every heretic by the very pro- fession of heresy forfeits the right of exercising legitimately the functions annexed to the orders previously received, although he still retains the power of exercising them validly. The lawful exercise of his authority is suspended ipso facto, till his reconci- liation with the church. But, to what church have the reformed been ever reconciled ? Evidently to none at all. So far from it, they established new raised communions by their own private authority, without giving themselves the trouble to examine whether there existed not a true church, to which they were Kk 258 L U T obliged to be united in faith. Nor can their pretensions to an extraordinary mission be, on any warrantable grounds, admitted. An extraordinary vocation must be proved by miracles ; and", unfortunately, the reformers can produce no miracles to attest the justice of their claims. Hence the inference is {Jain as demonstration they have erected a church without authority ; consequently, they are schismatics, since they have relinquished a society which was in possession of the ministry, and from which they have received no mission." Mr Johnson's Vindication, in reply to Dr Porteus* Of the rule of faith. Luther and his fellow reformers will have holy scripture to be the sole rule of faith ; and the late Dr Porteus, bishop of London, asserts," says Mr Johnson in his Vindication, " that the scriptures contain a full and clear account of Christianity, written by the very apostles and first disciples of our Lord him- self, honestly delivered down into our hands." (Page 6 of his pretended Confutation" of the Errors of the Church of Rome.) This would be much to the purpose if clearly proved from scrip- ture alone ; but when, for the chief proof of one part of that assertion, we are referred to the general consent of Christians to hand down the sacred books to us with an assurance of their being entire, inspired, uncorruptcd aiul duly translated, (ibid, p. 3, 4-, 5, &c.) this looks so very like giving up the assertion, that the confuter wishes to .put a bar to the conse- quences of that way of reasoning, by telling us, that " protes- tants receive scripture by no means upon the authority of tra- dition merely." (p. 9.) But if not upon the authority of TRA- DITION merely ; therefore not upon the authority of SCRIP- TURE merely : by consequence, scripture alone does not lay the FIRST FOUNDATION of our knowledge of Christianity. How then is it possible the scriptures should contain a full and clear account of christianism ? " Protestants," resumes Dr Porteus, " receive the scripture partly on account of its own reasonableness, and the characters of Divine wisdom in it ; partly from the testimony which one part of it bears to the other ;" but if only partly on these accounts, the authority of scripture is not learned from scripture alone. Besides, if this internal evidence of the integrity and the inspiration of scrip^ ture, be so glaring, that it is recognisable by every reader ofVj the bible in the eighteenth century ; how happened it that several books of scripture now received by protestants, were not accounted canonical by the whole church for some ages till by a general consent of Christians, concentrating the scattered rays of antiquity, they were at length received? (Walton, Prolegom. L U T *59 ! , 56.) For, as to the testimony of Jews and ! : so tliar thi -tant ereed, thi> fundamental arti- >n of the sacred books t U- d from scripture alone th not contain a lull account of Christianity." Ibid. v jigreed wh;;: ptare what not j o be informed in what !><>okofholy writ we read a full ' account of infant baptism, or of tin- obligation of holy the Sunday : i >n of baptism recorded Mar !), leaves it \\holly u: whether ini ought or ought not to be baptised. If all must be instr, before baptism, as the text seems to indicate, (Matt. 28) in I then are positively excluded from the benefit of that sacraim m. But if instnictiun be not always requisite before the ministration of baptism, where is this exemption r of infants expressed, in any plain text of scripture ? That tl. > t -\emption, woulil rm from Mnr. xvi. 1G, Acts ii. 38, viii. L It i> u EH . ' M, M;:r. x. that infant- came to our Sa\i< ur ; not however, to be christmed, hut to re- See Mat. xix. 13.) If heaven be for such, might not the reason be because infants are an em- blem of humble Christians. (Matt, xviii. 3, 4.) If baptism seem necessary condition of salvation, Jo. iii. 5, does not 10 be equally required, Mar. xvi. 16. In short, if we roid in scripture of whole families being baptised, we do that the;. one infant in any of those families, nor of that if there had been, they would have been baptised.* 1 Ibid. " With regard to the obligation of keeping holy the Sunday, we cannot even learn from scripture alone with any certainty which day of the week is Sunday. The Sabbath mentioned in the ten commandments (Exod. xx. and Dcut. v.) was not Sun- day, hut Saturday. Now it will be allowed by protestants as well as catholics, that the commandments are approved by the gospel, as to all moral and natural duties: we should therefore be inclined to infer, that the Saturday ought to be kept holy, did we not borrow our light in this in- stance from some other source than scripture. Nor should we be of course exempt from the obligation of sanctifying the Sa- turday too, although from scripture alone a proof might be made out for the obligation of sanctifying the Sunday. This, however, is not the case ; for the Lord's-day mentioned Rev. 1 , does not necessarily designate the Sunday in particular, ra- ther than any other day of the week ; nor do the circumstances of breaking bread (Acts xx.) and collecting alms on the first day of the week, prove it to have been a holiday. For we know that the disciples broke bread daily : (Acts ii.) nor is charity to Kk 2 269 L U T the necessitous a sufficient mark of a holiday among good Chris- " To lay aside infant baptism as unnecessary, and to neglect the religious observation of the Sunday, would bean unsiuTerable liberty even in the judgment of protestants, although these things are in no part of scripture clearly expressed : even with pro- testants, they are important points of Christian faith and con- duct. Therefore the obscure manner, in which these and many other not inconsiderable articles, relating both to faith and morals, are expressed in scripture, as well as the total neglect of all the sacred writers to give us an exact canon of holy writ, and an evi- dent mark of every inspired text is a convincing proof that the scriptures were not designed to contain a full and clear account of Christianity, nor, consequently, to be the only rule of faith." Mr JOHNSON'S Vindication, c. 1. Apostolical tradition one part of the rule of faith. " Whether the apostles could have written a full and compe- tent rule of faith, if God had so directed, is a question peri irrelevant to the point in debate. The fact is, they had no such commission. The precept of their divine master enjoined them to preach the gospel to every creature, and to teach them to observe all things whatsoever he had commanded. (Mar. xvi. J 5. Mat. xxviii. 20.) SS. Andrew, and James the son of Zebcdee, with other apostles who never wrote at all, but only delivered the truths of the gospel by tradition, complied, we presume, with the full import ot their commission, not less than others of the sa- cred college, who did leave some instructions in writing. Hence it follows, that if none of the apostles or disciples of Christ had committed any thing to writing, the injunction given them to teach all nations, and to transmit their doctrine to the latest pos- terity even unto the consummation of the world, (Mat. xxviii.) would still have been observed : all necessary knowledge would have been conveyed safe to the most distant ages through the channel of tradition. Where then is the necessity of exploding tradition, as a thing which could not long afford us in the ideas of Dr Porteus (p. 6, &c.) any security of the truth ? It must be owned, says the bishop, that our Saviour delivered his doc- trine to the apostles, and they to all the world by word of mouth, and that this way of delivery at first was sufficient ; (and why not still sufficient ?) and that therefore, continues he, St Paul\ exhorts the Thessalonians, to hold fast the traditions he had taught them, whether by word or by writing," (2 Thess, ii. j 14.) " Some traditions Christ himself, and his apostles, recom- mended, though they condemned such human inventions as are contrary to revealed truths. (Mar. vii. Col. ii.) But if somaj J. : traditions were then approved, uliy may not they be >till ap- Where docs our Sn\ oral communication of the uu . should be a rised i ing the first age? Does not the apo&tle ratlin, plainly intimate that the same method of coin continued in all succeeding generations, when be says to hi* ciplc Timothy ; the things which thou hast heard of me among many vitncssfs, the tame commit thou to faithful men, who BE ABLE TO TEACH OTHERS ALSO, (2 T . ' 1 8 it more impossible i . safe to posterity, the appstoli> and sonn t r .short instructions, than to d< -liver eiitir uncorrupted the M \rral books of the Old . - Testament ? The apostle's creed and all necessary doctri icrabered even; h u m 1 oth er contiguous dark ages; -else . come we in the , m the conveyance of tradition much depend on the sincerity and truth of persons liable to ignorance and other worse qualities ntut.) is not equal on persons of similar character requisite in the con \eyanee of holy writ ? Great depen is clearly unavoidable by :i!l who . imblican. The same prerogative of infallibility we also i >in Mat. xxviii. 19, 20. For the commission itself li< ;i to the apostles to teach and baptize, is not more plain, t' pro- mise of perpetual assistance in the execution of nnission, by the apostles and their successors tin the church, till the end of time. It should also be observed, that these and many other texts of scripture," (Jo. xiv. 16, 17 ; xvi. 1 -j ; i Tim. iii. 15, &c.) from which " catholics infer, that Christ and his Holy Spirit will always protect his church from error, mutually confirm and support each other." Ibid. " If private persons with his Lordship of London, p. 19, stand forth against what they think vain pretensions to infallibi- lity, because St John bids us try the Spirits, 1 Jo.iv. 1, and be- cause St Paul tells us to prove all things, 1 Thess. v. 21, how, we ask, can we prove or try spiritual matters better, in the opi- nion of the apostles themselves, than by submitting the determi- nation of them to the pastors of the church whom God gave, as St Paul avers, to prevent our being any more tossed to and fro, and carried about by every wind of doctrine ? (Ephes. iv. 1 1 , 16.) Is not this a more prudent method, than to leave the unlearned and the unstable, who wrest the scriptures to their own destruc- tion, (2 Pet. iii. 16) to decide by scripture what they are totally unqualified to do, with the evident risk of their eternal salva- tion ? This rule St John himself prescribes. Should it be al- leged that the Jewish synagogue had a stronger title to infalli- bility than the Christian church, this will hardly be maintained when what is said in Deutronomy xvii. 8, c. is diligently com- pared with Col. iii. 20, unless we be obliged to think our parents also, infallible : and when Ps. cxviii. 22, quoted and applied to the Jewish priests, Mat. xxi. 42, 4-5, has been collated with Mat. x. 16, 18, where something much more favorable is assert- ed in regard of the catholic church. But whether the Jewish church was or was not infallible before the coming of Christ, is a matter of no great moment to us, who by the grace of God are 266 L U T not Jews. Had Christ cautioned us as earnestly against the- leaven of the false doctrine of the pastors of the church, as he cautioned his disciples against the leaven of the Pharisees, (Mat. xvi. 6, 12,) we should have found as many exceptions in Mat. xvi. 18, as we do now in Mat. xxiii. 3 ; especially if miracles like those of Christ had been wrought by the opponents of church pastors : for the miraculous operations of Christ ought, surely, to have convinced the Jews that they were to listen to Him, rather than their jealous priesthood." Ibid. " But may not some of the members of the church be defiled by sin without falsifying what is said Matt. xvi. 18? They may. Some of them also may be deformed by latent error, skulking in the darkness of duplicity and subtile evasion, without any infringe- ment of that charter of infallibility which Christ promised to the pastors of his church in general. (P. 13, Confut.) But neither can error deform the generality of the pastors for that would falsify the promise of Christ ; nor can sin defile the whole church for that would render it absolutely unlike its description in the gospel. (Matt. iii. 12, xiii. 47, 48, 49.) It will always have wheat together with the chaff, and goodjish with the bad, till the destined separation at the end of time. Besides, though Christ has privileged the pastors of his church in general with a special exemption from error, he has no where promised them the like special exemption from sin." 44 To every objection drawn from sacred writ, this one an- swer may suffice ; that all such expositions of scripture are contrary to the expositions of the catholic church, and there- fore inadmissible. For the authority of the church must either be allowed as undeniable in things of this nature, or (it has been proved) we forfeit our title to the scripture itself. This ought abundantly to satisfy those who admit scripture exclusively, as the rule of faith. But if any thing be still wanting completely to vindicate the church's claim of infallibility, let our readers but recite the profession of faith in general use among Christians and commonly called the apostle's creed. For whether this creed was framed by the apostles themselves or not, it is allowed by protestants to contain a summary abridgment of their doc- trine. Protestants also grant, that the creed always was, is, and will be true ; and that therefore there always was from the time of the apostles, is now, and always will be, a holy catholic church, and a communion of saints. (See Pearson's Exposi- tion of the Creed on the ninth article.) Now a church cannot be holy and a communion of saints, if it teach impious errors, superstitions and idolatry : no ; it cannot be holy and a com- munion of saints, if it require all persons in its communion to believe erroneous doctrines, in lieu of the doctrine of our Sa- viour Christ. Therefore the holy catholic church can never err MAC 267 faith, Consequently, its privilege of infallibility N 1 ;:;rlv -red." I! 44 This reasoning is so plain and obvious; so ade. capacity of the most illiterate, that we have great cause to tl Pro\ /or favor church with this article in our daily profession of faith. The caviller may here raise mi const ; but forced constructio; nothing to do in the expo* -uliich was desigi frame;- person of common sense. The ol true meaning; and that otaious meaning will always prove the catholic church to sub- sist, to be infallible in faith, and to be the authoritative inter- of faith and morals. And as no other church or body of men can justly claim a like degree of infallibility, the church alone is this interpreter, and the lawful judge of concerning religion. Let each one then diligently enquire (ami ihi> enquiry is by no means difficult, as will cl >m tlu perusal of what we have already said) what it ; utes the whole rule of faith and conduct, and title to be the interpreter of that rule; and i -ubinit to be instructed and directed in Christian faith morality, by the interpretation thus obtained." Ibid. Whoever does this will act most rationally, and soon arrive at the //-/// (.ftnttli. M EUONIANS followers of Macedonius who in the fourth age denied the divinity of the Holy Ghost. This man in 332 was placed in the see of Constantinople by the Arian faction, whose errors he had espoused ; and his intrusion was attended with tumult and much bloodshed. The violences which he com- mitted, compelled the emperor Constantius though himself an Arian, to remove him ; and Macedonius was, in consequence, deposed by a council of that sect held at Constantinople in the year 359. * Incensed alike at his fellow sectarists and the catholics, he now maintained against the former the divinity of the Son of God, and against the latter he assertedthat the Holy Ghost was not a Divine Person, but merely a creature more perfect than the rest. The objections from Holy Scripture which the Arians brought forward against the divinity of the Son, were the greatest part of them employed by Macedonius against the divi- nity of the Third Person : his error was the dictate ot re- venge, and the suggestion of a proud and contumacious spirit. Ll2 268 MAC However, he prevailed with certain Arian bishops who had been deposed like himself, to make common cause ; and they found means to propagate their heterodox opinions in Thrace, in the province of the Hellespont, and in Bithynia. They imposed upon the people by an affected gravity in their exterior, and the auste- rity of their manners a usual artifice with false teachers, or in other words, of wolves in sheep's cloathing. The Macedonians were tolerated by Julian the apostate, and by his catholic succes- sor Jovian: but the Arian emperor Valens persecuted both them and the catholics, with whom the Macedonians one while appeared disposed to enter into terms of communion. In 381 they were invited to the general synod at Constantinople, con- vened by Theodosius with a view to the restoration of peace to the distracted church: dn this occasion they refused to sign the Nicene symbol ; and were condemned as heretics. From that period we find no farther mention of them in ecclesiastic history. The errors of the Macedonians in reference to the Third Per- son of the most blessed Trinity, differ in this from those of the Socinians : the latter, with the sectarists of Photinus, hold that the Holy Ghost is not a Person, but merely a denominative term signifying the operations of the Divinity within our soul : the Macedonians, on the contrary, held the Holy Ghost to be a per- son, a real subsisting being, a created spirit resembling the angels, but of a nature far superior to their's, although greatly inferior to the Godhead. We will endeavour, with the help of God, to demonstrate against these ancient as well as our more modern Anti-trinitarians the divinity of this Holy Spirit. " Christ our Lord, before his ascension into heaven, com- missioned his apostles to go and preach to all nations the ado- rable mystery of the Trinity, and to baptize those who should believe in him in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. (Matt, xxviii. 19.) These words alone should be sufficient to confound the Arians, the Socinians, and all other ancient or modern enemies of this fundamental article of the Christian faith. Reason, indeed, cannot compre- hend this sublime mystery, as Christ himself sufficiently de- clares, (Matt, XL 27 ; xvi. 17;) and to affirm it to be demon- strable by the aid of reason alone, as Abelard and some mo- derns have pretended, is not only an error, but evidently ab- surd. Almighty God, in condescension to human weakness, was pleased to prepare the world gradually to receive this and his other most profound mysteries. The incarnation of the Son of God cannot be understood without faith in the most Blessed | Trinity ; and Christ himself has often expressly inculcated it in the New Testament, in which we read at every turn of three distinct subsisting persons in the Godhead ; and St John in- forms us that there are three in heaven that give testimony. M t 269 (1 John, v. 7.) Tliis must mean not a moral union, but a i' the Di ire in them, as ol \M plainly prove. By the above is implied a real di- sons: for one who should ij.mny b; alone, could not -ses, as St Jo! are, in the Godhead Tin- Socinians grant t ; t'o be a witness distinct from ; r, and even pretend him to be net, as not to be of the same Divine nature with him, Imt a nu -iv man. It is then an inconsistency in them to ' the Holy Ghost a m of the Father, not dis- tUKt from him. For he is no less mentioned in this and in sw?ral other places of the New Testament as a real subsisting >n, than the Son ; for instance, in the form of baptism. We cannot i the name of a I . The Holy Gh' John xiv. 1.1; ;: res evidence, (John xv. 26) reveals hidden things, (1 M 1) searches the secret is of God, (\ Cor. xi. 10) operates, and divides the gifts of God a$ he pleases, (I Cor. xiii. 1 J) proceeds from the Father, (John xiv. lo % , xv. L'(>', 27) appears in a visible form, (Matt, iii. 1 >ns like the above cannot with any proprirty In- a>cril>ed to mere properties, but to persons alone. Moreover, the Holy GI. ailed Jehovah, or the Great God. (Isa. vi. 9. A 1. Acts v. 3. Matt. xii. 32.) The incommunii ntial attributes of God belong to Him as immensity, ( Wisdom i. 7. Ps. cxxxviii. 7. 1 Cor. iii. 16 and 11. 2 Cor. xiii. 1^) Omniscience, (John xvi. 13. 1 Cor. ii. 10) Omnipotence, (Ps. xxxii. 6. Luke i. 35) Creation, (Gen. i. 2. Ps. xxxii. 6) Conservation of creatures, (Ps. ciii. 80) Miracles, (Matt. xii. 28. 1 Cor. xii. 4-) The Conception of Christ, (Luke i. 35) His Unction and Mission, (Isa. Ixi. 1) The Forgiveness of sins, (1 Cor. vii. 11) The Government of the Church, (Acts xi'ii. 2. xv. 28) The conferring of Gifts, (1 Cor. xii. -}Sanctification of Sojds, (Ephes. i. 17. 2 Thess. xi. 13. 1 Pet. i. 2) The diffusion of Charity, (Rom. v. 5) The resur- rection of the dead, (Rom. viii. 2, &c.) What then is there wanting to this most Holy Spirit to constitute his Divinity ? Truly nothing ; unless it be the consent of ancient and modern Anti-trinitarians. Messrs Whiston, Clarke, and the host of Socinian writers find a difficulty in conceiving that which, in fact, is incomprehensible to the highest angels ', and on this senseless plea, they impiously deny and reject the sacred mysteries of revealed religion, which those sublime spirits, with their coun- tenances reverently veiled, adore. They are indeed revealed truths ; but still, so revealed, as to remain obscure and impenetrable to all created understanding. God would be no longer infinite, if his Divine nature could be fathomed or described by any limited being, however perfect ; much less by us mortals in our present imperfect state of trial, during which nothing can be more reason- 270 M A H able or becoming, than the exercise of faith, and a sacrifice of our reason itself captivated in submission to the word of God ; nothing more glorious to the Deity than our silent adoration of his incomprehensible nature and perfections." (See the learn- ed author of the Moveable Feasts, p. 584, &c.) MAHOMET or MOHAMMED originally a merchant in Arabia, began to publish his pretended revelations in the thirty-eighth year of his age, and the six hundredth and eighth of Jesus Christ. Some time after this, with the help of a Jew and a Nestorian monk, he compiled his Alcoran or Cor an. It is^n undigested heap of ridiculous absurdities. In proof of whrch. it will abundantly suffice to instance his marvellous Cock ; whose size was so prodigious, that his feet standing on the first heaven, his head reached up to the second, at the distance of five hun- dred years journey with other such arrant nonsense, too silly even to amuse our readers. Mahomet engaged his wife and three of the principal inhabi- tants of Mecca, Abubeker, Othman and Omar, to embrace his extravagant system of religion, and called it islam, a term which, according to Dr Pocock, signifies obedience to God and his prophet. Hence his followers are distinguished to this day by the name of Moslem or Mussulmans. Mahomet however, met with opposition, and was obliged to consult his safety by flight. He retired to Yethreb ; where he had already many fol- lowers. This place, from the circumstance of the impostor's flight, took the name of Medina t'Lnabi, or the prophet's town. From this date the 16th of July, 622, the Hejira of the Arabs, that is, the epocha from which the Mahometans compute their years, commenced. In 628, Mahomet was complimented with the title of Prophet, arid declared chief, as well in civil as in reli- gious matters. Soon after, he forced his old enemies the Coreishites to embrace his sect, together with the whole city of Mecca ; and before his death, which happened at Medina in the eleventh year of the Hejira, the twenty-third of Heraclius, and the six hundredth and thirty-second of Jesus Christ, he had sub- jugated a great part of Arabia. Abubeker, whose daughter he had married, held the sovereignty after him, with the title of Caliph or vicar of the prophet. He employed his forces in the conquest of Syria ; for Mahomet had commanded his followers to oblige all nations to adopt his religion or to puy tribute, by force of arms, (Alcoran, c. ix. 29. c. viii. J 40.) After many victories obtained over the armies of Heraclius, Abubeker by his generals reduced Damascus in 634, on the very day of\ his death, which happened at Medina. Omar, one of whose daughters had been married likewise to Mahomet, succeeded Abubeker. This prince took Jerusalem in 637, Antioch in 638, and Alexandria in 640, by his general Amrou. The reduction M A H 271 of this city was followed by the conquest of all Egypt. A little while after the Caliph seized on Tripoli and almost all Barbary. Jn Ml one of his armies reduced Ispahan capital of Persia; and in the course of Othman's reign, who succeeded Omar in 64? .S, all Persia submitted to the Saracen yoke. Thus did the Saracens in less than thirty years found an empire equal in extent to that of ancient Rome ; God employing this savage people as a scourge wherewith to punish the sins of many nations. It was not long however, before this vast empire was dismembered, and divided into a multitude of independent kingdoms. Mahomet- is^pat this day is a superstition immensely extended over Asia, isiderable part of Europe. See Mr Butler's Lives of the Saints vol. 12. p. 4-14-, I.". The leading principles of Mahometanism are as follow 1. Thai (luil u but one. 2. That Mahomet is his prophet. y. That angfls are the ministers of God, and execute his com- mands ; of whom the angel Gabriel is chief. 4. The Mahome- tans hold late and absolute predestination. 5. They believe a heaven and a hell with such rewards and punishments as Ma- homet knew would make the deepest impression upon those with whom he had to deal. Paradise, he said, abounded with pleasures and delights best suited to the palate of his Arabians : women ever young and beautiful ; pleasant rivers and refreshing streams, cooling drinks, shaded gardens, delicious fruits with an eternal enjoyment of all sensual satisfactions. And with the same kind of subtlety he formed their notions regarding hell. G. The Mahometan* practise circumcision, like the Jews. 7. Their religion is to be propagated by the instrumentality of the sword ; for which reason their Imaiis or priests, as often as they preach, hold in their hand a drawn sword. 8. That the Mussulmans, in killing unbelievers^ merit heaven. 9. Mahomet forbids wine, games of chance, &c. 10. He admits both the Old and New Tes- tament, and quotes many passages from each, to justify his pretended apostleship. 11. His followers are allowed, not only a plurality of wives, but to keep as many women-slaves for con- cubines, as they are able to maintain ; and the children of the latter are as legitimate as those of the former. Mahomet for- bade indeed, adultery; but, by a special privilege granted him, he said, by Almighty God in his nightly jaunt to hea- ven, he took to himself the wife of his domestic Zayd. 12. He teaches the immortality of the soul, but holds notwithstanding, that the punishments of the wicked are not eternal, and that the very demons theinseves shall eventually be converted by the power of the Coran. These, with innumerable other silly, false and ridiculously extravagant tenets and traditions, make up the bulk of Maho- metan doctrines and practice : a system of religion invented by an illiterate barbarian, who could neither write nor read, 272 MAN aided in his work of darkness by a renegado Christian, and an apostate Jew ; and using as the means of its propagation the violence of persecution and the all-powerful eloquence of the sword. Seriously to undertake the refutation of a religion so licentious and impure, would be offering an affront to Christian- ity, and an insult to common understanding. MANICHEES a numerous sect of heretics who derived their name from Manes or Manicheus. Scythianus the first forger of the Manichean imposture, was a very rich merchant, well skilled in medicine, astronomy and the mathematics ; was a Chris- tian before his fall ; travelled into Egypt, and afterwards into Palestine ; and, at his death left his manuscripts to Manes : for he was his contemporary though senior, as appears from a letter which Manes wrote to him. A fragment of this letter was pre- served by Photius, and published by Fabricius (Bib. Grace. T. 5, p. 283) : though some have made Scythianus much older. See St Cyril of Jerusalem, St Epiphanius, and Photius. Manes himself, according to St Ephrem, was born in Chaldea (hym. 1 4-) in the year 240, as we are assured also by the chronicle of Edes- sa, published by Jos. Assemani (Bibl. Orient. T. 1. p. 393.) His name was Corbicius or Cubricus ; but he afterwards took that of Manes or Manicheus, probably the same with Manaem or Manahem, the Paraclete or Comforter. He was a Christian, and had been ordained priest, as the learned Jacobite Abul- pharagius, and the judicious D'Herbelot testify. For obsti- nately maintaining heterodox opinions he was excommuni- cated, and afterwards repaired to the court of the infidel king Sapor, son of Artaxerxes the founder of the second Persian monarchy. He lived in favor with this prince, and accompanied him in his wars, perhaps in quality of his physician, says Beausobra. He now renewed and perfected the system which he had formerly learned of Scythianus, blending in one religion many notions of heathenish philosophers, the Persian magians and the gospel. Pretending that all nations had had their respective prophets* he preferred those of the an- cient Persians and the other Gentiles (meaning their philoso- phers) to those of the Hebrews, whom he rejected ; and he adopted the Magian notion of two First Principles, the one good and the other bad, for the ground or basis of his new re- ligion. The Magians originally had established two co-eternal principles ; the one good or light, the other evil, and the au- thor of all evil. It is certain, however, that the Persians never adored this evil principle, nor called it God; though someV Greek writers in their account of the Persian system, gave it ' that name. Some other idolaters had their avenging or malici- ous God, whom they fancied they appeased by sacrifices and supplications. From the acts of the Persian martyrs, and other MAN 273 monuments, it notwithstanding appears, that the Magians in general worshipped all the four clement*, as inferior Zoroaster, the tamed reformer of the ancient Persian ivli : taught the resurrection of the dead, a heaven and a hell, \\ith several other important and religion* truths. Hut thi> phi! pher was puz/led to account how evil and principle did Dot come from God } sin* ! ing to him, God formed both the good and the- evil principle, the subaltern causes of all tilings though not coeval; and Pocock observes that upon thi> article the Magians were always much di\ided among them- selves. There were among them above seventy sects, differing chiefly concerning the properties of this evil principle* Among Ifbesc, some after Zoroaster's time old Magiaii tenets, and were called Mamjsians, i. c. followers oft Manes approved this popular sect, the capital point of whose doctrine was, that the tuo principles of light and darkness are eternal and coi : val, both neces>ai i ig and producing CCSSarily all other things that are produced, good and had. This was the origin of Manichei>m. .See Schari>tani, publish- ed by 11 Sapor and the reigning /oroa^-trian Magians were much offended at the innovation of Manes, who pretended he had learned his new doctrine in an estacy, ivoi\ed hi* apostles-hip immediately from heaven, and was in>pired by tli-- Paraclete, whom Christ had promised from above. The king resolved to put him to death ; which he prevented only by a timely flight. During his retreat, he composed his gospel (often quoted by the fathers) in a cave; as Zoroaster had compiled his /end in soli- tude. Sapor 1. died in 'JT'J ; and his son I lormisdas secretly favored the pretended prophet. Manes, therefore, taking with him the book of his gospel, which he had adorned with excel- lent paintings, and in which he had written his own revela- tions, returned into Persia. The new king his protector did not reign quite two years, and his son Varanes first favored, but afterwards persecuted Manes, who was put to death, pro- bably by him, though some think, by his adoptive son and suc- cessor Varanes II. This took place in the year 277. Manes had twelve apostles. The three most noted ones were Thomas, Abdas and Hermas. Another called Leucius wrote false acts of the apostles of Christ, and a book on the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin. The Manichecs became a very numerous sect, and spread themselves in Persia, Mesopotamia, Syria, Egypt, Greece, Africa and Spain ; and in the seventh century, in Armenia : afterwards in Bulgaria, Lombardy and Languedoc ; but were every where the execration equally of Pagans, Jews, Mahometans and Christians. The whole doc- trine of Manes centered chiefly upon the distinction of the two principles of light and darkness, which had been first introdu- M m 274 MAN ced among Christians by the heresiarch Basilides. He had tra~ veiled into Persia, and dogmatized at Alexandria in the begin- ning of the second age, He is accused by the fathers, of prac- tising the black art; and it is certain, that he taught many superstitious notions and ceremonies with reference to his Eons or angels. See the article BASILIDES. Marcion his contemporary propagated the doctrine of two principles, in Pontusand at Rome; rejected the Old Testament, and denied the resurrection of the body. Bardesanes, previous- ly a Christian philosopher of Edessa, admitted likewise a good and an evil principle ; denied the resurrection, and fell irr%ith Apelles, Marcion, and the Docetse, (see their respective articles) who contested the reality of Christ's incarnation and passion. These seetarists were the precursors of Manes, who ingrafted his own inventions upon their false principles. He curtailed and in- terpolated the New Testament, and with Marcion absolutely re- jected the Old Testament as the work of evil powers ; he also de- nied the inspiration, or at least the superior authority, of the Hebrew prophets ; to whom he opposed ancient Chaldean Gen- tile philosphers; and he produced apocryphal books in support of his extravagant theorisms. He condemned the use of mar- riage as in itself sinful. The Manichees also reprobated war, but allowed necessary self-defence. Their elect were forbidden to build houses, to traffic, or to possess estates ; and they boasted of great continency : but Si Augustine who before his conver- sion was himself a Manichee, calls their chastity hypocrisy, and accuses them of abominable unnatural lusts, as do als6 the great St Leo and other fathers. Nor is it much to be wondered nt, that, falling into habits of such crimes, they attempted to vindi- cate them by principle, though the general precepts of their sect Condemned them. Of this we have seen an instance in our times in three eminent preachers of a new sect, notoriously convicted of justifying to their accomplices such excesses by principle, al- though by no means the result of any avowed doctrine of the sect. The Manichees held it lawful to dissemble or deny their religion, in order to avoid persecution; and from them the Priscillianists borrowed that pernicious maxim : Jura, perjura, secretum prodere noli. St Augustine reproaches the Manichees also with idolatry In the worship of the sun, moon and heavenly powers ; for they ascribed to the intelligences which they supposed to preside over the heavenly bodies, certain perfections which belong exclusively to the Divine Being. (For a more circumstantial detail of the errors of this sect see the learned notes of Mr Butler, Lives' nj the Primitive Fathers, &c. vol. 8, p. 426, &c.ibid. p. 69, et seq. Some Manichees maintained that trees and plants, as well a animals, had their feelings ; and that they were capable of plea sure and of pain : so that, in their ideas, the plucking of any fruit* MAN 275 reaping corn, lopping a branch off a tree, could not be consider- than as so many palliated murders; and, ; to them to eat, they \\itlulrcwa while; imprecations against those that ofK !c tone of voice addressed the bread to t : " It was not I that reaped you or sent you