LIBRARY OF THE University of California. Mrs. SARAH P. WALSWORTH. Received October, 1804. <^ccessions No.S^^^bo- Class No. ;\ .\ ' t •■ ^v::^" :^- \ ? V ^ p.. MORNINGS AMONG THE JESUITS AT E M E jBmg Notes of ContJersations l)elb toitf) certain Sesnits on tl)e Subject of Beligion in t^e Cits of Eome. ( *\ REV. M. HOBART SEYMOUR, M.A. NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, 82 CLIFF STREET. 184 9. SfHi^ CONTENTS. Introduction Page^S CHAPTER I. An Ordination — A Visit of the Jesuits — Explanation of my Views — The Laying on of Hands — The Priestly Power of Absolution and of Sacrifice — The Religious Movement at Oxford — The Rehgious Move- ment in Germany — The Nature of the Absolving Power — Whether Judicial or Declaratory — The Opinions of the two Churches com- pared ». 12 CHAPTER n. The Grossness of some Superstitions — Whether sanctioned by the Church of Rome — Contrast between the Religion of the English and the Ital- ians — The Virtue of miraculous Pictures — The Reality of their Mira- cles asserted and explained — A Convert in a Nunnery — Parallel be- tween Eve and Mary — The Religion of Christ becoming the Religion of Mary — The Nature of this Process explained — Mary more Merci- ful than Chiist 35 CHAPTER HI. A Visit from a Convert to Romanism — Argument drawn from his Ex- perience of Happiness — Motive to rest entirely on the Infallibility of the Church — The Infallible Tribunal among Protestants contrasted with that among Romanists — Arguments for InfallibiHty — The Scrip- tures — Tradition — The Fathers 61 CHAPTER IV. The Death of a Convert — Administration of five Sacraments— Prayer through Mary heard sooner than through Christ— Argument from Experience — The Madonna of the Augustinians— The Means by which Saints hear Prayers — God a Mediator to the Saints — Opinions of St. Chrysostom— The Influence of the Worship of Mary— Mary more Compassionate than Christ 96 IV CONTENTS. CHAPTER V. Invitation to a Polemical Discussion — The Prohibition of the Scriptures for Sale at Rome — Universal Ignorance of the Sacred Volume — Sal- vation only in the Church of Rome — Infallibility of the Popes neces- sary to be believed — Whether there be Salvation in the Church of En- gland — The Church of Rome has never claimed Infallibility . . Page 124 CHAPTER VI. Conversation with the Professor of Canon Law — The Fdte at the Jes- uits' Church, closing the Year — The Question of Infallibility residing in a Council or in a Pope — Seven Signs or Tests by which to disceni when the Pope is Infallible and when Fallible — The alleged Unsuit- ableness of the Scriptures as a Rule of Faith — The same Argument applied to the Papal Decisions * 145 CHAPTER vn. Opinions entertained at Rome respecting the Movement in the Angli- can Church — The Bishop of Exeter and others at Oxford — Caution against Romans intermeddling with the Church of England — Sepa- ration of the Temporal from the Spiritual Power of the Popes — Ar- gument derived from the Success of the Missions of the Church of Rome — An Indian Tribe converted — Their holy Lives — Wonderful Miracle — Credulity prevalent at Rome — Inconsistency between two Doctrines of that Church — Transubstantiation and the Mass — The Im- maculate Conception — Human Merit — Indulgences 172 CHAPTER VIIL ' The Origin of the Catacombs — The Christians using them as a Refuge — As a Place of Worship — As a Burial-place — Forgotten and afterward discovered — Resorted to for Relics — A Visit to them — Description of their present State — Means or Tests for the Discovery of Relics — Collection of monumental Inscriptions found in the Catacombs — Their Character and Nature — A Conversation in the College of the Jesuits respecting them — Conclusion as to the Religion of the Primitive Church 202 3ffinrmngs amnng tljf ^tmib at %mt INTRODUCTION. In committing the following pages to the press, it is felt that some few words of introduction are required, to account for their origin and to explain their nature. Having visited Rome, not only to gratify and in- dulge my taste for the arts among the most exquisite sculptures and the most beautiful pictures, the great- est miracles of art in the world — having visited that city not only that I might look at the ruins — ^the glo- rious ruins, of the temples, and baths, and palaces of the conquerors of the world, and to wander among those scenes where lived and walked the heroes of the past, but also and chiefly that I might see and study the true genius of the Church of Rome, and judge for myself as to her nature and character, I felt it to be my duty to avail myself of every means in my power to obtain information on the subject. Two sources of information immediately presented themselves. One was derived from my own means and opportunities for personal observation : I there- fore carefully attended all the various services of the Church ; was a watchful observer at every procession ; attended every exhibition of relics ; was at every Q INTEODUCTION. church on all unusual ceremonials ; attended every- place at which the pope or the cardinals were expect- ed ; took my place at every ordination, at every fu- neral of cardinals or bishops, at every reception into a nunnery, at the celebration of every festival — in short, at every thing that could give opportunity for judging of the true nature and character of the system, as ex- hibited in its outward manifestation of services, cere- monials, and festivals ; and I am bound to acknowl- edge the debt of gratitude which I owe to some mem- bers of the Society of Jesuits, and to some lay gentle- men of Rome, for the extreme kindness and courtesy with which they facilitated the prosecution of my ob- ject, securing to me access to places where otherwise I could not have been admitted. The results of my observations thus made have already been published in my account of "A Pilgrimage to Rome." The sec- ond source of information was not so dependent upon myself, but was opened to me by circumstances as un- expected as they were gratifying. I allude to the opportunity of close intercourse with the members of the priesthood, by which I might learn their opinions and feelings, and receive their explanations of all that was passing around me. It arose from the following circumstance. During my constant attendance at all the services of the Church of Rome, I was observed by a Roman gentleman who held office in the papal court ; and, being acquainted with him, he remarked one day to my wife that I seemed much interested in these things, and asked whether I would not like to make the acquaintance of some of the clergy. Having learn- ed from her ray wishes to that effect, he called some INTRODUCTION. .7 days after to say he had been with his personal friend the Padre-Generale — the Father-General of the Jes- uits, and had mentioned to him my wish to enter into communication with the clergy, and he seemed to in- timate that this was sure to convert me to the Church of Rome. He added that the father-general had di- rected two members of the order to wait on me, to give me any information which I might desire. These gentlemen came in due course. They soon presented me to others. They introduced me to the professors of their establishment, the Collegio Romano, and thus a series of conversations or conferences on the subject of the points at issue between the Churches of England and Rome commenced and were carried on, as occa- sion offered, during the whole period of my residence at Rome. A portion of my notes of these conversa- tions constitutes this present volume of " Mornings AMONG THE JeSUITS AT RoME." I dealt with all frankness with these several gentle- men as to the object of their visit. They were under the impression, which they were at no pains to conceal, that I was disposed favorably toward their Church ; that I was one of those Anglican clergymen who nei- ther understand nor love the Church of England, and who, in a restless dissatisfaction and love of change, are prepared to abandon her communion for that of Rome, and who only wait a little encouragement, and perhaps instruction, before taking the last step. I was very careful to undeceive them, stating that I should be most happy to confer with them on the dif- ferences between the two churches, but that I could not do so under a false color ; that I was devotedly 8 INTRODUCTION. attached in judgment and in feeling to the Church of England ; that I looked on her as the Church of God in England, and the most pure, most apostolic, most scriptural of all the churches of Christendom ; that, without unchurching other churches, she was still the church of my judgment and of my affections ; and that I had never for a moment harbored the thought of abandoning her for any other church, and especially for the Church of Rome. My new friends, for such their subsequent conduct proved them to be, seemed surprised at the decision of my opinions, and expressed their wonder that I could refuse to hold communion with the Church of Rome. I stated that I felt very strong objections, as they appeared to me, against that Church ; but that, if those objections were removed — if they, who were priests of the Church of Rome, could remove them — if they, living at the fountain-head of that Church, could prove them futile, in that case they should find me free to act, and prepared to act on my enlighten- ed convictions, and I would, without hesitation, join their communion. They generally asked me to state my objections, as they felt assured that they would be able to remove them. This invitation led to a series of conferences or con- versations with some of these gentlemen. We rang- ed through a very large portion of the entire field of controversy between the Churches of England and Rome, and much was elicited that was perfectly new to me — new, chiefly as indicative of the opinions and feelings of the enlightened and learned members of the INTRODUCTION. d priesthood ; and I was sometimes startled at the opin- ions expressed and the feelings avowed, as exhibiting a phase of mind and feeling which has heretofore seemed to me incompatible with enlightenment and education. I have learned, and must bear about me forever the memory of the lesson, never again to re- gard the extremities of credulity as inconsistent with the most scientific attainments, or to suppose that what seems the most absurd and marvelous supersti- tion is incompatible with the highest education, or to think that the utmost prostration of the mind is in- consistent with the loftiest range of intellectual power. There was in some of my friends an extraordinary amount of scientific attainments, of classical erudi- tion, of polite literature, and of great intellectual acu- men ; but all seemed subdued and held, as by an adamantine grasp, in everlasting subjection to what seemed to them to be the religious principle. This principle, which regarded the voice of the Church of Rome as the voice of God himself, was ever upper- most in the mind, and held such an influence and a mastery over the whole intellectual powers, over the whole rational being, that it bowed in the humility of a child before every thing that came with even the apparent authority of the Church. I never could have believed the extent of this, if I had not witnessed it in these remarkable instances. They seemed to regard the canons of the Church precisely as we regard the decisions of Scripture ; and just as we regard any un- belief of the statements of Holy Scripture as infidel- ity, so they regard every doubt as to the judgment of the Church as the worst infidelity. It seemed A 2 10 INTRODUCTION. a9 if a doubt of it never cast its shadow across their roinds, But my friends argued in these conferences at a considerable disadvantage. They imagined that I was unacquainted with the controversy between the churches; that I was disposed in my principles and views to join the Church of Rome ; that I was already convinced that I ought to join her communion ; and that my objections were only a sort of make-believe. They imagined that I entered on these conferences in an easy, free, unprepared state, and without any view to controversy ; and they therefore were induced to express themselves more freely and openly, less guard- edly than perhaps they otherwise would have done. This placed them in some respects at a disadvantage, which I am bound in candor to acknowledge, and one that was particularly serviceable to me, as calculated to secure to me the more free expression of their real sentiments and feelings. But, at the same time, it was not without its disadvantages to myself. I dared not distinctly assume the position of a Protestant con- troversialist, as it would, in the first place, have led to their immediate withdrawal from all communica- tion with me, and in the next place, in case I exhib- ited any thing like a proselyting spirit, there was every probability my passports would be sent to me, with orders from the police to withdraw from Rome. This necessitated great caution on my part, and oblig- ed me to hold back many things that I might other- wise have urged, and in all faithfulness should have urged ; and it obliged me to confine myself to one ob- ject, namely, the obtaining information as to the sen- INTRODUCTION. 11 timents and feelings of the priests at Rome. If I could draw them out ; if I could elicit their real mind ; if I could ascertain the real nature of their religion, and their mode of argument as developed in free and famil- iar conversation ; if I could occasionally advance an ob- jection that might awaken a doubt, or suggest a new train of thought in their minds which might ultimate- ly lead to better things, then I should have obtained all I could under the circumstances reasonably hope or expect to, obtain. And thus we all labored, both they and myself, under certain disadvantages, and to this must be attributed, by the gentle and Christian reader, much of the peculiarities that characterize these conferences, and strip them of much of the point, and life, and spirit of antagonism which some persons might have expected. In all these conversations I acted for the best, and to the best of my feeble judgment. If I have done wrong, either in my close examination of the services of the Roman Church, or in my mode of conducting these conversations, I have only to bow my head in meekness, and pray that He whom I desire to serve may pardon his servant. I have now only to add, in reference to the accu- racy of these notes, that they were always written on the very day on which each conversation was held. While actually in conversation, I often made it a point to make a note of what they said, and my mode of doing so was not discourteous, but seemed at the time to be giving importance to their words, as if they ap- peared to me deserving of an accurate record. But on every occasion, without exception, the moment J 2 MORNINGS AMONG they left me I immediately committed the whole to paper. The conversations, as now presented to the public, are very little else than an accurate transcript of some of my notes thus taken at the time. CHAPTER I. An Ordination — A Visit of the Jesuits — Explanation of my Views — The Laying on of Hands — The priestly Power of Absolution and of Sacri- fice — The Religious Movement at Oxford — The Religious Movement in Germany — The Nature of the Absolving Power — Whether .Judicial or Declaratory — The Opinions of the two Churches compared. The day was far advanced when the hour appointed for the visit of the Jesuits had arrived. The morning had been occupied by me in attendance at the great church, or Basilica of S. Giovanni di Laterano. It is the Senior Basilica of Rome, taking precedence even of St. Peter's itself. The object of my attendance there was to witness the form of ordination. Ninety- two young men were that morning ordained, admit- ted into the various orders of the Church of Rome. They are seven in number, and I was glad of the op- portunity of witnessing the ceremonial; and certainly it was a deeply interesting sight ; for however I might dissent from the system of the Church, and however strongly I might feel at what might seem to be super- stitious, or superfluous, or unscriptural, it yet could not fail of being a touching and beautiful sight^ the self-devotion and vowed consecration of ninety-two men, in the flower and vigor of early manhood, to the THE JESUITS AT ROME. 13 service of God. As the several candidates for the va- rious orders performed the prescribed ceremonials, ac- cording to the rules of the Pontifical ; as I held the Pontifical in my hand, and carefully followed every step in its performance ; as I saw some standing, some kneeling, and some prostrate with face on the earth ; as I observed some receiving one order and some an- other, in different yet regulated forms ; as I saw the laying on of hands, the tonsure, the giving the chalice, the unfolding the chasuble, the tying the hands, the anointing the fingers, the washing, the communion, I could not but feel that the formalities were very pu- erile, but I felt still more my heart stirring within me in prayer that the Holy Ghost might indeed descend from above, and make them faithful and fearless in preaching the everlasting gospel of Christ. It was the cardinal-vicar who conferred the orders. I had returned home after this spectacle, and was looking over the Pontifical, examining a point which had much impressed me, when two visitors were an- nounced. They were two Jesuits. They came in the peculiar costume of the order. One was a priest, and the other a lay-brother ; but, according to the rule of the order, as observed at Rome, they were robed alike, the whole body, from the padre-generale him- self, to the lowliest lay-brother who is porter at the gate, being dressed in costume precisely the same. It consists of a black cassock, extending from the throat to the ankles, without any ornament beyond a little brass medal and chain appended to the waist. The cravat is white, but so narrow as to be scarcely ob- servable above the cassock, and over all is a black 14 MOBSmXQS AMOXQ doaky neat, plain, and whfaoat sleeves. The hat is remarkable for the great breadth of its leaf. It is not red like those of the cardinals, nor white like those of the camaldolines, nor decorated with rosettes and hands of orange, green, &^, like those of the prelates, all which seem so strange to onr English tastes. It is black, and tnmed np slightly at the sides, without any bow or other ornaments The costome, as a whole, is neat and seemly, and as el^ant and becoming as any eodesiastieal or academic costume can be. It certainly surpasses in this particular the style and appearance of the other nu»iastic or religious orders, for it bears the stamp of studied neatness and propriety, while that of some of tiie other orders is exquisitely grotesque and ridiculous. In a few momraits we all were as much at ease as the peculiar object and nature of the visit could per- mit. The interchange of mutual courtesies and some words upon general subjects soon led to the object of our meeting. The reverend padre opened it by saying that he had been directed to wait on me in consequence of my desire for information as^ to some particulars in the Church of Rome ; that he was informed that I was an Anglican clergyman who was wishing to withdraw from the Chnrdi of England, and to hold communion with the C^holie Church ; and that he came to as- fflst me, as fur as lay in his power, in carrying oat my desire. And he concluded by asking me, in an earn- est manner and in an under voice, whether there was any thmg particalar which I wished to communicate. I did not ohoose to noiiee tins soUo voce commnni- THE JESUITS AT ROME. jg cation, but I said at once that there must be some mistake ; that some one must have misinformed him ; for that I was an attached member of the Church of England ; that I had, as one of her clergy, held pre- ferment in her, but had resigned my appointment; that I was perfectly independent in my circumstances and my feelings ; that I had always been warmly op- posed to the Church of Rome, as well as sincerely at- tached to the Church of England; and that I had now visited Rome with a desire to see and judge all things for myself, to change, modify, or confirm my former opinions, after a free and fedr examination of every thing to which I might be so fortunate as to obtain access. He stated at once, and with extreme courtesy, the pleasure he should feel in facilitating my object, and expressed his readiness to give me all ibe information in his power ; but that he did not see why I should be unwilling to join the communion of his Church, since it was allowed by all parties thai there was a true Church at Rome, and that there wms no other than one, and therefore he thought that, as an An- glican clergyman, I might not be unwilling to do as did some others, namely, while at Rome, join in the communion of that church. I replied that, whether rightly or wrongly founded, I felt great and strong prejudices against the Church of Rome ; that all my feelings and experience were against her ; and that I felt so many objections and difficulties against communicating witii her, that tliere was much to be answered and remoTdd before 1 4xmld give him any hope of my joining her : but that I was 16 MORNINGS AMONG fully prepared to hear all that might be said in her de- fense, and that I believed myself sufficiently open to conviction, and sufficiently candid to acknowledge it, if convinced, and sufficiently fearless to act on it. He questioned me as to the nature of my difficul- ties, and suggested naturally to me that I should state my objections, that he might have the opportu- nity of removing them. I could not but acquiesce in this. It was precise- ly the position in which I desired to be placed. But I felt that my commencement must be with extreme caution, lest I should awaken suspicion and elicit act- ual opposition. I wished to be an inquirer rather than a controvertist ; and I was led to begin with a point that exactly suited my object with a man who imagined me to be one of those who, under the name of Anglican clergy, have all their ideas and feelings, all their minds and hearts with the Roman Church. The Roman Pontifical was in my hands at the mo- ment. I told him that I had attended at the ordination that morning at S. Giovanni di Laterano ; that I had observed what was to my mind a most remarkable omission, namely, the omission of the "laying on .of hands" as the act of ordination ; that, although there was at an early part of the ceremonial a laying on of hands, yet it was only for the^ purpose of designation, and not of ordination ; as designating the person to be afterward ordained, and not as the act of ordina- tion itself; that the candidates for orders were called ordinandi even after laying on of hands, showing that they were not regarded as ordained by that act, but THE JESUITS AT ROME. j^ only set apart to be afterward ordained, and that they were not called ordinati until the chalice was given to them, with the words " accipe potestatem^''^ &;o., '' receive power to offer the sacrifice of the mass for the living and the dead." I said that this showed that, in the Church of Rome, orders were conferred, not by laying on of hands with prayer, but by the de- livering of the chalice, &c. ; whereas, if, as some suppose in England, the virtue of orders in the apos- tolic succession can only pass through the hands of the ordaining bishop, there can be none such in the Church of Rome. In her the virtue or grace of the apostolic succession passes through the chalice, and not through the laying on of the hands of the bishop. He replied by saying that the ordination was a continuous act — one that commenced with the laying on of hands, and ended with the delivering of the chalice ; that though the former was for designation, and the latter was for ordination, yet with the former was connected the power of absolution, and with the latter the power of sacrificing ; that by the former was conferred the power of absolving sins, and by the latter the power of offering the sacrifice of the mass. He argued thus that it was to be regarded as one act. After some further conversation on this point, he went on to say that there were two distinct powers conferred upon a priest : one being inherent in his priesthood and inherent in every priest — a power over the literal and natural body of our Lord, that is, the power of transubstantiation ; the other being null and void unless with the sanction of the bishop; not in- herent in his priesthood, but ceded to the priest by the 19 MORNINGS AMONG bishop, that is, the power over his mystical or spir- itual body — in other words, the power of absolution. I said that I was to infer from this that a priest could celebrate mass, that is, could transubstantiate the bread and wine into Christ, and offer him for the sins of the living and the dead without the sanction of the bishop, but that he could not absolve the sins of his people without that episcopal sanction. He replied that this was precisely the case ; that he Gould celebrate mass without the bishop, but could not absolve from sins without the bishop ; that the former power was inherent in his priesthood, the lat- ter not. I felt that he had placed himself in a difficult po- sition by this statement ; so I remarked, If a priest has no power to pronounce absolution without the bishop's license, and yet can say mass without it, then there can be no efficacy in the absolution w^hioh he reads, and which the canon of the mass requires him to read. Assuredly, if he can celebrate mass of his inherent power, he can give absolution of his in- herent power ; for that absolution is part of the mass, and is, therefore, involved in it. His answer to this was very remarkable. He had no way of escape but one, and that one he did not hesitate to adopt. He said that the absolution in- volved in the mass is of no value or efficacy ; that it is only a general absolution of persons of whose sins the priest knows nothing, and of whose repentance he knows nothing, and therefore it is of no efficacy or value, and has no effect ; for, he continued, if the persons have repented, then God has already forgiven THE JESUITS AT ROME. 19 them, and if they have not repented, then this abso- lution in the mass can not help them. I was conscious of the advantage which I might derive from this statement, and I therefore took care to dwell on it and to reiterate it, that it might be- come an assumed point, an admitted principle between us, to be employed in our after-argument. I waited patiently till our conversation should take such a turn that I might avail myself effectively of so important an admission. The conversation immediately took another direc- tion. He asked me respecting the movement at Ox- ford, remarking that the Anglican Church was now in a most interesting stat6 ; that it was giving great promise of many and of better things ; that the late or present religious movement within her was now in- teresting all Rome, and Europe, and the whole world. And he concluded by asking me my opinion of the movement. This was the very last question that I wished to answer. I felt it might oblige me to avow my opin- ions sooner as well as more strongly than I desired. I feared the question might have been proposed with the view to test me — ^to ascertain my party, and thus to determine the course he should pursue. I knew that if I at once avowed myself a decided antagonist, he would withdraw from all further intercourse with me. I therefore answered his inquiry by saying that I had been careful to read all the " Tracts for the Times," which were the profession of faith with those among whom the movement originated ; that I did not agree with many of their statements and principles; and 20 MORNINGS AMONG that I thought that my reverend friend was mistaken as to their probable effect on the mind of the people of England — an effect of the very opposite character from that which seemed to be the intention of those who originated it. He asked me whether I did not think that they tended to create a similarity or union of the Angli- can Church with the Roman Church. I replied that such seemed to be the intention of the parties. They seemed yearning for a union with Rome, but that I apprehended a very different and op- posite result; that their proceedings would evoke, and indeed had already evoked, an antagonist spirit, which would be altogether too powerful for them, and I feared would do incalculable mischief to the Church. He said he was aware that the Anglican bishops in general had set themselves against the movement, but he seemed to treat their interference very lightly. He then begged of me to explain my idea of the manner in which the movement was likely to operate. I answered, that the Anglican Church stood be- tween two systems — ^between Romanism and Dissent. These were the two extremes, to one or other of which all who loved extremes were likely to precipitate them- selves. The party of the movement desired to draw her nearer and nearer to Rome — to give her more and more a similarity to the Church of Rome, and by that very course had led their opponents to run into the opposite extreme. It had evoked an antagonist spirit, that was sure to lead nearer and nearer to Dissent ; and I added, that my own conviction was, that the real evil, the impeynding danger, was, the people for- THE JESUITS AT ROME. 21 saking the Church of England, as a Church declining toward Rome, and then utterly overthrowing and de- stroying her — a danger like that which arose out of the proceedings of Archbishop Laud in the time of Charles I., namely, the utter subversion of the Church of England. He intimated that he had not seen the movement in that light, but rather regarded it as one likely to lead the Church of England toward the Church of Rome ; that all parties of all churches seemed agreed that the movement could not stop where it was ; that the active movers would come over, and, if honest in their statements and sincere in their opinions, must come over, to the Church of Rome ; and that so far, at least, the Church of Rome must be a gainer; that, however it might end for the Church of England, it must prove a gain to the Church of Rome ; that they could not remain as they were, but must go further ; and he felt that the course taken by such good men was certain to exert a great weight and influence upon others. I was silent, except so far as assenting to his opin- ion respecting the parties engaged in the movement. He observed this, and continued to say that there was a large section of the Church of England — and that, too, an increasing section — steadily and surely inclin- ing to the Church of Rome ; that thus a great divi- sion existed in the very heart of the Church of En- gland, and that thus there were many who would em- brace, and were embracing, the very system against which I objected ; and he added that although I might not be aware of the fact, yet he knew it from gources 22 MORNINGS AMONG of information that were not accessible to all, that multitudes in England were privately coming over to the Church of Rome. On my remarking in reply that his statement was very probable, and that the members of his order, the order of Jesuits, were likely to have very accurate in- formation, he said that the existence of such a divi- sion in the Church of England was a strong argument against my remaining in her, and that the multitude of good men leaving her and entering the Church of Rome was a further argument for my forsaking the one church and embracing the other ; in short, that it formed a strong objection to remaining in the Church of England. I said, in as quiet a tone as I could command, as if indifferent to the result of my words, that I did not see how his statement as to the facts, whether true or untrue, could affect the principle of the question ; that I thought the argument derived from the exist- ence of a division or counter- movement in a church was an argument that cut both ways ; that at that moment there was a division and movement in the Church of Rome, arising out of the exhibition of the Holy Coat at Treves ;^ and that several of the priest- hood were the leaders of the movement ; that these parties were calling for a change or reformation in sev- * This conversation was held when the excitement in Germany was at its height. The Roman government suppressed every newspaper of all nations mentioning it. The Roman people were profoundly igno- rant of it, and even the English learned it only through the means of private correspondence. Newspapers describing it were suppressed at the post-office, and not delivered even to the English residents. THE JESUITS AT ROME. 23 eral particulars ; that they were demanding that the sacramental cup should be given to the laity ; that some of them were actually administering it ; that they were celebrating their services in the vernacular tongue ; that they were calling for a rescinding of the laws on the celibacy of the priesthood ; that this move- ment occurring in Germany, was quite as marked in the Church of Rome as the movement at Oxford in the Church of England ; and therefore, I added, the movement in Germany was as cogent an objection to the Church of Rome, as the movement at Oxford was to the Church of England. He flushed and fired at this statement, declaring that the movement in Germany was nothing ; that they were only a set of rebels; that they were merely a few rebellious priests, who would soon be brought down. They were unworthy of notice, bad and rebell- ious priests, who would soon be reduced to obedience. I said that he seemed mistaken; that as the papal government excluded "the Times," and other English, German, and French papers describing the movement, not permitting the facts to be made known at Rome, it was possible he was not aware of the extent and im- portance of the movement ; that they circulated only those papers which were hostile to the movement, and that thus I apprehended he might be deceiving him- self as to the extent and importance of the movement, which had already succeeded to a considerable extent. My reverend friend was thoroughly upset and irri- tated by this turn of the conversation, and I was glad to let it pass to other topics, even though connected with the movement at Oxford. He observed that he 24 MORNINGS AMONG thought the Church of England very inconsistent to- ward these men and toward herself; that she admit- ted the ancient and Catholic sacrament of penance ; that is, as he explained it, she recognized the power of absolution, but that she did not exercise it ; that she went so far as to confer that power on her priests, but expelled them for exercising it ; that the Lutheran and the Reformed Churches had rejected the thing alto- gether, and were therefore consistent, but that the Anglican Church admitted and recognized the thing — conferred the power on her priests — but did not ex- ercise it, and was inconsistent. I said that I thought he did wrong to the Anglican Church ; that she recognized and held a certain power ; that she conferred this power on her ministers ; that those ministers exercised that power, and w6re not, as he supposed, expelled for it ; that it was their duty and constant practice to exercise all, neither more nor less than the Church designed to confer on them. I then, added that I feared he had misunderstood her formularies ; that she confers only a power to declare or pronounce authoritatively God's absolution and for- giveness of sins, and that all her ministers exercise, and can not help in her daily services exercising this power, which is all the Church confers on them, and that, therefore, she is thus far consistent. But as she does not pretend to confer a judicial power to judge the sinner and absolve the sin, as in the Church of Rome, so her ministers do not pretend to exercise that, and thus there is no inconsistency. His rejoinder to this was that our Lord conferred two powers, one to *' bind" and the other to " loose;" THE JESUITS AT ROME. 25 and that, as the bishops of the