to i had I any hand in kneading or in baking you; . I am innocent of all the injuries which you have itily wish that those who have been the oc- tlicmin. ience the like tin. After this filiation, the religious Manichee without further scruj)le devoured the poor loaf, and consoled himself with the l;v, importing in a vessel : they said, that the Word was in his Father, just as one vessel is contained within another. This sect appears to have been of Arian extraction. METHODISTS a name given 1st, by protestants to their adver- saries the French controversionalists ; of whom Mosheim in his ecclesiastical history says : These Methodists may be distributed into two classes. Those of the first class pretended to dictate to protestants certain unreasonable normas, to which they were in- violably to adhere in religious disputation. Of this number was the ex-Jesuit Veron, curate of Charenton, who required of his adversaries, that they should prove every article of their creed by clear and formal texts of Holy Scripture ; and would not allow them the privilege of reasoning at all, or of tracing any conse- quence whatever, or deducing any argument from the apparent intimation of the text. He was followed by Berthold Nihusius a renegade from protestantism ; by the two Wallembourgs and others, who found it easier to retain what they possessed, than to evince the justice of their title. The burden of proof they abandoned to their adversaries, and reserved to themselves only the more easy task of eluding the force of the soundest logical conclusions. Cardinal Richelieu, and a crowd of catholic pole- mics, wished to set aside the complaints and the reproaches of the reformed, and to content themselves with proving the divine au- thority of the church by reasons the most decisive and unequi- vocal. Those of the second class, continues Mosheim, to decide the contest with their adversaries in the most summary way, adopt- ed a sort of general arguments, which they called warrantable prejudices, (See Nicole's Prejuoes Legitimes contre les Calvin- istes) any one of which developed and displayed to advantage was alone sufficient, in the opinion of some controvertists after him, to demonstrate the imposture or the nullity of the reform. Some of these Methodists have opposed to it their pretended right of prescription ; others the vices and want of mission in the reformers ; a third set have attempted only to prove, that this religious revolution was in fact a schism, and therefore of itself highly criminal. Bossuet, agreeably to the remark of this learned Lutheran author, undertook to demonstrate the falsehood of the religion established by Luther, by exposing the perpetual chnngeableness of opinion among its doctors, and the multitude of variations so discernible in its doctrines ; while he proved the authority and the divine origin of the Roman catholic persuasion, from the con- stancy with which its religious dogmas have been handed down to us unadulterated, through each revolving age. All these different o o 290 MET methods of combating the reformation, in Mosheim's ideas, have embarrassed protestants, more than they have advanced the cause of catholicity. It is true, he admits, many princes and some enlightened scholars, have suffered themselves to be seduced by these captious arguments, and have returned to the communion of that church, from which their fathers had seceded : but their example has not been copied by any single nation, nor even by one solitary canton. After enumerating the most illustrious proselytes,- as well princes as learned individuals, he tells us, that the number is very inconsiderable of those who, from truly con- scientious motives, have readopted the ancient faith. The lynx-eyed sagacity of Mr Mosheim, doubtless, must have been derived immediately from above, thus to penetrate the secrets of hearts ! While our methodistic controversialists demonstrate, that the reformers in their schism were influenced by a spirit of libertinism and independence, and the ambition of becoming leaders of a sect, protestants cry out calumny, and enquire by what right their adversaries pretend to sound the hearts and the intentions of their fellow men, and to ascribe to a principle of depravity in them, what might be the innocent result of misconception or a mere defect of judgment. But be- hold ! these very delicate and tender casuists are the first to vio- late their own, uncommonly charitable, maxim in the case of all those who have had the courage and the virtue to renounce the schism and erroneous principles of their deluded ancestors* How heavily would Mr Mosheim have complained, had any one politely told him, that his only motive for choosing to live and die a Lutheran was his occupying the most dignified situ- ation in a university, or enjoying the douceurs of a prime good living ? Nor is it a matter of surprise, that the vulgar sort among the Lutherans should continue obstinately stedfast in the errors of their early youth, notwithstanding the example of many princes and the most enlightened personages of their com- munion quitting their former prejudices, and eagerly em- bracing the catholic religion. The fact is : they are ignorant ; and are determined to remain so; they are not in the habit of reading catholic books, and are moreover diverted from it by their ministers ; while the eventual conversion of those who have well examined both sides of the question, appears to us, we must own, a reasonable presumption in favour of catholicity, arid a well-grounded argument against protestantism. Our catholic Methodists are equally warranted in calling up- on protestants to prove each article of their doctrine by the clear and formal testimony of holy scripture. This is their only rule of faith, and they avowedly maintain, that every question should be decided, and all disputes be terminated by its sole authority\ v i and guidance. They have themselves prescribed this law to H catkttlics ; and these have met them on their own ground. If MET 291 then they feel the restraint somewhat troublesome, whom have they to blame but themselves ? They are the aggressors, and have entered a protest against the catholic church and its pos- session of full fifteen hundred years ; it is their's to prove from holy scripture that this possession is founded in injustice and a lawless usurpation. This is a task which none have ever yet attempted, or we apprehend, ever will attempt with tolerable success, or even with the slightest plausibility of reason. Mr Mosheim, therefore, is in the right to deprecate the challenge of our Methodist divines. With equal justice does this cherished critic except against the method of the Cardinal Richlieu, who insisted that, as pro- testants alleged for the motive of their schism that the Roman was no longer the true church of Jesus Christ, by proving the reverse, we subvert the very ground- work of the reformation. On this head, as in all other points, our adversaries have made but a very feeble defence ; they have shifted their ground, and sometimes have asserted the church to be invisible, sometimes to be a compound of all the various sects of Christians excommuni- cating and disclaiming all connection with each other ! The great Bossuet, and a whole legion of catholic theologists, have triumphantly demonstrated the absurdity of both these airy sys- tems ; nor have protestants been able to support them with any specious argument. They onlv have maintained without the semblance of a proof that the catholic church had set them the example in varying its faith. They have said : we find no monuments in the three first ages of such and such false doc- trines since adopted by the church of Rome; consequently, say they, they were not then believed, and of course this church must have varied its religious creed. These negative arguments are illusive. The church of the fourth age solemnly professes to believe no articles, but such as were believed and generally pro- fessed in the preceding age, and delivered by the apostles; therefore the existing monuments of the fourth age are a suf- ficient proof, that the articles in question had been already taught and believed before that era. What Mosheim objects from the avowal of even French divines with relation to the en- croachments of certain popes, is alike nugatory and irrelevant. French divines admit that many popes had availed themselves of circumstances to extend their jurisdiction ; to circumscribe that of bishops ; to dispose of church benefices, &c. ; and that they had thus introduced changes into the ancient discipline. But discipline and doctrine, unfortunately, are quite different things. Bossuet has demonstrated that protestants have varied in their articles of faith : Mosheim merely proves what no body ever thought of contesting with him a variation of discipline ; and what is this but imposition and chicanery ? Besides, it is the opinion of French theologians, that the Roman pontiff can- o o 2 292 MET not by himself jctefmitively pronounce upon articles of faith, and that his decision is not infallible, unless confirmed by the general acquiescence of the whole church. How then could they, with any consistency, accuse the popes of altering the faith of the ca- tholic church ? But, in vain do we look for candor or sincerity in this critic and champion of the reformation, or in a host of controversial writers in defence of the same untenable and un- hallowed cause. Nor is it true, that catholic polemics confine themselves to in- validate the proofs of their antagonists in support of their reli- gious system without attempting to substantiate their own. Let but any one peruse Veron's Profession of Catholic Faith / he will find that he establishes each article upon the formal testi- mony of the written word. The Wallembourgs have done the same : but they have not stopt here. They have moreover de- monstrated, that the catholic church, in proving her dogmas of faith and refuting all erroneous doctrines, has uniformly with the fathers in every age adopted precisely the same method ; whereas that of the protestants is essentially defective, and calcu- lated to justify indiscriminately all heresies whatever : that the distinction of fundamental and non-fundamental articles, is de- lusory and abusive ; that their bible is adulterated both by arbi- trary expositions, and wilful mistranslations, as they shew at large by comparing them with other versions of their own ; and that, not satisfied with this their unwarrantable temerity, they have rejected every book of Holy Scripture which they know not how to reconcile with their novel doctrines. After this, they object to the reformers their want of a lawful mission, the novelty of their religious code, and the guilt of schism. Whether in this their method there be any thing like unfair dealing, we ieave it to the good sense of our readers to determine. What Mo- sheim complains of with so little reason in his. Catholic Metho- dists, English protestant writers, almost universally, practise as their exclusive privilege against the church of Rome. METHODISTS (protestant) seemingly an increasing sect, claim an antiquity of somewhat more than eighty years. John Wesley, their principal founder, was son to a clergyman of the church of England, and received his education at Oxford. Upon his re- turn he was presented to one of his father's livings. During his absence from the university, his brother Charles, a Mr Morgan, and one or two other companions, formed a little society, with a design, it would seem, of leading a devout life. This took place in 1729. Not long after John Wesley returned, and put himself at the head of this new society. Some few others joined, and among the rest, in 1735, George Whitfield. They visited^ j the sick arid prisoners, and gave abundant alms. Living ac-'n cording to a rule, they were denominated Methodists ; and were MET 293 sometimes called Sacramentarians, from their frequently re- ceiving the sacrament ; and, from their apparent holiness the Holy Club. In Ireland they still retain the nick-name of Swaddlers, given them, it is said, in consequence of a sermon of one of their first lay preachers there, who had taken for his text in Ezcch Thou wert not swaddled at all. In 1735, John Wesley visited Georgia, in America, in order to preach his new gospel to the Indians ; but had not the good fortune to make any converts. After spending there to little purpose nearly two years, shaking off the dust from his feet, he returned to England, where he fell in with one Peter Bohler, a Moravian brother, whose orthodoxy Wesley deemed more pure than his own ; and accordingly he became himself a member of the brotherhood. Meanwhile Whitfield also, took a trip to America with simi- lar religious intentions, and with the like success. Instead of making^ proselytes, he too was perverted, and exchanged his former creed for that of Calvinism, to which he adhered for the remainder of his life. This man became the founder of the second branch of Methodism. In lieu, however, of converting infidels during his residence in Georgia, John Wesley had succeeded in establishing there another small society after the model of that of Oxford, previ- ously to his own conversion by Bohler the Moravian. But the Methodist society, properly speaking, did not begin till May, 1738 in London. Wesley says in his first journal, that he had not yet attained to justifying faith : he had, he says, the faith of a slave t not that of a child. But on the twenty-fourth of May the same year, being present at a Lutheran meeting, he tells us, he felt his heart to grow warm, and imagined he re- ceived a supernatural assurance that his sins were forgiven. \Vhether he on this occasion became a Lutheran, is not men- tioned : if he did, he did not long continue so. Of his various peregrinations, or even hardships suffered in the cause of Me- thodism, as I cannot think well of his doctrine, I will say no- thing ; observing only, that at , very advanced age he went to receive the reward of his labors, in the close of the eighteenth century. According to the Wesley an system of theology, orthodoxy or correctness in point of doctrine is no essential part of religion, if it be any part at all ! Religion consists, he says, in holi- ness of disposition, in the love of God and our fellow- creatures ; no doctrine but this, in Wesley's ideas, is necessary to salva- tion ! Can then that gospel love of God which is the fulfilment of the law, exist without its essential conditions ? Heathens to whom the gospel hath not been preached, according to him, are justified by an interior light, without even knowing Christ. But how does this accord with those words of our Blessed Sft* viour this is eternal life, that they know Thee, and Jesus Christ &hom thou hast sent ? Wesley tells us, that those who have 294- MET heard the gospel, are justified by faith alone in formal contra- diction to St James, who says Faith 'without works, is dead. Repentance, Wesley insists, is merely a conviction of sin : so that provided I am convinced I have done wrong, it matters little, it would seem, whether I be resolved to repeat the crime or not ! The fruits of repentance may, he says, precede justifi- cation, or they may not ; but they are not necessary : the only condition is faith, or a sure trust and confidence, that Christ died for me ; yea even, quoth he, for me ; that he hath taken away my sins, even mine. Surely this is a doctrine very com- modious, and highly agreeable to flesh and blood, however irre- concileable with the gospel of Jesus Christ. The moment a sinner believes this, continues our new evangelist, he is justi- fied ; and immediately the spirit (of delusion, we presume, cer- tainly not the spirit of truth] witnesses to his spirit, that he is a child of God. This is the beginning of the new birth ; for Wesley acknowledges none in baptism, notwithstanding our Blessed Redeemer's expressly teaching the contrary, in the fol- lowing words Unless a person be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. (Jo. iii. 5.) Baptism, he proceeds, is an empty sign of future blessings; yet Methodists believe that all children, baptised or unbaptised, are saved : nay, Mr Fletcher, a celebrated Methodistic writer, maintains, that the guilt of original sin was actually taken from all men by Christ's redemption, and is found in none evidently in opposition to the text just quoted. The fruits of faith, re- sumes Mr Wesley, are joy, peace and love, that is felt by every righteous man ; a notion not warranted by scripture, which says No man knoweth whether he be worthy of love or haired. (Eccles. c. ix. 1.) The being of original sin termed by Methodists inbred sin, remains ; but is not imputed. Perhaps it had escaped Mr Wesley's recollection that all sin whatever, in a greater or a less degree, defiles the soul ; and that nothing defiled can enter into heaven. (Rev. xxi.) Sanctification, re- continues our great divine, is a distinct work. Are we then to believe that Christian justification may subsist without holiness ? Sanctification is instantaneous, rejoins Mr Wesley, as well as justification ; while authors as spiritual as this gentleman, and much more theologically accurate, affirm it to be, in general, attained but gradually. Works, says he, are no more the con- ditions of the one than of the other ; for this plain reason, we presume, that they are the conditions equally of both. By faith alone, Mr Wesley will have it, a man is sanctified ; al- though St Paul assures us, that faith strong enough to remove mountains, will profit nothing without charity. Methodists, however, exhort their hearers to good works after justification ; for before, they tell us, they are sinful, and that even duties in an unjustified person are sins. Does then the prophet Daniel MET 295 advise the infidel king Nebuchodonosor to redeem his sins by adding to their number ? Sanctification is the extirpation of inbred sin, or concupiscence, says Mr Wesley ; but what says St Paul ? I see another law in my members Jighting against the law of my mind, (Rom. vii.) While Mr Wesley declares, that no concupiscence remains ; and that the evil nature is gone : that a sanctified person may indeed be tempted from abroad, but not from within ,- It is sin which dweUeth in me, that doeth it, repeats the same apostle, ibid. Which of the two must a chris- tian believe ? In general, Methodists admit, that a person may fall from a state of justification, and even of sanctification; although Wesley sometimes speaks of a state from which one cannot fall: to such St Paul addresses himself to little purpose, when he says If any one thmketh himself to stand, let him take heed lest he fall. By reading Lord King's Account of the Primitive Church, Mi- Wesley adopted the opinion, that bishops and presbyters are the same order. (Against this erroneous doctrine see the article Aerius.) When old, he ordained Dr Coke bishop, and two of his lay-preachers presbyters. Coke sailed immediately for America, where, he also, took upon himself to consecrate one of his fellows bishop; and thus was founded, in 1784, the Metho- distic pretended episcopal church of America. A new prayer- book was published for the use of that church, and of the Me- thodists in general, under the title Sunday Service of the Methodist ; from which the catechism, the Athanasian and Nicene creeds, the absolution in the morning and afternoon service, and for the visitation of the sick, are retrenched, and the thirty nine articles reduced to twenty-five with various other material alterations of the common Book of Prayer ; and yet Methodists affect to make a part of the church of England, whose discipline and doctrines they so unequivocally discard ! The supremacy of the sect is lodged in the conference, or the collective body of the travelling preachers. They have superin- tendants, local preachers, exhorters and band-leaders. The classes are small companies of Methodists who meet weekly under their leader ; whose office it is to enquire how their souls pros- per ? To advise, reprove, comfort or exhort, as may be need- ful : to receive their offerings for the relief of the poor ; and to pay to the stewards of the society what is thus collected, and to inform the minister if any should be sick, or incorrigible in their disorders. The bands are smaller companies of married or unmarried persons of each sex, apart ; in order to confess to each other their sins of thought, word or deed, together With their re- spective temptations, and behaviour under them ; the leader of the band first setting the example, and then enquiring of each their particular failings, &c. MET Love feasts are quarterly meetings, where, in token of bro- therly love, each one receives a small bit of cake, and generally before they are dismissed that, say they, which endureth unto everlasting life. The Conference is annually convened in order to consult about the affairs of the societies. The office of a Helper is to preach morning and evening ; to meet the Society and Bands weekly, and to see the Leaders also weekly. The Assistant was the chief preacher in a circuit who imme- diately assisted Mr Wesley in the regulation of the societies. See Wesley's Life by Messrs Coke and Moore. The two grand divisions consist of the Election or Calvini&tic Methodists in Whitfield's Connexion, and the Wesleyan or Ar- minian Methodists. The latter hold that Christ died tor all, and that justification ' arid sanctification are an interior work of the Spirit, as observed above : the former maintain imputed righte- ousness ; that Christ died only for the elect ; and are Predestina- rians. These two have branched into many other less conside- rable sects. For it often happens that a preacher turns inde- pendent, when he is popular enough to form a party and shake off' the yoke of the Conference. The most noted of these parties is that of the Kilhamites, whose author Mr Kilham contended, that a proportionable number of lay-members and local preachers should be admitted to sit in the Conference with the travelling preachers ; and that an account should be given to the Methodist society at large of the sums lodged in their hands : this being refused, a division took place, and Kilham was excommunicated. For a more minute detail of Methodism, its various rules and discipline, Wesley's Life by Messrs Coke and Moore, Nightin- gale's Portraiture of the Methodists, the Rev. Nicholas Gilbert's tracts, together with Mr Slack's answers, &c. may be consulted. The latter gentleman by the bye, in his attempts at a reply to Mr Gilbert, has only exposed, still more apparently, to the intel- ligent reader, the weakness of the cause which he undertakes to advocate. In the Methodist community, it will not be denied, that great numbers of well meaning persons are to be found, who are in- fluenced by the best of motives : but their principles are wrong ; they rest not on a sound found at ion ; they have abandoned the only criterion of truth. That authority which Christ hath most emphatically recommended, and the common creed of Christians acknowledges, they have discarded as a treacherous rule : they refuse to hear that church which our blessed Saviour hath com- manded all to hear under pain of being looked upon as the heathen man or the publican ,- that church which, as St Paul assures us, is the very pillar and firm support of the truth. Their prophets were self-commissioned j they undertook to preach the MET 297 faith to others, before they knew themselves what true faith was ; before they so much as believed in Jesus Christ. (See Wesley's Journ. 1.) Of such, Almighty God himself heretofore com- plained : They have prophesied falsly to you in my name, and I have not sent them, saith the Lord. ( Jerem. xxix. 9.) If it be objected, that much good has resulted from Mr Wes- ley's preaching ; that great disorders have been reformed, and the morals of the people altered for the better ; all this we are willing to allow, and feel no reluctance in conceding to Mr Wes- ley the merit of so considerable a benefaction to society ; nay, we will even give him credit in most instances, for the purity of his intentions. All this too, we are not less disposed to admit in favor of some other fellow sectarists ; George Fox, for in- stance, and William Penn ; and to extend it even to the whole body of the people called Quakers. But will this suffice to veri- fy their doctrine ; to make that orthodox which even Mr Wesley would allow to be unscriptural and fundamentally erroneous ? If it be said : Mr Wesley was a learned, and a good man : so were thousands of those whose opinions in religious matters he despised ; the Cyprians, the Cyrils, the Ambroses, the Basils, the Chrysostoms, the Jeroms, the Augustines, the Gregories, and an innumerable phalanx of enlightened and most holy personages who have done honor to religion, and to human nature itself, in each succeeding age. Were these all wrong ; and the founder of the Methodist persuasion, a society/ of but yesterday, the first discoverer of pure religion and the genuine truth ? The supposition would imply blasphemy, and give the lie to the promises of Christ, whose sacred words shall not pass away, though heaven and earth, he says, shall pass away. (Mat. xxiv.) Before we dismiss this article, we are free to acknowledge our- selves at a loss to know what Mr Wesley means by faith alone. Does he mean to exclude the divine virtues of Hope and Charity ? The former he seems absolutely to discard, as in his system all doubt and fear must be done away ; and perfect security of our acceptance with God, and eternal salvation substituted in its place. Why then, we must ask again, does the great apostle of the Gentiles declare in his first epistle to the Corinthians, c. 13, that if he should have all faith even so as to remove mountains, and give his substance to the poor and his body to the flames, and have not charity ; it would avail him nothing ? Right ; says Mr Wesley : but justifying faith produces charity. Rather does not charity produce justifying faith ? Independently of cha- rity, St Paul assures us, faith cannot justify. Consequently not faith alone, but charity with the other two divine virtues conjointly ; the greater of the three as we are informed by the same apostle (ibid) being charity. Does Mr Wesley mean all this? If not 3 his doctrine is evidently unscriptural: if he does; p p 296 MIL why does he not speak intelligibly ? Had he done so, neither Calvinism nor Antiuomianism would have classed him among its patrons. MILLENARIANS those who in the second and third ages maintained, that at the end of the world Jesus Christ would de- scend upon earth to establish a temporal kingdom, in which the faithful should enjoy a temporary felicity during the term of one thousand years before the last general judgment, and still more perfect bliss in heaven : the Greeks denominated these Christians Chiliasts ; an epithet synonymous with that of Millenarians. This opinion was grounded upon, that passage in the twentieth chapter of the Apocalypse, where it is said, that the martyrs shall reign with Jesus Christ a thousand years. Some primitive fathers, among whom were Papias, bishop of Hierapolis and a disciple of St John the Evangelist, and after him St Justin, St Ireneus, Lactantius, Tertullian, &c. understood this mysterious prophecy in the literal sense of the words. But they did not ima- gine with Cerinthus and his sectarians, that under the supposed reign of Jesus Christ the just would be rewarded with sensual gratifications. So gross an idea never entered their mind : all sensual satisfactions they absolutely disavowed: nor did the greater part of them suppose the Milleriarian system to be a point of faith. St Justin himself whom some have thought to incline that way from an ambiguous expression in his dialogue with Tryphon declares in plain terms, (ibid.) that there were many pious and orthodox Christians of a contrary opinion. Some moderns have erroneously contended, that the fathers generally held the Milleiiarian doctrine as a point of catholic tra- dition. Nepos indeed, who was a zealous and learned bishop of Arsinoe and who died in the communion of the church, propa- gated that mistaken notion in his vicinity, and wrote in defence of it two books entitled On the Promises. This work St Diony- sius of Alexandria confuted by his two books against the Millena- rian heresy. He moreover undertook a journey to Arsinoe, and held a public disputation with Coracion the chief of the Millena- rians, in which he confuted them with equal strength of rea- soning and moderation; and with such success that Coracion publicly revoked his error. It was absolutely exploded in that country, and was unanimously condemned upon mature exa- mination into the sound and uniform catholic tradition ; which could not be affected by the disagreement of some few persons or particular churches. The Millenarian system has been revived by several Lutherans in Germany ; and among the English protestants by Dr Wells, in his Notes on the Apocalypse ; and by some few others ; Johanna Southcote, &c. Another kind of Millenarianism is mentioned by some writer^ J which consists in the fancy that once every thousand years there 1 ' M O N 299 shall be a cessation of the pains of hell. This error likewise, ori- ginated in the misinterpretation of the Apocalypse. MONOTHELISM a term of Greek derivation signifying the doctrine of but one will in Christ. Athanasius its author was patriarch of the Jacobites or Eutychians in Syria. In Christ he acknowledged two distinct natures, the Divine and the hu- man ; but only one will. This Demi-Eutychianism is a glaring inconsistency ; for the will is an essential property of the nature : and Christ himself sometimes speaks of his human will as distinct from the Divine ; for instance, in his prayer during his agony in the garden. This Monothelite heresy which seems to have been invented as an expedient to compound with Eutychianism, the emperor Heraclius confirmed by an edict called Ecthesis, or the Exposition ; declaring that there is only one will in Christ, namely, that of the Divine Word : it was condemned by pope John IV. Cyrus bishop of Phasis, a bigotted Monothelite, was by Heraclius preferred to the patriarchate of Alexandria in 629. Here St Sophronius, prostrate at his feet, in vain besought him not to publish his erroneous sentiments. Travelling thence into Syria in 634-, this servant of God was elected patriarch of Jeru- salem ; and in the course of the same year he assembled a coun- cil of all the bishops of his patriarchate to condemn Monothe- lism and composed a synodal letter to explain and prove the catholic faith. This learned epistle, afterwards approved in the sixth general council, he sent to pope Honorius, and to Sergius of Constantinople. The latter, by an insidious letter and cap- tious expressions, had persuaded pope Honorius to recommend a mysterious kind of silence on the subject, conformably to the intentions of Heraclius. It is evident, notwithstanding, from the most authentic monuments, that Honorius never assented to that error, but always adhered to the truth. (See Nat. Alex. saec. 7. Witasse and Tournely, Tr. de Incarn.) However, his silence was ill-timed, and might be deemed a species of conni- vance ; and he himself together with Sergius and the other chief abettors of Monothelism, was by name condemned in the sixth general council, celebrated at Constantinople in 680. Thirty years afterwards, the emperor Philippicus patronised anew the cause of Monothelism ; but he reigned only two years ; and, un- der Leo the Isaurian, the heresy of the Iconoclasts caused that of the Monothelites to sink into oblivion: the remnants of the sect were confounded with the Eutychians. MONTANISTS were the adherents to the tenets of Montanus; This man was a convert and a native of Mysia on the confines of Phrygia, whose disappointed ambition to occupy the first digni- ties of the church, impelled him to impugn its doctrines. He commenced prophet, and began, in an enthusiastic strain, to ut- pp 2 300 M O N ter extraordinary expressions. Prisca or Priscilla, and Maxi- milla, two women of quality but of abandoned morals, left their husbands, and, like Montanus, affected a mysterious kind of jargon ; pretending that they succeeded the prophets. Montanus ranked himself above the apostles, and said he had received the Paraclete, or the Holy Ghost, promised by our Redeemer to perfect his new law of the gospel. He denied that the church had power to forgive the sins of idolatry, of murder and impu- rity ; and hardly would admit any sinners to repentance. St Paul had allowed second marriages. Montanus prohibited them, as inconsistent with the perfect law of chastity ; and he forbade Christians to flee in time of persecution. Thus did this hypocritical innovator affect a severity of doctrine, to which his manners did not correspond. His followers were also denomi- nated from their native country Cataphryges, and Pepuzeni from Pepuzium, a little town in Phrygia which was their me- tropolis 5 and which they called Jerusalem. (Euseb. 1. 5. c. 17. St Hier. ep. 54. ad Marcel. Tert. 1. de Fuga. de Pudic. &c.) The Montanists boasted of their martyrs, as did also the Marcionites ; a thing not very ordinary with sectarists in gene- ral, as St Ireneus and Origen remark ; nor indeed could these with any plausibility support their high pretensions. Asterius Urbanus, one of the writers that undertook a refutation of their errors, positively affirms, that the Montanists never had had any martyrs, and that among the few whom they pretended to be such, some had paid a sum of money for their enlargement out of prison, and the rest had suffered for real crimes. Apollonius, another catholic author, quoted by Eusebius, confounding the hypocrisy of the Montanists, reproached their pretended pro- phetesses with infamous debaucheries. And " does a prophet," exclaims this ancient writer, " colour his hair, paint his eye- brows, play at dice, or lend out money upon usury ? Of these things I will prove them to be guilty." Their pretended prophecies and errors being condemned as impious, the followers of Montanus were excommunicated. Montanus him- self, and Maximilla, agitated by the evil spirit that possessed them, afterwards according to a popular tradition when Euse- bius wrote, laid violent hands upon themselves. These enthusiasts pretended that, besides the fast of Lent observed by catholics, there were other fasts imposed by the Di- vine Spirit. Accordingly they kept three Lents in the year, each of two weeks, and upon dry-meats, as necessary injunc- tions of the spirit by the new revelations made to Montanus which they preferred to the writings of the apostles ; and they said, these laws were to be observed for ever. The great Ter- tullian, as St Jerom informs us, resenting some affronts which he imagined had been put upon him by the Roman clergy, in revenge became a Montanist ; forgetting in his passion those N A Z SOI maxims by which he had himself triumphantly refuted all here- sies both of past and future ages. (See his admirable book of Prescriptions, fyc.