Anglican Church exer- cised the power of excommunication, they therein ex- ercised the power to '' bind" the sin upon the sinner, but never exercised the power of <' loosing" by abso- lution, taking away the sin, and that this was a great inconsistency. I answered that, by our laws, if a bishop excom- municated a person for any canonical fault, he rriust take off that excommunication, and again receive him, on his open repentance ; that if he thus exercises one power, he must, under these circumstances, exercise the other ; and that thus, if the excommunicating and restoring power of a bishop, peculiar as it was to the bishop, and not to the priest, was the power to 'y the system, and exhibited the worship of Mary in a new light, at least in a light in which I had never seen it before. He stated that there was a great dif- ference in the bent or habit of mind between English Protestants on one hand and Italian Romanists on the other ; that Protestants habitually let their minds dwell on Christ's teaching, on Christ working mira- cles, and especially on Christ's suffering, bleeding, dy- ing on the cross, so that in a Protestant mind the great object was Christ in the maturity of his man- hood, but that Romanists habitually dwelt on the childhood of Christ ; not on the great events that were wrought in maturity and manhood, but on those interesting scenes which were connected with his childhood. He then went on to say that this habit of mind led to the great difference, that as Protest- ants always dwelt on the suffering and dying Christ, so Christ in a Protestant mind was always connected with the cross : and that as Romanists constantly meditated rather on the childhood of Christ, so Christ in a Romanist's mind was usually associated with his mother, the Virgin Mary. He then continued to say that the constant dwelling of the mind in contempla- tion on the child naturally led to more thought, more contemplation, more affection, and, finally, more de- votion for the mother ; that when one thinks on all the little scenes of His childhood, dwells on the little incidents of interest between the child Jesus and the mother Mary, recollects that she had him enshrined in her womb, that she used to lead him by the hand, that she had listened to all his innocent prattle, that she had observed the opening of his mind, and that 48 MORNINGS AMONa during all those days of his happy childhood she, and she alone of all the world, knew that little child whom she bore in her womb, and nursed at her breasts, and fondled in her arms, was her God ; that when a man thinks, and habitually thinks of all this, the natural result is, that his affections will be more drawn out, and his feelings of devotion more elevated toward Mary, And he concluded by stating that this habit of mind was becoming more general, and that it was to it that he would attribute the great increase that late years had witnessed in the devotion to the Vir- gin Mary. My wife and myself were much struck with all this. It was, I must freely acknowledge, perfectly new to me, and greatly interested us. It was a new view of the system, of the means by which the sys- tem is spread, and quite a new phase of mind ; while the pleasing manner, and evident sincerity and en- thusiasm of the man, gave an additional charm to his words. We did not conceal the interest we felt in his statement, and he seemed pleased at his success, and continued : He said that all this devotion to Mary, however repugnant to the feelings and judgments of Protest- ants, was capable of being justified, or at least was capable of being accounted for on a principle very well known, and recognized among Protestants themselves. He said it was to be ascribed to the feeling universal among Romanists, that the Virgin Mary was more merciful, more gentle, and more ready to hear than Christ ; and he added, that among Protestants it was often thought that the Son, Jesus Christ, was more THE JESUITS AT ROME. 49 merciful, gentle, and ready to hear than God the Fa- ther, from their feeling that in the manhood of Jesus Christ there is that which creates a sympathy in Him with them ; and that in the same way Romanists feel that there is even more in the Virgin Mary common with them, so as to create still greater sympathy on her part. On my wife remarking here upon the unsoundness of the idea which he attributed to Protestants, name- ly, regarding the Son as more merciful, and gentle, and ready to hear than the Father, adding that the Father showed his love in giving his Son, as much as the Son in giving himself — on this he at once assent- ed that the principle was unsound and wrong, and in- volved a very false view of the Godhead, but that yet there were many among Protestants who held it in their ignorance ; and that many of them, influenced by it, do actually pray to the Son more than to the Father. They feel that the Son is Man as well as God, and that manhood insures a sympathy which makes him more accessible ; and that the Romanists feel that Mary is altogether of their own nature, and that this insures a more perfect sympathy, so as to make Mary more accessible than Christ, and that this feeling leads them to pray with more frequency, as well as with more confidence, to Mary than to Christ. It was impossible not to recognize the ingenuity of this, and, at the same time, it was as impossible not to acknowledge that there was too much justice in what he stated as to the feeling of many Protestants. But it was saddening indeed to the heart to witness the wiles and subtleties with which the fallen heart is C 50 MORNINGS AMONG ensnared and the fallen intellect entangled ; and still more saddening, even to fearfulness and trembling, to hear the Savior practically dethroned from his High Priesthood and Mediatorship, and one of his creatures exalted to his place, as the object of affection, devo- tion, and prayer, on the ground of so awful an error as that Mary is more merciful, more gentle, and more ready to hear than Christ. I knew the danger of speaking out — of speaking my opinions openly, and yet I could not let such a statement pass without some notice ; that, even if it had no effect on him, would at least clear my own conscience. So I spoke of the love of Christ — a love exhibited in leaving the heavens for us ; a love exhibited in all the sweetness of his words ; a love exhibited in all the benevolence of his acts; and, above all, a love exhibited in all the mysterious agony in the garden, the infinite sufferings of the judgment hall, and the awful scenes of Calvary — even a love still exhibited in the heavens, where he yet pleads for the sinner, as if heaven were no heaven to him if his people be not there ! And I asked how it was possi- ble that there could be imagined a Being more merci- ful, more gentle, or more ready to hear? '' God com- mended his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us ;" and << greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friend ;" and again. He pleads himself with us, <'Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb ? Yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee." Here indeed is love expressed and proved, and there is neither love expressed nor love proved by the Virgin Mary ; while THE JESUITS AT ROME. 51 it seems the basest ingratitude, the most heartless re- turn to a Savior of such infinite love, '< a love that passeth knowledge," to harbor for one moment the thought that it could be surpassed, especially by one who at the best is but a creature still. I do not think that this produced any serious im- pression on my companion ; and certainly it had no effect on his reasoning further than to say that he thought it a wrong principle for Protestants to regard Christ as more merciful than the Father, and so mak- ing that a ground for praying more frequently to him ; but that it was the very same principle, only applied to the Virgin Mary, that led the Church of Rome to regard her as more merciful than Christ, and there- fore to pray more frequently to her. I observed here that this took away the ground on which they prayed to Mary so much more frequently than to Christ ; and that, to say the least of the sys- tem, the praying to her more frequently than to him bore the complexion of idolatry — as lowering him and exalting her, and giving the love, the devotion, the prayers to Mary, which ought to be rendered to God alone. -' He rejoined by saying that there was a distinction always observed in the minds of the people between the worship rendered to Christ and the worship ren- dered to Mary. I replied, that although the more intelligent and enlightened of the Roman Church might understand and be able to maintain that distinction while in the act of worship, yet it was evident that the mass of the population, and of the children, were both incapable of 52 MORNINGS AMONG understanding it or of observing it. I added that the distinction of their theologians between Latria, Dulia, and Hyperdulia had never been clearly defined, and that I had never met a member of the Church of Rome, whether ecclesiastical or lay, who could clearly state the difference between them. In answer to this, he said that, however difficult it was to explain — and he acknowledged it was very dif- ficult, yet it was universally known and understood — that the youngest children and the most ignorant adults all recognized the distinction, and could never fall into any mistake respecting it; but that, feeling that Christ was the Almighty God infinitely above them, and that Mary was a creature like themselves, and of the same human feelings with themselves, they conceived she would have more sympathies with them, and therefore they prayed more frequently to her. To this I rejoined by again expressing my convic- tion that it was impossible that the mass of the poor and ignorant people could understand the distinctions which their most learned theologians were unable to explain ; that although they were told that latria be- longed to God, hyperdulia to the Virgin, and dulia to the saints — that although they were told of these three kinds of worship, yet they could not distinguish be- tween them, and most certainly could not act upon them ; that frequently they prayed in the same form for the same objects, and in the very same words, to God, and to Mary, and to the saints, without making the least difference between them. I then referred to the well-known prayer, to the saying of which, in the year 1817, an indulgence of THE JESUITS AT ROME. 53 three hundred days was attached. It was in the words : " Jesus, Joseph, Mary, I give you my heart and soul; " Jesus, Joseph, Mary, assist me in my last agony; " Jesus, Joseph, Mary, I breathe my soul to you in peace." Here, I said, was a prayer addressed to God, to the Virgin, and to a saint — addressed to one and all alike, addressing them for the very same objects, and making no distinction whatever between them. Here was a case in which the three degrees of worship were all demanded. There was God, for whom latria was required ; hyperdulia for the Virgin ; and dulia far Joseph. And I added, that as the people used the same words to each — employed the same form of pe- tition to each — asked for the same things from each — offered and expressed the same devotion to each, it could hardly be asserted that they were not worship- ing them all alike. He evidently felt this a great difficulty. He ac- knowledged that he knew the prayer, and that it was of frequent use among the people, and that at first appearance it looked objectionable ; but he insisted that the people knew the distinction so well, that no man, or woman, or child could possibly fall into the error of praying to God, and Mary, and Joseph alike. It might appear to me that their words, and form, and manner of worship being the same, the worship itself was the same ; but that nothing was more certain than that they observed a distinction in their own minds, and did not really pray to them, or worship 54 MORNINGS AMONG them alike, even in that prayer, which was addressed to Jesus, Joseph, and Mary simultaneously. I felt that reasoning further on this precise point was neither profitable nor judicious, and therefore only remarked that I was well able to judge of the form of prayer itself, and knew that it was addressed to all alike, but that, as to distinctions in the minds of the people, neither he nor I could be competent judges. Neither of us could read the heart, and there- fore neither of us ought to say any thing as to what may or may not be in the secret mind of others. Our province is to judge of the outward action, and that outward action was one of prayer and devotion to all the three alike. He made no objection to this, but directed our con- versation into another channel. It was some time be- fore I could bring him back, without any apparent ef- fort, to the same point. He then resumed it by allud- ing to something that had passed between us; and then remarked, as he had done on that occasion, that the devotion to the Virgin Mary was very popular ; that latterly it was become increasingly so ; and that he knew personally of many facts that proved it to be a growing devotion among all classes. • My wife remarked that she had been in conversa- tion with a religious Italian lady, who was lamenting the vice and wickedness that abounded in Rome, and who concluded by saying that her only consolation and hope for Rome was, that the devotion to the Most Holy Mary, santissima Maria, was so much on the increase ! He stated that such was the fact, and proceeded to THE JESUITS AT ROME. 55 relate some little incidents to illustrate it. He nien- tioned the frequency with which he hears the poor and simple people praying to the Virgin, singing hymns to her pictures at the corners of the streets early in the morning, appealing to her for protection in moments of danger ; and he detailed a scene which he had himself witnessed. It was the case of a very little child, that conceived itself in great danger, and immediately cried aloud to the Virgin, " O Mamma, Mamma Mia, Mamma Mia, O Mamma !" He sup- posed the little child so well taught to regard the Vir- gin Mary as her heavenly Mother, and so truly pious and devoted, as to have addressed these words to her ; and he was touched to tears — the tear glistened in his eye as he told the incident, being evidently touched at the idea of so much piety in so young a child. I remarked at the moment that to me it seemed as if the child was only crying for its own mother — at least it was like the cry of some child in England, who had never heard of the Virgin Mary. He said that in the case he mentioned there was no doubt that it was the cry of a child appealing to its heavenly Mother. He added that there was some- thing among the Italians — something in the Italian mind, and Italian feeling, that led them particularly to devotion to the Virgin ; that while in Germany the prayers of the Roman Catholics are directed to the crucifix, to the figure of our Lord upon the cross, it is quite otherwise in Italy, where all the devotion of the people, and all their prayers, .are addressed to the pictures and images of Mary ; that, however it 56 MORNINGS AMONG was to be accounted for, the fact was so, and that it was increasing, and likely to increase yet more. I remarked that his words seemed to imply that there was a process of change gradually going on in the Church of Rome in reference to the Virgin, and that thus the religion of Rome was becoming more and more the religion of Mary. I then added that I had seen some remarkable things in a work by St. Alphonso de Liguori. It was entitled " The Glories of Mary," and, among other things, described the vi- sion of St. Bernard, in which he beheld two ladders extending from earth to heaven — two ways by which the sinner could have access to heaven. At the top of one ladder appeared Jesus Christ ; at the top of the other ladder appeared the Virgin Mary ; and that, while those who endeavored to enter into heaven by the way of Christ's ladder fell constantly back and utterly failed, those, on the other hand, who tried to enter by the ladder of Mary, all succeeded, because she put forth her hands to assist and encourage them. I mentioned, also, that I had seen this as an altar piece in a church at Milan, where the two ladders were represented reaching frorn earth to heaven ; Je- sus Christ at the head of one, and Mary at the head of the other ; and while none were succeeding by the ladder of Christ, all were succeeding by the ladder of the Virgin ! I added that this was degrading Christ in order to exalt the Virgin, and that it was repre- senting her as a more merciful and effectual Savior than the Savior himself! I felt that I could apply no other language to this than that I could not im- agine a more hideous blasphemy than the language THE JESUITS AT ROME. 5^ of Liguori, or a more frightful sacrilege than such a picture beside the altar of a church. He said mildly that he could not approve of such things ; that such things undoubtedly were often said and often done, but that, for himself, he could not do otherwise than condemn them ; that, though he could not go so far as to apply to them such strong lan- guage as blasphemy and sacrilege, yet he could not but most strongly disapprove of them ; but still he be- lieved they were capable, when rightly interpreted, of being understood in an orthodox and unobjectionable sense. I then alluded to other pictures of the Virgin Mary, and I reprobated the practice of representing Mary as the chief or principal figure in the picture, and Jesus Christ being introduced as a subordinate figure — as a figure that was merely accessory to hers, a sort of ap- pendage to her^ as if he was introduced merely to show that the figure of a female was intended as the figure of Mary — as if, there being innumerable female fig- ures in such pictures, figures of various saints, it was necessary to introduce the child Jesus to show that this female figure was intended for Mary. The fig- ure of St. Catharine is recognized from