} Nor does his prevarication take from the solidity and acuteness of his former arguments, any more than the fall of Solomon can affect the excellence of his former in- spired writings. A certain protestant writer in 1751,* undertook to shew, that the Montanists had been ranked in the class of heretics without sufficient reason. But Mosheim vindicates the justice of their condemnation, 1st, because it was a very reprehensible error to pretend to teach a morality more perfect than that of Jesus Christ ; 2nd, it was not less unpardonable to atttempt to per- suade the people that God himself spoke by the mouth of Montanus ; 3rd, it was the Montanists that separated from the church, rather than the church that expelled them from its pale: it was on their part an intolerable pride to pretend to establish a society more perfect than the church of Christ, and to nick-name the members of her holy communion Psychici, or sensual animals. And is it not somewhat singular, that Mo- sheim, in arguing thus against the Montanists, was not aware of the argument being perfectly applicable to his own dearly- beloved Lutheranism ? The Montanists divided into various branches. SS. Epiphanius and Augustine speak of the Artoty rites, the Ascites, &c. (See those articles.) Some of them adopted part of the dreams of the Valcntinians and Marlcesians. The Passalorynchites or Petta- lorynchites lay mighty stress on the ceremony of putting their fingers upon their noses and into their mouths during prayer, and almost always when they had their hands at liberty, to sig- nify their extraordinary recollection and religious silence. St Jerom tells us, that some of these still subsisted in Galatia ; who were the object of certain imperial ordinances so late as the commencement of the fifth age : such is the delirium of fanati- cism ! MORAVIANS. See ANABAPTISTS. N NAZAREANS were a sect equally obnoxious to Jews and Christians. They allowed Christ to'be the greatest of the pro- phets ; but said he was a mere man, whose natural parents were Joseph and Mary : they joined all the ceremonies of the old law with those of the new, and observed both the Jewish Sabbath, 302 N E S and the Sunday. Mosbeim in his ecclesiastical history affects to blame St Epiphanius, for placing the Nazareans on the list with heretics. If then, they denied the divinity of Jesus Christ, and in spite of the decisions of the council at Jerusalem still persisted in the superstitious observance of the Jewish ceremonies, were they notwithstanding, in the eyes of the protestants, verjt orthodox ? NESTORIANS the followers of Nestorius, a monk and priest of Antioch, who was promoted to the see of Constantinople in 428. The retiredness and severity of his life, joined with the exterior of apparent virtue, a superficial learning and a fluency of words, had gained him some reputation in the world. The study of the fathers he had neglected ; was a man of weak judg- ment, extremely vain, violent and obstinate. Such is the cha- racter which he bears in the history of those times, and which is given him by Socrates and Theodoret. The latter he had formerly imposed upon by his hypocrisy. Marius Mercator in- forms us, that immediately upon his preferment, he began to persecute with great fury the Arians, the Macedonians, the Manichees and Quartodecimans, whom he caused to be banish- ed from his diocese : while he himself denied the necessity of grace, and on that account received to his communion Ce- lestius and Julian, though previously condemned by the popes Innocent and Zozimus, and exiled by the emperor Honorius, for Pelagianism. Theodosius, however, commanded them to leave Constantinople, notwithstanding the protection of the bishop. Nestorius himself soon began to teach new errors from the pulpit ; maintaining there were two persons in Christ, that of God, and that of man, joined only by a moral union ; by which, he said, the Godhead dwelt in the humanity, merely as in its temple. Hence he denied the incarnation, or that God was made man ; and said, the Blessed Virgin ought not to be styled the mother of God, but only of the man who was Christ ; whose humanity was no more than the temple of the Divinity, not a nature hypostatically assumed by the Divine Person; though at length, overruled by the common suffrage of antiqui- ty, he allowed her the empty title of mother of God ; but con- tinued to deny the mystery. At these novelties the people were not a little shocked ; and the priests St Proclus arid Eusebius, bishop afterwards of Dorylceum, with many others, separated themselves from his communion, after having in vain attempted to reclaim him by remonstrances. His homilies every where excited clamour against the errors and the blasphemies*which they contained. St Cyril of Alexandria having read them, sent to him a mild expostulation ; but was answered with haughtiness and disdain. Pope Celestine being applied to by both parties, examined his doctrine in a council at Home, and pronounced N E S SOS a sentence of excommunication and deposition against the au- thor, unless within ten days after notification of the sentence he publicly condemned and retracted it ; appointing St Cyril his vicegerent in this affair, to see the sentence put in execu- tion. (Cone. T. 3. p. 343. Liberat. in Breviar. c. 4.) St Cyril, together with his third and last summons, sent to Nestorius twelve propositions, accompanied with as many ana- themas, hence called his anathematisms^ to be signed by him as a proof of his orthodoxy. But Nestorius appeared more ob- stinate than ever. This occasioned the calling of the third ge- neral council opened at Ephesus in 43 1 by two hundred bishops with St Cyril at their head, as legate and representative of pope Celestine. (St Leo, Ep. 72, c. 3. Cone. T. 3, p. 656, 980.) Nestorius, though in the town and thrice cited, refused to appear. His heretical sermons were read, and depositions were received against him ; after which his doctrine was condemned, and the sentence of excommunication and deposition was pro- nounced against him, and notified to the emperor. Six days after this, John, the patriarch of Antioch, arrived at Ephesus with forty-one Oriental bishops ; who secretly favor- ing the person not the errors of Nestorius, of which they deem- ed him innocent had advanced but slowly on their journey to the place. On their arrival, instead of communing with the council, they assembled apart, and presumed to excommunicate St Cyril and his adherents. Both sides applied to the emperor for redress, by whose orders St Cyril and Nestorius were soon after both arrested and confined ; but Cyril was the worst treat- ed of the two. He was even upon the point, through the greater interest of his antagonist at court, of being banished when three legates from pope Celestine ; Arcadius and Pro- jectus bishops, and Philip a priest, arrived at Ephesus. This gave a new turn to affairs in St Cyril's favor. The three legates having considered the proceedings of the council, the condemnation of Nestorius was confirmed ; Cyril's conduct was approved ; and the sentence pronounced against him was de- clared null and invalid. He therefore was enlarged with honor. The Orientals, notwithstanding, persisted in their schism till the year 433, when they made their peace with Cyril, con- demned Nestorius, and gave a clear and orthodox exposition of their faith. The heresiarch retreated from Constantinople to his monastery at Antioch ; where John, though formerly his friend, finding him very perverse and obstinate in his heresy, and attempting to pervert others, entreated the emperor Theo- dosius to remove him. In conclusion, he was banished to Oasis, situate in the desert of Upper Egypt, on the borders of Lybia, in 431; and there ended his days in misery and im- penitence. His sect remains to the present time very numerous in the East. 304 N E S After the condemnation of his doctrine and of his person by the general council at Ephesus, Nestorius had still a multi- tude of obstinate abettors ; particularly in the diocese of Con- stantinople, and in the provinces that lay contiguous to Meso- potamia. Proscribed and exiled by the Eastern emperors, they retired into the territories of the Persian kings ; and were patro- nised by them out of enmity to their lawful sovereigns. A cer- tain Barsumas, bishop of Nisibis, by his extraordinary influence at the Persian court, effected the establishment of Nestorianism over the different provinces of that extensive kingdom. Its sec- taries, since the conquest of the Persian monarchy by the Maho- metans in the seventh century, have uniformly enjoyed a larger portion of religious liberty than the catholics. This may be easily accounted for from the striking conformity between the Nestorian manner of speaking of Jesus Christ, and that of Ma- homet in the Alcoran ; a circumstance which they did not fail themselves to notice, in order to curry favor with the conquerors. (See Perpet. de la Foi, t. 4, 1. 1, c. 5. and Assemani's Biblioth. Orient, t. 3, 4.) Positive documents assure us that so early as the year 540 Nestorianism had already reached the coasts of Malabar 5 and in the seventh age its missionaries penetrated into China ; where the Christianity introduced by them, subsisted, it is said, till the thirteenth century. The sect was also established at Samarcand and in other parts of Tartary, till the mighty and not less bar- barous conqueror Tamerlane, planted on the ruins of all other systems of religion, the impious doctrines of Mahometism throughout the greatest part of Asia. About the year 1500, when the Portuguese after having doubled the Cape of Good Hope, penetrated into the Indies, they were much surprised to find numberless small cantonments of Christians : nor were the latter less astonished at the arrival among them of fellow Christians from so remote a region. They called themselves Christians ofSt Thomas, and were then distri- buted in fourteen hundred boroughs along the coast of Malabar. They had but one pastor, who was a bishop or archbishop sent them by the Nestorian patriarch of Babylon, or rather, of Mozul, whom the sect had complimented with the epithet of catholic. Oppressed and persecuted by certain pagan princes of those parts, they implored the protection of the Portuguese, and notified to their patriarch the arrival of these strangers, as a very providential and extraordinary event. They ascribe their origin to the apostle St Thomas, from whom, they say and riot with- out some plausibility they first derived their Christian name and religion, and have constantly professed it down to the present time. They had been implicated in the errors of Nestorianism ever since the fifth century. The Portuguese missionaries con- ceived the design of reuniting them to the catholic church, from N E S 305 which they had been separated upwards of a thousand years. The work was undertaken by Don John d' Albuquerque first archbishop of Goa, and prosecuted with success by his successor Don Alexis, aided by the society of St Ignatius. (See Govea's Hist. Orient. &c.) Had the Portuguese continued peaceable possessors of Mala- bar, the whole Christian population of those parts, it is more than probable, would have been catholic. But while the Dutch were in possession of it, they promoted the division instead of se- conding the efforts of catholic missionaries. M. Anquetil who travelled through that district in 1758, found the churches of Malabar divided into three partitions ; the first catholic, of the Latin rite ; the second also catholic, of the Syriac rite ; the third was that appropriated to the use of the Syrian schismatics. Fifty thousand only, of two hundred thousand Christians, were schismatics. P. Le Brun and La Croze had severally brought down their histories of these churches only to the year 1663, the epoch of the Dutch conquest of Cochin. M. Anquetil (Disc. Prelim, du Zend Avesta, p. 179) has continued it to the year 1758. He informs us, that in 1685 the schismatic Malabarians had been accommodated by theirDutch masters successively with two arch- bishops, one bishop and one monk, from Syria j who were all Syrian Jacobites, arid sowed their own errors among these igno- rant people. Thus they exchanged their former heresy of above a thousand years prescription for that of Jacobitism or Euty- chianism, without seeming aware of it themselves notwith- standing the formal opposition of these two systems. In 1758 their archbishop was a Syrian monk extremely ignorant attend- ed by a chorepiscopus little more enlightened than himself, who favored M. Anquetil with the sight of the Syriac liturgies, and allowed him to take down in writing the words of consecration. He afterwards delivered to him his profession of the Jacobite faith in the same language. Mosheim and some other protestant writers, have in vain at- tempted to justify Nestorius and his sect from heretical opinions. The catholic doctrine declares, that in Jesus Christ there are two natures, the Divine and the human ; but only one person : that in him the humanity subsists not by itself, but by the person of the Word to which it is substantially united ; so that Jesus Christ is not a human, but a Divine person : otherwise he could not be denominated God-Man or Man-God / nor would it be true to say that the Word was made flesh ; was born of a wo- man ; died, and redeemed us with his sacred blood, &c. Hence no sophistical explanations, nosubtilty of logic will ever reconcile the opinions of the Nestorians, or their language, with Holy Scripture. Mosheim adds, that to the immortal honor of the Nestorians they alone, of all the christians of the East, have been always clear of that multitude of superstitious practices and 306 N E S notions which have infected the Greek and Latin churched, They are however, accused of teaching with the Greeks that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father only, and not from the Son ; of denying with Theodorus of Mopsuestia original sin, Sic. Would it not then have been for their immortal honor, to have first vindicated them from these serious charges ? Mosheim doubtless wished to insinuate, that the Nestorians had never held the same doctrine with the church of Rome concerning the seven sacraments, the real presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucha- rist, or Transubstantiation ; the Veneration and Invocation of Saints, Prayer for the Dead, &c. But the learned Renaudot in the fourth book of the Perpetuite de la Foi ; Assemani in his Biblioth. Orient. 1. 3, part 2 ; Le Brun in his Explic. des cerem. de la Messe, t. 6, and Dr Hawarclen in his Church of Christ, have proved the contrary by documents the most incontrover- tible ; documents against which their adversaries are unable to produce even the shadow of an argument. Upon their first se* paration from the catholic church, the Nestorians used, and have> continued to use down to the present times, the liturgy of Con- stantinople,, which they translated into the Syriac tongue. Be- sides this they have other two ; the first of which they term the liturgy of the apostles ; and it appears, in fact, to be more an- eient than Nestorius ; the other is that of Theodorus of Mop- suestia. That of Nestorius or of Constantinople is the only one into which they have introduced their error concerning the Incar- nation : the two former remain orthodox. In them, as in all the other Oriental liturgies without exception, we find the doc- trines of the real Presence, Transubstantiation, the Commemo- ration of the blessed Virgin and of the Saints, Prayer for the Dead, &c. unequivocally noticed. These schismatics have always celebrated mass in Syriac not in their vulgar tongue wherever they have been established ; and have always admitted the same number of sacred books with catholics. Whence it evidently follows, that in the fifth century when the Nestorian schism first commenced, the whole rhristian church professed the identical dogmas of belief, which protestants are now pleased to style new doctrines unknown to antiquity, and the mere inventions of the church of Rome. In every age there have not been wanting zealous catholic missionaries who have attempted to reclaim these deluded peo- ple, and frequently with very great success. Many even of their patriarchs have at different periods declared themselves catholics, and have formally abjured their errors. Some indeed, it is to be feared, were not sincere : but it is by no means the case of all. One of these patriarchs called Abjesu or Abedjesu, went twice to Rome, repeated each time his abjuration, and sent his profession of faith to the council of Trent. He received \ the archiepiscopal pallium at the hands of the sovereign pontiff, ( N O E 307 and on his return into Syria applied himself successfully to the conversion of his people. He was a person well skilled in the Oriental languages, and composed himself many useful treatises. In the year 1 304, the patriarch Jaballah had caused an orthodox profession of faith to be presented, in his name, to pope Benedict XI. and in the sixteenth century John Sulaka, patriarch also of the Nestorians, had done the same under the popes Julius III. and Pius IV. Abedjesu was his immediate successor. According to the gazette of France, (1771, 5th June, art. Rome) the Dominican missionaries in Asia reconciled to the church the schismatical patriarch of Mozul, with other five Nestorian bishops of the same province. As to the invidious remarks of the Lutheran historian so often quoted, they are for the most part equally slanderous and groundless. But slander and mis- representation, we are sorry to observe, are the usual weapons of those that quarrel with the catholic church. NICOLAITES ancient heretics, who scrupled not to eat meat offered to the idols, and held prostitution to be an act of virtue. (Apocalype, c. 2. St Iren. L 1, c. 27. Clem. Alex. Strom. 1. 3.) Whether these sectaries really owed their origin to Nicolas the deacon, one of the seventy-two disciples of our Lord, or only, like some other heretics, wished to add authority to their errors by fathering them upon a man of apostolic sanctity and character, ecclesiastical writers do not agree. Some authors have even expressed their doubts whether any such sect had ever been in existence. This, however, is a notion diametrically op- posed to all antiquity. They were a sensual race of men ig- norant and superstitious ; who believed equally in evil spirits, and in the mysteries of Christianity ; and, for fear of offending the demons, they eat of meats consecrated to the heathen gods. The Nicolaites afterwards adopted the opinions of the Gnostics respecting the primary origin of the universe. (See their article.) There was a species of Nicolaites so late as the seventh century ; but, as their errors are not detailed, it is very possible the name may have been given to those clergymen, who after their ordi- nation retained their wives a practice not unusual in that age, though never sanctioned by the western church. (See Cone, Galliae. t. p. 330.) NOETIANS so called from their author Noetus, a native of Smyrna. About the year 240 this man began to teach that there was but one person in God, who sometimes took the name of Father, sometimes that of Son, and himself assumed our human nature ; was born of the Virgin, and died upon the cross. Being cited before his superiors, Noetus disavowed his errors ; but soon relapsed. He called himself Moses, and his brother Aaron. Praxeas and Sabellius afterwards maintained 308 N O V the same errors with Noetus; (See their articles) though it not appear that the Noetians were ever very numerous. They were solidly refuted by St Hypolitus of Porto, who flourished at that period. Beausobre pretends (Hist, du Manich. t. 1, p. 535) that SS. Hypolitus and Epiphanius ascribed to Noetus opinions which he never taught. But Mosheim (Hist. Christ, saec. 3, p. 686) shows-, that these two fathers of the church were perfectly right in their inferences ; that Noetus's system evident- ly destroyed all distinction of persons in the Blessed Trinity, and that he held it inconsistent to admit three persons without admitting also three Gods. What the English translator Mr Maclaine says upon this subject, is not less unreasonable than it is untheological. This gentleman, always excessively liberal in regard of sectarists, but ever the reverse when the conduct of the catholic church and its pastors is to be censured, blames the primitive fathers for opposing innovators with their own weapons, and giving by the aid of that philosophy which the latter abused, true and orthodox explanations in opposition to their captious and sophistic arguments pointed against the chief mysteries of catholic faith ! Such is the injustice of some pro- testant writers ; such their obstinate and indecent enmity to their mother-church ! NON- CONFORMISTS are the sects in Globo so called from their non-conformity with the protestant church of England, established by law : Puritans, Anabaptists, Quakers, &c. &c. See their articles. NOVATIANS the adherents of the first anti-pope Novatian. He had been a Stoic philosopher, and had acquired a considera- ble reputation for eloquence. At length he embraced the chris- tian faith ; but deferred his baptism till, in a dangerous fit of ill- ness, he received the sacrament of regeneration lying on his sick- bed. He was afterwards ordained priest. During the persecu- tion of Decius, instead of assisting his suffering brethren as was expected of him he kept himself in close retirement ; and, to do away all unfavorable impressions on the public mind from such a conduct, he afterwards affected an extreme of rigorism, and com- plained that some who had fallen in the persecution, were too easi- ly readmitted to communion. By this pharisaical zeal he formed a small party, and counted some among the confessors who had been imprisoned for the faith, in his interest. He was much em- boldened in his cabals by one Novatus a wicked priest of Car- thage, who having strenuously abetted the deacon Felicissi- mus in the schism which he raised against St Cyprian about the beginning of the year 251 to avoid the sentence of excommuni- cation threatened by his bishop, fled to Rome, and there cither first excited Novatian to commence an open schism, or N O V 309 at least very much encouraged him to persevere. So notoriously were ambition and faction the character of this turbulent man, that though at Carthage he had condemned the conduct of St Cyprian towards the Lapsed as too severe, he was not ashamed to ground his schism at Rome upon the opposite principle; there censuring the self-same discipline of the church as a criminal relaxation of the law of the gospel. To frame a clear conception of the controversy in question, it is necessary to observe, that those christians who in the persecu- tion had offered incense to idols, were called Sacrificati and Thurificati ; others who purchased with money of the imperial officers libels or certificates, as if they had actually offered sa- crifice, (by which, indeed, they were guilty of the same scandal) were termed Libellatici or Certificate-men. All the Lapsed, up- on giving marks of sincere repentance, were admitted by the church to a course of severe canonical penitence, which was shorter and milder with regard to the Certificate-men than to Apostates. The term being completed, or abridged by an in- dulgence of the bishop, they were finally received to communion. If any penitent during his penitential course happened to be in danger of death, the benefit of absolution and communion was granted him ; and this discipline was confirmed by several coun- cils at Rome, in Africa and other places. At this Novatian took offence ; pretending that the Lapsed ought never again to be admitted to penance, or to receive absolution, not even after performing a regular course of penitence, or at the article of death. To his schism Novatian quickly added heresy; and maintained, that the church had not received from Christ the power of absolving sinners from the crime of apostacy, however penitent they might be. His followers afterwards taught the same with regard to murder and fornication ; and condemned second marriages. They were called from him Novatians, and also Cathari or Puritans, as the rigid Calvinists have been deno- minated in latter times in England. Having already separated many persons from the communion of St Cornelius, he at length decoyed three ignorant and besotted bishops from a corner of Italy to Rome. These he prevailed upon while intoxicated, to ordain him bishop of that see. One of them returned soon after to his duty confessing and lamenting his guilt, and was ad- mitted by St Cornelius to lay-communion; although he still remained deposed from the episcopal dignity, as well as his two accomplices in this act of schism and of sacrilege ; and the holy pope substituted other pastors in their place. Thus Novatian became the first anti-pope ; and was acknowledged by none but heretics. He is called by St Cyprian" a deserter from the church, an enemy to every tender feeling, a very murderer of penitence, a teacher of pride, a corrupter of the truth, and a destroyer of charity." 310 O P H St Cornelius held at Rome a synod of sixty bishops, in which were admitted, according to the canons previously established, those Lapsed who sincerely implored admittance to public penance ; and bishops and priests in the same circumstances only to the rank of laics, without the privilege of exercising any sacerdotal function. Novatian, who was present and obstinate- ly refused to communicate with such penitents, was himself ex- communicated. The confessors, Maximus a priest, Urbanus, Sidonius, Celerinus and Moses, who had been imposed upon by Novatian, were undeceived by the letters of St Cyprian, and the evidence of truth ; and were all received to communion by Cornelius to the great joy of the people. (Cornel, ep 46 inter Cyprian, ed. Pam. 49, ed. Oxon.) The sect, notwithstanding, spread and was perpetuated in the East to the seventh age ; and in the West it subsisted till the eighth. In the general council of Nice held in 325, the terms on which they were to be re- admitted to communion, were fixed. One of their bishops called Acesius, disputed on the occasion with much vehemence ; insisting upon the impropriety of admitting notorious sinners to repentance. Constantine, who was present at this council, cried out : " Bring then a ladder for yourself, Acesius 3 and mount up to heaven all alone." Novatian and his fellow-schismatic Novatus desperate as is their cause have their protestant advocates equally with most other enemies of the church of Rome. And indeed, it is pro- voking beyond all sufferance to protestant bigotry to observe its own errors reprobated and proscribed in Novatian and his abettors, at so early a period as the third century. Mosheim among others has in vain exerted all his rhetoric aided, as usual, by misrepresentation, to palliate the guilt and impropriety of their conduct. The facts however speak a language which can- not well be misunderstood ; and the attentive reader is himself enabled to pronounce upon the merits of the cause without the imputation of rash judgment. O OPHITES or Serpentinians a branch of Gnostics who ima- gined, that Wisdom had revealed itself to man under the form of a serpent ; and on that account paid to it divine honors. The wicked spirit, as we are informed in Holy Scripture, in the guise of a serpent prevailed with our first parents to eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil ; and after they had eaten, their eyes were opened in effect to know good and OKI 311 evil. Out of gratitude for this pretended service to mankind, these fools who deemed themselves wiser than the rest of mortals, worshipped the devil under his assumed serpentine appearance. They kept for the purpose a serpent in a cage ; and, at the time appointed for the commemoration of so signal a benefit to the human race, they opened the cage, and called to the serpent. Presently he issued forth ; crawled upon the table where the bread was placed for the intended sacrifice, and entwined him- self about the loaf. This the maniacs, with much reverence, consumed as their eucharist, and as a perfect sacrifice. Having then adored the serpent, they offered through him a hymn of praise to the celestial Father, and thus concluded their absurd mysteries. (See Origen, 1. 6. contr. Cels. p. 291 and 294-, 1. 7. p. 358. Philastr. c. 1. Epiph. Haer. 29. Damascen. c. 37. de Hcer.) Origen has handed down to us their prayer : it was an un- intelligible jargon, somewhat resembling the gibberish of Alchy- mists. From this prayer, however, we may collect, that they supposed the world to be governed by we know not how many different powers ; and that these imaginary powers had separated their respective world from those of other puissances ; and that a soul in order to return to heaven, must find means to sooth them, or to elude their vigilance in travelling incognito from one world to another. They professed the most frantic enmity against our blessed Redeemer who came into this world to crush the serpent's head ; and of course they refused to admit among them any person, that did not first renounce Jesus Christ. Of this ridiculously impious sect one Euphrates was the author. Their rule of faith was that of all reformers Scrip- ture interpreted by private sense ! ORBIBARIANS were a sect that denied the mystery of the blessed Trinity, the resurrection, the last judgment and the sa- craments : they believed Jesus Christ to be a mere man, and said he had not suffered. (D'Argentre, Collect. Jud. t. 1. Spond. ad an. 1192. Dup. n. 26.) These sectaries appeared about the close of the twelfth century : they were a kind of Gypsies, and probably derived their appellation from their vagabond and un- settled state of life. They seem to have been a branch of the Waldenses, and were condemned and excommunicated by Inno- cent III. (See WALDENSES.) OREBITES were a body of Hussites who, after the death of Zisca, placed themselves under the conduct of a Bohemian named Bedricus. They called themselves Orebites from their retreating to a mountain which they denominated Oreb. ORIGEN surnamed the Impure to distinguish him from the fa- 312 PAL mous Christian Origen, taught about the year 290, that marri- age was a device of the devil ; and in its place encouraged the un- restrained indulgence of all wickedness. His sectaries were every where held in execration : they subsisted, notwithstanding, till the fifth century. (Epiph. Haer. 63. Baron, ad an. 256.) ORIGENISTS those who abused the authority of the great Christian philosopher Origen in support of the anti-catholic doctrines, that Jesus Christ is only the adoptive Son of God ; that the human soul pre-existed its union with the body ; that the torments of the reprobate would not be eternal ; that the wicked spirits themselves would one day be delivered from the pains of hell, &c. Certain Egyptian monks, with some of that pro- fession in Palestine, adopted these errors; maintained them with great obstinacy, and excited much disturbance in the church. This drew upon them the anathemas of the fifth general council held at Constantiple in 553 ; in which the person of Origen himself, as the supposed author of their heresy, was not spared. The Origenists were at that time divided into two branches, neither of which held all the false opinions contained in the writings now ascribed to Origen. Those who maintained Jesus Christ to be no more than the adopted Son of God, held more- over, that at the general resurrection the apostles would be equalized with him, and on this account were called Isochrista. Those who taught the pre-existence of souls, were denominated Protoctisttf, epithets which designated the nature of their error. Why the latter were also called Tettradites> or persons who attribute a particular virtue to the number Four^ does not appear. See the articles ABELARD, ADOPTIONISTS, OBSTRUCTIONISTS, &c. OSIANDRIANS the followers of Osiander, a disciple of Luther. See the article LUTHER. THE PACIFIC were so called because, in adhering to the Henoticon of Zeno, they pretended their motive was a love of peace. (See the article MONOTHELISM.) The Anabaptists likewise, took this name ; asserting, that their new system of re- ligion would estabb'sh upon earth an eternal peace. PALAMITES the same with HESICASTES. See the article. \ P A U THE PERFECT a usual epithet assumed by pretended re- formers of catholic doctrine, and by those who affected extraor- dinary singularity in their religious exercises. PASAGIANS a name of Greek etymology, importing alj per- fection in those fanatics that deemed themselves entitled to it. PASSALORYNCHITES were a sect of Montanists. See the ar- ticle. PASSIONISTS and PATRIPASSIANS those who pretended that God the Father had suffered. See PRASIEAS. PATARINI a branch of Paulicians, so called from a street in Milan, where they settled in great numbers during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries : it was given indiscriminately to almost all the sectaries of those epochs. PAULICIANS. See MANICHEES. PAUL OF SAMOSATA was made bishop of Antioch about the year 262. The famous queen Zenobia reigned at that period in Syria ; and her court was the rendezvous of rr-en of talents and learning. Among the rest, Paul also was invited by the queen, who admired his eloquence, and signified a desire to hear from him an account of the Christian religion. She was a princess well versed in the knowledge of history, and a great proficient in the study of various languages. She preferred the Jewish reli- gion before all others ; but could not relish the mysteries of Christianity. To do away her difficulties, Paul attempted to simplify the mysteries of our faith, and to render them intelligible to human reason. He told her that the three Persons of the most blessed Trinity were not three Gods, but merely so many attributes of the Divinity under which he had been pleased to reveal himself to men ; and that Jesus Christ was not God, but a mortal man to whom the Divine Wisdom had communi- cated himself in an extraordinary manner. (Epiph. Hser. 65. Hilar. de Synod, p. 136.) At this new doctrine the faithful took the alarm, and freely uttered their complaints. But Paul, who was one of the most haughty of mankind, and whose vanity procured hymns to be sung in his own praise even in the churches, was not disposed to give them satisfaction. However, seeing himself on the point of being condemned in a council held at Antioch in 264, he disavowed his errors, and thus escaped personal censure. The synod dissolved, and Paul renewed his heresy ; for which he was anathematized and de- posed in a second council, convened also at Antioch, in 270, R r 314 PEL by the unanimous voice of the assembly. He refused to sur- render the episcopal residence till the downfal of his protect- ress Zenobia, when, upon the application of the catholic bishop, the conqueror and Roman emperor, Aurelian, decreed that the episcopal house should be adjudged to the person, to whom the bishops of Rome should have addressed their letters of com- munion ; concluding very rationally, that if any individual re- fused submission to the decisions of his religious superiors, he ought from that instant to renounce all claim to what belonged to them. (Theodoret, Haeret. Fab. 1. 2, c. 8.) Upon this principle he accorded to the catholics that protection which the laws hold out to every subject indiscriminately, aiding him to drive from his premises the unjust intruder ; and to every so- ciety in order to the expulsion of such members as it dislikes, or who refuse obedience to its rules. But he did not punish the refractory bishop by depriving him of the rights of a citizen ; nor did the catholics require it. The Antiochian synod having thus condemned the innovating doctrine, together with its author, wrote circular letters to all the churches of the Christian world to inform them of its pro- ceedings ; and they were received with general approbation. Con- sequently, the divinity of Christ was at that early period distinct- ly professed ; and the smallest deviation in the generally received doctrine affecting it, was deemed heretical and destructive of religion. The sentiments of Paul relative to this great and fun- damental article of Christianity, were indeed precisely the same with those of Theodotus in the preceding century : the same arguments were by him urged in their defence : they were com- bated in both instances with the same principles, and with simi- lar effect. No traces of either sect were visible towards the close of the fifth age ; nor had they ever been considerable for their numbers or respectability. However, St Lucian of An- tioch seems to have been deceived by the subtile reasoning, or rather the crafty dissimulation of his master Paul ; and, as we are informed by St Alexander of Alexandria, remained for some years separated from the communion of the catholic church. The Arians even boasted, that Arius had received his doctrine from him ; but he is justified with regard to that as- persion by the panegyrics of St Chrysostom and St Jerom ; by the express testimony of the ancient book On the Trinity, among the works of St Athanasius (torn. 2, p. 279) ; by his own or- thodox confesson of faith in Sozomen, (1. 3, c. 5, p. 502) and by the authority of the church, which from his death has al- ways ranked him among its illustrious martyrs. PELAGIANS Pelagius was by birth a Briton, as we are in- formed by St Augustine, St Prosper and Marius Mercator ;\ and was a monk of Bangor in Wales. His name in the Ian- \ PEL Sis guage of his country was Morgan ; which abroad he changed into the Greek word of the same import mA* y ;o ? from nA yof the sea. (See Usher. Antiq. c. 8.) He travelled into Italy, and lived a long time at Rome, where he acquired a reputation for virtue. Falling in with Rufinus the Syrian, a disciple of Theo- dosius of Mopsuestia who came to Rome about the year 400, he learned from him the errors which he began immediately to propagate though at first in private against the necessity of .Divine grace. He wished first to find out how the people were disposed to receive his doctrine, before he openly committed himself ; and he sounded them by means of his disciples : the chief of these was Celestius a man, according to Mercator, nobly born, assuming, and of a subtle ready wit. He was a Scotch- man and is called, somewhat vulgarly, by St Jerom " a fellow bloated with Scottish gruels" or crowdies ; meaning, we suppose, to censure in him the want of that spirit and practice of mortifi- cation, becoming his profession of a monk. He had joined Pe- lagius at Rome ; and a little before that city was taken, passed with him into Africa in 409. Pelagius went soon into the East ; but left Celestius at Carthage, where he entered himself among the candidates for the priesthood. Meanwhile Paulinus, the deacon of Milan, who was then in Africa, preferred against him an accusation of heresy to Aurelius bishop of Carthage, about the beginning of the year 412. Aurelius assembled a council in that city, to which Paulinus presented two memorials charg- ing Celestius with holding the following errors : that Adam would equally have been mortal and have died, though he had not sinned ; that his sin was prejudicial to himself alone, not to his posterity ; that children are now born in the same state in which they would have been, if Adam had never sinned ; and that, if they die without receiving baptism, they nevertheless ob- tain eternal life. Celestius was heard ; and notwithstanding all his evasions, he confessed enough to be convicted of obstinate error ; so that he was finally condemned and deprived of ecclesiastical communion. Before the close of the same year, the great St Augustine un- dertook the refutation of Pelagianism. This, however, he did -without naming the authors of that heresy, in order the more easily to reclaim them. Pelagius himself he even praised in a book which he wrote against his errors, and says : " As I un- derstand, he is a holy man very far advanced in Christian virtue a good man, and worthy of praise." (1. de merito Peccat. et Remiss, c. 1. 3.) But after his condemnation, Orosius and other fathers accuse him of loving banquets and the baths, and of leading a life of softness and sensual indulgence. He made a long stay in Palestine; and in 415, was summoned to appear before certain bishops at Jerusalem ; who thought fit to write to the pope for information in this affair, and to abide by his an- 11 r 2 316 PEL swer. However, in December the same year, a council of four- teen bishops, among whom was John of Jerusalem, was held at Diospolis or Lydda ; in which Peiagius was obliged to appear and give an account of his faith : two Gaulish bishops who had been expelled from their sees, Heros of Aries, and Lazarus of Aix, were his accusers. Peiagius escaped personal condemna- tion by subscribing to the condemnation of his errors. But this he did with certain mental reservations so as to deceive the synod; for, in fact, he never altered his opinions. (St Aug. 1. de gestis Pelag. c. 20.) After this, his vanity was at its zenith ; and he boasted loudly of his imaginary victory ; al- though he durst not show the proceedings of the council, be- cause the people would have seen in them, that he had been compelled to disavow his tenets. He contented himself with writing to his friends ; informing them that fourteen bishops had approved his doctrine ; which asserted that a man may live without sin, and may easily keep the Divine command- ments, if he will. But he did not say that he had added in the council these words with the grace of God : and he super- added in his letter the word easily, which he had not dared to affirm before the synod, as St Augustine observes. The bishops of Africa were too well acquainted with his artifices to be im- posed upon ; and, assembling two councils, one at Carthage, the other at Milevis, in 416, they wrote against him to Pope Innocent, who with commendations of their pastoral vigilance, in 417 declared Peiagius and Celestius excommunicated: for he perceived, that the answers of the former in the council of Diospolis were no way satisfactory ; as appears from the episto- lary correspondence between him and St Augustine upon this affair. Peiagius wrote to Rome in his own justification ; and Celestius, who had got himself ordained priest at Ephesus, went thither in person, where Zozimus had succeeded Innocent in the papal chair in March 417. To him Celestius presented a confession of faith, in which he was very explicit on the first articles of the creed, and professed that if in some of his letters he had advanced any thing erroneous, he submitted it to his judgment, and begged to be set right. Pope Zozimus had so much regard to his pretended submission, that he wrote in his favor to the African prelates ; though he would not take off' the excommunication which they had pronounced against Celestius, but deferred passing sentence personally for two months. In the mean time St Aurelius assembled in 4 1 8, a council at Car- thage, of two hundred and fourteen bishops ; which renewed the sentence of excommunication against Celestius, and declared its firm adherence to the decree of pope Innocent. Zozimus having received their letters of information, condemn- ed the Pelagians, and cited Celestius to appear again. TheVJ latter secretly withdrew from Rome, and returned into the East; 1 ' PEL 317 thus demonstrating the insincerity of his late professions of sub- mis>ion, and his pretended wishes to be set right. Upon this Zozimus published a solemn sentence of excommunication against both Pclagius and Celestius, and sent it into Africa, and to all the principal churches of the East. Eighteen Italian bishops refusing to subscribe the letter arid sentence of pope Zozimus, were deposed. The most learned of these, as well as the most obstinate, was Julian of Eclanum in Campania, which see is now removed to Avellino. His writings show him to have been one of the most self-conceited of human beings ; full of pride and a contempt of all other men, but of quick parts and abundance of ready wit. The chief errors of Pelagianism, as is plain from what has been said above, regard original sin and divine grace : the former they denied, with the necessity of the latter. They also affirmed that a man independently of grace could live entirely exempt from sin ; and they extolled the virtues of the heathens. The con- trary truths of the catholic faith St Augustine maintained with invincible force ; and he proved from the clearest passages of Holy Scripture, that all men are sinners, and bound to pray for the pardon of their sins : for, without an extraordinary grace, (such as was given to the Virgin Mary) even saints offend by small transgressions of a faulty inadvertence ; against which they watch, and for which they live in daily compunction. He also proves, that the virtues of heathens are often counterfeit ; ibr instance, whenever they are influenced with motives of vain glory, or other vicious qualities : they are true moral virtues, and may deserve some temporary recompence if they spring purely from principles of moral honesty. But no virtue can be merito- rious of eternal life, which is not animated by divine charity, and which is not produced by a supernatural gift of grace. He teaches, that the divine grace obtained for us by our blessed Redeemer, works in us the consent of our will to all virtue, though not with- out our free concurrence ; so that all the good that can be in us, is to be attributed to the Creator ; and no one ought to boast of his good works by contrasting them with those of other men. But God cannot be the author of evil : this arises entirely from the malice and defect of rectitude in the free will of the creature ; to whom nothing remains without the Divine concurrence but the wretched power of self-depravation and corruption, or at most, of doing that from self love, which ought to be done for God alone. It cannot without grace do any action, of which God is the supernatural end, nor of which, by consequence, He will be the final recompence. Through the corruption of human nature by sin, pride being become the darling passion of our heart, men are born with a propensity to Pelagianism, or principles which flatter an opinion ef our own strength, merit and self sufficiency. We cannot 318 PEL therefore be surprised, that this heresy found advocates; rather, it is wonderful it should have had no more. The wound would certainly have been much deeper and more severely felt by the church of God, had not Divine Providence raised up so eminent a doctor of his grace, as was St Augustine, to be a bulwark for the defence of the truth ; and to him is the church indebted, as to the chief instrument of God in overthrowing this heresy. From its ashes sprang Semi-Pelagianism, the authors of which were certain priests, bishops and monks in Gaul, at Le- rins, and in other parts in the vicinity of Marseilles. St Prosper and Hilarius, two zealous and learned laymen, informed St Augustine by letter in 429, that these persons expressed the ut- most admiration for all his other actions and words ; but took of- fence at his doctrine of grace, as if it destroyed free-will in man. They taught, that the beginning of faith, and the first desire of virtue, are from the creature, and move God to bestow that grace which is necessary for men to execute and accomplish good works. They said, that as to children who died without baptism, and those infidels to whom the faith is never preached, the reason of their misfortune is that God foresees they would not make a good use of longer life, or of the gospel ; and that he on this account deprives them of those graces. St Augustine wrote two books against this error ; one entitled On the Predes- tination of the Saints / the other On the Gift of Perseverance ; showing that the authors of this doctrine did not recede from the great principle of Pelagianism, and that, to ascribe to the crea- ture the beginnings of virtue, is in reality, to give the whole to it and not to God. He treats the Semi- Pelagians as brethren, be- cause they erred without obstinacy ; and their error had not been yet condemned by any express definition of the church. The principal persons who espoused it, seem to have been Cassian at Marseilles, and certain monks of Lerins. It was con- demned in the second council of Orange under St Caesarius in 529, confirmed by pope Boniface II. in a letter to that saint. The famous Vincent of Lerins has been falsely classed by some in the list of Semi-Pelagians. There were two other Vin- cents living at Marseilles at that very time ; and, very possibly, there were many others of the same name, one of whom may have been a Semi- Pelagian, whence the mistake in all appear- ance originated. At all events, it is certain, that Vincent of Lerins condemned Semi-Pelagianism with great warmth, and highly extolled the letter of pope Celestine to the bishops of Gaul. To guard the faithful against the dangerous snares spread on every side in order to seduce them, and to open the eyes of those already seduced by the false and perplexing glosses of subtle refiners, St Vincent, with great clearness and force of reason- ing, wrote a book in the year 434-, which he entitled A Commone- tory against Heretics in general The saint here lays down as a PER 319 rule and fundamental principle in which he found by a diligent enquiry all catholic pastors, and the ancient fathers, to agree 5 that such doctrine is truly catholic , as hath been believed in all places at all times and by all the faithful. (Cone. c. 3.) By this test of universality, antiquity and consent, he says, all controverted points in belief must be tried. He shews that while Novatian, Donatus, Arius, Pelagius, &c. expound the Divine oracles different ways, to avoid confusion and the per- plexity of errors, we must interpret the Holy Scriptures by the tradition of the catholic church, as the clue to conduct us in the truth : for this tradition derived from the apostles, manifests the true meaning of the Holy Scriptures ; and all novelty in faith is a certain mark of heresy. He adds, that new teachers who have made bold with one article of faith, will proceed to others; and what will be the consequence of this reforming of religion, but only, that these refiners will never have done reforming till they have reformed it quite away, (c. 29.) Of this there cannot be a more striking exemplification than the conduct of our modern innovators. St Vincent elegantly expatiates on the Divine charge given to the church, to maintain inviolate the depositum of faith, (c. 1. 27, p. 30.) He observes that, in the works of Paul of Samosata, Priscillian, Eunomius, Jovinian and other heretics, (and we may include in the list those of the present day) almost every page is painted, and overcharged with scripture texts. But in this, he says, they are like those poisoners or quacks, who put off their destructive potions under the inscriptions of good drugs, and under the title of infallible cures. They imi- tate the Father of Lies, who quoted scripture against the Son of God. (c. 31, 32.) If a doubt arise in interpreting the sense of scripture in any point of faith, we must summon in the holy fathers, who have lived and died in the faith and commu- nion of the catholic church ; and by this test we shall prove the false doctrine to be novel : for that alone we must look upon as indubitably certain and unalterable, which all or the major part of these fathers have delivered, like the harmonious consent of a general council. But if any one among them, be he ever so holy, ever so learned, holds any thing besides, or in opposition to the rest, it is to be placed in the rank of singular opinions, and never to be deemed the public general authoritative doctrine of the church, (c. 33.) Can any thing be more rational than these principles 5 more scriptural, or equally secure ? PEREANS the followers of one Euphrates of Pera, in Cilicia, who pretended there were three fathers, three Sons, and three Holy Ghosts. To these sectaries the symbol termed the Atha- nasian creed seems to allude in the versicle which sets forth that there is but one Father, not three Fathers j one Son, not three 320 P H O Sons ; one Holy Ghost, and not three. (Theodoret, Haeret. Fab. 1. 1, c. 18, Philast.) PETROBRUSIANS took their name from Peter Bruys, a na- tive of Dauphine. He was yet young when he commenced re- former , and began by a very austere and singular method of life to gain a reputation, though the writers of that age accuse him of disguising most wicked actions, and corrupt morals under a hypocritical garb. He went very meanly clad ; and his or- dinary retreats were the cottages of peasants. Having a ready tongue, he first gained attention by declaiming against the riches, and the luxury of the clergy; and afterwards boldly sowed his errors in Provence, Languedoc and Gascony. Peter the Venerable, abbot of Cluni, who wrote against them, re- duces them to five: he denied the validity of infant bap- tism ; condemned the use of churches and altars, and, wher- ever his rabble was sufficiently strong, pulled them down : rejected the mass ; denied that alms and prayers avail the dead, and for- bade the singing of the Divine praises in churches : reprobated the veneration of crosses ; broke them in pieces, and made bon- fires of the wood, on which he boiled large pots of broth and meat, to regale his hungry followers and vagabond adherents. Abelard (Introduct. ad Theol. p. 1086) and other contemporary writers give the same account of his tenets. He passed from province to province, attended by a lawless banditti pillaging the churches, demolishing crosses, and destroying the sacred altars, as they advanced. The profanation of places of worship, and the re-baptising of their deluded proselytes were the fa- vorite occupations of these frantic hypocrites. At length, how- ever, their infuriated author was arrested and condemned for his seditious conduct to be hanged, and his body burnt. Protestants have made a holy martyr of this enthusiast, and have ranked him in the class of sanctified reformers. He has indeed as good a right as his fellows of more modern date, to the boasted title. But it is rather singular that those should claim him for their precuisor, who are the avowed enemies of the Anabaptist system. To what inconsistencies are people often driven, when they wish to trace the pretended succession of their religion through the medium of such characters as was Peter Bruys ! (See the article HENRY BRUYS.) PHOTINIANS the adherents of Photinus, a native of Galatia, and disciple of Marcellus of Ancyra. Marcellus had zealously opposed, together with St Athanasius, the Arian system, and had written against that faction a book entitled On the Sub- mission of Jesus Christ, in which were some expressions favora- ble to Sabellianism. He was accordingly accused of holding the opinions of Sabellius, and condemned by an Arian council in \ P R E 321 336. A sentence of banishment was pronounced against him by the emperor ; and he withdrew to Rome. Pope Julius ad- mitted him to communion, and pronounced him innocent of the charge alleged against him, in a council held in that city upon the occasion. Photinus, however, imagined that the sen- timents of Marcellus really inclined to Sabellianism, and him- self adopted the real or, in all probability, only the supposed principles of his former master. He maintained with Sabellius, that the Word was a mere attribute; and denied his hypostatic union with the humanity. (Epiph. Haer. p. 71. Vincent. Lyrin. Commonit. c. 16. Soz. 1. 4, c. 6, &c.) The errors of Photinus were immediately condemned by the Oriental bishops, in a council at Antioch in 345 ; and by the Western prelates in 346. He propagated his heresy in Illyria ; but his sectaries were not numerous, and did not long survive their author. See SABELLIANS, NOETIANS, PRAXEANS and PAUL OF SAMOSATA. PHOTIUS. See GREEKS. PRAXEANS had for their author one Praxeas a Phrygian, who coming to Rome under pope Victor towards the close of the second century, informed him of the errors of Montanus, and afterwards began himself to sow there a new heresy ; maintain- ing but one person in God, and attributing crucifixion to the Father as well as to the Son ; whence his followers were called PATRIPASSIANS. Tertullian has refuted this error with great energy and solidity of argument. He opposes to the Praxean heresy the doctrine of the universal church, which had condemn- ed its author, and with which, says he, we believe in one only God, at the same time that we profess our belief in the Divine Word his only Son, who proceeds from Him, and by whom all things were created ; and that without Him nothing actually exists ; that this Divine Word was sent down from heaven by the Father, and took flesh of the Virgin 5 God and man at the same time, son of man and Son of God: that he was surnamed Jesus Christ ; and that he suffered death, and was buried: such, continues he, is the faith which the church enforces, and has uniformly professed since the commencement of Christianity. Clerk and some other modern Ariaris and Socinians have, by forced constructions and unnatural hypotheses, in vain endea- voured to render doubtful the opinions of Tertullian with re- gard to the divinity of the Son of God. PREDESTINARIANS are all those of whatever sect nthat blasphemously affirm all reprobates to have been doomed by Almighty God from all eternity to sin and hell without the power of avoiding either. This most impious heresy was an- s, s 122 P R E ciently condemned by the councils of Aries and Lyons about the close of the fifth century. Towards the middle of the ninth, it was renewed by a wandering monk of the diocese of Soissons, named Gotescalcus. Rabanus Maurus archbishop of Mentz, one of the most learned and holy men of that age, condemned his errors in a synod held in that city in 848, and sent him to his own metropolitan Hincmar archbishop of Rheims, a pre- late also, of great learning and abilities. By him and Wenilo, archbishop of Sens, and several other prelates, he was again examined in a synod held at Quercy on the Oise, in 849. Gotescalc proving refractory, was degraded from the priesthood, and closely confined in the abbey of Hautvilliers, in the diocese of Hincmar. However, by the advice of St Prudentius, whom Hincmar consulted upon the occasion, he was not deprived of lay-communion, till Hincmar found his obstinacy incorrigible ; and he issued against him a sentence of excommunication ; under which this unhappy author of much scandal and disturbance died, after twenty-one years of rigorous confinement, in 870. With a variety of other exploded heresies, our modern reformers, Lu- ther, Calvin, Beza and a countless tribe of their deluded ad- herents, have revived Predestinarianism not to speak of the infidel Mahometans, who have always held the absurd and im- pious doctrines of absolute fatality. Bishop Usher too, with Jansenius and Mauguin, is an advocate for Predestinarianism. Their vindication of Gotescalc is confuted by the Cardinal de Laurea, (Opusc. 1. c. 7) Nat. Alexander, Honoratus of St Mary, and Tournely, in accurate dissertations on that subject. The Divine predestination of the elect is an article of catholic faith ; but such a grace and predestination as destroy free-will in the creature, are a monstrous heresy. In disputing, how- ever, upon either of these subjects, we walk upon the brink of two precipices ; and without the utmost caution it is easy to take a false step, and to fall headlong into an abyss. Hence it happened that the adversaries of Gotescalc were thought by some to lean too much the ether way ; and this gave occasion to much wrangling and mutual, crimination between parties who agreed in sentiment, but for some time could not satisfy each other of their orthodoxy. It was the case of Hincmar, Raba- iius Maurus, and St Prudentius, on the one side ; and Ra- tramnus, Amolon, St Remigius, &c. on the other; though all alike censured the errors of Gotesealeus, as well as the oppo- site doctrines of Pelagius* PRESBYTERIANS they that assert the government of the church to belong not to bishops, but to Presbyters or ruling El- ders ; and that there is no order in the church of divine institu- < tion superior to that of a Presbyter ; who therefore hath power to ordain ministers by fasting, prayer and imposition of hands. P R I 323 They have three courts 1. That composed of the minister of each parish, with his elders, and the congregation. 2. That of the Presbytery ; consisting of a great number of ministers and elders, associated for governing particular churches. 3. The highest court is a synod, which, they hold, may be provincial, national, or oecumenical ; and allow of appeals from the lesser to the greater. They baptise by sprinkling ; and their common worship consists in extemporary prayer, preaching and singing of psalms. (See Bibliotheca Technologica, p. 34.) Rigid Calvinism was first introduced into Scotland in the reign of queen Elizabeth, by John Knox and his fellow gospel- lers on their return from Geneva ; and was some time afterwards improved into its present form, designated under the gene- ral denomination of the Kirk of Scotland. The Presbyterians however are not confined within the limits of that country ; but have established themselves also in the north of Ireland, in some of the North American states, and in England where under the name of Puritans, Independents, &c. they overturned the existing government, and raised their general Oliver Cromwell to arbitrary power under the title of Protector. Since the re- storation they have been here gradually on the decline, and at the present day form but an inconsiderable part of our English protestant Dissenters. (See the article CALVINISTS ; also that of AERIUS, under which we have refuted their doctrine respecting the equality of order and jurisdiction in the ecclesiastical hier- archy, &c.) PRISCILLIANISTS an infamous sect of the fourth age, who renewed many errors of Simon Magus, the Gnostics, and the Manichees ; to which they added their favourite tenet of dissi- mulation and lying ; it being an avowed principle with them rather to commit perjury itself, than to reveal the abominable tenets of their sect. Swear, forswear thyself, said they, in order to conceal thy sentiments.' One Mark, a Manichee, coming from Memphis in Egypt into Spain, spread the poison of his errors in Galicia. His first disciple was a lady of distinction, who brought over to the party a rhetorician named Elpidius. These two persons taught Priscillian, who gave name to the sect. He was rich, and well born ; had fine parts ; was eloquent, curious and inquisitive ; had read much, and acquired a large stock of profane learning. His vanity kept pace with his know- ledge ; and he was of a hot and restless temper. This man tainted with his errors several persons of quality, and a great number of the common people, especially females ; and his ob- liging carriage and affected gravity gained him much esteem. With Sabellius thePriscillianists confounded the three Divine Persons in the Trinity ; said that Christ is the only-begotten Son of God in as much only, as he was the only Son of Mary ; s s 2 324 P R I for that God had many other sons. They taught that Christ assumed our human nature, was born and suffered merely in appearance ; that every human soul is a portion of the Divine substance, and pre-exists the state to which it is con- demned in the body : that the devil, or author of evil, was not created by Almighty God, but sprang from darkness and the chaos, and is evil by his own nature. Marriages they con- demned and dissolved, and in lieu of matrimony authorised ob- scenities ; qualifying their adultresses and harlots with the soft epithet of adoptive sisters. They did not reject the Old Testa- ment, but explained it allegorically. To the books of the New Testament they added false acts of St Thomas, St Andrew, and St John ; and two most blasphemous books, the one written by Priscillian, called Memoria Apostolorum ; the other called Libra, or the Pound, because it consisted of twelve questions or blasphemies. This book they ascribed to one Dictinius. To conceal their doctrine, they were ready, if necessary, to abjure even Priscillian himself together with their own tenets, as we are assured by St Augustine. (Ep. 237, n. 3, &c. See also St Leo's Letter to Turibius, 15. ed. Quesnell, p. 93. The first council of Toledo, Cone. T. 2, p. 228 ; the council of Braga, in 563, T. 5, p. 36. &c.) Two bishops named Instantius and Salvianus were seduced by Priscillian ; Higinus of Cordova their neighbour at first op- posed, but afterwards joined them. The two former, with El- pidius and Priscillian laymen, were condemned in the council of Saragossa subscribed by twelve bishops in 381. The execu- tion of the sentence was committed to Ithacius bishop of Ossobona (formerly an episcopal see in Lusitania, now called Estombar in Algarves) who was ordered by the council to excommunicate Higinus also. Ithacius is much commended by some writers for his eloquence ; but is charged by Sulpicius Severus with the odi- ous vices of gluttony, adulation, haughtiness and revenge. In- stantius and Salvian, after their condemnation, proceeded to or- J dain Priscillian bishop of Avila. Ithacius and Idacius his col- league, exasperated the sect by the violence of their proceedings ; and, through their procurement, the emperor Gratian issued an order for the banishment of the Priscillianists. Instantius, Sal- vian and Priscillian applied to pope Damasus for redress, and perverted many in Aqutiain on their way to Rome ; particularly one Euchrocia, wife of Delphidius a famous poet and orator, and her daughter Procula, whom Priscillian is said to have debauched. Pope Damasus refused to see them, and Salvian dying at Rome, the other two repaired to Milan, and were rejected in like manner by St Ambrose. But they found means by dint of bribery and court intrigue to obtain of Gratian their re-establishment in their episcopal sees. Ithacius remained at Triers till Maximus be-\ came master of Spain j who listened to his complaints, and; PRO 325 caused Instantius and Priscillian to appear before a council at Bourdeaux. Instantius was condemned ; but Priscillian ap- pealed to Maxim us ; and they were both sent to him at Triers by the connivance of the synod. Doubtless, they were afraid of offending this new master should they have rejected the undue appeal. Maximus committed the cause of the Priscillianists to Evodius, whom he had made prefect of the prsetorium. This severe judge convicted Priscillian of several crimes by his own confession ; among others, for instance, of holding nocturnal assemblies with lewd women; of praying naked, and other such scandalous immoralities. Ithacius was the accuser, and was even present when Priscillian was put to the torture : though after this he withdrew, and did not assist at their condemnation to death. Evodius laid the whole proceeding before Maximus, who declared Priscillian and his accomplices worthy of death. The sentence was accordingly pronounced; and Priscillian, his two clerks named Felicissimus and Armenius, Latrocinius a lay- man, and the adulteress Euchrocia, lost their heads; and many others were variously punished for the same cause. Ithacius and his associate bishops were patronised by the emperor ; so that several who highly disapproved their conduct, durst not openly condem them. However, neither St Ambrose nor St Martin would communicate with Ithacius, or those bishops who held communion with him. Nor can we be surprised at this re- fusal when we consider how much the church abhors the shed- ding of the blood even of criminals, and never suffers any of her clergy to be party in such cases. After the defeat or Maximus by Theodosius in 338 or 339, Ithacius was brought to a trial, and having been convicted of se- ditious and irregular behaviour, he closed his life in exile, and under the severest censures of the church. The wretched Pris- cillian and his fellow miscreants were honored by their deluded followers in Spain as martyrs; and their bones were conveyed thither, as so many precious relics. The sect was repressed by the severe laws of Honorius in 407 and 4-08, and by the zeal of the holy pope St Leo, and of St Turibius, bishop of Astorga in 44-7 ; and quite annihilated in Spain by the invasion of the Moors, (see Tillemont, Orsi, &c.) although they still subsisted in some other parts of Christendom ; as is evident from a council held against them at Prague in the sixth century. (Collect. Cone.) See the Life of St Martin of Tours by the learned Al- ban Butler, T. 11, p. 215, c. ; the article MANICHEES, &c. PROCLIANS were Montanists who received their name from a certain Proclus, a leading man of that sect : see the article. PRODIANITES otherwise HERMJANS : see that article. 326 P R O PTOLOMEANS the followers of Ptolomy a disciple of Valen- tinus, who maintained with him the doctrine of a Being sove- reignly perfect ; but rejected his system of the origin of the world and of the Jewish dispensation. He taught, that the Jewish, and the evangelical law, were derived from the good Principle, and not the work of two hostile divinities ; and that the world was not the production of the Supreme Being; other- wise, in his ideas, there could have been no evil. Hence he concluded, that the Creator was a good Principle residing in the centre of the universe, which he had created, and in which he produced all possible good ; but that in this same world there existed also, an unjust and evil Principle which was united to matter, and was the author of evil. It was to prevent the con- sequences of His inbred malice, that the Creator had sent down amongst us his divine Son. But this wise reasoner has not thought fit to let us know how his supposed evil Principle which had not from itself an independent existence, came into existence at all, if all things received their being from one Principle sove- reignly perfect ! PROTESTANTS a name first given to the adherents of Luther, because in the year 1529 they protested against a decree of the emperor and the diet of Spire, and appealed to a general coun- cil. At their head appeared six princes of the empire, namely : John, elector of Saxony; George, elector of Brandenbourg ; Ernest and Francis, dukes of Lunenbourgh ; Philip, landgrave of Hesse, and the prince of Anhalt. They were seconded by thirteen imperial cities. This league, however, was formed rather with a view to set bounds to the authority of the emperor, than in opposition to the catholic religion. The appellation of protestants was likewise given to the disciples of Calvin in France, and was extended to the various branches of the reformed) whe- ther Lutherans or Calvinists ; the Church-of- England-men, or the numerous sects into which they have since divided. We have spoken of each under their respective articles ; we will here examine their general claim to orthodoxy. If they be asked where was their religion before Luther and Calvin were in being, they will answer in the Bible. It must then have lain there very close and snug ; since for fifteen slow- revolving centuries none had ever discovered it, before these sa- gacious gentlemen dragged it into light. You are much de- ceived, they will exclaim: the Manichees, like ourselves, dis- covered in scripture the idolatry of paying religious honors to the martyrs ; Vigilantius, the abuse of venerating their relics ; Aerius, that of praying for the dead ; Jovinian, the superstition of vowing a state of virginity. Berengarius, as well as our- selves, saw clearly in the gospel, that the dogma of transubstan- tiation was absurd ; the Albigenses, that the pretended sacra- PRO 327 ments of the church 9f Rome, were but empty ceremonies ; the Valdenses and others that priests and bishops differ not in authority or character, from simple laics, &c. Consequently, we can prove our belief to have been always professed, either in the whole, or at least in part, by some or other society of chris- tians ; and that it is wrongfully accused of innovation. Behold here a tradition with a witness the most pure and respectable that ever was adduced ! Ever to be sought for without the pale of the church, it has for its guarantees none but sectaries anathematized for their impious tenets. But why not grace the honourable pedigree with the additional suffrage of the Gnostics, the Marcionites, the Arians, the Nestorians, the Pelagians, Eutychians, and the Lord knows how many other equally creditable progenitors ? All alike have seen in holy scripture their errors and their absurdities ; they maintain- ed as well as protestants, that this Divine book was a sufficient rule of faith. But by what peculiar evidence are protestants convinced, that themselves recognise in holy writ more certainly than all these eminent theologists of old, those articles of belief in which they think proper to dissent from them ? To point out pretended witnesses of the truth, and never fully to agree with their testimony ; to adopt their sentiments on some parti- cular point, and reject them in every other instance, is not the way to add much weight to their authority. A creed thus made up of patch-work, and of materials purloined from ancient heretics, a multitude of whom were no longer Christians, nor worshippers of Jesus Christ, can bear but a very scanty resem- blance with the doctrine of that Divine master. If the Bible in fact contained all the errors which fanatics of every age have pretended to deduce from it, it would be the most pernicious book in existence : nor would the Deists, on this supposition, be wrong in affirming it to be a bone of con* tention, destined to set all mankind at variance. However, as protestants will have the privilege of giving it what sense they please, they certainly should not refuse the same prerogative to other sects : hence all possible errors and heresies, evidently are justified by the protestant rule of faith the private interpreta- tion of scripture. But, we should likewise wish to know why the catholic church is not also allowed the privilege, in her turn, of discovering from holy scripture, that all who relinquish her communion, pervert the sense of that Divine book, which itself was entrusted to her exclusive charge by the apostles her origi- nal founders ? St Peter admonishes us, that the sense of scrip- ture may be perverted by the ignorant and unstable, to their own destruction, ep. 2, c. 3, 16 ; and how doea this stand with the protestant maxim, that all are capable of interpreting it for themselves ? Tertulliaii informs all sectaries, that scripture is the exclusive property of the true church, to which aliens can 328 PUR have no just pretensions. (Prsescrip. c. 37.) It concerns the protestants to prove, that this exclusion does not affect them- selves. PUCCIANITES are those whd adhere to the doctrine of one Puccius, who pretended that Jesus Christ, by his death, had sa- tisfied in such manner for all mankind, that whoever should have a natural knowledge of God, although they had no faith in Jesus Christ, would be saved. This doctrine he maintained in a trea- tise which he dedicated to pope Clement VIII. in the year * 592 with the following title : De Christi Salvatoris efficacitate in om- nibus et singidis hominibus, quatenus homines sunt, assertio Catho- lica fjequitatis Divince et humance consentanea, universe? Scriptures S. et PP. consensu, spiritu discretionis probata, adversus scholas asserentes quidem sujficientiam Servatoris Christi, sed negantes- ejus salutarem efficaciam in singulis, ad summum Pontificem Cle- ment em Octavum. (Stockman. Lcxic. Puccianiste.) Rhetorius in the fourth age had held nearly the same opinion, and Zuinglius in the fifteenth. It may, very possibly, be an er- ror of the heart ; but it is formally opposed to the words of Jesus Christ himself, who says, that no man cometh to the Father but through Him, (John xiv. 6.) and again, / pray not for the world, but for them whom thou hast given me . . . and for them also, who through their word shall believe in me, (c. xvii. 9, 20.) PURITANS were