all others by the introduction of the wheel. The figure of St. Mar- garet is similarly distinguished by the introduction of a tower. In precisely the same spirit, the figure of Mary is recognized by the introduction of the infant Jesus. But, as with St. Catharine and St. Margaret the wheel and the tower are mere accessories by which they may be recognized, so, in the pictures of Mary, the child Jesus is nothing else than a mere acces- C 2 58 MORNINGS AMONG sory to identify her ! I expressed myself strongly against this practice as an awful dishonor to Christ. It was making God the creator a mere secondary to a creature. He again expressed himself as disapproving of such pictures, saying that, although others approved of and liked them, yet he did not think them altogether jus- tifiable. I then called his attention to a large number of pictures to be seen in almost every church. They are designed to represent the Virgin Mary in heaven,, enthroned above the clouds, and encircled by angels and cherubs, and even there she is represented with the infant Jesus in her arms ! It could not possibly be that either the artists who paint, or the priests who suspend those pictures over the altar, suppose that Jesus Christ is now an infant still, in the arms of Mary in heaven — that He is still an infant in heav- en ; and therefore it is apparent that He is introduced, thus absurdly and improperly, as a mere accessory to distinguish the figure of Mary from the figure of any other ^aint ! I added that there were few things in the Church of Rome that so offended us, as dishonor- ing to Christ, as this system of making Mary the principal person, and Christ only the secondary per- son in their pictures. It seemed an index of the state of Italian religion, in which Mary seemed first, and Christ second in prominence, as if it was the religion of Mary rather than the religion of Christ. I added yet further, that it was singular that in the Church of Gesu e Maria in the Corso, where the sermons are preached in English for the conversion of the English, THE JESUITS AT ROME. 59 there are no less than three large altar pieces — pic- tures larger than life — representing the Virgin Mary with the infant Jesus in heaven ! He said that he quite agreed with me that such things ought not to be ; that the representing Mary as enthroned in heaven, and our Lord as a child in her arms, was ignorant, absurd, and untrue — contrary to right teaching; but that, unhappily, there was too much of it. He went on to say that the Church had never done it — never sanctioned it ; and although it certainly was done, yet as certainly it was without the sanction or approval of the Church. I said that the Church had tacitly sanctioned it. It had ever been held that where any doctrine or prac- tice had been propagated, and the Church had not in- terfered with it or condemned it, that she was then to be regarded as permitting it. I said that in this way the Church tacitly sanctioned the practice ; for as these things were not done in a corner, but were done in a large portion of the churches, so they must be known to the authorities and permitted by them. I alluded to a picture of the Virgin in the chapel un- der St. Peter's, with an inscription that it had mirac- ulously shed blood when struck with a stone ; and an- other picture of the Virgin at Arezzo, which had mi- raculously shed tears of grief at hearing the profane language of some drunkards ; and another picture of her that was shown at Rome, which miraculously wept before the whole congregation at the invasion of the French ; and, more strange than all, a picture of the Virgin and child at Lucca, of which it was af- firmed that, when some one flung a stone at the face 60 MORNINGS AMONG of the child, she most wonderfully transferred the child to the other arm, and thus saved it from injury — a wonder indeed for a mere picture to perform ! I ar- gued that all these, and a thousand similar things, were known to the authorities, and therefore the Church, by permitting them, did tacitly sanction them, and must be held responsible. He replied by stating that many of these things were undoubtedly untrue, but that many of them were undoubtedly true ; that in either case the Church had never given her authority to any of them ; that individual priests, and bishops, and even popes be- lieved and sanctioned them, but the Church had nev- er done so. He added that, although they were ex- hibited in churches, approved by the priests^ of those churches, and sanctioned by inscriptions on the walls of the churches, yet they were not authorized by the Church. The people might believe or might not be- lieve them, but the Church was not responsible. She left her people at liberty, and the responsibility lay with the priests and people themselves, and not with the Church. I said, in return, that I was to infer that a belief in such miraculous pictures of the Virgin Mary was not confined to the ignorant of the populace, but was received among the learned and enlightened of the priesthood. His words seemed to imply as much. He at once replied that he could not answer for others, but that, for himself, he did not believe the greater portion of such narratives ; that the Roman Breviary was full of such tales of wonders and mira- clesj as of men whose heads were cut off, and yet who THE JESUITS AT ROME. g^ afterward took up their own heads and carried them away in their hands ! He added, laughing, that he could not believe such things, of which some were un- reasonable and foolish, and even known and proved to be false and impossible. In the Church of S. Stefano Rotundo, among other representations of martyrdom, S. Dionysius is repre- sented as walking in full episcopal robes at the head of a procession, holding his head streaming with blood in his hands ! It is said that, after being decapita- ted, he quietly took up his own head in his hands, and walked away with it, to the no small astonishment of all ! This was as much as I could expect. I pressed him no more on the subject, and soon after our inter- view ended. CHAPTER III. A Visit from a Convert to Romanism — Argument drawn from his Ex- perience of Happiness — Motive to Rest entirely on the Infallibility of the Church — The Infallible Tribunal among Protestants contrasted with that among Romanists — Arguments for Infallibility — The Scrip- tures — Tradition — The Fathers. I EXPECTED the promised visit of a reverend gentle- man who had originally been a Protestant, and had entered the Church of Rome. Our conversation commenced, after his arrival, by my observing to him that I understood he had once been a Protestant, and that he had now become a Ro- (52 MORNINGS AMONG man Catholic. I expressed myself as much gratified in making his acquaintance, and being able thus to state my opinions, feelings, and difficulties to one who could understand and appreciate them. I had felt that much and many of the difficulties that pressed upon the mind of an English Protestant were altogether un- intelligible to a mind so peculiarly constituted and ha- bituated as that of an Italian Romanist ; that it might therefore be feared that my feelings could scarcely be adequately appreciated by our mutual friend, the Padre M , so as to enlist his sympathies ; but that, now that I had to converse with one who had himself been a Protestant, I felt assured that he would understand and sympathize with me. He replied by stating that he had always, until his arrival at Rome, been a Protestant ; that, after a long and painful struggle, he was convinced of the course which it became him to pursue ; that he therefore came to Rome, and, after some communication with the Jesuits there, formally renounced his former opin- ions, and was received as a member of the Church of Rome. He entered into some details of his former his- tory — in fact, the story of his life, and concluded by saying that he had never known peace or happiness until he had taken the final step; and then, and from that moment, he had experienced a tranquillity of mind and a satisfaction of feeling, a joy and delight which he had never known before. Instead of being disturbed in mind, he felt calm ; instead of being rest- less, he had peace ; instead of unhappiness, he had full satisfaction ; instead of uncertainty, he had the most perfect certainty ; and thus, from the moment of his THE JESUITS AT ROME. g3 seeking rest in the bosom of His Holy Mother the Church of Rome, like the wandering child in the bo- som of its loving mother, he experienced in her embrace and communion the most perfect happiness. He then added that he believed this happiness was experienced by all who, like him, embraced the Church of Rome; that he knew it to be the experience of oth^s as well as his own ; that he could not regard it otherwise than as the special gift and blessing of God — the reward of Heaven to those who entered his true Church ; and that, if I took the same step, I should assuredly be partaker of the same reward. I answered all this by stating that I could well un- derstand it, as I had seen very much of the same na- ture in the case of persons who had acted in a manner the very opposite to that which he had adopted. I had known many persons, who had been brought up from infancy in all the principles and practices of the Church of Rome, who, by the reading of the Holy Scriptures, or by hearing the preaching of the Gospel, had been led to entertain doubts as to the verity of their former faith, and to receive and adopt the simple and scriptural principles of Protestantism, and so to go on to the finalstep of embracing the communion of Protestants ; and such persons had often told me of the peace of mind and happiness of heart — the gush of joy and delight that they experienced in forsaking by that act what they regarded as the unscriptural and unstable errors of one church for the scriptural and stable truth of the other, speaking with rapturous ecstasy of peace and joy which they had never known before and of the sweetness of which they had previ- 64 MORNINGS AMONG ously had no conception. I added that I supposed this feeling among those who embraced the Roman faith and among those who embraced the Protestant faith — this feeling common to both alike, may arise from the casting aside the doubts and difficulties that had pre- viously occupied and absorbed the mind, but that I could not regard it as a reward or recompense for the final step — that I could not think that God would give this reward to both sides, to the Romanist for embracing Protestantism, and to the Protestant for embracing Romanism. He said, in return, that he had sometimes heard of such things, and that he was not quite sure whether he ought to doubt or acknowledge them ; but that, for himself and his own experience, he could entertain no doubt whatever. For years the conflict had raged within him ; principle struggled with principle ; one series of apparent truths held conflict with another se- ries of truths equally apparent, till he was tossed to and fro, and reeled like a ship upon the waves, now inclining to Protestantism, and then leaning to Ro- manism, till he felt all faith giving way, and, to save himself from infidelity, he resolved to embrace the Church of Rome ; that, if he had not done so, he must certainly have ended in infidelity ; that he had been rushing headlong into that awful abyss, till he was saved by entering the Church of Rome, and from that moment all was peace and joy, every doubt vanished and every difficulty fled away, and all was now tran- quillity and happiness. He then assured me that if I would only take the same course ; if I would resolve to fling away my doubts and difficulties ; if, instead THE JESUITS AT ROME. 55 of making objections, and answering arguments, and requiring reasons and proofs ; if, instead of all this, I would but fling them to the winds, and boldly and un- hesitatingly enter the Church of Rome, I should escape all the harassing anxieties of doubt, and all the awful- ness of infidelity, and receive my reward in the peace- fulness and tranquillity of soul which he had himself experienced, and which it was absolutely impossible I could ever experience otherwise ; for that I must else continue in doubt and difficulty, and that my doubts must increase, and my difficulty become still more dif- ficult, and my whole mind become so mystified, and perplexed, and entangled, that I must end in infidelity. There was no escape but in the Church of Rome. I could not but smile, while I thanked him for his anxiety about my doubts and difficulties ; and I as- sured him that I had never any doubt or difficulty as to the truth of all required of me as a member of the Church of England ; that the only doubts and diffi- culties of which I was conscious had reference, not to the Church of England, but to the Church of Rome; that, residing as I then was in the city of Rome, the seat of that Church, I was forced to consider whether I could hold communion with her ; that, having been invited to join myself to her, I felt doubts and difficul- ties of so cogent a nature, in my judgment, to such a step, that I had not done so; and that I never could do so, unless my objections to the Church of Rome were fully removed. I added that my previous communi- cations with Padre M arose from his proposal that I should freely state my objections, and thus give him an opportunity of an&wering and removing them. 66 MORNINGS AMONG He replied by saying that he had been under a mis- take, but that it need not affect our communications, as he could quite understand and enter into my feel- ings on the point, the more so as he had himself had long and sad experience of the same state of mind ; that he had indeed been bitterly tried and sadly per- plexed by difficulties, by prejudices, and by distastes ; that he was conscious of a feeling amounting to re- pugnance and loathing of some things, and seemingly an impossibility of believing others ; that in all these he had probably felt as many and as great difficulties as those which now stood in my way, and opposed my union with the Church of Rome ; and that, if he had listened to them, and continued to argue them out, as I seemed disposed to do, he should probably have con- tinued a Protestant to the present day, or rather, as he immediately corrected himself, he should probably have become an infidel, for he had brought himself to that pass that he had reasoned himself into the belief that the Church or religion of Rome seemed to him more natural, more reasonable, more consistent, and better put together than the Church or religion of Christ, so far as it could be gathered from the Scrip- tures, and thus he must become either a Catholic or an infidel, embracing the Church of Rome or none at all. He continued to say that my only as well as my most comfortable course was to fling aside all my men- tal difficulties, no longer to debate or argue the objec- tions, but, remembering they had all been already de- cided by the infallible authority of the Church, dismiss them forever from my mind ; that he had himself felt the advantage and comfort -of this, for that a doubt on THE JESUITS AT ROME. g7 any point — as, for example, on Transubstantiation — never crossed his mind. Whatever difficulties might exist, they never troubled him now, for he laid them all on the tribunal which had already infallibly decided them. I said, in reply to all this, that I could well under- stand such a course as an easy and effectual way of disposing of some difficulties, and that I had long been in the habit of acting on it. I fully felt the value, and, indeed, the necessity, for a tribunal — an infalli- ble tribunal, to determine the religious difficulties of my mind, and I knew and felt they could not be satis- factorily and safely determined by mere human au- thority, my mind being so constituted as to require the decision of Divine authority to satisfy it, and that I therefore felt the necessity of referring all to an in- fallible authority. My friend seemed to accept this as all he required, and was about to proceed with his argument, when I continued to say that I had found and felt that the Holy Scriptures were the Word of God ; that they were inspired by Him, and therefore were infallible ; that, being of Divine, and not mere human authority, they were an infallible tribunal, to whose decisions our difficulties should be referred ; that, by God's grace and mercy, my mind was completely subdued and sub- missive to them ; so subdued and submissive, that, no matter how opposed to previous convictions any state- ment might be, yet if only it was clearly maintained or justified by the Holy Scriptures, I at once bowed to it as of Divine and infallible authority. I added that the difference between him and me was, that he 68 MORNINGS AMONG bowed to a supposed authority, the inspiration and di- vinity of which I denied, while I bowed to an author- ity whose inspiration and divinity was admitted by all. He yielded to the decisions of the papal bulls, while I bowed to the decisions of the Holy Scriptures. His answer to this was precisely what I had antic- ipated. He acknowledged that, in appealing to the Holy Scriptures, the Protestants appealed to that which must be recognized as an infallible tribunal, but that he objected to the practical inutility of the Holy Scriptures to such a purpose, as unfitted and in- adequate to the wants of the Church. He argued that this unfitness and inadequacy arose from their liability to a variety of interpretations on the part of a variety of persons ; that if ten men could be pro- duced united on one interpretation, he -could produce ten more insisting upon some opposite or different one, and neither had right or authority to say the other was wrong ; and thence he argued that this liability to a diversity of interpretation was a fatal objection to the fitness or adequacy of the Holy Scriptures for the determination of controversies or the solution of difficulties. I rejoined to this, that although the argument has often before been urged in many works of