a sect of rigid Calvinists in England, who affected to aspire after greater perfection, than they acknowledged to be attainable in the church established by queen Elizabeth ; and quarrelled with the popish ceremonies, episcopacy, and other rites, still retained to the intolerable scandal of these more precise and pharisaical gospellers. The contest between them and the established church terminated in the eventual sub- version of the existing government, and of the throne itself by the murder of their lawful sovereign Charles I. They had be- gun early to divide into various classes of Brownists ; Separa- tists ; Robinsonians, and the numerous sects of Independents. Even the most ignorant, and the very dregs of the populace be- came preachers, as is now the case among Methodists arid Quakers; and the gaping mob was all credulity and attention. The pulpits every where were filled with what the parliament termed " a godly, faithful, painful, gospel-preaching ministry," who railed against the alleged malignancy, treachery, barbarity, superstition, popery and idolatry of their predecessors in office, with as little decency or regard for truth, as the catholics had before experienced in the common anniversary discourses on the fifth of November. They did not, however, long retain their \ power ; for Cromwell growing tired of their yoke, put himself at the head of those, who were for a more perfect equality and hide- PUR 329 pendency in church affairs, than the Independents themselves. His Highness in person sometimes mounted the pulpit, and new modelled the Scriptures as he had modelled the laws, to the views of his own ambition. In the end, however, when this usurper found himself assailed with the extravagances of the Quakers of those times, and the anarchical ravings of the Fifth-monarchy- men, who would admit of no other ruler but Christ himself; and of other frantic enthusiasts each of whom with his Bible in his hand was ready to demonstrate his own senseless system to be the only one therein revealed, he of course felt the fatal conse- quences of that unlimited right of interpreting the Scripture, which he had hitherto supported. Dr Featly, an eminent divine quoted by Grey, complains heavily of the licentiousness in ques- tion. " There is not, says he, the meanest artizan or the most il- literate day labourer, but holds himself sufficient to be a master- builder in the church of Christ. I wonder that our doors and walls do not sweat when such notices as these are affixed to them : On such a day such a brewer's clerk exerciseth, such a tailor expoundcth, such a waterman teacheth" So fond were the common soldiers of shewing their gifts this way, that they de- clared that * if they might not preach, they would notjight" One of these military preachers went into the church of Walton upon Thames with a lanthorn and five candles ; declaring to the people that he had a message from God, which they must re- ceive upon pain of damnation. He first announced that the Sabbath was abolished, and put out one light ; next, that tythes also were abolished, and put out the second light. He then proceeded to declare that church ministers and every species of magistracy were abolished, putting out his third and fourth lights ; and lastly, that the Bible itself was abolished ; which he burnt with his fifth light, and then extinguished it. See Exam, of Neal, vol. iv. pp. 61, 62. The same author furnishes the most extraordinary instances that can be conceived of the pre- vailing blasphemies, impieties, crimes and follies proceeding from the unrestrained licence which every one then claimed, of expound- ing the Scriptures for himself; though not greater than what hap- pened at the commencement of the reformation in Germany and Holland. Salmon, a preacher at Coventry, taught his people to curse and swear, and commit whoredom. At Dover a woman cut off her child's head, pretending a special command from God like Abraham. Another woman was condemned at York in March, 1 647, for crucifying her mother, &c. Other extrava- gances were as laughable as these were awful. Some have killed their cats for catching mice on a Sunday, but scrupulously deferred the execution till Monday, for fear of incurring similar guilt ; nay, one Precisian, as he is called, knocked out the head Cff his barrel of beer for working on the Sabbath day ! An in- T t 330 QUA stance of the former kind gave occasion to the following ludi- crous verses : Veni Banbury, O profanum ! Ubi vidi Puritanum Felem facientem lurem, Quia Sabbato stravit nmrem." Ibid. pp. 92, 101. They may be very literally, though not very poetically, ren- dered thus : Arrived at Banbury, O profane ! I there beheld a Puritan In pious rage hang up Tom Cat, For catching on Lord s Day a rat. See the above in Mr Milner's vii. Letter to Dr Sturges. Since the epoch alluded to, the Puritans and Independents have gradually dwindled into non-existence at this period, and their very name is a memorandum of reproach with all sober- minded christians. See LUTHER, and the immediate effects of what is called the reformation under that article ; ANABAPTISTS, &c. Q QUAKERS the followers of George Fox. This man, by profession a shoemaker, in the reign of Charles the First began to hold forth against the established clergy, against the luxu- ry of the age, the lawfulness of war, of oaths, of taxes, &c. At a time when England was involved alike in civil and religi- ous anarchy, it is natural to expect he would find adherents ; and he quickly became the author of a sect. Taking in the strictest literal sense all the moral precepts and the councils of the gospel, he maintained it absolutely unlawful to take an oath, to enter into law-suits, to bear arms, engage in war, &c. He taught that all mankind are equal ; that exterior marks of respect, such as moving the hat, bowing, and the like civilities, must be laid aside as idle ceremonies tending only to flatter pride in persons of high rank, and contrary to Christian simpli- city and candor : he therefore ordered all his followers to address even the most exalted in dignity with the familiar pronoun Thou, and never compliment them with their usual titles of Your Lordship, Your Worship, Your Majesty, and so on. He x ( said that God gives to every man an interior light, sufficient to { \ QUA 331 conduct him to eternal life without the aid of priests or any ministers of religion ; and that each individual man or woman is qualified and authorised to instruct and preach, as soon as they shall feel themselves inspired so to do in formal opposition to St Paul, who forbids women to open their mouths in the as- semblies of the faithful. Fox also teaches, that the doing of good, and avoiding of evil, are alone sufficient to secure our sal- vation without either sacraments, the use of ceremonies, or of any exterior worship at all $ and that modesty and temperance are the most essential virtues of a Christian, which require the re- trenchment of every superfluity in dress of buttons, for instance, and ribbons, and lace in the ornaments of the sex, &c. One of the first apostles of Quakerism was William Penn, only son of the vice-admiral of that name ; a young man of a pleasing aspect, joined with great parts and natural eloquence. This youth became fellow- preacher with George Fox; and with him he undertook a mission into Holland and Germany. In Hol- land they succeeded tolerably well in forming some few disciples, known by the name of Prophets, or Prophesiers. Their success in Germany was less considerable. In England, however, the spiritual conquests of Fox were more extensive ; and he there had trained a prodigious multitude of He and She evangelists, whom he sent with his pastoral letters not only to every place where his sect had previously obtained any footing, but to ail the sovereigns of the universe ; to the king of France, the German emperor, and even to the Turkish sultan, &c. commanding them, on the part of God, to embrace his gospel doctrine : these letters were conveyed into the most distant parts of the globe by troops of men, women, and almost infant apostles of both sexes ; who backed them with their own spontaneous efiusions, but, alas ! to little purpose ! At home, these new reformers traversed in the paroxysm of their zeal our towns and villages ; furiously declaiming against Episcopacy and Presbyterianism ; in a word against all established religions indiscriminately. " They ridiculed the public worship ; insulted the ministers in the time of Divine service ; contemned alike the authority of the laws and that of the magistrates," says Mosheim; "alleging for the motive of their conduct inspiration ! Thus they ex- cited in church and state the most alarming commotions ; nor can we be surprised, if the civil power was at length obliged to employ the severest coercive measures against these turbulent fanatics." Ecclesiastic. Hist. After the death of his father, William Penn obtained of the king, in lieu of what remained due to him from government on his father's account the grant of an entire province in America, which from him was called Pennsylvania. Thither he conduct- ed a colony of his disciples ; built for them the city of Philadel- phia; and himself became their legislator. Notwithstanding T t2 332 QUA their aversion for war, they have been, more than once, com- pelled to take up arms against the savages who invaded their possessions, and to repel force with force. In England the Quakers are not now so numerous as formerly, nor so unsociable. The more enlightened part begin to see the absurdity of that stern and Pharisaical contempt for the innocent and received usages of their fellow men ; and that such odious singularity renders even virtue itself ridiculous. Quakers, like all other sects, have also varied in their doctrine. Those of Pennsylvania, who enjoy absolute liberty in both civil and reli- gious matters, have likewise stretched licentiousness of senti- ment much farther than their English brethren, in proportion as the latter have always been restrained by the ruling sect, and by the severity of government. Many among the former have adopted opinions the most impious ; and vast numbers of them have degenerated into open Deism. The parallel which some moderns have been pleased to trace -between Quakerism and primitive Christianity, - is absurd, and rests upon assertions utterly devoid of truth. They pretend,, that the Pennites, in refusing baptism, have Jesus Christ him- self for their surety, who, they falsely say, never administered it to any man ; for Jesus Christ has positively ordered his dis- ciples to baptise all nations. If then he neglected to baptise his apostles, he himself, it must be said, has violated his own or- dinance. Himself assures us, that unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he shall not enter into the king- dom of heaven. Can the Spirit of Truth and Jesus Christ con- tradict each other ; or rather, is not Fox's internal spirit evi- dently the spirit of error and imposture ? They say, again, that the primitive Christians were all equal, as Quakers too affect to be. This also, is a false assertion : did not the apostles exercise authority over the rest of the faithful ? Did they not establish pastors to whom they transmitted that authority, and to whom they commanded laics to submit ? Did they not order all to be obedient and submissive to magistrates and princes, and to those in power ? These indeed, our Quakers have more than once insulted, even on their judicatory tribunal ; and have constantly refused them the smallest demonstration of respect. The first disciples, continue these parallelogists, received the spirit, and spoke in the assembly 5 they had neither temples, nor altars, nor ornaments, nor tapers, nor any ceremonies at all. Fox and his disciples have only imitated them. Here, again, the disparity is palpable : the inspiration of the primitive Christians is demonstrable from the miraculous gifts with which it was accompanied. But how do our pretenders to primitive Christianity demonstrate their's ? St Paul, moreover, laid down rules for regulating the use of these very gifts in Christian assem- \ foKes > and expressly prohibited w&men from preaching and ia- | QUA 333 structing there j and it is plain from the apocalypse, that even in the time of the apostles, Christians had their altars, their or- naments, and their incense ; their tapers, and their ceremonies. We prove also, against protestants in general, and unbelievers in globo, that from the infancy of the Christian church, seven sacraments have always been admitted. (See LUTHER.) Nor is an apparent gravity and austerity of demeanour any better proof of the orthodoxy of a sect : they have been found repeat- edly in sectaries whom Quakers themselves would condemn as fanatics and false teachers : they are sometimes found in heathens and Mahometans; sometimes, even in Atheists. Their principles are wrong; the foundation of true faith is wanting, without which, St Paul informs us, it is impossible, to please God. We are prepared to give them credit for their moral virtues, although Mosheim and his translator exert their utmost ingenuity to render them suspected ; but they cannot, of themselves, entitle their possessors to supernatural reward. We sincerely pity their delusion, and wish them no other harm, than that of opening their eyes and heart to see, and to embrace with ardor, the true Christianity. With regard to the profession of arms, which Quakers disal- low in Christians, it is not in itself unlawful. St John the Bap- tist commanded soldiers to do violence to no man . . . and to be content with their pay, Luke iii. He did not enjoin them to abandon their profession : when Jesus Christ himself commended the faith of the centurion, he did not reprobate his calling, Matt, viii. St Paul recommends to every one to continue in the state of life in which he was engaged when first called to the faith ; soldiers are not excepted, 1 Cor. vii. Tertullian testifies that in his time the camps and armies were full of Christians, and that they were good soldiers since they were not afraid of death. (Apol. c. 37, 42.) If in other places he seems to prohibit the military profession to Christians, it is only because at that time an unlawful oath was tendered to them at their admittance. But when this grievance was done away, the third canon of the council of Aries excommunicated those who should desert even in time of peace. Constan tine was then emperor; and Christian soldiers were no longer in danger of prevarication, as such serious inconveniences did not then exist. (See Bellarm. t. 2. Controv. de Laicis.) The lawfulness too, of paying taxes, our blessed Sa- viour himself has sufficiently declared : render, says he, to Cesar the things that are Cesar's, (Matt. 22.) and St Paul tribute to whom tribute is due, (Rom. xiii.) Oaths likewise under due cir- cumstances, are justified by the example of the great Lawgiver him- self the Lord hath sworn, and it shall not repent him,(Ps. 109.) and they are also commended when taken by men in a reverent and respectful manner, all they shall be praised who swear in him, (Ps. 62.) Even the angels swear by Him that livethfor ever and QUA ever, as we are informed in the Revelations. What our blessed Lord says seemingly against oaths of any kind, is to be under- stood of all rash, inconsiderate and unnecessary swearing in common conversation, for instance, or in passion. With Quakers we most cordially agree, that law-suits, on account of the danger of injustice or uncharitableness, ought, if possible, to be avoided by Christians ; and that it would be better to suffer wrong than to offend in either instance. QUARTODECIMANS those who after the general council of Nice, obstinately continued to celebrate the paschal solemnity on the fourteenth day of the moon of March. This deviation from the general rule, tolerated in the church without any breach of communion, had subsisted a considerable time when it began in the pontificate of pope Victor, to be canvassed with greater warmth than heretofore. Asia Minor, alleging the example of St John the evangelist, observed it on the fourteenth day of the moon, with a few neighbouring provinces. " The universal church, if we except these provinces," says Eusebius, " had af- fixed the solemnity of the resurrection to the Sunday exclusively." Many councils were convened upon this disparity of practice ; and they were all unanimous in confining the Easter solemnity to the Sunday. This universality of sentiment was opposed by Polycrates bishop of Ephesus, one of the most eminent prelates of the church at that time, and the first among the Asiatics: Victor requested him by letter, as he had done with regard to the rest of the principal pastors, to assemble the bishops of his province, with a threat of excommunication if he persisted to op- pugn the general sentiment. Polycrates assembled them accord- ingly ; and they were all determined like him, to adhere to what they thought the tradition of their predecessors. Victor was prevailed upon to proceed no farther : but in 325 the contro- versy was decided by the general council of Nice ; and those were qualified schismatic? who refused submission to the synodi- cal decree. If any held the practice of celebrating Easter on the fourteenth of the moon to be of precept from the Jewish law, such were always classed by the church with heretics. The Scotch or Irish, in the fifth and sixth centuries, kept Easter on a Sunday ; not, like the Quartodecimans and Jews, on the fourteenth day, unless when this fourteenth day coincided with the Sunday : by which circumstance they differed widely from the practice condemned at Nice ; yet fell short of perfect con- formity with the universal church. If any of the apostles who lived among the Jews, tolerated for some time a coincidence of Easter with the Jewish Pasch a fact by no means clearly proved, at least the contrary rule \vas\ always the general discipline of the church, a rule established ' by the apostles to show, that Christians were not bound by the Q U I 335 Jewish ceremonial law, and distinctly to assert the liberty of the gospel, in the same manner as they transferred the Sabbath to the Sunday. See Butler's Lives of the Saints, vols. vii. p. 383-4. and x. p. 254-5, ed. Edin. in the lives of St Victor P. M. and St Wilfrid the elder. See also the article CULDEES. QUIETISM The heresy and fanaticism broached by Michael Molinos, a Spanish priest and spiritual director previously in great repute at Rome, who in his book entitled, The Spiritual Guide, established a pretended system of perfect contemplation. " It turns chiefly upon the following general principles. 1. That perfect contemplation is a state in which a man does not reason^ or reflect either on God or himself; but passively receives the impression of heavenly light without exercising any act; the mind being in a perfect state of inaction and inattention, which this author terms Qiiiet. This principle is a notorious illusion and falsity ; for even in supernatural impressions or communications, however a soul may be abstracted, and insensible to external ob- jects which act upon the organs of the senses, she still exercises her understanding and will, in adoring, loving, praising, or the like pious affections, as is demonstrable both from principle, and from the testimony of all true contemplatives. 2. This fanatic teaches, that a soul in that state desires nothing, not even its own salvation; and fears nothing, no not even hell itself. This principle, bi and those who Worship his image" (See Mr Evans, Sketch.) The truth of this prophetess's mission, we presume, is still as far from being made manifest to the world at large, as it was the first instant she began to prophesy, notwithstanding full twenty years have now elapsed since that period. So that her authority, we fear, must daily be on the decline among her votaries, unless some other equally inspired female should kind- ly step forward and contribute to uphold the flimsy delusion. Dame Southcott, by the bye, is herself possessed of wonderful invention, and loquacious address in palliating her fanciful new dreams to the credulity of an undiscerning rabble. Her pam- phlets are numerous, and constitute a curious farrago of prose and verse. Her passports to heaven, which she encloses in a small box to be carefully deposited in the coffin of the happy pur- chaser, she rates indeed somewhat high 5 though certainly, the price is by no means adequate to the intrinsic value of so pre- cious a commodity. Since writing the above, we are informed, the inventive ge- nius of this very eccentric female continues to amuse the public with wonderful accounts of new revelations, among which the most important is that she is actually with child of the Messiah, who, she says, is now about to re-visit the world through her medium in thejlesh, and to commence his millennial reign with all the elect upon the new apocalyptic earth. She had before, we recollect, given some shrewdish hints to mortals what was in contemplation when she revealed to the happy individual whom she was to marry, the nature of the functions to be dis- charged by him in quality of husband. Her miraculous con- ception closely followed the delicate intimation ; and, admirable indeed, is the pious officiousness with which her female votaries provide the requisite state appendages for the honorable recep- tion of the new-born king of Israel; among other precious articles, a cradle of the most costly materials and unrivalled workmanship, and a font of massy silver gilt. Dame Southcott will now be in a capacity to dispute the pre-eminence in the new millennial kingdom, even with her very ambitious Ameri- can rival Hannah Leese the reputed Mother of all the elect* (See article SHAKERS.) STADHINGI were fanatics of the diocese of Bremen who a- dopted the Manichean principles, and in their assemblies wor- shipped Lucifer and the devil 5 on which occasions the most in- 352 S W E famous excesses were deemed acts of piety. The sect gradually in- creased 3 and missionaries were sent among them ; whom the Stad- hingi, with many insults, put to death. They conceived it would be a sacrifice singularly grateful to their good Principle Lucifer, if they could but immolate to him all the priests of Christendom. They roamed up and down the country ; pillaging the churches, and massacring the ministers of religion. Their progress alarm- ed the pastors of the church ; and pope Gregory IX. published against them a crusade, according the same indulgences to those that undertook it, as to the crusards in the holy wars of Palestine. Multitudes soon offered themselves for the sacred expedition, and were headed by the bishop of Bremen, the Duke of Bra- bant, and the Count of Holland. The Stadhingi trained to mi- litary discipline and led on by their frantic author who was him- self a soldier, encountered their assailants with determined cou- rage, left above six thousand of their fellows on the field of bat- tle ; and the sect itself was totally destroyed. (D' Argentre, Col- lect. Jud. torn. 1. an. 1230. Nat. Alex, in saec. 13. Dupin, treizieme siecle, c. 19.) See the articles MANICHEES, ALBI- GENSES, &C. SWEDENBORGIANS, or NEW JERUSALEMiTES are the fol- lowers of Emanuel Swedenborg, a Swedish nobleman, who died in London, 1772. This very fanciful gentleman conceived himself to be the founder (under the Lord) of the New Jerusalem churchy described in the apocalypse. He, like every other en- thusiast, supports his novel opinions with scriptural authority. In the year 1743, the Lord, forsooth, manifested himself to him by a personal appearance, and opened his spiritual eyes constantly to see and converse with spirits and angels. Of the marvellous things heard and seen by him he gives the following account in his treatise concerning heaven and hell : "As often as I conversed with angels face to face, it was in their habita- tions which are like to our houses on earth, but far more beautiful and magnificent, having rooms, chambers and apart- ments in great variety; as also spacious courts belonging to them, together with the gardens, parterres of flowers, fields, &c. where the angels are formed into societies. They dwell in contiguous mansions, disposed after the manner of our cities in streets, walks and squares. I have had the privilege to walk through them, to examine all round about me, and to enter into their houses ; and this when I was fully awake, having my inward eyes opened." A similar description he gives of heaven itself. Among other strange dreams, mth his spiritual eyes open, he recounts the grand event of the last judgment, which took place, he says, in the spiritual world in 1757. From this era is dated the second coming of the Lord, and the commencement of a TAN 353 new Christian church, which is meant, they fell us, by the new heaven and new earth in the Revelations, and the New Jerusa- lem thence descending. Every page of scripture, according to our Swedish instructor, is written by certain correspondences, that is, by such things in the natural world as correspond unto and signify things in the spiritual world. The science of correspondences, it is sa'd, had been lost for some thousands of years, namely, ever since the time of Job ; till it was renewed by Emanuel Swedenborg, who uses it as a key to the spiritual or internal sense of holy writ. This may suffice to give some idea of the spirituality of his own conceptions, and those of his deluded followers, who are pretty numerous in various parts of this kingdom, in Germany, Swe- den, North America, &c. See Mr Evans's Sketch. A Trinity of Persons in the Godhead is rejected by this sect, while they maintain an ideal kind of Trinity in Jesus Christ. They are very partial to vocal music accompanied by the organ ; and the minister's dress is now exactly similar to that of the English clergy. Ibid. SYNCRETISTS a sect of Lutherans. See that article. SYNERGISTS another Lutheran sect. See Luther, The TACITURN or SILENT were a sect of Anabaptists. See their article. TANKELIN or TANCHELIN though a layman, commenced preacher at the beginning of the twelfth age, and published a va- riety of erroneous doctrines 5 doctrines which had been gra- dually diffusing over France for near a century of the profoundest ignorance, ushered in originally by the incursions of barbarians,- against the Roman pontiff", against the sacraments, and against the government of prelates, &c. He declaimed incessantly u )on these topics, and taught the people the sacred duty of despising their superiors. The sacraments, he pretended, were sacrilegi- ous ceremonies ; the churches houses of prostitution. As ibr the eucharist, he looked upon it as absolutely useless ; and he pro- hibited the paying of tithes. The ignorant and besotted people eagerly imbibed his notions, and thought him a divine man commissioned by heaven to reform the church. An armed mul- titude escorted him in triumph to the pulpit; and while he 354 TAT preached a standard and a sword were displayed in order to enforce attention. His words were received by the gaping croud with the veneration due to oracles. When- he had thus gained the ascendant over a deluded rab- ble, he blasphemously pretended, that he himself was God, and in nothing inferior to Jesus Christ. He said, that Jesus was God only in as much as he had received the Holy Ghost ; and that himself had equally received the plenitude of the same di- vine spirit, and consequently was his equal. He was believed ; and to such a pitch of folly did the delusion proceed, that the stupid people applauded the impostor for the most unblushing effrontery with which he publicly abused their wives and daugh- ters ; esteeming it a mighty honor to be thus dishonored by the vilest of all hypocrites. The wretch now proceeded at the head of his frantic sectaries^ to fill with slaughter and dismay all places where his impious doctrines were not submissively embraced ; till at length he tell a sacrifice to the tumults which himself had raised. His sect was propagated in the vicinity of Cologne and Utrecht ; but was soon suppressed by the severity of their punish- ment, except a remnant which intermingled with those groups of other heretics that then- attacked the sacraments, the ceremonies of the church, and churchmen. (D'Argeritre Collect. Judicior. t. l,p. 11.) ' TASCADRU GISTS the same with Passaloryncliites : see the ar- ticle MONTANISTS. TATIAN was a Syrian, a platonic philosopher, and disciple of St Justin the martyr; after whose death he taught some time at Rome. Returning into Syria in 171, he there disseminated his erroneous opinions, which he had dissembled while at Rome. Several of these errors he had borrowed from Marcion, Valenti- nus and Saturninus (see their respective articles) ; holding, like them, two self-existing Principles, and that the Creator is the evil God. To these capital errors he added several others ; for instance, that Adam was damned, &c. Marriage he condemn- ed as not less criminal than adultery 5 whence his followers were called Encratites or the Continent. They were likewise called Hydroparastatae or Aquarii, because in consecrating their eucha- rist they used only water ; for they absolutely condemned the use of wine, as well as that of flesh meat. (St Epiph. hser. 46. St Iren, 1. 1, c. 31. Clem. Alex. Strom. 1. 3, p. 465.) Tatian's discourse against the Gentiles, in which he approves marriage, was written before his fall. In this work he maintains also One God the Creator of all things. His fall was the consequence of pride, which but too often attends the opinion of knowledge $ and of this there cannot be a more dangerous symptom in a \ scholar, than a love of novelty and singularity, especially whem THE S5S joined with obstinacy and opiniativeness. See Mr Butler's se- venth and twelfth vols. of the Lives of Saints, p. 382-3 and 108-9. The Tatianites were numerous at Antioch, in Cilicia, Pisi- dia, and several provinces of Asia Minor. They had votaries even in Rome itself in France, Aquitain and Spain. TIIEOBUTUS After the death of St James, surnamed the Just, this man expected to have succeeded him ; but being disappoint- ed in his ambitious views, he renounced Christianity with the design of forming a new sect by the combination of the various s of Jewish sectarists. We know nothing more of this an at innovator, than that his unhallowed lust of preferment thus caused him to apostatize. THEODOTUS of BYZANTIUM by trade a tanner, having apos- tatized from the faith to save his life in time of persecution, afterwards, to palliate the crime, pretended he had denied only a man, not God ; maintaining Christ to be nothing more than a mere man, as Socinians teach at the present day : whereas, the Arians allowed him to have existed before this visible creation ; though himself, notwithstanding, a creature. Theodotus going to Rome, drew many into his blasphemous opinions ; for he was a man of parts and erudition. Pope Victor, to check the progress of his heresy, excommunicated his person, together with Ebion, Artemon, and another Theodotus who had upheld the same blasphemy. (St Epiph. haer. 54. Eus. 1. 5, c. 28. Cone. T. 1. Theodoret, Haeret. Fabul. 1. 2, c. 5.) This other Theodotus, called Trapezita, or the Banker, was author of the Melchisedecian heresy. (See that article.) The Theodotians, with our modern Socinians, contend, that the doctrine of Theodotus was maintained by the apostles them- selves, and that the contrary doctrine was unknown in the church till Zephirinus found means to corrupt the ancient faith, by introducing the belief of Christ's divinity. The catholics re- futed their pretensions by the testimony of the scriptures, by the hymns and canticles in use with Christians from the infancy of the church ; by the writings of ecclesiastical authors, namely, St Justin, Miltiades, Ireneus, Clement of Alexandria, Melito, &c. who all had taught and defended the Divinity of Jesus Christ, &c. (Theodoret, Haer. Fab. 1. 2, c. 2. Euseb. Hist. Eccles. 1. 4, c. 2$.) The Theodotians, by an infidelity very common with the broachers of new doctrines, impiously re- trenched from holy scripture whatever would not bear an inter- pretation favorable to their system. " Some of them, to save themselves the trouble of corrupting the sacred writings, reject- ed at once both the law and the prophets, under the very spe- cious pretext, that the grace of the gospel was all-sufficient." Y y 2 356 V A L (Cains apud Euseb. Hist. Eccles. 1. 4, c. 18.) The followers of Theodotus were not very numerous ; and the sect itsejf was soon extinct 5 while the faithful increased in numbers beyond all cal- culation, even in the midst of persecution and continual alarms: a fact which, in the estimation of all unbiassed judges, will furnish an additional argument in favor of the primitive and catholic belief. See ANTI-TRINITARIANS, ARIANS, &c. under which articles the Divinity of the Son of God is more fully vindicated. THEOPHILANTHROPISTS a sect which commenced during the late awful revolution in France. It had for one of its first pa- triarchs and warm promoters the celebrated Thomas Paine. They reduce religion to what they call its primitive simplicity, and confine it to the belief of a Divine Being ; the immortality of the soul; the supposed original form of worship insinuated by natural religion, and prescribed to the first inhabitants of the earth ; and moral virtue, which they make to consist principally in doing good to their kind, and in promoting the interests and the welfare of their country. They have temples with an altar in the middle whereon they place their offerings of flowers or of fruit, in their due season ; as testimonies of their gratitude to the Author of nature. Each temple, moreover, has a tribune whence the audience is occasionally harangued ; and these make up the whole of their religious ornaments. The sect is now nearly ex- tinct. See the article DEISTS, of which Theophilanthropism seems to be a kind of modification ; as they both concur in re- jecting revelation, and devising a religious system that has no connection with Christianity, nor any evidence of facts to re- commend it to its followers. TURLUPINS were fanatics of the fourteenth century, who in addition to the errors of the Beguardae, of whom indeed, they formed a branch, practised with unblushing publicity the infa- mous irregularities of the Cynics. These wretches were excom- municated by Gregory XL and punished with great severity by Christian sovereigns ; which, together with the horror excited by their execrable conduct, quickly annihilated this hateful sect. Prateol. Elenchus Haeres. Bernard de Lutzembourg, Guguin. Hist. 1. 9. VALDENSES or WALDENSES were so called from Peter Valdo ) a merchant of Lyons, who, sensibly affected at the sudden death V A L 357 of a person actually in conversation with him, distributed his ef- fects among the poor, and determined to imitate the apostles in the future method of his life. He was joined by several others ; and they were called " The poor men of Lyons." Soon after, they began to preach and teach by their own private authority, in imitation too, they said, of the apostles, although they were but mere laymen, and destitute of missionary powers. The clergy reproved them for this irregularity, and for affecting su- perstitiously to wear a kind of sandals so contrived as to exhibit the bare foot to public view ; alleging, forsooth, that the apostles went thus shod. The pope enjoined them silence. Wanting however, the humility to submit, and finding that the pontiff' to whom some of them applied for the approbation of their insti- tute, rejected it as irregular and in some instances, superstitious, they said that the clergy were jealous of their superior sanctity and the purity of their morals. Nor was it long before they added heresy to their fanaticism and insubordination. Accord- ingly pope Lucius III. issued out against them a sentence of ex- communication. Rainerius, who from a minister of the Waldenses, became a convert to the catholic faith, and a Dominican friar in 1250, acquaints us that, among other errors, they affirmed, with some of our modern reformers, although upon different grounds, that the church of Christ had failed ever since the times of Pope Syl- vester by possessing temporalities j that it is unlawful for th clergy to have prebends or estates ; that they ought to appl; themselves, as the apostles did, to manual labour j that neither rents nor tythes ought to be paid to them, nor any thing be-> queathed to churches : that all bishops were murderers, because they tolerated wars : that in no case is it lawful to swear ; and that a man should rather choose to die than take an oath even in a court of judicature, or in any necessity whatever. All ec- clesiastic judgments they absolutely reprobated, including in this censure all judges and princes upon the maxim, that it is never lawful to punish malefactors, or to put any man to death. They denied purgatory, and rejected prayer for the dead, inr dulgences, the celebration of all festivals whatever, even that of Easter; also the invocation of saints and veneration of images, crosses or relics. They maintained, that neither absolution nor any other sacrament is valid when administered bgf a bad priest : but that any good laic has power to remit sins, and to confer the Holy Ghost by the imposition of hands. The exorcisms, benedictions and sureties in baptism, they set aside, and held that the washing of infants in that sacrament, did no$ avail them. With regard to the most blessed eucharist, they said that priests in mortal sin cannot consecrate, and that tran- substantiation is not effected in the hands of him who conse- crates unworthily, but in the mouth of him who worthily re- 358 V A L ceives. They rejected also the canon of the mass, reciting in the vulgar tongue only the words of consecration, &c. The Waldenses had subsisted chiefly in certain valleys of Piedmont, till in 1530, QEcolampadius and the Sacramentarians of Switzerland offered them terms of accommodation, but without effect. Six years after this, Farel and other Calvinistic minis- ters, by representing to them that their temporal security re- quired it, prevailed with them to purchase the desired union by the relinquishment of several errors which that sect had hitherto maintained, and to acknowledge that a Christian might some- times lawfully swear before a magistrate ; also, that the ministers of the altar might possess temporal estates ; and that even wick- ed priests validly confer the sacraments. They likewise engaged them to maintain in contradiction to their former belief, that the body of Christ is not in the eucharist, and that it is not necessary to confess our sins. Most of the Waldenses, notwith- standing, adhered to their own principles till in 1630 they were compelled, for protection, to receive among them Calvin- istic teachers. (See Bossuet, Hist. Variat. 1. 1 1. De Marca's History of Beam. Fleury, 1. 73, n. 12. F. Fontenai, in the 9th, 10th, and llth tomes of the Continuation of F. Langue- val's Church History of France 5 and the late History of Lan- guedoc.) We have refuted the errors of the Waldenses under the ar- ticles VlGILANTIUS, DONATISTS, ICONOCLASTS J to which WC beg leave to refer our readers. The peculiar error of this sect, which consisted in denying to the church the lawful possession of temporalities, merits not a serious discussion. Nevertheless, we will just beg leave to trespass a few moments upon the atten- tion of our readers, and make some obvious remarks upon this subject. According to the principles of natural equity every public functionary, of whatever description may be the functions with which he is entrusted, has a right to his subsistence ; such ever was, and is at this day, the universal maxim prevalent in all na- tions, and established in the legislature of every commonwealth. Consequently, the revenues assigned by the church and state for the support of the clergy, are not of the nature of a gratuitous contribution, or merely an alms : they are a salary ; a retribu- tion ; an honorary stipend for services to which they are in rigor- ous justice and strict equity obliged. Now every obligation of justice being reciprocal, it is difficult to conceive how the public should be exempt from that of providing for the maintenance of those who serve it : it is on both sides a duty of justice, and not of charity : and however the mode of securing a competent re- venue to ecclesiastics may vary according to circumstances, \ whether it be raised by tithe or from funds legally established for the purpose, or otherwise, is immaterial : this does not in the Y A L 359 smallest degree affect their natural and unalienable right. On this point as on every other regulation of discipline, regard is had to the particular exigences of the times, the vicissitudes of the state, or the wants or inconveniences of the community. In vain is it objected that Jesus Christ commanded his apostles to exer- cise their ministry gratis : he gives them at the same time a right to their subsistence. To sell what is spiritual or to exact for it any thing temporal as its price, is profanation ; it is the crime of simony : but an honorable maintenance, retribution or salary accorded to a person occupied in the discharge of any function, is neither the price nor the equivalent of this function : the price is relative to the value of a thing ; whereas an honorary stipendium is attached to the place which a person fills, and to the person of the functionary : it is the same for all that exercise the function, however unequal may be their personal merit, their talents or their services. A physician cannot with propriety be said to traffic in health, nor a magistrate to trade injustice , al- though such notions are but too common with the vulgar, and with men of little sense. Their stupidity, very fortunately for these respectable departments of the commonwealth, cannot af- fect the essence of the thing. (Bergier Dictionaire Theolog.) The Waldenses in adopting the religious tenets, adopted also the turbulent and seditious spirit of their new teachers. When- ever they conceived the interests of their sect required it, they rose in arms against their lawful sovereigns, and often stained their hands in the blood of those who charitably wished to un- deceive them. We do not advocate what is termed religious persecution. The inhuman principle is equally foreign to the doc- trines and to the civil well-being of catholics. But we are free to say, that if, under the pretence of piety and religion insur- rection and rebellion be countenanced, superiors do right in se- verely punishing and vigorously repressing the upholders of te- nets so notoriously destructive of the public peace. If the Wal- denses could be proved to have been guiltless of the charges alleged against them, their sufferings must be ascribed to the ma- lice of the actors, however dignified in church or state not to the pretended intolerance of that religion which has ever been averse from bloodshed. But the calumnies of its adversaries and the wilful misreprentations of many protestant writers, are in no in- stance more strikingly recognisable to persons of any reading or sincerity, than on this topic. They descant incessantly upon po- pish massacres, imaginary persecutions of the church of Rome, and the bloody reign of Queen Mary : but they forget the out- rageous insults and provocations, the traiterous disloyalty and violent conduct of the party which became the object of persecu- tion. The Gunpowder Plot in which a few miscreants of despe- rate fortunes and abandoned morals, unconnected with the ca- tholic body, and execrated for the attempt by every individual 360 V A L catholic subject in Great Britain, were unfortunately engaged,- must be for ever objected by the ignorance or the malice of con- troversial authors, or rather of the collective bigotry of the na- tion at largej as an eternal infamy to the religion of our ances- tors ; while the more successful, but not less nefarious plot of the very same description, planned and conducted solely by Scotch reformers, and by many of their leading characters, with every circumstance that could possibly conduce to make the crime most awfully flagitious, is hushed into oblivion, and sanctified by the holy zealotism of its perpetrators. The relentless tyranny of Queen Elizabeth in persecuting her unoffending catholic subjects merely for religion, is hardly ever noticed by our English historians. But these partial writers will not suffer their readers to be ignorant of the tyrannical cruelty of the Duke of Alva equally repro- bated by catholics and protestants though they are careful not to mention the re- iterated conspiracies of the reformed to take away his life ; or the still greater cruelties practised upon catho- lics by the two more infamous ruffians Vandermerk and Sonoi, both of them lieutenants to the Prince of Orange. " A cele- brated biographer (Feller, Hist. Abreg. torn. 1, art. Toledo) says, that Vandermerk slaughtered more inoffensive catholic priests and peasants in the year 1572, than Alva executed pro- testants during the whole term of his sanguinary government. He gives us in the same place a copious extract from 1'Abrege de THist. deFHolland, par Mons. Kerroux, in which this protes- tant author, who professes to write from judicial records still extant, draws a most frightful picture of the infernal barbarities of Sonoi on the catholic peasantry of North Holland. He says, that some of these, after undergoing the torment of scourges and the rack, were enveloped in sheets of linen, steeped in spirits of wine, which being inflamed, the poor creatures were miserably scorched to death ; that others, after being tortured with burning sulphur and torches applied to the tenderest parts of their bodies, were caused to die for want of sleep, guards being placed over them to beat and torment them with clubs and other weapons whenever exhausted nature seemed to sink into forgetfulness : that many were fed with nothing but salt her- rings without a drop of water or other liquid until they ex- pired with thirst ; finally, that others were stung to death by wasps, or devoured alive by rats, confined in coffins with them for that inhuman purpose. Among the cruelties there recount- ed, some will not bear repeating, and those just mentioned are adduced with the intent only, of forcing our much prejudiced opponents to join with us in consigning the odious names of such as Alva, Vandermerk and Sonoi, to merited execration, or rather, if possible, to absolute oblivion." See Milner's 4th Letter to Dr S. on Persecution. V A L 361 VALENTINUS a Platonic philosopher, had embraced Christi- anity ; but being puffed up with the vain opinion of his own learning and superior merit, and seeing another preferred to a certain bishopric before him, revived the errors of Simon Magus, and adopted many other absurd fictions concerning the progeny of thirty ceones or ages an imaginary kind of inferior deities which this heretic pretended to have been produced by the eter- nal, invisible and incomprehensible God called B#0? or Depth, and his wife EMOU* or Thought, otherwise named z<*/>j or Silence. These chimeras he had borrowed from Hesiod's book of the genealogy of the heathen Gods, and some Platonic notions, blend- ed with certain truths from the gospel of St John. His whimsi- cal dreams St Ireneus refutes by scriptural authority ; by the apostles' creed, of which he mentions almost all the articles ; and by the unanimity of all churches in the profession of the same faith, contrasted with the perpetual disagreement of the sectaries among themselves : for there was not a disciple of Va- lentinus, who did not undertake to alter and reform his master's doctrine. Several of their variations he mentions, and describes at length the superstitions and impostures of the heresiarch Mark, who in consecrating chalices filled with water and wine according to the Christian rite, made the chalices appear full of a certain red liquor which he called blood, and allowed women to consecrate the holy mysteries. Heretics, he says, have no- thing but the novelty of their doctrine to recommend them : for the Valentinians were not before Valentinus, nor the Marcionites before Marcion, &c. All these arose much too late to be the teachers of the truth. " Their novelty alone, continues he, suffices to confound them." How much more forcibly will this apply against all modern sectarists. Valentinus first broached his heresy in Cyprus, and afterwards propagated it in Italy and Gaul. He was excommunicated by the holy pope St Pius I. (St Epiph. haer. 41. Tertull. 1. contr. Valent. Iren. Ogdoad, &c.) VALESIANS the deluded followers of one Valesius. This man, more zealous than discreet, in order to avoid temptation made himself an eunuch ; in which action he was imitated by many others of similar dispositions with himself. These enthu- siasts deemed all those to be in the way of perdition and enslaved to vice, who were not yet disposed to follow their example. They were excommunicated, and retired into a province of Arabia. As the gospel directs all christians to study to procure the sal- vation of their neighbour, the Valesians conceived that this obli- gation could not be more effectually complied with, than by re- ducing other people when they had it in their power, to the same state in which they were themselves ; and ia case their exhqrta- z i 562 V I G tions had not the desired effect, they thought it a sacred duty of charity to offer violence to their delicacy, and to do for them by compulsion what they had not resolution enough to have done by choice; esteeming them as sick persons who in their delirium reject the remedies essential to their cure. Hence they did not fail to perform the operation indiscriminately upon all that came within the precincts of their district ; and nothing was so terri- fying to travellers as the idea of falling in with these religious ruf- fians. This circumstance may account for what St Epiphanius remarks concerning them ; that they were much talked of, bufc little known. (Hagr. 56.) It was on their account that the coun- cil of Nice decreed in its ninth canon, that those shall not be ad- mitted among the clergy who mutilate themselves. (Cone. Nicasn. Collect. Cone. Hist, du Cone, de Nicee in oct. un. vol.) In these fanatics we may behold another early example among so many striking instances of a similar nature, of the fallacy of the protestant maxim that scripture interpreted by private sense is the only rule of faith ! VIGILANTIUS a priest of Barcelona, who depreciated the merit of virginity, and condemned the veneration of relics calling those who paid it idolaters and Cinerarians or worship- pers of ashes. St Jerom undertook the refutation of so foul a charge, and said : " We do not adore the relics of the martyrs .... but we honor them, and adore Him whose martyrs they are. We honor the servants, that the respect which is rendered unto them may be reflected back upon the Lord." Having ob- tained a copy of Vigilantius's performance, he lost no time in. answering his exceptions ; shewing first, the excellency of vir- ginity and clerical celibacy, from the discipline observed in the three patriarchates of Antioch, Alexandria and Rome. He then proceeds to vindicate the honor paid to martyrs from the impu- tation of idolatry, by observing, that no Christian ever worship- ped them as gods. In order to show that the saints in heaven, pray for us, St Jerom argues thus : " If the apostles and martyrs still living upon earth could pray for other men, how- much more effectually may they do it after their victories ? Have they less power now they are with Jesus Christ ?" St Jerom lays much stress on the miracles wrought at their tombs ; though Vigilantius, admitting the notoriety of the fact, pretend- ed they were wrought for the sake of the infidels. This suppo- sition, in the opinion of St Jerom, would not disprove the power of the martyrs, by whose intercession they were obtained. He mentions that the bishops of Rome were accustomed to offer sacrifices to God over the venerable bones of SS Peter and Paul, and made altars of their tombs. He tells his adversary, that if ' his new doctrine were true, all the bishops of the world, who follow it, must be, forsooth, in error ! Nor will the silly objec- V I G $63 tion of many protestants be found to have any weight in the scales of sound theology. They ask with an air of triumph, how the saints in heaven can hear at such a distance the silent whispers of their votaries ? When these wise critics shall first have answered the following question: what precisely is the distance beyond which the saints and angels cannot hear each other ? Catholics may reply, that distance has nothing to do with intellectual language, such as, we presume, the inhabitants of the upper world perfectly understand. If this fall short of satisfying their curiosity, we will then acknowledge that we don't exactly know in what manner our thoughts or fervent desires are communicated to the happy ones above ; but have faith enough to believe St John, who expressly asserts in his Revela- tions (c, 5) that the twenty-four ancients falling down before the throne of God, offer up to him the prayers of the saints ; faith And simplicity enough to listen to the church which Christ him- self has commanded all to hear, (Matt. 16) when it decides that it is lawful to invocate the saints and angels, and that they inter- cede for those who piously invoke them. But our adversaries still insist, that Christ alone is our mediator. Christ, most cer- tainly, is our only mediator of redemption, not our only media- tor of intercession ; else what did the apostle St Paul mean in recommending himself so earnestly to the prayers of those to whom he wrote ? It is in fact a doctrine insinuated in number- less passages of both the Old and New Testament; plainly taught and practised by all Christian antiquity ; authorised by the reiterated decisions of ecumenical councils, and defended by all the most illustrious fathers and doctors of the church. Where then is the pretended idolatry or absurdity of this catho- lic and venerably ancient practice ? Many of the most distin- guished prelates, and the best informed writers in the ranks of protestantism, have generously vindicated catholics from the groundless charge of idolatry. Such, for instance, were Bishop Montague, (On the Invocation of Saints); Parker (Disc, for the Abrogation of the Test) ; Thorndike (Just Weights and Mea- sures), &c. The last mentioned protestant theologian says: " Let not those who charge the pope to be antichrist, and the papists idolaters, lead the people by the nose to believe, that they can prove their supposition when they cannot." Nume- rous, however, and unfortunately for the innocent sufferers high in political as well as in ecclesiastic influence, is this un- feeling class of calumniators, and mischievous beyond calcula- tion to the community at large in a civil not less than religious view. It is not our intention to specify the numberless incon- veniences resulting in this two-fold light from their slanderous aspersions. We will only beg leave to express our fervent hopes of a speedy revolution in the sentiments of our protestant bre thren, as fellow-men and fellow-christians. 364 V I G Vigilantius, and with him, all protestants in general, are equally displeased at the religious honor, which catholics think due to the mortal remains of deceased saints. It is a maxim engrafted in our very nature, and most congenial with true sentiments of reli- gion. Did not Moses, impressed with these sentiments, carry with him out of Egypt the bones of the patriarch Joseph ? That respect which the pious king Josias testified for the bodies of the prophets, and the miracles which Holy Scripture assures us were performed by the touch of the sacred bones of Eliseus, and the garments of St Paul, ought abundantly to justify the veneration of catholics for the relics of the saints. It was universally esta- blished throughout the whole Christian church when Vigilantius thought proper to arraign it ; as St Jerom expressly informs us. Doubtless there may exist abuses in the manner, or in the mea- sure, of this otherwise legitimate veneration ; and, very possibly, these might be greater previously to the reformation than at pre- sent. But such abuses were never sanctioned by the church, and therefore could not with the smallest plausibility be al- leged as a lawful subject of separation from her communion. M. Basnage and other cavillers of the same description, always rest their plea upon a supposition notoriously false ; namely, that the catholics render to the saints and to their relics a species of religious worship similar to that which is due to God alone. Nothing can be more disingenuous, more uncandid, or more remote from truth. We honor God with supreme and sovereign honor ; the saints and angels, with an inferior and su- bordinate respect different from the former, as is that which is finite from infinitude; as that which is essentially dependent, from what is self-sufficient and absolutely independent. We apply indeed, through the poverty of our language, the same phrases in a sense widely different without the danger of being mis- understood by any but by those who are totally unacquainted with our doctrines: and do not protestants themselves teach their children to ask their father's blessing upon their bended knees, in the same words precisely which they address to Almighty God Father lless me, God bless me, without incurring the peril of idolatry ? Another point at issue between Vigilantius and St Jerom, was the celibacy of churchmen. With Vigilantius, the church of England and protestants in general declare against it. " It is,' 1 as Dr Hawarden rightly observes, " a matter of mere discipline only : and though by no means a sufficient plea for any to for- sake the catholic communion; yet if all other controversies were compromised between us, there is every reason to believe, that the church would condescend to wave such points of mere discipline, as still might be a bar to a reconciliation so much to be desired by all good and unbiassed Christians. The clergy, without trespassing upon faith, might be allowed to marry ; th$ V I G 365 laity to receive the chalice and to have all the liturgy of the church in English. The intemperance of churchmen, although it was not the first pretence, was probably one of the first causes of the reformation. And had it been as easy to keep religious vows, as it was to break them, there would have been no more different religions in England at present, than there were three hundred years ago. But when monks took wives and nunneries were set open, the fact, of course, was to be justified; and He or She that found celibacy a restraint, was happy to throw over broken vows the hallowed veil of matrimony . Csnjugium vocat: hoc praetexit nomine culpam. Here conscience was to be taught a new lesson : sacrilege must be made a virtue, and continence, if not a downright sin, at least a dangerous imperfection. The old religion was too old to be good ; and presently it had a thousand faults. Thus the schism began ; and though it be not yet three hundred years of age, the circumstance is hardly known to one-ninth part of the nation at large ; and every new religion is pretended to be as old as Christ. But more immediately to our present purpose " It is undoubtedly the doctrine of St Paul (1 Cor. vii.) that a single life is of itself a more perfect state, and more becoming the clergy, than that of matrimony. He that is without a wife, is solicitous for the things that belong to the Lord, how* he may please God. But he that is with a wife, is solicitous for the things of the world, how he may please his wife. The same difference he makes between a wife and one in the state of vir- ginity. Whence he concludes: He that giveth his virgin in marriage doeth well , but he that giveth her not doeth better. In effect, if. the laity are advised by St Paul to abstain, at least for a while, from the rights of matrimony, that you may give your- selves, saith he, to fasting and praying , is it not very suitable with the office of celebrating daily the holy mysteries of our divine religion, and offering up prayers for themselves and the people, to think of no other nuptials but those of the Lamb ? It is the argument of St Epiphanius (Ha3r. 59), of St Jerom (1. cont. Jovin. c. 19), of St Augustine (Tr. 9, in Joan.) &c." " To this we may add the authority of the church in the case of Jovinian, whom St Jerom calls the Christian Epicure. His opinion was, that there is no more merit in a single life, than in conjugal chastity. He urged the same texts of scripture which are commonly alleged against the obligation of religious vows, and the celibacy of priests. The reformation might have commenced here, had it not then been a plant out of season : like a winter flower, it was presently blasted. Jovinian was excommunicated ; arid his heresy was condemned by a council at Rome under pope Siricius, and by St Ambrose in a council at Milan 5 and it was 366 V I G \ refuted by the writings of the last mentioned holy prelate, St Jerom and St Augustine. (S. Aug. 1. de Haer. c. 82. S. Amb. Epist. 6, 7, 25. ed Par. 1603 & 1. de Virg. S. Hier. lib. duob. cont. Jovin. S. Aug. 1. de Bono Conjugal. & de Sancta Virginia) And because Jovinian seduced ignorant virgins by saying Are you better than Abraham, Sarah, &c. ? St Augustine bade them answer, I am not better than Abraham ; but the chastity of a single life is better than the chastity of marriage ; and better, as he says, in order to the kingdom of heaven" (1. de Bon. Gonj. c. 28. & de Sancta Virginit. c. 14, 23.) " Nor was it ever the practice either of the Latin or the Greek church, for bishops or priests to marry after their ordination ; not- withstanding the mistakes of some few writers asserting the con- trary. They were all under age, says Dr Hawarden, and there- fore illegal witnesses of what passed in the primitive times ; and they do not affirm it of their own. Socrates indeed, says, that the holy bishop Paphnutius dissuaded the council of Nice from obliging bishops, priests and deacons (Sozomen adds sub-dea- cons) to live separate from their wives, though previously en- gaged in wedlock. For at that time priests and bishops were ordain- ed in some measure by compulsion 5 and in such case it certainly would have been rather hard, as well for themselves as for their wives, to be tied to perpetual continency. Both these cases had so much difficulty attending them, that the council was equally to be commended for its zeal in promoting clerical perfection, and for superseding the decree at that time upon the just re* monstrance of St Paphnutius. But now when none are com- pelled to be either bishops or priests, or to enter among the clergy at all ; and such only are ordained as are esteemed vir- tuous, and are willing to follow the advice of St Paul ( 1 Cor. vii. 7.) of living as he did in perpetual celibacy, why may not the church be allowed to prefer them before all others ; and as long as there is no want of more, promote them exclusively ? Be- sides, if Socrates may be credited, the above advice which the council followed, had this limitation, that such as entered among the clergy unmarried^ should, always remain single, according to the ancient tradition of the church" " Moreover, the breach of religious vows is evidently in de- spight both of reason and the Word of God. A vow is a religious promise made to God of a greater good ; that is, of something which is better to be done than left undone. Now if it be against reason to break our faith with man, how much more so with Al- mighty God ? When thou shalt vow a vow unto the Lord thy God, ihou shalt not slack to pay it. For the Lord thy God will surely require it of thee ; and it would be sin in thee not to comply. (Deut. xxiii. v. 21, &c.) Better is it that thou shoiddst not vow 9 than thou should st vow and not pay. (Eccles. v. v. 4.) Hence St Augustine (1. de Bono Viduit.) says: " I am not afraid to as- V I G 367 sert, that falling from chastity vowed to God, is worse than adul- tery. For if it be a sin, as most certainly it is, for a woman that is a member of Christ, not to be true to her husband ; how much more is Christ offended, when the promise is not kept to Himself? In effect, although God did not require the promise, he strictly requires the performance. For when a counsel, not a precept, is the matter of a vow, if it be not performed, the iniqui- ty is greater in proportion as the necessity of making the vow was less." What then would this great saint have thought of the reformation, built as it is, upon the ruins of above ten thousand broken vows ?" " St Paul, indeed, gives directions how a bishop ought to go- vern his children, (1 Tim. iii. v. 4.) For bishops in the primi- tive church were often widowers. But, for the government of the wife, he has left none ; and if he had, it would be little to our present purpose. For in the times of the apostles both bishops and priests who had wives, lived as if they had none. Not that it was absolutely commanded either by Christ or his apos- tles ; but because it was more becoming their sacred office ; and the apostles themselves first set them the example, " who," St Jerom assures us (ep. 50) " were either virgins" when called to the apostleship, " or had no more to do with their wives" subse- quently to their vocation. " Bishops, priests and deacons are either chosen virgins or widowers, or at least remain continent after priesthood, as long as they live." Thus St Jerom ; and, before him, St Cyril of Jerusalem argues in the manner follow- ing : (Cat. 12) " If he that bears well the priestly character in Christ, abstains from the use of matrimony ; how could Christ himself derive his sacred birth from matrimony ?" St Epipha- nius observes (hser. 59) that " the person who continues to live as a husband with his wife, although he have but one, is not admitted by the church to the order of deacon, priest, bishop or sub-deacon, unless he ceases to converse with her as a hus- band." Origen too, was of opinion " that none are fit to offer continual sacrifice to Christ, who have not consecrated them- selves to perpetual chastity." (Horn. 23 in Numeros.) It would be endless to enumerate all the authorities of the fathers, and ancient ecclesiastic writers, attesting and recommending this venerable rule of primitive discipline and practice. " But is not marriage honorable in all ? In due circumstances it is ; not in cases where marriage would be sinful, sacrilegious and null. Is marriage with a father or mother very honorable ?- But, did not St Paul exhort every man to have his own wife, and every woman to have her own husband, in order to avoid fornication? ( ( 1 Cor. vii. 2.) Yes; but the same apostle, in the very same chapter (v. 27) likewise says : Art thou loosedfrom a wife? seek not a wife. Why did Christ (Matt. xix. 12) exhort Christians to a single life ? Certainly, to dissuade them from 368 UNI the necessary means of avoiding intemperance, was a thing alto- gether repugnant to his sanctity. Therefore, in the judgment of Christ himself, marriage is not the only preservative of virtue." See more upon the subject in Dr Hawarden's Church of Christ, whence the above remarks are taken ; also in Milner's iii. Letter to Dr Sturges, or in any other catholic polemic who has under- taken to discuss this topic. U UNITARIANS. See ANTITRINITARIANS. UNIVERSALISTS are those that hold out universal salvation to all mankind indiscriminately, and even to the wicked spirits themselves after undergoing a sharpish kind of purgatory in the other world. Their system certainly would appear highly chari- table, were it not subversive of scripture doctrine and Christian revelation. But, unfortunately, it has been long ago discarded in the universal church as equally inconsistent with both, and at a very early period of Christianity anathematized as erroneous and heretical. Its votaries fail not to urge in favor of the scheme some specious arguments and ingenious conceits, well calculated to stagger the credulity of the ignorant and the weak in faith ; but those that listen to the precepts of Jesus Christ, ordering them to hear the church, and to believe its pastors in the defini- tion of doctrinal truths, -have a safer guide than human reason, even the Spirit of truth itself, to preserve them from pernicious errors. Of Universalists there are various descriptions ; but all agree in the leading, or rather the only fundamental doctrine of the sect, which is the final restoration of all without exception, even the fallen angels, to eternal happiness. The Reltyan Universalists, so called from a Mr Relly formerly a Calvinistic Methodist preacher, with the Quakers reject baptism, and will have nothing to do with ceremonial ordinances. They maintain, that no works are necessary but the doing of good, and relieving the miseries and distresses of their fellow creatures without regard to any particular religious injunction or revelation. Thus the author, after a variety of experiences or supposed convictions of the truth of his first religious creed by a contradictory inspira- tion exchanged the odious extreme of rigorism for the opposite, though more agreeable, extreme of anti-scriptural indulgence and good nature. Happy indeed j thrice happy tidings for old W I C 269 Lucifer and his sable adherents, were this new Evangelist's latter conceits more infallible than his former experiences ! UBIQUITARIANS, or UBIQUISTS were Lutherans who main- tained, that in consequence of the hypostatic union of the hu- manity of Christ with the Divinity, his sacred body must, of course, be every where together with his Divinity. The Sacra- mentarians held opinions widely different with relation to the eucharist ; the latter rejected the doctrine of the real presence, because they could not conceivehow a body should exist in divers places at the same time j while the Ubiquitarians, on the contrary, attempted to demonstrate, that the humanity of Jesus Christ being united to the word, must necessarily be in all places together with the word. Melancthon rightly observed, that this idea tended to confound the two natures of Jesus Christ, as it implied not only that his humanity, but that even his sacred body was immense ; and that it quite destroyed the mystery of the eucharist, by depriving it of whatever was peculiar to itself; since in this hypothesis Jesus Christ, as man, would be equally present in a piece of wood, or in a stone. W WICKLIFFITES the followers of John WyclifFe, a native of the village of that name in Yorkshire. In his theological lec- tures, his sermons, and his writings, he inveighed bitterly against the Roman pontiff, who had approved a sentence of the archbishop of Canterbury to his disadvantage. He repeated whatever had at any time been alleged against the pope's power or his riches, attacked his authority even in things purely spi- ritual, and pretended to recognise many fundamental errors in his doctrine. From the clergy he could expect no countenance. He therefore contested their privileges, and endeavoured to bring them into disrepute with the laity. There existed some abuses in the collation of benefices upon strangers, the undue interference of Trans- Alpine authority, and certain other griev- ances of smaller moment. These Wickliff hailed as favorable circumstances, which would greatly facilitate his darling project of severing England from the church of Rome. In this design he was seconded by the Lollards, who had acquired importance in our island, and now became zealous advocates and coadjutors of Wickliff in so laudable an enterprise. See their article. The anarchy, the fanaticism, and the outrageous conduct of the Hussites and the Anabaptists were the natural result of w i e WicklifPs doctrine, which they imbibed from his irreligious, and not less seditious, writings. After declaiming immoderately against the popes in some things, doubtless, very blame- worthy, else they must have been more than men ; after falling foul upon religious orders, and descanting against the riches of the clergy, he proceeds to deny the efficacy of the sacraments. Confession, he says, is a useless ceremony ; and, with transubstantiation he will have nothing to do. He renews the error of Berengarius, or rather of his disciples; and with them rejects the real presence of our Blessed Saviour in the eucharist. He will not allow the extreme unction to be a sacra- ment, and maintains that whoever is in the state of mortal sin, has forfeited all right to any property whatever. Tithes, ac- cording to him, no man can in conscience pay to any wicked minister ; over whom he establishes the laity themselves judges, and exhorts them not to stand in awe of ecclesiastic censures. A father who perseveres in justice until death, cannot, forsooth, transfer an inheritance to his son, unless he also merits for him the grace of living holily. Kings, and popes, and bishops, if guilty of a single mortal sin, are equally to be despoiled of alF their rights and prerogatives. Prelates, he declares, have no- thing but an imaginary jurisdiction over the rest of the faithful. All men are, in his ideas, on the level of perfect equality ; arid all ought to enjoy an equal participation in the blessings of na- ture. All this he repeats in his treatise Of the Devil, in his book On Heaven, and in that Of Confession. With Abelard, he teaches optimism, and fatalism with the Predestinarians and the first reformers ; nor were his ideas of indulgences more orthodox, or his exceptions against praying for the dead. WicklifF had a multitude of votaries in England ; the clergy in order effectually to check the progress of his errors, repeated- ly condemned his doctrine ; and the university of Oxford having examined his writings, extracted from them two hundred and seventy eight propositions, which it deemed worthy of ecclessiastic censure, and caused to be presented to the archbishop of Canter- bury. From this collection we have borrowed the scanty sum- mary of part of "Wickliff's erroneous tenets, most of