controversy, yet it had never seemed to me to have weight in the matter for which it was adduced, because the very same objection, in all its force, was as applicable to the system of the Church of Rome. If appeal be made to the canon law ; if reference be made to the writings of the primitive fathers ; if the appeal be made to the decrees of councils ; if the reference be THE JESUITS AT ROME. 69 made to the bulls of popes ; if, in short, it be made to any documents supposed to contain the infallible mind of the Church, there will be found as great a diversity of interpretation as if the reference be made to the Holy Scriptures. They all have been and still are as liable to diversity of interpretation as the Holy Scriptures ; so that, if he could produce ten men for one interpretation, I could produce ten more for a dif- ferent interpretation ; and for every ten Roman Cath- olic authors whom he might adduce as teaching in- fallibility as residing in the popes and not in the coun- cils, I could adduce ten others teaching that infalli- bility resides in the councils and not in the popes. And I argued, that if a liability to a diversity of in- terpretation or variety of opinion were an adequate objection to the Holy Scriptures as the final tribunal of appeal in questions of religion, then a similar lia- bility must be an adequate objection against the writ- ings of the fathers, the canons of Rome, the decrees of councils, or the bulls of popes. They all were liable to diversity of interpretation and variety of opinion. He acknowledged frankly and at once that he thought my answer was sufficient, so far as those writings, canons, decrees, and bulls, that have been already passed or written, are concerned. They are now written documents, and, as such, they necessa- rily become liable to various interpretations in the hands of able and subtle men. They are all, there- fore, in the same category, and liable to the same ob- jection as the Holy Scriptures. He would fully ad- mit all this. But he thought that the great advant- age of the Church of Rome consisted in having one 70 MORNINGS AMONG who, as the head of the Church, was a living and speaking Judge, who could at any moment determine infallibly the question under debate ; and that it was better to refer such question to the infallible deci3ion of the pope, as head of the Church, than to the Holy Scriptures, which every disputant would interpret as suited his purpose. He then went on to speak of the comfort of being able to fling away the mental diffi- culties and intellectual doubtings with, which some minds were oppressed, stating how he had felt it in his own experience, and that I could never know the end of such difficulties and doubtings until, like him, I resolved to cast them all aside, and lay the respons- ibility of all the right or wrong, all the truth or er- ror connected with them, on the infallibility of this infallible authority. And he concluded by saying, in very complimentary terms, that as my mind was an inquiring one, and also a logical one, it was the more necessary for me to take this course, as it was evi- dent, from the very character of my mind, that I must end in infidelity if I did not embrace Catholicity. I thanked him with all courtesy for the compli- mentary terms in which he was pleased to describe the character of my mind, and I earnestly begged that he Would accept the inquiring and logical nature of my mind in apology for pressing so much for proofs and evidences before I received any important state- ment. The character of my mind required proofs, and must be my excuse to him for asking what proof, what evidence, what argument he could adduce, on which he would ask me to believe in the existence of any infallible tribunal on earth other and besides the THE JESUITS AT ROME. »7j Holy Scriptures. I observed that he had repeatedly- asserted the existence of such infallible tribunal ; that he had offered it to me as a panacea or remedy for all my difficulties ; that he pressed it as a resolver of all my objections to the Church of Rome; that he avow- ed it as the basis of all his faith as touching eternity ; and that he presented the whole system of his relig- ion, his faith and hope, and the important step of embracing the Church of Rome, as founded upon one point, namely, that there was a living and speaking infallible tribunal on earth other and besides the Holy Scriptures. I therefore asked with all earnestness and solemnity. As you say my mind is a logical one, so you will believe that my mind requires a clear, co- gent, unanswerable proof of the actual existence of such a tribunal ; and I therefore ask. On what evi- dence, proof, or argument, do you present it to me ? You say that all — Catholicity, Protestantism, infidel- ity, depend on the reception or rejection of it. Heav- en and hell depend on it. It requires a strong foun- dation, for it has much to carry. He assented to this, and said he would at once en- ter on the question. He then proceeded to say that one argument for the existence of this tribunal was Necessity. He referred to the variety of opinionsr that agitate and distract the Church ; to the conflict- ing elements which characterize the different sects ; to the difficulties that beset the pathway of every in- quirer ; to the doubts and conflicts that perpetually oppress the minds of thinking men ; to the difficulties apparently, perhaps really, insurmountable, that sur- round some minds — he referred to these as creating a 72 MORNINGS AMONG necessity for some tribunal. He said the minds of men were in doubt, and an infallible tribunal is nec- essary to resolve those doubts ; that there are divers- ities of opinions as to faith and practice agitating various sections of the Church, and an infallible tribu- nal is necessary to decide between them ; that there were sects and schisms innumerable, all maintaining opposite doctrines, and an infallible tribunal is neces- sary to determine and settle all. He thus based his argument on the supposed necessity. To this I replied by saying that in the Holy Scriptures we possess that which all Christian church- es regarded as the word of God, and therefore infalli- ble, and that the necessity of which he spoke was thus fully provided for. We have in them an infal- lible tribunal, and we see no necessity for any other, and especially such a one as decrees of councils or bulls of popes, which are often directly contradictory and opposed to one another, and all of which are lia- ble to diversity of interpretation as much as the Holy Scripture, so that we gain nothing by leaving the Scriptures and flying to them. I then added that he had assumed a necessity for some infallible tribunal, and I appealed to him, asking whether, as a logician, he was satisfied with his own argument ; whether it was good logic or sound reasoning to say that there are diversities of opinion, and therefore there is a necessity for an infallible tribunal, and therefore there is such a tribunal ; whether such a syllogism could be used in the College of Nobles, of which he was a tutor ; where was the vis consequentice by which he could conclude the existence of a thing from the im- THE JESUITS AT EOME. .yg aginary necessity or convenience of the thing. I ask- ed whether, as a logician, he really thought that so important a point as the existence of an infallible tri- bunal was sufficiently demonstrated by a mere opin- ion of the great convenience or necessity for it in the present state of the Church ; and I asked further, whether, as a Christian, he would think me justified in placing all my faith on that which seemed so in- adequately proved. He paused some time before he replied. It appear- ed to me, as I observed him, that he was struggling with himself as if he felt that the answer he was about to give was other than he wished. His man- ner was different from the confidence and self-posses- sion he had previously shown. After some moments, he smiled good-humoredly at his own argument, as it seemed to me, and he frankly stated that it did not satisfy himself; that he could not defend the logic of it ; and that, of course, the argument must go for nothing ; adding freely, and with a good-humored smile, that he thought I should not be justified la changing my religious views upon such grounds. I could not, after so frank an admission on his part, press further on the point ; but I asked him whether he could advance any further and more satisfactory argument, reminding him that he had asked me to cast aside all my reasonings, my doubtings, my diffi- culties, and my objections, and to lay the solution and responsibility of all on the infallible tribunal ; and that the argument ought therefore to be logical, clear, cogent, and unanswerable. He answered by saying that he could prove its ex- ^4 MORNINGS AMONG istence from the usefulness and convenience of such a tribunal^so useful and convenient that we must suppose a good and beneficent God must have grant- ed it to the Church. He then repeated his former statement, touching similarly on the doubts, the divi- sions, the conflicts, the sects of the Church ; and he argued that an infallible tribunal w^ould be so desira- ble, so advantageous, so consistent with the goodness and beneficence of God, in order to remedy these evils in the Church, that God may well be supposed to have established a tribunal so useful and convenient. I asked him quietly. Do you yourself think that your proving it to be convenient, or useful, or desira- ble for the Church is really proving that it does exist in the Church ? Do you yourself think that in logic you are justified in inferring the existence of any thing from the supposed usefulness of the thing ? He at once and with the utmost candor admitted that his argument had so far failed, that I should not be justified in believing the existence of an infallible tribunal on the grounds he had stated. He seemed perplexed, as if unprepared to enter further on the argument, or as if he had never before considered the point with sufficient care. I was much surprised at his apparent confusion, and could not well understand his being so unprepared on so important a question. I added, however, that the supposed convenience and usefulness of an infallible tribunal was the argu- ment most generally urged in its behalf — the argu- ment usually unfolded in writing, and urged in con- versation, at least so far as my personal experience extended, so that it seemed to me to be the main ba- THE JESUITS AT ROME. ^5 sis or foundation of this important matter ; and that I really was unable to understand how thinking and earnest men could hazard all their faith and hope, and peril all the destinies of eternity, on a principle found- ed, as it seemed to my poor judgment, on so frail and inadequate a basis. I felt myself that I could not do so. It would, I acknowledged, undoubtedly be very convenient and useful for us, that hell, with all its horrors, should be annihilated, but we are not justi- fied in believing, therefore, that hell is annihilated. It would also, without any question, be useful and convenient for us, beyond expression, that sin should be abolished and driven from the world, but we are not therefore to infer that sin is so abolished. The annihilation of hell, and the abolition of our liability to sin, would be an act that in our eyes might seem very consistent with the goodness, and compassion, and beneficence of God, but we are not thence to in- fer that He has annihilated the one or abolished the other. And in the same way, I continued, our prov- ing the convenience or usefulness of an infallible tri- bunal other and besides the Holy Scriptures, or its suitableness to the goodness of God, can not be re- garded as any adequate argument to prove that God has actually established it. The question is, not what God could or might have done, but what he has done. The conversation now assumed a most unexpected phase. He frankly and at once, and with no little emotion, acknowledged that his arguments had failed ; that my answer was sufficient to set it aside ; that his argument was illogical, and that, at the best, all he had urged could not prove the matter before us as 76 MORNINGS AMONG SO important a point required to be proved. All this was confessed so frankly, so unhesitatingly, and with so much evident earnestness as it seemed to me, that I was quite taken by surprise. I began to imagine that perhaps his own belief in an infallible tribunal was shaking, and that, as he so fully surrendered the foundations on which he had built it, he might be dis- posed to forsake the whole structure itself. I paused for some moments to give him time to draw his own conclusions, and at least, to collect his thoughts, for he seemed confused by the position in which he unexpectedly found himself. After a. while I asked, What further argument can you adduce to demonstrate the existence of this infallible tribunal ? He answered, << Really I do not just now recollect any other. I thought that these would have been enough." I said, <' But how do you prove to your own mind -^how do you at this moment satisfy your own mind as to the existence of this infallible tribunal ?" He replied, " I have always assumed it — I have al- ways assumed it — I have always taken it for granted, without further consideration." He spoke this with much emotion. I felt for him, for he seemed both confused and humbled ; and I would not have pressed him further, only that I felt I had perhaps a duty to discharge — a duty to the truth of God, and a duty to himself, by endeavoring to strengthen any doubts that might possibly have been raised in his mind. I therefore addressed him with much earnestness, and in all the kindness of holy brotherhood, reminding him how he had some mo- THE JESUITS AT ROME. 120 MORNINGS AMONG ment of thy conscience, affrighted at the horrors of the judgment, thou beginnest to be swallowed up in the gulf of sadness, the abyss of despair, think upon Mary — in dangers, in difficulties, in doubts, think upon Mary, invoke Mary. Let her not depart from thy mouth, let her not depart from thy heart," &o. I asked him solemnly whether he would use such lan- guage, even though sanctioned by his Breviary, in pre- paring a dying man for the presence of God in the eternal world. He replied unhesitatingly that he would, and then went on to argue that experience justified him ; that experience proved that the prayers offered to the Vir- gin were heard and answered ; that mothers praying to her who was herself a mother, with all the sym- pathies of a mother, were heard and answered ; that such prayers for children in sin, or in danger, or in sickness, were heard and answered ; and it was this practical experience that proved the great encourage- ment to the devotion of ourselves to the Virgin Mary. He then went on to say that a Catholic devotion to the blessed Virgin never interfered with a right devo- tion to Jesus Christ, but redounded rather to his glo- ry ; but that it required a Catholic heart to see and understand this ; that one who was not a Catholic could not understand it ; that the ignorant often per- verted it, going on in sin under the belief that, by praying to her, she will pardon them ; that all this was only the abuse of the system ; that the devotion to Mary was a holy devotion, and a source of holiness. If we think of one so pure, so <3haste, so holy, the thought will keep us from sin. St. Alphonso de Li- .i THE JESUITS AT ROME. J21 guori was a proof of thisj so devoted to the blessed Virgin, and so holy in his life. The order of the Jes- uits was another illustration. Their devotion to the blessed Virgin is known through the whole world ; and as for their holiness, they have been accused of ambition, of intrigue, of politics, with opposing sov- ereigns and disturbing the peace of kingdoms, but no one has ever charged them with impurity or immo- rality. They are a living proof that devotion to the blessed Virgin is conducive to holiness. But, he add- ed, it requires a Catholic heart to comprehend this. To others it may seem dishonoring to Jesus Christ ; yet it is not so. The Holy Virgin is never honored above Christ, nor as equal to Christ, but only as His mother, who has a mother's influence over him ; and thus all the homage and worship paid to her is really a homage and a worship to Him, inasmuch as it is only as His mother that it is offered to her. He ran on in this way for some time, and I feared to interrupt him by any attempt at opposing or con- futing him. It would have given me the appearance of an opponent rather than a listener ; and when I considered the station and influence of the person, I felt particularly anxious not to awaken suspicion, and desirous to appear as an intelligent and inquiring listener. I therefore said that I was acquainted with some of the works of the St. Alphonso de Liguori whom he mentioned ; that among other things in his " GJories of Mary" is the vision of the two ladders extending from earth to lieaven ; that at the top of one is the Virgin Mary, and at the top of the other is Jesus F 122 MORNINGS AMONG Christ; that all who attempted to enter heaven by the ladder of Jesus Christ fell back and failed, while all who tried the ladder of the Virgin Mary succeed- ed by her assistance. I mentioned this as I had al- ready done in conversation with another priest, and I asked whether such language did not exalt the Virgin Mary, not only as equal, but as superior to Jesus Christ — superior in the love, and compassion, and mercy of a Savior, as if she was a safer Savior than Jesus Christ ? He seemed thoroughly vexed and ashamed at this quotation from an author and saint whom he had so highly praised. He hesitated, and seemed perplexed for a satisfactory answer ; but at length said that such language was intended by Liguori merely to ex- press the love of Mary, and to show how willingly and how effectually she uses her influence as a moth- er in behalf of those devoted to her. He then added, that it was the opinion of many of the fathers and saints that God hears more