them adopt- ed by the Hussites, Anabaptists, &c. Indeed, they were so well accommodated to the various inclinations of vast numbers of tepid Christians at the time, and so favorable to the general spread of disaffection for the pope, the clerical body, and the religious, that it is not matter of surprise he should have had his followers. The clergy were not indifferent to their progress, and procured severe measures to be adopted against both Wickliffites and Lol- lards indiscriminately. They found, however, many powerful protectors ; and the house of commons in 1404 presented an ad- dress to the king praying him to make a seizure of the revenues of the clergy ; with which unreasonable requisition he thought W I C S71 not proper to comply. A similar address was repeated in 14-10. It met with no encouragement ; on the contrary, his majesty forbade the commons any more to interfere in clerical concerns, and when they afterwards demanded the revocation or at least a mitigation of the statute against the Wickliffites and the Lol- lards, he remained inflexible, and even caused a sectarist of the latter description to be executed while parliament was actually sitting. Henry V. was equally severe in regard of the Lollards, although he did not eventually succeed in compassing the de- struction of that sect, or the suppression of the Wickliffites. They silently gained ground, and made many proselytes in the house of parliament itself; a circumstance which contributed not a little to prepare the way for the schism under Henry VIII. When the Hussites were put down, the impression which the doctrines of Wickliff had left upon the minds of the ignorant and the ill disposed, did not so easily wear out ; and these doc- trines produced the various sects of Anabaptists : who filled the provinces of Germany with desolation, when once the daring Luther had erected the standard of revolt against the catholic church. The Wickliffian errors concerning the real presence of Christ in the eucharist, we have refuted under the article BERENGARIUS ; his heterodox opinions regarding prayer for the dead, the cere- monies of the church, the sacrament of order, and the superiority of bishops, under that of Aerius ; his system of optimism, under that of Abelard ; his ideas of indulgences, under that immediately following. His exceptions against confession have been renewed by the Calvinists who pretend, that the obligation of confession originated only with the council of Lateran in 1215 under Inno- cent III. On the other hand a host of learned catholic divines have proved, that sacramental confession of sins not only in general and in particular, but of sins, too, committed in secret as well as in public, was in practice at all times even from the very birth of Christianity ; that it is of divine institution, and strictly obligatory by divine right. (See Nat. Alex. cont. Dalleum. Sainte Marthe, traite de la Confession, &c. &c.) Among others the great Bossuet observes, that " the terms of the com- mission given to the ministers of the church, to absolve sinners, are so general, that it cannot without temerity be restricted to public crimes ; and as in pronouncing absolution in the name of Jesus Christ, they apply only the express terms of this commission, Jesus Christ himself may with truth be said to pronounce the sentence, while those pass judgment whom he has appointed judges in this instance : and while the priest is exercising the outward ministry, it is in fact our invisible High Priest that in- wardly absolves the penitent. This sacred tribunal being, as it really is, so necessary a check upon licentiousness, so fertile a source of good counsel, a consolation so cheering to the truly 3 A2 572 Z U I repenting and afflicted soul when she hears not a mere decla- ration in general terms of pardon for her crimes, as is practised by some among the reformed ministers ; but an effectual absolu- tion pronounced in her favor in the name and by the authority of Jesus Christ, after a particular examination, and careful cog- nisance of her state;" let not that Jewish question, formerly objected against our Lord himself, Who is this that even for- giveth sins? (Luke vii. 49.) and Who can forgive sins, but God alone ? (Mark ii. 7.) have any weight with Christians; for Christ has said : whose sins you shall forgive they are forgiven un- to them, and whose sins you shall retain, they are retained. (John xx. 23.) WicklifPs charitable wish to rid the clergy of their property was not a new conceit : the Albigenses who before him had ar- dently coveted their possessions, had found none more zealous supporters of the measure, than were certain usurers and some avaricious noblemen. These made a much worse use of their power and their riches than the clergy, in oppressing and tyran- nizing over their vassals. We often hear repeated these thread- bare declamations against ecclesiastics ; but rarely, very rarely indeed, from the mouth of men of sense, from the disinterested, the modest and the charkable. See on this point the article WALDENSES. ZUINGLIANS adopted the tenets of one Zuinglius, curate from the year 1506 to 1531, first of Glaris, afterwards of a consi- derable borough in Switzerland. About the same time that Lu- ther began to preach against indulgences in Germany, Zuinglius also, exerted his zeal in the same way among the Swiss. Like the former, he was scandalized at the abuses which he saw prac- tised by some of the papal commissioners in the collection of alms. From the abuses committed by the collectors, he soon converted his attention to the indulgences themselves, which he condemned with no less vehemence than the German reformer ; and, together with indulgences, Zuinglius rejected the veneration paid by the catholic church to the saints and angels, -^-monastic vows, the celibacy of the clergy, the mass, the Lenten fast, &c. The reform which Zuinglius introduced in Switzerland, soon became widely diffused. Many leading men of the new religion, seconded his efforts at Berne, at Basil, at Constance, and in other places. However, several of the Swiss cantons still remain- ed attached to the catholic doctrine, and reprobated the i Z U I 373 tions adopted by their fellow cantons. Both parties were much incensed against each other ; and at length they mutually pro- claimed open war. Zuinglius at an early period of his evan- gelical career, had imitated Luther and many other godly re- formers by taking to himself, in despight of the then existing eccle:iiaptical law forbidding priests to marry, a rich and, we may suppose, a very accomplished widow lady to wife. His personal prowess was not very great ; and he dreaded the idea of heading in person his new gospel proselytes to combat. Wherefore he neglected nothing which he deemed conducive to re-establish peace. A comet denounced to him his approaching fate; and he bitterly lamented his own too premature dissolution. March, however, he must against the common enemy ; and the doleful event deprived his followers of their great apostle. He fell in the field of glory in 1531. The catholics remained mas- ters of the plain ; till the contending parties wisely agreed to terminate the bloody contest by allowing to each other the free exercise of their respective religion. The doctrine of Zuinglius regarding clerical celibacy, and the veneration of the saints and angels, we have refuted under the article VIGILANTIUS ; his denial of the real presence under that of BERENGARIUS; his exceptions against the mass, and against indulgences under that of Luther. The Lenten Fast being only a point of ecclesiastic discipline could afford no sufficient grounds for a separation from the catholic church. However, we may here be allowed to observe, that the ecclesias- tical Jaw ordaining the annual observation of this solemn fast, is on many accounts most venerable to Christians : it is venerable for its antiquity ; for the universality of its observance, and for its manifold spiritual advantages recognised even by protestant travellers in the surprising and edifying change operated in the lives of all descriptions of people in catholic countries, during this holy season. (See Sir Edwin Sands, in his Europce Specu- lum.} If we trace the religious observance of Lent through each preceding age from the present time, we find it clearly established in the councils and ecclesiastic writers of every cen- tury up to the very first, and that such monuments and vouchers in all parts of the church, evidently carry it as high as any monu- ments of the kind are extant ; that is, to the time when the immediate disciples and successors of the apostles were living, and actually governed the chief sees. The name itself of The Forty Day's Fast of Lent was used by Origen, (horn. 10. in Le- vit. T. 1 , ed. de la Rue) and by subsequent writers in every suc- ceeding age ; a circumstance, which demonstrates it to have been understood by the Christian community of this fast before their time. With regard to the general practice and utility of fasting, in order to appease the Divine anger, and to obtain blessings from above, it is so strongly recommended in holy 374 Z U I scripture, and even by the example of Christ himself in the new law, who in his retirement into the desart fasted forty days ; that it would be a gross insult to the understanding of our chris- tian readers to instance a multitude of texts by way of proof. Zuinglius wrote a book in support of his new doctrines, in which he employs the common-place arguments of all reformers ; arguments and slanderous charges which have been a thousand times refuted, and a thousand times with increased asperity brought forward again, as if they never had been controverted at all by catholic polemics. In the confession of faith which Zuinglius addressed to Francis I. a little before his death, occurs the following curious specimen of the author's orthodoxy. Ha- ving previously reminded that prince, that it was his duty to cherish in his breast the pleasing hope of one day beholding the assembly of all the holy, and courageous, and virtuous person- ages that ever have adorned society from the commencement of the world, he proceeds : " There will you see the two Adams the redeemed and the Redeemer ; you shall there see an Abel and a Henoch ; a Hercules, a Theseus ; a Socrates, an Aristides, Antigonus," &c. &c. and for aught we know a Bo- naparte too ! The good-natured Swiss would have heaven set wide open to the very papists themselves, were it not too plain a contradiction to his darling system of reform. Before we conclude this last article in our Dictionary, it will not perhaps be deemed foreign to the subject, to examine a little more minutely into the grounds of protestant separation from the Roman catholic church. " The very best divines of the protestant communion allow that no separation ought to have taken place, but on account of articles authentically established, and to the belief of which all Christians are equally obliged. If then they allow also, as in fact they do, that in the Roman church all articles fundamentally necessary to salvation are re- tained and professed, it follows evidently, that the first reformers separated themselves from its communion without sufficient grounds," and were therefore schismatics. " M. Daille, in a treatise entitled Faith founded upon Scrip- ture 9 after exposing all the articles of faith held by the protestants at large, tells us ; they are beyond all contestation ; that the Ro- man church professes to believe them ; that in reality the protes- tants do not hold all our opinions, but that catholics hold all their articles of faith ; consequently, all the principal articles of the Christian religion. But though M. Daille had not granted thus much, the thing itself is manifest j and it is most notorious to the world, that Roman catholics actually do believe all those arti- cles termed by yicotestauts fundamental. Nor will it suffice to say that we destroy these articles by interposing others contrary to them. For the same M. Daille, whose authority is alleged- not so much to convince protestants by the testimony of one of Z U I 375 their most learned ministers, as because what he says is in itself highly reasonable, tells them what they ought to think of such kind of consequences, on the supposition that mischievous ones might be drawn from our doctrine. Writing to M. Monglat, he says : " although the opinion of the Lutherans upon the eu- charist, as well as that of Rome according to us infers the destruction of the humanity of Christ ; yet this consequence cannot be imputed to them without calumny, since they formally disavow it." " There is nothing more essential to the Christian religion, than the reality of the human nature in Jesus Christ ; and yet though the Lutherans hold a doctrine, from which is inferred the destruction of this capital verity, by consequences which the rest of the reformed judge evident 5 yet they have not scrupled to offer to communicate with them because their opinion has no poison in it, as M. Daille tells us in his apology ; (cap. 7.) and their national synod, held at Charenton, 1631, admits them to the holy table, upon this ground, that they agree in the principal and fundamental points of religion* It is then a certain maxim established among them, that they must not in these cases insist upon the consequences which may be drawn from a doctrine, but purely upon what He proposes and acknowledges, who teaches it." " So that when they infer by consequences, which they pre- tend to draw from our doctrine, that we do not sufficiently ac- knowledge the sovereign glory which is due to God, nor the quality of Saviour and Mediator in Jesus Christ, nor the infinite value of his sacrifice, nor the superabundant plenitude of his merits ; we may defend ourselves without difficulty from such consequences, by this short answer of M. Daille ; and tell them that-the catholic church disavowing them, they cannot be imputed to her without calumny" But the catholic church, far from overthrowing the funda- mental articles of faith, either directly or indirectly, on the con- trary, establishes them after so solid and evident a manner, that no one can question her right understanding of them, without great injustice." Catholic doctrine upon religious worship. " To begin with that adoration which is due to God alone ; the catholic church teaches us, that it consists principally in be- lieving Him to 'be the Creator and Lord of all things, and in ad- hering to him with all the powers of our soul, by faith, hope and charity, as to Him who alone can render us happy by the com- munication of an infinite good which is himself." " This interior adoration, which we render to God in spirit 376 Z U I and truth, has its exterior marks ; the chief of which is Sacrifices This cannot be offered to any but to God alone ; because a sa- crifice is established to make a public acknowledgment, and a solemn protestation of God's sovereignty, and our absolute de- pendance. the children of God, *' 378 Z U I both as a grace 'which is mercifully promised to them by the me- diation of our Lord Jesus Christ, and as a recompence which is faith- fully rendered to their good works and merits, by virtue of this promise. These are the proper terms of the council of Trent. (Sess. 6. c. 16.) But lest human pride should flatter itself with an opinion of a presumptuous merit, the same council teaches us, that all the price and value of a Christian's works proceeds from the sanctifying grace which is given us gratis in the name of Jesus Christ ; and that it is an effect of the continual influence of this divine Head upon its members. " The precepts, exhortations, promises, threatenings and re- proaches of the gospel shew clearly enough, we must work out our salvation by the co-operation of our wills with the grace of God assisting us ; but it is one of our first principles, that the free-will can do nothing conducive to eternal happiness, but as it is moved and influenced by the Holy Ghost." " So that the church knowing it is this Divine Spirit which works in us by his graces all the good we do, she is obliged to believe, that the good works of the faithful are very acceptable to God, and of great consideration before him ; and it is just she should make use of the word merit with all Christian anti- quity, the better thus to denote the value, price, and dignity of those works, which we perform through grace.. But as all their sanctity comes from God, who produces them in us, the Same church adopts, in the council of Trent, these words of St Augustine, as a doctrine of catholic faith ; that God crowns his own gifts in crowning the merits of his servants." " We beg of those who love truth and religious concord, that they would be pleased here to read the words of this council a little more at length, the more easily to divest themselves of those false impressions which have been given them, concerning our doctrine. Although we see, say the fathers in this council, that holy writ has such an esteem for good works, that Jesus Christ himself 'there promises , that a glass of cold water given to the poor shall not want its reward ; and that the apostle testifies how a moment of light pain endured in this world, shall produce an eternal weight of glory ; nevertheless, God Jorbid a Christian should trust and glory in himself, and not in our Lord, whose bounty is so great to all men, that he mil have those gifts which He bestows upon them, to be their merits" (Sess. 6, c. 16.) " This doctrine is diffused throughout the whole council; which teaches us, in another session, (Sess. 14, 8) that we, who can do nothing of ourselves, can do all things with Him that strengthens us, in such sort that man has nothing of which he may glory, nor for which he may confide in himself / but all his confi- dence and glory is in Jesus Christ, in whom we live, in whom wev merit, in whom we satisfy ; bringing forth fruits worthy ofpe- ( nance, which draw their virtue from Him, and by Him are offer- ed to his Father, and .accepted by his father through Him. Z U I S79 Wherefore we ask all things, we hope all things, we render thanks for all things, through our Lord Jesus Christ. We con- fess aloud we are not acceptable to God but in and by Him ; and we cannot comprehend why any other thought should be attributed to us. We so place all the hopes of our salvation in Him, that we daily make use of these words to God in the sa- crifice : Vouchsafe, O God, to grant to us sinners tliy servants, who hope in the multitude of thy mercies, some part and society with the blessed apostles and martyrs into whose number we be- seech thee to be pleased to receive us, not looking upon our merits, but graciously pardoning us in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord" " Will the church never be able to persuade her children, now become her adversaries, either by the exposition of her faith, or by the decisions of her councils, or by the prayers in her sacrifice, that she believes she can have no life but in Jesus Christ, and that she has no hope but in Him ! This hope is so firm, that it makes the children of God, who walk faithfully in his ways, find a peace which surpasseth all understanding, as the apostle assures us. (Phil. 4, 7.) But though this hope be stronger than the promises and menaces of the world, aud suffi- cient to calm the troubles of our consciences ; yet it does not wholly extinguish fear : for although we be assured God will never abandon us, if we do not forsake Him, yet we are never certain we shall not lose him by our own fault, in rejecting his inspirations. He has been pleased by this saving fear duly to moderate that confidence, which he has infused into his children ; because, as St Augustine tells us, such is our infirmity in this place of temptation and dangers, that an absolute security would produce in us tepidity and pride ; whereas this fear, which, ac- cording to the apostle's command, makes us work out our salva- tion with trembling, renders us more vigilant, and makes us rely with a more humble dependence upon Him, who worketh in us by his grace, both to will, and to do, according to his good plea- sure, as the same St Paul expresses it." (Phil. 11, 12, 13.) Thus you see what is most necessary in the doctrine of jus- tification ; and our adversaries would be very unreasonable, should they persist in denying that this doctrine suffices to teach Christians, that they are obliged to refer all the glory of their sal- vation to God through Jesus Christ." " Let then our protestant brethren cease to accuse us of an- nulling the grace of God, by attributing all to our good works ; since we have shewn them, in such clear terms of the council of Trent, these three points, so decisive as to this matter; That our sins are pardoned us out of pure mercy, for the sake of Jesus Christ ; that we are indebted for that justice which is in us by the Holy Ghost to a liberality gratuitously bestowed upon us ; and that all the good works we do, are but so many gifts of his grace." " And indeed we must acknowledge, that the learned of their 3 B 2 380 CONCLUSION. party do not contend so much of late about this subject, as they did formerly ; and there are few but who now confess, there ought not to have been a breach upon this point. But if this important difficulty about justification, upon which their first authors laid all their stress, be not looked upon now as essential by the wisest and most learned persons of their communion, we leave them to think what they ought to judge of their separation, and what hopes there would be of a re-union, if they would but lay aside their prejudices and renounce the spirit of contention." See Bossuet's Exposition of the Doctrine of the Catholic Church ; whence I have extracted the above reflections. We will now beg leave to close our Dictionary with nearly the whole of the Reverend Joseph Berington's justly admired Introduction to his Faith of Catholics ; as we conceive it well adapted to our plan, and highly appropriate in this stage of our compilation. CONCLUSION. " The creed or religious belief of catholics is not confined, ex- clusively, to the scriptures : it is what our Saviour taught, and his apostles delivered, before the sacred books of the New Testa- ment had any existence. During the course of his mission, and after his resurrection, the apostles had been instructed by their divine master, fully and explicitly, we cannot doubt, in all things that it was necessary for them to know. To them he shewed himself alive after his passion by many proofs, for forty days ap- pearing to them, and speaking of the kingdom of God. (Acts i. 3.) Then, giving to them his final commission, he distinctly said: Go ye therefore and teach all nations, baptising, &c. Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you ; and behold I am with you all days even to the consummation oj the ivorld. (Matt, xxviii. 19, 20.) The same commission is repeat- ed : Go ye into the whole world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth, and is baptised, shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be condemned" (Mark xvi. 15, 16.) " Commenting on this commission, as stated by St Matthew, the learned St Jerom calls the form, in which it is delivered -the ordo prcecipuus, or the leading rule ; and then adds : " Christ commanded the apostles first to teach all nations; in the second place to baptise them in the sacrament of faith ; and then, after faith and baptism, to teach them what things were to be observed. And lest we should think that these things were of little moment, or few, he added : all things whatsoever I have commanded; that is, they who have believed, and have been bap- tised, shall be taught to observe all my precepts; and behold! 1 am with you all days even to the end of the world. This is his CONCLUSION. 381 promise : He will be 'with his disciples to the end of the world ; thus shewing that they shall never die, and that he will never forsake them, that shall believe in him." Comment, in Matt. 1. 4. in fine T. iii. p. 734. " Had Christ said : " Go and commit to writing the gospel, or those saving truths which you have heard from my mouth ; and let that writing or written word be the rule of belief to those whom you shall instruct, and to their successors to the end of the world" had he said this, the point had been clear. But he said it not ; he commands them to go, and to teach, or preach. The commission then is to teach ; and obedience to that teaching is enjoined under the severest menace : He that believeth not shall be condemned ; or, as you may have seen it rendered, shall be damned" ( xvreutp fao-irai . ) " Under what latitude of interpretation can it now be main- tained, that this positive ordinance of Christ was merely tempora- ry ? That it was to cease, and be superseded by another rule when the apostles should be no more, and the writings which they might leave behind them should have been declared authentic, and have obtained a very general circulation ? Were this to have been so ; without any effort of the imagination, I might be al- lowed to represent to myself the apostle St John, who survived his brother apostles, surrounded at Ephesus as, we are told, he often was by his disciples, thus addressing them : My dear children I have finished my gospel ; written some epistles, as likewise the work which, from the various scenes therein de- scribed, I have entitled Apocalypse or Revelations. Three other gospels have been compiled ; a narrative called Acts, made pub- lic ; and my brothers Peter and Paul, James and Jude have ad- dressed certain letters to the churches. I can speak to their truth and their authenticity. Now then, as my time of abiding with you is short it is essential you should know that these writings are to be the future rule of belief to you, and to all the faithful to the end of the world not that ordinance of teaching, which our master once delivered to us." " Poly carp the venerable bishop of Smyrna, who was ac- quainted with many of the disciples of Christ, and particularly with St John, does not tell us that he was ever addressed in that manner. But it is said of him " that he always taught what he had learned from the apostles." And yet, surely, it was the duty of the evangelist so to have instructed his pupils, had he been aware that a new order of teaching and believing was thence- forth to prevail. It is admitted that the greatest part of the books of the New Testament was, at this time, coming into the general use of the Christian churches. The moment then, was oppor- tune and critical." " We catholics, therefore, believe that our master Christ established a rule, which was to last as long as his religion should 382 CONCLUSION. endure ; and that, to give to that rule a security that should never fail, he promised to be with the apostles and their successors, even to the consummation of the world. We likewise think that the perpetuity of that faith, which Christ came down from heaven to establish, would have been ill provided for rather, would not have been provided for at all if that ordinance of teaching which during his life time and that of his apostles, was judged necessary, had been then suspended when it began to be most wanted. He would thus have been with his apostles who could enforce, even by miracles, the truths which they had received from his lips but would on this supposition have left their suc- cessors to the guidance of their own judgment 5 or, which is the same thing, to the guidance of a rule which himself had not esta- blished, and that on points, avowedly not within the compe- tence of human reason." " The apostles taught the truths which they had learned from Christ. I have received of the Lord, said St Paul (1 Cor. xi. 23) that which I also delivered to you : and again : -For I delivered to you Jirst of all, which I also received , how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures : (Ibid. xv. 3.) This is the ordo pr&cipuus the leading rule ; first to receive, and then deliver. He does not say that he learned it from the scriptures ; but that he had received it. And the same truths by the same mode of teaching, have continued to be delivered down to us by the pastors of the church, the successors of the apostles. The difference lies in this only ; that the interval between us and Jesus Christ the fountain of every Christian truth is measured by eighteen centuries ; whereas the communication between that fountain and the apostles, and between these apostles and the next to them in succession, was immediate. But truth is not lost, nor altered, nor weakened by descent when an unbroken chain of living witnesses provided with all necessary documents,, proclaims its identity, and the promised assistance of Christ himself, gives security to their words : / am with you all days, even to the consummation of the world." " But how is Jesus Christ with the pastors of his church. How ! ! Does it become a thinking Christian to ask this ques- tion ? How does the Divine Providence govern the world ? How, after he had left the earth, could Christ, as he had pro- mised, abide with his apostles ? Plow were the writers of the scriptures inspired in the execution of their tasks ? " But, if the subject be duly considered, it should appear, that no particular interference of the Divine Spirit, in the go- vernment of the church, is, on ordinary occasions, necessary, to preserve its pastors from error. They deliver what they have received. To this all are witnesses : the decisions of councils are witnesses 5 the faithful are witnesses ; all our liturgies and other forms of prayer are witnesses ; the catechisms and books CONCLUSION. 383' of public instruction are witnesses ; and the writings of all pre- ceding teachers, joined to the admitted testimony of the scrip- tures, are witnesses. A barrier, in defence of the truths once received, is thus formed, which no subtlety can undermine ; no temerity surmount. Still we cannot doubt, that God, with pa- ternal kindness, watches over the great work of his mercy, and interferes as he judges it expedient ; in the same manner as, it is believed, he guided the pens of the evangelists, though all of them, by other means, were in possession of the facts which they relate. " For as much as many," says St Luke, i. 1,2, 3, *' have taken in hand to set forth in order, a narration of those things that have been accomplished amongst us ; according as they have delivered them unto us, who from the beginning were eye-witnesses and ministers of the word : it seemed good to me also, having diligently attained to all things from the beginning, to write to Thee in order, most excellent Theophilus." " But here, I admit, a question may be very fairly proposed. If the ordinance of teaching, delivered to the apostles, was de- signed to be perpetual as has been said ; of what use are the scriptures of the New Testament ? As an independent rule of faith we conceive them to be of none, for this plain reason : that, as all the truths which we believe to be divine, and which are the objects of our faith, came immediately from Christ, and were taught by the apostles before those scriptures were written we are not at liberty to think that those truths would not have remained, to the end of the world pure and unaltered, had that primitive state of things continued ; that is, had it never seemed good to any of those apostolic men as it did to St Luke, to commit to writing what they had learned. He did it, he says, that Theophilus, to whom he writes, might know the verity of those words in which he had been instructed." (v. 4.) " But though these scriptures are not to us a rule of faith, taken independently of the teaching authority of the pastors of the church, who are the successors of the apostles ; yet we ve- nerate them as a sacred deposite bequeathed to us by the kindest of parents, containing truths of high moment, practical lessons of saving morality, and facts of history, relating to the life of our Saviour and the conduct of his disciples, eminently interest- ing and instructive. For this we are deeply grateful. Nor have I mentioned all the advantages to be derived from the scriptures. For they come forward with a powerful aid, to support by the evidence of their contents the divine truth of the faith which we have received. So Theophilus, when he read that admira- ble narration which St Luke compiles for him, would be more and more confirmed in the verity of those words, in which he had been instructed" " Really I cannot understand, under what security of con- science we could, unauthorised, choose that for a rule of belief, 384* CONCLUSION. which Christ did not appoint and which, if expounded by pri- vate interpretation, must often lead into error $ and neglect that authority, which he so positively ordained to be our guide. *' Go ye and teach all nations .... teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you." And yet, I believe, it has been said not by any member, indeed, of the catholic church that " the scriptures are the sole rule of faith, and rea- son their sole interpreter," that is, that each one shall teach himself! St Paul allowed not this liberty to his Corinthian con- verts. He speaks to them of the gospel which he had preached ; which they had received ; and wherein they stand : and, by this, he adds, " you are saved," if you hold fast after what manner I preached to you, unless you have believed in vain. (1 Cor. xv. 1, 2.) No choice is allowed: they must believe as he had taught them." " The catholic reader will now be sensible, should any point o his belief seem to receive but little support, or even no support, from any text of scripture, that its truth is not thereby affected, as its divine origin from Christ, and its descent from the apostles, remain the same; and, therefore, that the doctrine of Purgatory and the Invocation of Saints stands on the same foundation as that of the Authority of the church, though, in support of the former, the evidence of scripture be comparatively weak. Why, or how this has happened, let him say, who hath known the mind of the Lord, and hath been his counsellor" (Rom xi. 34-.) " But even where the proofs from scripture are most plain and most abundant, the well-taught catholic does not apply them definitively, as the light of his own understanding may direct him ; but he turns to the guide that Christ appointed, that is, the teaching authority of the successors of the apostles ; which guide will lead him through the paths of truth, by explaining in what sense the passages of scripture on doctrinal points have, at all times, been understood, expounded, and applied. Such a guide is manifestly necessary when on those points as it too of- ten happens the meaning of any passage has been made a sub- ject of controversy. For, it needs not be said, how prone to er- ror is the undirected mind of man ; and that when he thinks that he follows the evidence of the written word which must be to him a silent letter, it is his own fancy that he follows, or the de- lusive light of a very fallible understanding. Such a guide, says the catholic, can give me no security ; while if I wish for subjects on which to exercise the powers of my mind in which to err in- deed, may be easy, but where error would be innocent they present themselves on every side. On points avowedly above my reach, I wish to risk no decision, nor on collateral subjects connected with them : for errors in religion, I am told, have all arisen from the scriptures misunderstood, or have been maintain- ed by alleged proofs derived from them." CONCLUSION. 335 " The security which a catholic, well -instructed, experiences in the profession of his belief, resting on the teaching authority established by Christ, must be esteemed a signal blessing. And what adds to it is, that the more he enquires, the more he finds that security confirmed, as he ascends, through the annals of time, towards Christ and his apostles : while the unlettered man, by a few plain documents, is taught, that the guides whom his Saviour has commanded him to follow, can lead him securely into all truths ; and that, in trusting them, he trusts in God." " I would ask the soundest reasoner when I had obtained from him the concession, that it was important to believe the truths which Christ came from heaven to establish ; and that, on the ad- mission of those truths, as the same divine teacher had so posi- tively declared, depended future happiness : I would ask him, I say, were I at a loss by what means to come to the knowledge of those truths what advice he would give me ? Would he advise me to search the scriptures for them, and rely on my own saga- city for the discovery when I added that, on less important subjects, my own judgment often deceived me ; and that, in re- gard to the meaning of some leading points in the scriptures, there were as many (and as opposite) opinions as there were lines ? Or would he refer me to such a guide as has been described the speaking authority of the catholic church which could tell me, in what sense those scriptures, on the points in question, had, at all times, been expounded ; and besides, could hold out to me a clue that should safely lead me, through the series of ages, up to the time when Christ himself taught, and the apostles as he com- manded delivered the doctrines which they had received from him ?" " What his advice would be, cannot be doubted. And 1 can as little doubt that he would proceed to assure me, that to rely on any other guide, or to oppose to it the guidance of " private judgment" must obviously arise from the most inveterate preju- dice, or from the wild conviction, that it mattered not what a man believed, when he chose a guide that could not direct him." " I am thea convinced, would the serious enquirer laying aside every other motive, but what the evidence of common reason would present to him decide impartially ; that he must embrace the catholic principle of a teaching authority, resting on the commission given by our Saviour to his apostles, and the concomitant promise of perpetual assistance. But is not this authority an overbearing control? Does it not infringe that liberty of conscience which each one it is often said en- joys, of choosing his own faith, and of professing what he has chosen ?" " That man enjoys this liberty in regard to his fellow-man, I am ready to allow. To one another we arc not accountable. 