quickly the prayers that are offered through the blessed Virgin ; that so great- ly is she in the love of God, and so great in her in- fluence with God, that the prayers offered through her ascend to heaven more quickly, and are heard and answered more speedily and effectually than oth- erwise, and this was probably the meaning of Liguori in the details of the two ladders from St. Bernard ; that many sinners are troubled with fears on account of their sins ; that surely we all m^ust at times be in fear on account of our many sins ; that many such fearful or timid' sinners come to Mary instead of Je- sus. They feel that she is so merciful, so loving, so THE JESUITS AT ROME. 123 willing to save them, that they come to her instead of coming to him — that when they think of Jesus Christ they are afraid. " Afraid of Jesus !" I exclaimed, involuntarily, startled at the idea of Jesus being less attractive, less loving, less merciful than Mary. *' Afraid of Jesus, who died for them — who showed his love in dying for them, and yet not afraid of Mary, who never profess- ed or showed any love for them !" He immediately checked himself, and looked sus- piciously and inquiringly at me. I feared I had shown my feelings too plainly, and therefore, in the hope of turning the subject, asked him to explain the vision of the two ladders on his principles. He said, expressively, that he had already explained the doctrine of the Church ; that as our Lord on the cross desired John to behold his mother, and that dis- ciple obeyed and took her to his own home, so he was a type of the Church, which is, in like manner, ever to look on Mary as its mother ; and therefore the Church respects her, loves her, serves her, aiid venerates her as its mother, to whom, as a child, she comes for comfort, consolation, grace, and assistance in every time of need. I replied that our Lord on the cross desired the Virgin Mary to look on the beloved disciple John as if he were her son, instead of Him now dying on the cross, and then desired the beloved disciple John to look on Mary, now bereaved and desolate, as if she were his own mother, and to take care of her as such. And the narrative states that John, acting on this, took Mary to his own home, and thus complied with the 124 MORNINGS AMONG dying wishes of Jesus Christ. *' But," I added, '' how does this prove the moral of the two ladders, and those seeking Heaven through Mary succeeding and being saved, while those seeking heaven through Jesus Christ fail in the effort ?" He. replied that he was unwilling to argue further ; that he had stated the doctrine of the Church ; that that doctrine, in honoring Mary, was not dishonoring to Christ ; that it was a subject on which, as that of images and pictures, there was much misunderstood, and that it required << a Catholic heart" to understand it rightly. He thus broke off the conversation. CHAPTER V. Invitation to a Polemical Discussion — The Prohibition of the Scriptures for Sale at Rome — Universal Ignorance of the Sacred Volume — Sal- vation only in the Church of Rome — Infallibility of the Popes neces- sary to be believed — Whether there be Salvation in the Church of England — The Church of Rome has never claimed Infallibility. A COMMUNICATION had been made to me to the ef- fect that the reverend professor of Dogmatic Theolo- gy wished to have a theological discussion with me. "Whether this arose from a hope that he might prove a means of making a proselyte of me, or from a de- sire for a controversial conference with me, in conse- quence of our previous collision in the Collegio Roma- no, it is not for me to state. A communication had been made to me, by a clerical friend of the Church THE JESUITS AT ROME. 225 of England, that the professor had expressed himself thus desirous of a meeting, and a formal message, with an invitation or challenge to a theological dis- cussion, was afterward conveyed to me by the rever- end professor of Canon Law. I gladly accepted it. I felt it might prove a new and additional source of information as to the real nature of the Church of Rome, and the arguments by which she is supported, though I certainly felt rather nervous at the prospect of a controversy with two of the most able and subtle of the order of Jesuits. A brother clergyman was with me, and we knelt together and prayed with earnest- ness for the light and grace of which we felt in need. On the appointed, day we knelt together in prayer, and soon afterward the professor of Canon Law and the professor of Dogmatic Theology were announced. At first our conversation was of a general character, but soon turned to those subjects which were conge- nial to all our feelings. Some remarks had been made by me designedly on the subject of the Holy Scriptures, with a view to directing our conversation into a profitable channel ; and I took occasion to remark on the ignorance of the Holy Scriptures so prevalent ^mong the people of It- aly — so prevalent, indeed, that it was impossible to argue with them ; and that it seemed to English minds a practical illustration of that which was so often asserted in England, namely, that the Church of Rome was opposed to the circulation of the sacred volume. The professor of Dogmatic Theology replied by saying that, although it was very tru^ that the peo- 126 MORNINGS AMONG pie were wholly unacquainted with the nature of the Holy Scriptures, yet it was very incorrect to suppose that the Catholic Church was opposed to their read- ing them ; that the Church set a great value on the sacred volume, and venerated it too highly to let it be used commonly or indiscriminately ; that, so far from forbidding its circulation and perusal, the Church permitted it to all whom she thought likely to profit by it, and forbade it only to those who, being igno- rant, would be likely to pervert and misapply it ; but that it was a great mistake, and indeed a calumny against the Catholic Church, to say that she was op- posed to the full and unrestricted use and circulation of the Scriptures. The answer I made to this was, that, having re- sided many years among a Roman Catholic popula- tion in Ireland, I had always found that the sacred volume was forbidden to them ; and that, since I came to Italy, and especially to Rome, I observed the most complete ignorance of the Holy Scriptures, and that it was ascribed by themselves to a prohibition on the part of the Church. He at once stated that there must be some mis- take, as the book was permitted to all who could un- derstand it, and was, in fact, in very general circu- lation in Rome. I said that I had heard the contrary, and that it was impossible to procure a copy of the Holy Scrip- tures in the Italian tongue in the city of Rome ; that I had so heard from an English gentleman who had resided there for ten years ; that I looked upon the statement as scarcely credible ; that I wished much THE JESUITS AT ROME. 127 to ascertain the matter for my own information ; that I had one day resolved to test this by visiting every bookselling establishment in the city of Rome ; that I had gone to the book-shop belonging to the Propa- ganda Fide — to that patronized by his holiness the pope — to that which was connected with the Collegio Romano, and was patronized by the order of Jesuits — to that which was established for the supply of En- glish and other foreigners — to those which sold old and second-hand books, and that in every establish- ment, without exception, I found that the Holy Scrip- tures were not for sale. I could not procure a single copy in the Roman language and of a portable size in the whole city of Rome ; and that, when I asked each bookseller the reason of his not having so import- ant a volume, I was answered in every instance, e prohibito, or non e permesso—ihoX the volume was prohibited, or that it was not permitted to be sold. I added that Martini's edition was offered to me in two places, but it was in twenty-four volumes, and at a cost of 105 francs (that is, four pounds sterling), and that, under such circumstances, I could not but re- gard the Holy Scriptures as a prohibited book, at least in the city, of Rome. He replied by acknowledging that it was very prob- able that I could not find the volume in Rome, , espe- cially as the population of Rome was very poor, and not able to purchase the sacred volume ; and that the real reason the Scriptures were not at the booksellers, and also were not in circulation, was not that they were forbidden or prohibited by the Church, but that the people of Rome were too poor to buy them. 128 MORNINGS AMONG I replied that they probably were too poor, whether in Rome or in England, to give 105 francs for the book, but that the clergy of Rome, so numerous and wealthy, should do as in England, namely, form an association for cheapening the copies of the Scrip- tures. He said, in reply, that the priests were too poor to cheapen the volume, and that the people were too poor to purchase it. I then stated that if this was really the case — that if there was no prohibition Against the sacred volume — that if they would be willing to circulate it, and that, really and sincerely, there was no other objec- tion than the difficulties arising from the price of the book, that difficulty should at once be obviated. I would myself undertake to obtain from England, through the Bible Society, any number of Bibles that could be circulated, and that they should be sold at the lowest possible price, or given freely and gratui- tously to the inhabitants of Rome. I stated that the people of England loved the Scriptures beyond all else, in this wojld, and that it would be to them a source of delight, and thanksgiving to give for gratui- tous circulation any number of copies of the sacred volume that the inhabitants of Rome could require. He immediately answered that he thanked me for the generous offer, but that there would be no use in accepting it, as the people of Rome were very igno- rant—were in a state of brutal ignorance — ^were un- able to read any thing, and therefore could not profit by reading the Scriptures, even if we supplied them gratuitously. , THU JESUITS AT ROME. 129 I could not conceal from myself that he was pre- varicating with me ; that his former excuse of pover- ty, and this latter excuse of ignorance, were mere evasions ; so I asked him whose fault it was that the people remained in such universal and unaccountable ignorance. There were above five thousand priests, monks, and nuns, besides cardinals and prelates, in the city of Rome ; that the whole population was only thirty thousand families ; that thus there was a priest, or a monk, or a nun for every six families in Rome ; that thus there was ample means for the education of the people ; and I asked, therefore, whether the Church was not to blame for this ignorance on the part of the people. He immediately turned from the subject, saying that the Church held the infallibility of the pope, to whom it therefore belonged to give the only infallible interpretation of the Scriptures. This led the conversation in another direction. If I had prevented this, it would have given me the ap- pearance of a partisan, as if I were more anxious to prove and fasten a fault upon the Church of Rome, in- stead of one who was searching for information, and was entering on a friendly rather than a controversial conversation. I allowed him, therefore, to lead me to the question of infallibility, feeling that it was a sub- ject which might be turned to the advantage of truth. I therefore remarked, somewhat carelessly in man- ner, that I believed, or at least had heard, that there was much difference of opinion in the Church of Rome as to the seat of infallibility ; that I had heard of some asserting it to reside in the popes ; that others held it F 2 180 MORNINGS AMONG ^ resided in General Councils ; while others still main- tained that infallibility was the exclusive possession of the Church in general. I said that, as far as I could form a judgment upon such a subject, the preponder- ance in the argument was in favor of those who claim- ed it for the popes ; that, generally, all the various ad- vocates seemed to me to argue very powerfully when disproving the positions of their opponents, but became singularly weak when endeavoring to establish their own ; but still I thought the weight of argument was in favor of the pope. The professor, my opponent, seemed delighted with this admission, and seemed to take courage from it to express himself very strongly, saying, in the broadest and clearest terms, that no man could be a true Catho- lic — a true member of that Church, out of which there is no salvation, who did not believe in the entire su- premacy and infallibility of the popes as successors of St. Peter. I replied that such a sentiment was by no means universal ; that it was so far from being held by the Roman Catholics of England and Ireland, that they would look on it as illiberal and untrue ; that they did not hold it, and that no man in those countries would assert that none could be saved unless in the Church of Rome. He said that it was impossible my statement could be correct, as no man was a true Catholic who thought any one could find salvation out of the Church of Rome. They could not he true Catholics. I answered that they seemed as zealous and as true as others, and that there could be no mistake as to my THE JESUITS AT ROME. 131 statement, for that some of the priests in England and Ireland had often, in conversation with myself, denied the doctrine of exclusive salvation ; and that I had known some of the priests make the same statement in the most public manner. He again exclaimed that it was impossible ; no true Catholic could say so ; and if any one said it, he was not a true Catholic. I repeated my words, adding that I had heard it too often to be mistaken ; that the people of England hated exclusiveness, and bigotry, and narrowness of mind ; that the Roman Catholic priests, when enter- ing on controversy, were therefore always anxious to disclaim all notions of exclusive salvation for the Church of Rome ; and that I had myself been repeat- edly a witness to such disclaimers, so that there could be no mistake. Whether they were sincere in such disclaimers, it was not for me to say ; but all those among them who aimed at any popular influence al- ways disclaimed it. One priest, a Mr. Esmonde, whom I heard disclaiming it on a public platform, was a mem- ber of the order of the Jesuits, and therefore I suppose a true Catholic member of the Church of Rome. He again said, with vehemence, that it was impos- sible ; such persons were not true Catholics, and cer- tainly were a great injury to the Church. The truth of the Church was, that no man could be saved unless he was a member of the Church of Rome, and believed in the supremacy and infallibility of the popes, as the successors of St. Peter. I said that that was going very far indeed ; for, be- sides requiring men to be members of the Church of 132 MORNINGS AMONG Romey it required their belief in the supremacy and infallibility of the popes. He reiterated the same sentiment in language still stronger than before, adding that every one must be damned in the flames of hell who did not believe in the supremacy and infallibility of the pope. 1 could not but smile at all this, while I felt it de- rived considerable importance from the position of the person who uttered it. He was the chief teacher of theology in the order of the Jesuits, and the chosen professor of theology in the Collegio Romano — the Uni- versity of Rome. I smiled, however, and reminded him that his words were consigning all the people of England to the damnation of hell. He repeated his words emphatically, and with some assumption of manner, as if he thought he could over- awe or frighten me by the statement. He said that the people of England would all certainly be damned eternally in hell unless they embraced the doctrine of * the infallibility of the pope. He looked at me with an air of triumph. " And what," said I, " what is to become of me ? I do not hold, nor can I hold that doctrine ; and do you consign me, and numbers of others like me, to ever- lasting damnation, because I do not hold it ?" He did not hesitate a moment in answering that I could not be saved ; that when once I had the oppor- tunity and the power of hearing the truth, and being informed of it, I could not be saved if I did not re- ceive it ; but that, if I had not the opportunity and power, he could not speak so decisively. I then looked at him with much seriousness, and THE JESUITS AT EOME. 133 spoke with great deliberation, saying that truth — the truth of God, was the great object of my researches, and that I felt that the whole world was nothing in comparison with it ; that I had read the Holy Scrip- tures of God ; that I had read the controversial writ- ings of Cardinal Bellarmine, Bossuet, and all the ablest controversialists of the Church of Rome ; that I had read also the works of the ablest English writ- ers in answer to them ; that for many years I had been seeking a mastery over the intricacies of these questions ; that I had come to Rome to obtain a per- sonal inspection of the Church at its fountain-head ; that I had many and long conferences with several priests in Rome on the subject, and that I was abso- lutely constrained, on a balance of the arguments, not only not to believe, but to reject altogether the doc- trine of the supremacy and infallibility of the pope ; that I therefore was one who had enjoyed every op- portunity and power of adequate information on the point ; and, considering that I had arrived fairly and honestly, and to the best of my judgment, and to the conviction of my conscience, at the conclusion to re- ject this doctrine, I asked him whether he would still consign me to the damnation of hell ? I spoke with a grave look and in a solemn manner, to prevent tri- fling on so important a question. He hesitated and said, that if I had indeed used all possible diligence, as I intimated, and if I still found my prejudices invincible — if I was still invincibly ig- norant, he would not speak too decidedly. He was unwilling to do so. The Church had made an ex- ception of such a case j but he hoped I should yet see 134 MORNINGS AMONG and believe it. His manner in all this showed that his natural courtesy alone prevented his declaring a decided judgment. I felt that quite enough had been said upon this point. I had obtained the judgment of one professor very clearly, a^d observed that the other professor did not contradict him in the least ; so I suggested that we should turn to some other subject. He immediately proposed to me to argue the ques- tion of the possibility of salvation in the Church of England, suggesting that as no one could be saved out of the Church of Rome, he would prove that no one could be saved in the Church of England ; ask- ing me to enter on the question, and undertaking, on his part, to prove against me that the Church of En- gland was not the Church of Christ ; and that, while I continued a member of the Church of England, I could not be saved. It was a formal challenge. I replied that I could not assert that the Church of England was the Church of Christ ; that I believed and held she was a part, a member, a branch of the Church of Christ ; that she held all necessary truth, and that salvation was to be found within her, and that I was prepared to maintain thus far, but no fur- ther. I could not defend the proposition in the form in which, he proposed it. He said that he would shape his argument so a^ to embrace that view, and then, before he commenc- ed, we agreed that nothing should be asserted respect- ing the doctrines of either Church, by either him or myself, without producing the canon, or decree, or bull, or article of the Church containing it. He was THE JESUITS AT ROME. 235 not to claim for the Church of Rome, nor to ascribe to the Church of England, any thing whatever, with- out producing the authoritative canon of one Church, or the authoritative article of the other. I was pledg- ed in the same way, and thus it was so arranged that there could be no railing accusations, no undue asser- tions, no claims on one hand or charges on the other, no assertions or denials, as all was to proceed on the authoritative documents of the respective churches. I was careful to have this settled between us before proceeding further, as I perceived he was disposed to enter on the question more as a practiced and confi- dent controversialist than as a sincere inquirer. He seemed a bold, lively, warm-hearted man, experienced in the disputations of the college, and confident in his own resources, and he seemed to have sought me rather in a youthful spirit of emulation and desire for a polemical tournament. He wished to try his prow- ess and break a lance with me, and that, too, in no unkindly or ungenerous spirit. I resolved, therefore, to meet him, so as to show him that the argument was not so clearly with him as he had imagined, and that he might find in me his equal in argument, though certainly far from being his equal either in talent or in learning. He commenced according to the method still prac- ticed in the classes of the college, namely, arguing in the form of a syllogism. He said. The Church of Christ is infallible. The Church of England confesses herself fallible. Therefore the Church of England is not the Church of Christ. 136 MOENINGS AMONG I at once pointed out the fallacy or error of his ar- gument, showing, as I had already stated, that the Church of England did not pretend to be the Church of Christ, but only a part, or brandi, or member of it ; and that the fallibility of a part of the Church was no proof she was not a part of the Church, to which only, as a wJiole, infallibility could belong. He acknowledged this to be sufficient, and said he would state his argument in another form. The Church of Christ, in all her parts, is infallible. The Protestant Church of England confesses her- self fallible. Therefore the Church of England is not a part of the Church of Christ. I answered that the syllogism was as faulty as the preceding one, but that I would at once meet it by denying his minor ; that is, by denying that the Prot- estant Church of England confesses herself to be fal- lible : I was not aware that she had made such a con- fession. He laughed at me good-humoredly, and with a look of triumph, and said that the Church of England had confessed it, and he could produce the article. He referred me to the Article XIX. I produced the article and read the words, '^ As the Chur<3hes of Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Antioch have erred, so also the Church of Rome hath erred, not only in their living and manner of ceremonies, but also in matters of faith." I said that this Article of the Church of England asserted that other churches, and the Church of Rome in particular, had erred, and were fallible, but that she had said nothing of herself ; and THE JEest/rTS AT ROME. I37 certainly had not, as his argument supposed and re- quired, confessed herself fallible. He frankly acknowledged this to be a sufficient an- swer, and that his argument had failed, but said he would arrange his syllogism in another form, so as to obviate this. He seemed, however, slightly — -very . slightly annoyed at finding himself so easily foiled in his first two attempts. He proceeded with great quick- ness to arrange his argument again. The Church of Christ, in all her parts, claims to be infallible. The Protestant Church of England does not claim to be infallible. Therefore the Church of England is not the Church of Christ. The ordinary mode of replying to this would have been by denying the major, namely, that the Church in all its parts claimed to be infallible ; and this would have opened the whole question of the infallibility of the Church, whether as a whole in the Church gen- eral, or in a part as the Church of England. I felt, however, in my secret soul, that there was another mode of dealing with it. I had, in years long past, pondered the matter well and thoughtfully, and many years' experience and research alike confirmed my feel- ing. I had never expressed it in private, nor had I employed it in public, and I thought that the present was an occasion the most fitting possible to advance it. I knew that my present controversy was with an able and learned man, and not only so,, but was with one of the most influential Jesuits in ^ Rome, assisted by another member of the same order, profoundly 138 MORNINGS AMONG versed in the Canon Law, and therefore peculiarly competent to deal with my argument. I felt, there- fore, disposed to try it. I am free to confess that I was somewhat nervous in advancing a position so ut- terly untried, especially considering the talents and learning of my opponents ; but I felt that He whose I was and whom I desired to serve, and who had hith- erto so wonderfully sustained me in nqiany an arduous struggle, would turn my success or failure to some good account, by which His truth would be manifested and his Gospel glorified. So, after some moments' pause for reflection, I requested my opponent to re- peat, and kindly to write his syllogism on paper. He wrote it as follows : The Church of Christ, io all her parts, claims to be infallible. The Church of England does not claim to be in- fallible. Therefore the Church of England is not part of the Church of Christ. Having read it carefully, I drew my pen over the word "England" in the minor and in the conclusion, and writing the word 'anQY^\ It is therefore ex- THE JESUITS AT ROME. jgg pressly stated in the canons of the Council of Trent that the mass is an '• unbloody sacrifice," and all the catechisms of the Church of Rome distinctly assert that it is " an unbloody offering," and all endeavor to obviate the objection of Protestants by saying that Christ is offered in the mass in ^' an unbloody manner." He assented to this, stating that such was the doc- trine of the mass; that Christ was offered as a pro- pitiatory sacrifice for the living and the dead in the mass, and that there could be no pain or suffering to him, though truly, literally, substantially present in the host as the victim, because he was offered in "an unbloody manner." It was " an unbloody sacrifice," and therefore it gaye no pain like that on Calvary ; and he asked me where there was any contradiction or inconsistency. I replied that I had only stated one half my sub- ject. The other half remained to be told, which was this : that the dogma of transubstantiation, as defined by the Council of Trent, and held universally in the Church of Rome, taught that the bread and wine of the communion were truly, literally, substantially changed, so as that their whole substance was chang- ed into the substance of <' the body, and bloody and soul, and divinity" of Jesus Christ. According to this doctrine, the substance of wine is annihilated, and the substance of blood substituted in its stead, so as that all is no longer wine, but bloody truly, literally, substantially blood. In the offering, therefore, of this there is bloody a bloody offering, and in the sacrifice of this there is blood, a bloody sacrifice ; and there is no point of doctrine in the whole system of the Church 190 MORNINGS AMONG of Rome on which she usually makes so determined a stand as this assertion, that after the words of con- secration the elements become flesh and blood, and thus the inconsistency or contradiction to which I refer is this : her teaching in one moment that in the mass the sacrifice is an unbloody oxiq, and in the next moment that it is transubstantiated into blood; so that in one doctrine all is bloody and in the other all is unbloody ! My friend made no attempt at concealing that he had never observed this before, but he was silent, as if revolving it in his mind. He continued so long without replying that I asked him whether he clearly understood me, and saw the point which I urged. He said fairly that he saw it ; that it charged the Church with using the argument both ways and in opposite directions, asserting that there was blood, or teaching that there was no blood, just as suited her purpose. He added very honestly, after a long time for consid- eration, that he had never heard the difficulty before ; that it struck him as very curious ; that he did not see just then how to answer it; but that he would make it his business to consult a certain lecturer then in their college, and also their professor, to whom such questions belonged ; and that, after consulting them, he would communicate to me their opinions. [When next I had the pleasure of meeting him, it was at the CoUegio Romano, where we walked and talked a long time together ; but though he stated he had consulted the parties referred to, I was unable to get any intelligible explanation of the inconsistency which I had urged, nor, indeed, have I ever heard it explained by any one to whom I have objected it.] THE JESUITS AT ROME. 191 On reverting to our original point, namely, his statement that the Anglican Church was hastening to her fall, and that I should be necessitated to em- brace the Church of Rome, a variety of topics were touched on, and among them the doctrine of the im- maculate conception. On this he expressed himself as believing that the Virgin Mary, the Prophet Jer- emiah, and John the Baptist had all been born with- out original sin. My wife remarked that she could not believe this, for that the Virgin Mary recognized Christ as her Savior, which implied herself a sinner ; that the writ- ings of the Prophet Jeremiah were full of acknowl- edgments of sin ; that the Baptist certainly was with- out all claim to so peculiar an exemption ; and she was opening the Bible to show the places to which she referred. He said that the doctrine was founded on the words of Scripture ; that there could be no question as to the immaculate conception of the most Holy Virgin, and therefore her freedom from original sin ; and that, in reference to Jeremiah and the Baptist, it was ex- pressly stated that they were *' sanctified from the womb," implying that in their original conception in the womb they were immaculate, and as such exempt from original sin. I could not forbear smiling at such a frail founda- tion for such a doctrine, and reminded him that the word " sanctified," as ordinarily used in Holy Scrip- ture, meant being separated to a holy use, being set apart from all profane or secular uses, and appropri- ated or separated to the holy purposes of God, and 192 MORNINGS AMONG that this was the case of the Baptist. From the time of his leaving the womb of his mother, that is, from the time of his birth, it pleased God to set him apart, and separate him for the holy purpose of being the Herald or Forerunner of the Messiah. He replied at once that this was a proof, if proof were wanting, that we could never settle our differ- ences by referring to the Holy Scriptures, inasmuch as we could never agree as to their interpretation. He would ndt, therefore, refer to them, but would ask whether it was possible to doubt the miraculous and immaculate conception of the most Holy Mary, or that she was perfectly sinless — free from all orig- inal and actual sin alike. On perceiving that we dissented altogether on this point, he continued to say that there could be no doubt that she possessed merit — that she was meritorious in the sight of God. On still perceiving that we dissented from such an opin- ion, he continued to say that he did not see how any one could deny that there was merit in works, atid that assuredly there was merit in the sufferings un- dergone by the blessed Mary in giving birth to the child Jesus. There was no necessity whatever----no reason whatever why she should have subjected her- self to them, and therefore her having actually under- gone such sufferings was meritorious. It must have possessed merit in the sight of God. She had some claim upon God for it. There are many things, he added, which the Church calls counsels, not com- mands, and the difference respecting these is, that you are under obligation or necessity to perform com- mands—you must obey them, or you sin against God ; THE JESUITS AT ROME. I93 but you are under no sort of obligation or necessity to perform counsels. They are, as it were, an advice for increased usefulness or increased holiness over and beyond what is necessary for salvation ; and if a man perform these, he has merit in the sight of God be- cause he has performed them, and thus has made him- self more useful and holy than necessary. There was, for example, no kind of necessity upon the young man in the Gospel, obliging him to give all he pos- sessed to the poor, but there was counsel, advice ; and he was not bound to take that advice, even though given by our Lord himself; but if he had followed that advice, then undoubtedly he would have had merit with God. My wife replied to all this with expressions of sur- prise that any one could hold the doctrine of human merit ; that if we but knew our own hearts, we could not but feel ourselves such poor unworthy creatures, such poor miserable sinners, that it seemed impossi- ble to arrive at such a height of presumption as to imagine we could have merit, in the sight of God. We never do — we never can do enough for the God who has done so much for us ; and how, she asked, how is it possible for us to do more than enough ? Even after we have done our very utmost — ^^our all, we yet are unworthy sinners ; and therefore our Lord has expressly said, *< After ye have done all, say, We are all unprofitable servants ; we have done that which it was our duty to do." He said that the Church taught that there was a merit in some works ; that those works were not nat- ural works, but done by the grace of God, and that I 194 MORNINGS AMONG God was pleased of his own grace to ascribe merit to them. It was in this way the saints had merit with God. They had by God's grace been enabled to live very holy lives, and to endure many sufferings, and to perform many good works. They had been ena- bled to do all this only by God's grace, and as all this was not necessary to their own salvation, but was supplemental or supernumerary, so all this was meritorious, and thus gave them an accumulation of merit with God. But still there Was nothing pre- sumptuous in this, as it was from first to last of God's grace. I said here that I was anxious to understand him clearly : I understood him as saying that although the merit of works was only a merit ascribed to them of the grace of God, and not truly and rightfully belong- ing to them, yet that the merit was as effectual as if it truly and rightfully belonged to them ; so that a man having performed some such work might fairly reckon on it and take account of merit for it, and set it down against his sins — against the punishment his sins deserved. I added that I inferred that this was his view from what he had just said of the merits of the saints, implying, as I thought, that by such works of merit a man might obtain or work out for himself more merit than he wanted for his forgiveness and sal- vation ; in short, a man could be more righteous, holy, and meritorious than God required of him. He assented to this. I then asked whether I was so to understand him as implying that a man might, by following the coun- sels of the Church of which he spoke, obtain a large THE JESUITS AT ROME. 195 accession of merit, and then set this down, so to speak — if I might speak it with reverence — in a sort of ac- count with God, as if keeping a debtor and creditor account with God ;- and thus, by ii^creasing the sum of his meritorious actions, so far lessen the balance of sin that was against him, and thus lessen the amount of suffering or punishment for his sins. He smiled, and said that, though it seemed an un- usual way of stating the point, yet the truth was very much as I stated it ; that this merit went to lessen, not the sins as I had said, but the temporary suffer- ings and temporary punishment due to his sins. He added that the truth was, that the Church