3 c S86 CONCLUSION. But is it so in regard of Heaven ? When Christ said to his apostles : Go yc and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptised, shall be saved ; but he that believeth not shall be condemned (Mark xvi.) : when he pronounced this solemn threat 3 if Peter, with his usual promptness, had observ- ed : Master, shall this be ? Shall that liberty be thus taken away, which every disciple should enjoy of choosing his own faith, and of professing what he shall have thus chosen ?" I leave it to the person who may be supposed to have made the objection, to say what, probably, on the occasion, would have been the reply of Christ ? I will suggest to him only what on another occasion he did say to the same apostle : Get thee be- hind me, Satan ; thou art a scandal to me : because thou savourest not the things that are of God 9 but the things that are of men :" (Matt. xvi. 23.) " Notwithstanding what I have said of the authority of teach- ing pastors, succeeding to the apostles, and exercising their ministry in the propagation of the Divine truths, I am aware that we often speak of the written word, or the scriptures, as a rule of faith. This has arisen from the great authority which those scriptures bear, as the inspired word of God, and as con- taining the chief points of Christian belief. But that they are not to us, as I before expressed it, an independent rute, is mani- fest, when it is moreover observed, that not only do they owe their integrity to the vigilant care of the church ; but that no passage in them, on doctrinal points, is ever explained in any other sense, than as that chnrch in conformity with what she has received, explains them. Hence we Jay it down as an in- troductory and certain principle ; " That all that, and that on- ly, is of catholic faith, which God has revealed, and the church proposes to our belief." " The catholic Christian," observes the learned bishop of Meaux, u forms not his faith by reading the scriptures : his faith is already formed before he begins to read : reading serves only to corifirm what he already believes ; that is, to confirm the doctrine which the church has delivered to him." Conference avec M. Claude, p. 330. " The leading points of catholic faith we embrace because Christ and his apostles taught them : but Christ and his apostles taught likewise other articles : to those, therefore, we alike submit. To act otherwise, would, surely, be absurd. They come down to us through the same series of receiving and delivering the scrip- tures confirming their truth, and the fathers in their writings witnessing the legitimacy of their descent. And shall human arrogance here interfere ; and because it judges some points to accord better with its notions of truth than others, receive these and reject the others ; receive the doctrines of original sin, of the Trinity, of the incarnation and of the atonement ; and re- ject that of the corporeal presence in the eucharist ? Or the CONCLUSION. 387 Motive may be, that the scriptures, called in, without authority, to be the sole rule of belief, and arbitrarily expounded, shall seem to speak more distinctly on some points than on others. " It here seems expedient to notice a charge, often urged against catholics, that the use of reason, in the concern of re- ligion, is forbidden to them. That this should have been said by Deists, who reject all revelation ; or by the followers of So- cinus, to whose understandings no mysteries are acceptable ; I can readily conceive. But I cannot conceive, that it should be heard from men, who themselves believe, that the Divine Being has communicated his will to man, and that in the mani- festation of that, may be, and are, not one, but various sub- jects, placed beyond the reach of human comprehension. FOP by admitting but one single point let us say that of the incar- nation of the second person not, it is plain, from any evidence in the object, but on the single motive of its having been so revealed, they by this admit a principle on which the whole fa- bric of catholic belief is centred. " To make this more plain, let me ask you, who are ready to Submit your reasoning powers to this limited suspension why you are a Christian ? I am a Christian you will answer : because, having maturely weighed the various arguments which prove the authenticity of the Jewish scriptures ; dwelt on the prophecies therein contained ; arid looked forward to their fulfilment, I seemed to discover, in applying those prophecies to a personage \vho appeared among the Jews in the reign of Augustus Cesar their probable completion. At the same time a general expecta- tion among nations, and particularly in Judea, selected that pe- riod as the season of some great event. Fondly then, I contem- plated the birth of that personage with its wonderful circum- stances, his character, his conduct, his"lessons of morality, his miracles, his sufferings, his death, his resurrection from the dead, and his glorious ascension into heaven all recorded in the simple language of truth, by witnesses who could have no motive to deceive me. And these witnesses, with their associates in the same cause, afterwards, I found, all died attesting the truth of what they had heard and seen. The personage then, called Jesus Christ, who lived and died as is related, was manifestly, I concluded, the expected MESSIAH, in whom the ancient prophe- cies were fulfilled and who was sent by God to make known his further will to man. To his lessons I then submit, as to the voice from heaven : I embrace his law whether it contain moral pre- cepts, the obvious tendency of which I plainly see or it con- tain mysterious doctrines which I cannot comprehend. In these the authority of the Teacher is the motive of my belief. Shall I, weak and limited as I am in all my powers, attempt to measure what may be infinite ; or withold my assent, because, having compared what is spiritual with what is earthly, I discover not 3 c 2 388 CONCLUSION. that analogy, or those relations on which my understanding can repose ? The establishment of Christianity is then to me a fact, to which, by no laborious process of reasoning, I have been con- ducted ; and, being thus far advanced, if I demur, or hesitate to believe from any such motives as have been mentioned, that same reason which hitherto has been my guide will not fail to tell me, that, in so doing, I act not the part of a Christian or of a philosopher : I have said ; why I am a Christian. " This reasoning, I admit, is accurately just : but I must be al- lowed to add, that it is my own and that of every, catholic who, from considering the motives of credibility, as they are called, has been led to the belief of the fact of the Christian dis- pensation. But does the exercise of his reasoning faculties ter- minate here ? It does not ; because, from the unhappy divisions of the Christian world, he is compelled to go farther. " I will now say; why I am a catholic. But ? first, let me ob- serve, that the distinction of catholic and Christian, in their ori- final acceptation, was a distinction without a difference. Now, owever, it prevails ; and has long prevailed to a certain extent, since as early as the fourth century a Spanish bishop, reasoning against the Novatians, who had separated themselves from the church, says : *' Christian is my name ; Catholic is my surname." It served therefore to denote those, who adhered to and were members of, that great society which in the creed is called The Catholic Church. " I am a catholic then, because I am a Christian ; and I reason in the following manner: 1. Having been conducted, as has been stated, to the threshold of divine faith, am I not bound to receive as undoubted truths, whatever God in his goodness has taught me by his Son 3 without demur and without wavering ; not enquiring whether they accord with my own preconceived .notions, or with the relations and analogies of things conceived in my mind ? 2. " Would not such demur and wavering, and such enquiry, argue pride and a culpable want of confidence in that Being, whose wisdom, and power and goodness, and love for his crea- tures, we know to be without bounds ? 3. " But how am I to learn what truths those are which Gad has revealed ? 4. " Am I to learn them for eighteen hundred years have now elapsed since first they were delivered am I to learn them from those records, called the books of the New Testament, wherein are deposited many words and actions of our Saviour's life and conversation, as likewise many rules of belief and prac- ticeor may those truths be collected from any other source ? 5. " To satisfy this difficulty, should I not enquire whether any rule has been prescribed, which it is my duty to follow, and by following which a I shall learn in perfect security the truths in CONCLUSION. 389 question ; conscious that, without such rule to guide me, I must be liable, from the very character of mind, to fall into misconceptions and error ?" 6. " I now turn to those scriptures, and, perusing them with respectful caution, I find that, in giving his last instructions to his apostles, Christ bids them Go and teach all nations, . . teaching them to observe all things whatsoever he had command- ed ; and he promises to be with them all days even to the end of the world. (Matt, xxviii.) In the gospel of St Mark, c. xvi. I find the same injunction repeated, with the threat that he who believeth not the gospel which shall be preached to every crea- ture, shall be condemned." 7. " This is the ordinance or rule which I sought : and by it, I plainly see, two things are established : first an authority which is to point out to me, by teaching, what I am to believe ; and secondly a duty if I will be saved of listening to and obeying that authority" 8. " But I cannot discover that any command is given of committing to writing what our Saviour had taught, nor any reference made to books that might be written : Go and teach is the simple mandate : and as during the lives of the apostles there was no written word that could be a rule, under what new injunc- tion is the rule of teaching set aside, and that of scripture-inter- pretation substituted ?" 9. " The authority then of which I speak, was first lodged with the apostles to whom it was directly committed ; but as they, in a few years, would be called away from their labors, and Christ promised that he would be with them to the end of the world, must not this promise include them and their successors in the ministry of the gospel ?" 10. " Should it be restricted to the few years of the lives of the apostles, would Heaven, 1 humbly ask, have sufficiently pro- vided for the perpetuity of that faith, the foundations of which had been laid at such a vast expence of supernatural means ?" 11. " In the successors, then, of the apostles, I conclude, was to be lodged when they were gone the same authority of teaching ; and to the faithful was to descend under the same menace of condemnation the duty of receiving what they should be thus taught." 12. " Still, this being allowed me, must it not be proved in order to ascertain the genuine character of these teachers 'that the line of their succession from the apostles, during eighteen hundred years, has not been broken ; and moreover, that no- thing at any time has been added to, or taken from that depo- sit of sacred truths, which was originally committed to the apostles ?" 13. " Doubtless, this must be proved: First, then, I look to the promise of Christ that he would be with the pastors of '390 CONCLUSION. his church to the end of the world. Secondly, I turn to the annals of history, in which is recorded the succession of those pastors the object of my research and I particularly select the succession of the bishops of Rome. Thirdly, I institute a simi- lar enquiry through a similar research, on the points of belief." 14. " The result of this investigation is That a line of suc- cession in that church may be traced distinctly and incontro- vertibly ; and that whether 1 take the whole code of belief, or which is more easily accomplished select any one article ; state it as it is now publicly taught; and pursue it through the popu- lar books of instruction, and the writings of those who, in every age, have recorded its doctrine I am, invariably, brought to one conclusion, that the catholic belief of the nineteenth cen- tury, in no part differs from the belief of the early ages, that is, from the belief of the apostles." 15. " Here I rest in perfect security : my reason has led me to a guide, and to that guide I submit my judgment, on all those points which it has pleased God to reveal, and his church proposes to my belief. I have said ; why I am a ca- tholic." " But let it not be imagined that, because the catholic bows in humble submission to the voice of the teaching authority, on such points, and so far, as Christ has commanded, that his liberty, on other subjects, is abridged, or that, on such sub- jects, he is not as free to reason, to discuss, to receive, or to reject, as the freest man can wish. So it was of old: Of every tree of the garden thou may st freely eat, said the Lord to Adam: but of 'the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it : for in the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die. (Gen. ii.) Here was a restriction ; and shall the descendants of Adam think it much to be restrained where the utmost licence of thought could lead them to no certain knowledge ? When our first parents did eat, we know who told them, that their eyes should be opened, and that they should be as Gods, knowing good and evil. I was noc aware, that the exercise of private judgment had been so early recommended." *' Under what misconception, now, has it been made a subject f reproach to catholics, that the use of reason is forbidden to them ? I have led the reader through a series of investigation, composed of fifteen members ; which* investigation, it is plain, to be completed must be carried on to a much greater length. And every catholic, whose circumstances will allow it and whose capacity will bear him through, is invited to pursue a similar en- quiry ; from which the avenues to his faith will be best secured, and himself be always ready to satisfy every one " that asketh a reason of that hope which is in him." " Secondly. Much has been written on the use to be made of the fathers, and on their authority in deciding controverted CONCLUSION. 391 points of doctrine. Their use regards, chiefly, their testimony - and may be considered as limited to their being witnesses to the doctrines which they had received. What their characters may be as writers on general subjects, or what their style of composi- tion, is foreign from my plan to consider. I observe, when they speak of points of essential belief, that they uniformly hold the same language the language of St Paul declaring that what they received that they deliver. They give nothing new ; speak of nothing new but error ; and, to every attempt at innovation they as uniformly profess themselves hostile." " The testimony, then, of these personages not conspiring to the maintenance of any preconcerted system ; often separated by distance of space and time ; not speaking the same language some being Greeks and others Latins is irresistible. It is not their reputation for piety, for candour, nor for orthodoxy, that carries conviction to the mind of the reader for the testimony of Tertullian, when a Montanist, to the fact of his having receiv- ed such doctrines, is little less than before his defection but the simple circumstance of united testimony." " In the second and third centuries the authorities are less numerous, from the obvious reason that fewer works on religion were then written ; or that which to us is much the same fewer have come down to our times. But it has often excited my surprise, that all our doctrines can even from them be so dis- tinctly traced when no opposition to 'their truth called for any direct testimony. On these occasions, however, that is, before the subtlety of error made it necessary to be more accurate, it was very natural, that teachers of the people and writers should be more loose and unguarded in their expressions. And so it was. St Jerom, I recollect, remarks speaking of some fathers who wrote before the Arian controversy that their words might not have been always accurate ; and the same apology on other sub- jects has been made for Lactantius and other writers. They spoke without fear of being misunderstood 5 using such phrases as were in common use. But when that heresy and those arising from it the errors of Nestorius and Eutyches had made it necessary to adopt a language of more precision, writers of in- ferior talents and acquirements became more guarded and more correct." " A man, of common candour, being aware of this, will know how to judge as he investigates the opinions of those early days. Before any controversy had arisen on a particular point of doc- trine, he will not look for the same precision as after Arius and Nestorius had caused litigation ; and he will be disposed to make allowances for the case." It may be expected" continues Mr Berington, " that I shall claim "this allowance on the subject of Christ's presence in the eucharist; a point which, during the centuries of which I 592 CONCLUSION. am speaking, had experienced no contradiction : but I shall not j with such fulness and decision is the doctrine every where an- nounced. Still, I will not deny, that a captious controvertist may, on this and other points, extract some few passages, not al- ways so full and explicit, which he may think himself at liberty to make use of, should the candour of his mind not incline him to compare passage with passage ; to explain what may seem ambiguous or loosely worded, by what is clear and precise j and finally to decide not from detached clauses but from the nrited evidence of those who, during the period of the century, wrote incidentally or purposely on the subject." *' Having mentioned the subject of the real presence, and observed how full and decisive on it are the sentiments of the early fathers, I may be allowed, perhaps, to introduce the ana- logous declaration of the great innovator, Luther. He is defend- ing his own opinion against those who making use of the liber- ty which he had promulgated of expounding the scriptures by their own judgment denied the real or corporeal presence." " That no one among the fathers," he says, " numerous as they are, should have spoken of the eucharist as these men do, is truly astonishing. Not one of them speaks thus : There is only bread and wine , or the body and blood of Christ are not present. And when we reflect how often the subject is treated and repeat- ed by them, it ceases to be credible it is not even possible that, not so much as once, such words as these should have dropt from some of them. Surely, it was of moment that men should not be drawn into error. " Still, they all speak with such precision, evincing that they entertained no doubt of the presence of the body and blood ! Had not this been their conviction, can it be imagined that, among so many, the negative opinion should not have been uttered on a single occasion ? On other points this was not the case. But our Sacramentarians, on the other hand, can proclaim only the negative or contrary opinion. These men, then, to say all in one word, have drawn their notions, neither from the scriptures, nor the fathers," Defensio Verborum Came, T. viii. p. 391. Edit. Witeriberga, 1557. " These authorities so chained his mind, that no effort could release him. He blushes not to add : This I cannot nor am I willing to deny, that had any one, five years ago, been able to persuade me, that in the sacrament were only bread and wine, he would have laid me under great obligations to him. In the discussion of this point, studiously anxious, I laboured much : every nerve was stretched to extricate myself, if possible ; for I was clearly sensible, that nothing would have given so much pain to the Roman bishop." Ibid. p. 502. What will our friend Peter Plymley say to this ? For more upon the subject 1 would refer him to the article BERENGARIUS. CONCLUSION. 393 Mr Berington proceeds : " This extraordinary man (Luther) could shew some respect for the fathers, when their opinions served to strengthen his own ; but when they differed, all re- spect ceased. Our Henry the VIII. had entered the lists with him, in defence of the sacrifice of the mass ; the friar replied : To establish this sacrifice Henry has recourse at last to the words of the fathers. Heaven well knows, that 1 care not if a thousand Austins, a thousand Cyprians, or a thousand others like them were against me. God cannot err and deceive ; Austin, and Cyprian, and all the vessels of election, might, and did err." Contra Regent. Angl. T. ii. p. 334-. This may pass with Luther: but the more humble man will ask If the testimony of the fathers maybe disregarded -by what other means shall that chain of evidence be supported, which, through the lapse of ages, unites, and has united, the successive generations of believers, in one faith with Christ and his apostles ? I adduce therefore with pleasure the testimony of two divines of the established church, whose least praise it was, that they professed themselves the disciples of this arrogant and inconsistent reformer." " Dr Cave thus speaks : " In, this are all protestant divines, with few exceptions, agreed that the scripture is the first and only- infallible rule of faith and morals: and that the next place is due to the fathers, as far as they accord with, and approve and confirm by their testimony, the truth contained in the scripture. We revere the fathers; not indeed as judges of the faith, but as witnesses, who deliver to us with fidelity what was, in every age, done and believed. They hand down to us the sacred deposite of faith ; and clearly point out what, and when, heresies arose, and the article of faith which they opposed. The more ancient those witnesses, the stronger is their testimony, and our reliance on them, the more firm. Thus did those champions of old, Tertul- lian, Augustine and others, proceed in their defence of the Chris- tian religion unceasingly appealing to their forefathers ; and among them no one has treated this argument more successfully than Vincent of Lerins, in his Commonitorium against here- tics." Ep, Apolog. in append. T. ii. Hist. Lit. p. 68. Oxonii, 1743. " The same is the language of Dr Mills, in his dedication of the works of St Cyril of Jerusalem to the Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery : Although you do not allow, that the authority of the fathers is sufficiently strong to establish a new dogma of faith ; yet it is usual with you to adduce them as witnesses of the faith once delivered to the saints, and as most faithful inter- preters of the word of God. For since the many controversies, with which the church in our days is harassed, have arisen from the contending parties not admitting any certain rule whereby to interpret the scripture different authors drawing 394 CONCLUSION. from the same words different, and absolutely contrary meanings these contentions would be happily terminated, if that which was held by the church at all times, and in all or most places, were on both sides admitted as true, certain and indispensable. And I myself have heard you reject not without indignation the scriptural interpretations adduced by the Arians and Socini- ans, for no other reason, than because they are most remote from the sense of the fathers." " It is proper to add, that many of these fathers, to whose testimony we have recourse, were themselves bishops of the churches which the apostles had founded ; to which churches an appeal was always made against the heretics, in favour of the true doctrine. What the apostles taught," observes Tertullian, " that is, what Christ revealed to them, may best be learned from those churches which the apostles founded." He then adds : " all doctrine that agrees with the faith of those original and mo- ther churches, is to be deemed true: all other is false; not coming from the apostles, nor from Christ, nor from God." This he repeats ; and the same as will be remarked in the perusal of this bookis repeated by others. If then the authority of these churches be such - r such also, must be the authority of their teachers ; not only when they preached the doctrine which they had received, and their churches preserved ; but likewise, when they committed the same to writing, and attested its truth." " Thirdly. The voice of general councils, in our opinion, is most decisive. They form, in a certain sense, the representative body of the universal church. Yet councils, whether general, or national, or provincial, proceed on the common principle that guides individually the pastors of the church. Having enquired on the controverted point that has assembled them together, by turning to the annals of former times what was then taught, as confirmed by the scriptures and the testimony of the fathers ; and having declared what they themselves the pastors of the faithful and the guardians of the deposite of faith have received $ they pronounce that to be error, which is not conformable to the truth thus authenticated 5 and by a new definition, if judged ne- cessary, re-confirm this truth. To remove ambiguity, it may sometimes appear expedient to adopt a new term ; as was done at Nice when the word Consubstantial against the error of Arius was received into the Creed. But nothing new in the doctrine is thereby announced ; a more explicit profession alone is brought forward, or, as it has been well expressed, " in consequence of the sophistries of error, a clearness and accuracy are adopted, which the contested articles while uncontested did not stand in need of." " In councils then r is a greater solemnity, when the pastors of\ the church with united voice proclaim what is the doctrine that '<' hath been transmitted to them. This they did in the first gene* 195 ral synod, held at Nice against the errors of Arius ; and the same process was followed at Trent at a much more recent pe- riod when the innovating spirit of the times called for a like in- terference. But let me repeat it the same principle, on all points of faith, directs the proceedings of councils, that is the guide to each individual prelate, in instructing the flock com- mitted to his charge : What I have received, that I deliver to you. Discipline which is subject to the alterations of time and place, allows other modes of proceeding." " Fourthly. During the first eight centuries, there was not a shade of difference in the doctrines of the Greek and Latin churches : their sentiments were precisely the same on every in dividual article of faith. All were catholics ; arid so a few points excepted have the Greeks continued down to the present day. In the ninth century the schism began, and has never since been completely closed ; the points of disunion, principally, being the primacy of the Roman bishop over all the churches ; the ad- dition made to the creed of Constantinople, usually called the Nicene creed, concerning the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Son ; and the use of unleavened bread at the altar, by the Latins. The ambition of Photius, patriarch of the imperial city of Constantinople, first fomented the quarrel; which much of the same spirit, I fear, has since upheld." " Owing to this schism it has been, that many persons not at- tentive to dates, but attentive to the present difference of opinions, have incautiously fancied, that the Greek and Latin churches at no time thought alike ; arid that the points on which they differ are many, and not the few which I have mentioned. To ob- viate this mistake on the first head, it is necessary to notice, as we pass from century to century in our course of reading, and from father to father with what uniformity they utter the same sentiments, whether members of the Greek, or of the Latin* rite." " This unity of belief, so observable in the early centuries which must be viewed as an essential mark of the church of Christ as it rests on the immutable nature of truth, and is se- cured in its perpetuity by the means so often stated, must if we reasoned only from moral probabilities ever continue. The public mind, it will be admitted, has been often agitated, and often divided by discordant opinions, arising from the disputes of theologians on a variety of subjects ; though oftener such dis- putes at least amongst us in the West gained not the ear of the multitude. As far as it went, this was an evil ; but it is an evil inseparable from that liberty of thought and speech, which cannot be restrained. But, in the heat of the warmest alterca- tions, no discordance was, at any time, discoverable, on the points of general belief, and the authority connected with them. This fact is deserving of notice, and must appear more so, when through the progress of thirteen centuries which followed the 3 D 2 396 CONCLUSION. times of which I have spoken we contemplate the earlier events only that is, the state of the European kingdoms, invaded and occupied by barbarous nations ; the monuments of ancient days, in literature and in arts, destroyed ; the venerable language of Rome merging in foreign dialects ; and but the picture by too many writers is too deeply coloured the whole face of the moral world more or less disfigured by ignorance, superstition and in- discriminating credulity. In the last, from the wider spread of heresies, andthe portentous conquests of Mahomet and his fol- lowers, the case was worse. Yet the faith of the Jeroms and the Chrysostoms was not affected : the number of its professors was curtailed ; but wherever that faith was, there it was one and entire. Surely the hand of that Being-, who promised to be with his church to the end of the world, is in this visible ; protecting and upholding, what I called the work of his mercy." " To the other moral causes of the perpetuity of faith, must likewise be added, in the West, the vigilant superintendance of the Roman bishop ; which vigilance, as in the darker ages it be- came more necessary, was more active j while his chair with which all churches held an intercourse served throughout as a centre of union to all. Let me also add, as another preservative of unity in faith, the continued prevalence of the Latki lan- guage in the public service of the church. The culture of this language, and also that of Greece, while it prepared the ehris- tian minister for the discharge of his public functions, preserved them both from extinction ; tended to give some relish for the learning of former days, and with it an anxiety nbt to let perish the choicest monuments of that learning ; and, should a better era arise, it would be at hand to aid the reviving cause of letters." " The sum of these observations, which I am compelled to close, may be comprised in a few words. We believe that all the points of catholic faith exclusively, as likewise such other points as are common to us ard other Christian societies, were origi- nally taught by Christ, and by him communicated to his apos- tles, to whom he gave a commission to go and teach the same to all nations - 9 promising, at the same time, that he would be with them to the end of the world. This body of Divine truths those apostles, we believe, delivered pure and unaltered, as they had received them to the nations which they converted ; and to those men particularly, whom they appointed to be their successors in the ministry. The form of teaching, ordained by Christ, was thus established. But, as daily, in the progress of time let us say, by the end of the first century men began to recede further from the days of Christ and his apostles, a neces- sity arose, that every preacher of the Christian doctrine should prove to his hearers, that the points which he delivered as di- vine truths, were really such ; that is, were those which Christ CONCLUSION. 397 and his apostles had taught. His own word, it is plain, could not here suffice. He had recourse, therefore, to the aid of tes- timony : to the testimony of those who had conversed with the apostles, and had been instructed by them, could any such be found ; or to such documents as they might have left : and he had recourse with peculiar confidence to those writings which now began to be circulated, and were received as authentic in the churches. These writings we call the books of the New Testament, which were then carefully preserved ; and, in their integrity, have been transmitted down to us." " Thus is the use of these scriptures at once made manifest; and, as time goes on, their use in the same sense, remains ; while to them as an additional testimony, continue to be super- added the works of the fathers. These attest, century after century, what are the points of faith which were received, and were delivered. Through this channel, then, as St Paul ex- presses it, of receiving and delivering, all the truths taught by our Saviour Christ, are transmitted to us in an uninterrupted series by the pastors of the church ; which truths the scriptures confirm, while the writings of the fathers accompany and attest the legitimacy of their descent." " The following passage from Bossuet will not be foreign from our purpose. Reasoning with the Calvinistic minister Claude in a beautiful strain of eloquence, he thus proceeds : " There was no time when a visible and speaking authority did not exist, to which submission was due. Before Jesus Christ, that authority, among the Jews, was in the synagogue ; when the synagogue was 011 the point of failing, Jesus Christ himself appeared : when this divine personage withdrew, he left a church, and with it his Holy Spirit. Tell me, that Jesus Christ once more appears upon the earth teaching, preaching and working miracles; I want this church no longer. But if you take her from me, again I must have Jesus Christ in person, speaking, instructing, and deciding by miracles, and with an un- erring authority. But has he not left, you say, his written word ? He has : a word holy and adorable ; but it is a word that may be handled and expounded as fancy shall direct; a word that remains silent under every interpretation. When difficulties and doubts arise, then I must have some external guide that shall solve those difficulties, and satisfy my doubts ; and that guide must be unerring." Conference avec M. Claude, p. 129. "I will close with the character of a catholic, as drawn in the fifth century by Vincent of Lerins : " He is a true and genuine catholic, who loves the truth of God, his church and its members ; who to his religion and his faith prefers nothing not the authority of any man not wit, not eloquence, not philosophy ; but who looking down upon these things with in- 398 CONCLUSION. difference, and firmly fixed in his belief resolves to admit and to adhere to that only, which from ancient times he knows to have been universally received." Commonit. c. xx. p. 346. In necessariis unitas, in dubiis libertas, in omnibus charitas. By this golden rule, the intelligent reader will be enabled to appreciate the principles of the discordant sects enumerated in this Dictionary I and the Editor himself is willing to submit to its correction -whatever he may have incautiously advanced not reconcileable with its genuine spirit. If he has, in any in- stance, exceeded the boundaries of charitable animadversion where the erroneous maxims of fellow-christians seemed to him to require unqualified disapprobation, he begs permission to disavow, on such occasions, all personal hostility, and all in- tentional endeavours unnecessarily to wound their feelings. ERRATA. Read Edinburgh, instead of British, Encyclopedia, art. CULDEJES. Wittenburg, instead of Wirtemberg, art. LUTHER, &c. NEWCASTLE : PRINTED BY EDW. WALKER, PILGRIM-STREET. 0229