taught more than this, namely, that as a man could work out for himself more merit than was required for his own salvation — that as a man could thus accumulate merit, superfluous and supererogatory, it formed or went to form a sort of treasury of superabundant merits in the Church. I replied that I had so understood the doctrine of the Church of Rome ; that I had lately procured a small volume, just published by the order of Jesuits, setting forth all ^' the pious works" to which certain specified indulgences are attached, and that in this volume it is expressly stated that the superabundant merits of individuals — the merits which they have possessed over and beyond what was required for their own salvation, formed a sort of treasury of merit in the Church, and that the pope, as the head of the Church, had the disposal of all this superfluous merit, and could apply it to persons here or in purgatory, as it might seem good to him ; that thus he could lessen 195 MORNINGS AMONG the period of suffering in the fires of purgatory by what was called a partial indulgence^ and annihilate the whole by what was called a plenary indulgence. I added that this^as a doctrine too evident in every thing that was to be seen in Rome, and that all my views of the truth of Holy Scripture — all my opinions of God's revealed word — all my feelings as to my own poor sinful soul, that ought to be humbled to the dust, revolted against such notions. The doctrine of human merit seemed to me unbecoming and unnatural, irrec- oncilable with human experience, and contrary to the plainest language of Holy Scripture; but, bad and un- seemly as it was in itself, it seemed to me hideous and monstrous when carried to the outrageous extrav- agance of constituting a treasury of superfluous merits for the pope or any poor mortal to distribute or appor- tion to others in the way of indulgences to release them from purgatory. He said that he was not surprised at our repug- nance to it, and that he could not expect that we should receive it at first; but that, after some more instruction, we should feel the difiiculty pass away in this as in many other particulars. My wife said that nothing could reconcile us to this. It always was and always must be a fatal objection to the Church of Rome with all earnest and sincere Christians. She could never forget that it was this very point, carried out in the matter of indulgences, that first led Martin Luther to the work of the Ref- ormation ; and she added that day after day it was forced upon her memory at Rome, for whenever she looked on that noble Church of St. Peter's, she could THE JESUITS AT ROME. 197 never fail to remember the means by which much of it was erected ; that a large amount of the money to defray the cost of its erection was raised by the sale of indulgences ; so that, in her memory and im- agination, the Reformation of Luther was always con- nected with the erection of St. Peter's — the unscrip- tural doctrines of human merit and of papal indul- gences. ^ 1 I was unwilling that this subject should pass away hastily, as if it were not a matter of the first and last importance, and therefore I remarked, with the view of leading further into the subject involving so much of the essence of the Gospel, that Martin Luther felt very strongly on the point of human merit, and that he held that a man could never be justified by works, and could only be justified by faith in Christ. He held that the doctrine of justification was the question by which a standing and a falling church were id be distinguished. He replied, with great vehemence, that Luther was a bad man — an immoral man, inasmuch as his writ- ings led to immorality, and his life was horribly im- moral ; that he held that no actions were good ; that there were no good works ; that it was no matter whether a man did good or evil ; in short, it was per- fectly astounding the wickedness which he taught ; and yet, he added, Luther was a great man — a man of wonderful talent and power, and he stopped at noth- ing. He was a great man, but he was an awful one. He showed in his writings that his opinion was against all good works ; that there were no good works ; and that, even if there were, they were useless. The 198 MORNINGS AMONG zeal and vehemence of my friend against Luther led him to say more and to express himself more strongly and warmly than is necessary to repeat here. I said that I apprehended that Luther was much misrepresented, and, indeed, that the doctrine of the Gospel and of the Anglican Church was much misun- derstood on the subject of faith on one hand, and works on the other. I then narrated an interesting incident of a Roman Catholic priest, who once called on me in private to lay open the state of his mind. We had long and deeply interesting conversations on many points, but there remained what he regarded as a fatal objection to theChurch of England and all Protestant churches. They all, as he said, flung good works aside, and taught that men could be saved without them; and he felt that no man could be saved unless he lived a holy life unto God. The reply which I made to him was, that he was evidently under a mis- take ; that all Protestant churches, and especially the Church of England, held the necessity of holiness or good works, but in a different way and for a different end from what he imagined. The truth of the Holy Scriptures, I said, was this : There is the Son of God, and there is the Holy Ghost,, both the second and third persons of the Trinity ; both the one and the other of these has his own peculiar or special department in the economy of a man's salvation. The work or of- fice of the Son, Jesus Christ, is to justify us, that is, to take away our sins, and make us accepted through his merits in the sight of God. This is called our justification, and it is ours solely through faith in Jesus Christ, without any works or deserving on our THE JESUITS AT HOME. X99 part,. It is wholly through (aith and without works. But this, I said, was the office or department of Jesus Christ. There was then the office and department of the Holy Spirit. He was to take in hand those who were justified by faith, and He was to make them holy — holy in thought, holy in feeling, holy in desire, holy in aspirations, and holy in their whole lives, lead- ing them, and teaching them, and enabling them to live in prayer, and humility, and good works, and all that partook of the example of Jesus Christ. And thus, I continued, we hold that our justification, which is the office of the Son of God, is solely by faith and without works, while we hold that our sanctification, which is the work of the Holy Ghost, is manifested in every good word and work. Now Protestants hold both one and the other of these, but we do not like to confound them. We hold that the justification by Jesus Christ is necessary, and we also hold that the sanctification by the Holy Spirit is also necessary ; the former being through faith, the latter being a con- sequence, and never a cause of the former ; and there- fore it ought never be said of our Protestant churches that we reject the practice of good works. We put both faith and works in ther proper and relative places, and we do not like to confound them, and we shrink from supposing that there is merit in either one or the other. I added that ;this view of the question com- pletely satisfied the Roman Catholic priest, and shortly afterward he renounced the Church of Rome, and is now a minister of the Church of England. My reverend friend listened to this very attentive- ly, and stated that he quite understood it, but he 200 MORNINGS AMONG wished to know why we denied merit to the good and holy works of the justified man. I answered this with an apology for having already said so much, when I rather wished to be informed by hearing his opinions ; but that, if he could bear a little with me, I would endeavor to make some excuse fo* . our Protestant views on this subject. I then said that we held that poor, and infirm, and sinful creatures, such as we are, can do no good thing, that is, nothing good in the searching eye of a holy God, unless as His Holy Spirit gives us His grace. It is not we, but the Holy Spirit, that does the good work in us. If we have a good thought — if we have a holy wish — if we have a heavenly desire — if we have done a good thing, it has been the Holy Spirit who has planted it in us or enabled us to do it. "Whatever holy thought we think and whatever good work we are enabled to per- form, the praise and merit belong, not to us, but to the Holy Spirit, who has done it in us. The merit is His, and not ours, and it is a wrong and injury to Him for us to claim it as if it were ours. The great truth, I said, was this : our good and holy works, so far from making us creditors with God, as if we had a claim on him on account of our merits, do really bring us in more and more debtors to God. The more holy thoughts we have, and the more good works we do, even so the more are we made debtors unto God the Holy Ghost, by whose inspiration we were enabled to think the one or do the other. It has been some new and additional afflatus of the Holy Spirit, and it there- fore makes us debtors more than ever. This, I add- ed, was the view I took of this subject, feeling that THE JESUITS AT ROME. 201 our hearts were poor, weak, miserable things, and that, when rightly conscious of our real state, as our fallen hearts appear before God, the very last thought that can be congenial to the mind is that which could have connection with human merit. I can not say that my reverend friend was much affected by this mode of stating the subject. He heard it, however, with marked attention and respect. It seemed to commend itself to his better feelings, and I could only pray that the time might come when cir- cumstances might bring such views home to his con- victions and his heart. , He merely said that there was what the Church called the humility of merits and that the sentiments I had uttered were of that nature. He then turned away to some opinions of St. Augustine and St. Ber- nard, and on these we conversed for a short time, and soon afterward he retired with his companion, 12 202 MORNINGS AMONG CHAPTER VIII. The Origin of the Catacombs — The Christians using them as a Eefuge — As a Place of Worship— As a Burial-place — Forgotten and after- ward discovered — Resorted to for Relics — A Visit to them — Descrip- tion of their present State — Means or Tests for the Discovery of Rel- ics — Collection of monumental Inscriptions found in the Catacombs — Their Character and Nature — A Conversation in the College of the Jesuits respecting them — Conclusion as to the Religion of the Prim- itive Church. During a visit to the Collegio Romano, a conver- sation arose in reference to the Catacombs, and the argument to be derived from their inscriptions. Soma remarks respecting the Catacombs will be necessary to render the conversation intelligible. The origin of the Catacombs was in the days of pagan Rome,. and long previous to the preaching of Christianity. They seem now universally regarded as the mines or quarries from which the inhabitants of Rome extracted those vast supplies of that kind of earth or sand called puzzolana, so generally used in their buildings. Quarrying in the Campagna for this, they carried their shafts sometimes to a consid- erable depth, and on striking on a vein, they followed its windings, sometimes upward, sometimes down- ward, now by long flights of steps, and then by wind- ing galleries. The branches from the main shafts or galleries extend in every direction, frequently so wind- ing as to intersect each other, debouching by a great variety of openings on the Campagna. These pas- sages are narrow, ranging generally from three to six 0^- THE JESUITS AT ROME. 203 feet in width, and from seven to ten in height. They are very rude, and rough, and rugged, presenting in themselves, apart from the associations which give them so deep an interest, nothing whatever beyond the shafts, galleries, or passages of any mine. They are cold, damp, and dark, and constitute a sort of gi- gantic honeycomb-work, extending for miles in differ- ent directions under ground ; and many a time the wanderer of the Campagna — the desolate Campagna — comes suddenly upon some deep hole — some dark hollow, which, if explored, will be found to be one of the innumerable entrances to these quarries, or at least one of those spots where the superincumbent soil has sunk in, and perhaps closed some branch of the Catacombs forever. Indeed, this sudden falling in of the earth after heavy rains, severe frosts, and occasional tremblings of an earthquake, has been a source of much danger. Tales are carefully narrated of scenes too horrible to describe here, of those who heedlessly and without competent guides have enter- ed these subterranean regions. The earth falling in has crushed or smothered some, while it has debarred forever all exit for others, who have been left there to perish miserably. They who thus sought the Cat- acombs as the grave-place of others, found them only a grave for themselves. These quarries or mines of puzzolana had long ceased to be worked by the Romans. They seem to have been exhausted ; at all events, they had been long closed as mines before those events of Christian history which were destined to shroud the Catacombs with an ineffaceable interest and charm. 304 MORNINGS AMONG It is unnecessary to notice the persecutions of the primitive Church. The everlasting hatred — the fran- tic fury — the deep malignancy — the atrocious cruel- ty, so truly representing man as half beast and half fiend, that so characterized these several persecutions, are matters of history now familiar to all classes of Christians. They are alluded to here only as the causes which first operated in investing the Cata- combs with their special and peculiar interest. It was in these Catacombs the Christians concealed them- selves from the horrors of their persecutors. Some Christians, feeling themselves called on to stand as witnesses for the truth, gave their testimony with faithfulness and fearlessness, and willingly and rejoic- ingly sealed their testimony with their blood. They received the martyr's grave and the martyr's crown. Others seem to have sought their martyrdom — to have rushed madly to the tribunals, accused them- selves, and sought the crown of martyrdom as they might seek the robe of marriage. It is not necessary either to justify or impugn the motives of these per- sons, who seem to have freely sought persecution rath- er than to have been sought by it. But the immense body of the faithful, feeling no such special vocation, to martyrdom — feeling confident that they would be enabled to stand faithful if called on in the hour of need — rather fled before their enemies, and sought to retire from view, and hide themselves till the storm were overpast. They fled in vast numbers, and con- cealed themselves in the Catacombs. As the profes- sion of Christianity became a capital offense, it be- came necessary for all to fly for their lives — to fly THE JESUITS AT ROME. 205 from home, kindred, property, all, and conceal them- selves until some change in the law or some mitiga- tion in the persecution might give them some hope of escape. In the mean time, family after family, as well as individual after individual, fled from the city of Rome into the Campagna ; and there, entering the holes and shafts of the Catacombs, concealed them- selves in the dark recesses, and winding passages, and gloomy labyrinths of those exhausted and neglected mines. We read of some of the saints of the Old Testament, that '' they wandered about in sheep-skins and goat-skins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented, of whom the world was not worthy ; they wandered in deserts and in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth." And these had their followers in the saints of the New Testament. They gathered in crowds into these dark caverns. They flitted among them like specters, startling and frightening each oth- er, as meeting suddenly in these graves of the living ; now shrinking in terror as from an approaching ene- lAy, and now meeting with joyous thankfulness some faithful friend. There must have been a powerful band of brotherhood created by scenes like these, by a consciousness of common dangers and mutual depend- ence, and by the fact that they all were the sufferers for the same high and holy cause ; and they were knit together by the strongest ties of Christian brother- hood, and they lived together encouraging and com- forting one another by that with which they them- selves were comforted of God, by the enduring, en- nobling hope of eternal life. This conversion of the Catacombs into places of ref- 206 MORNINGS AMONG uge, and conceal^pent for the miserable and persecuted Christians, led to their consecration to a yet higher and holier purpose. It led naturally to their becom- ing the place for Christian worship. It has been ever found in the experience of Christianity, that affliction and sorrow draw the heart from the things of this present world ; and that times like those to which we are now referring — times when no man could call his life his own, draw men powerfully to their knees, and lead to a more frequent, more earnest, more fervent attendance and devotion to the worship of God. Such times lead true and faithful men not only to more de- votion in private for personal comfort and strength, but also to more worship in public for mutual encour- agement and support. Accordingly, amid the deep afflictions and fearful sufferings of these victims of persecution, they assembled together for the worship of God. They there knelt, and prayed, and praised, and read together ; and those long passages and dreary caverns resounded with the words of prayer, and with the hymn of praise, and with the reading of the word, and with the preaching of the Gospel, as these faith- ful and devout men, the children of persecuted Chris- tianity, and living martyrs to the faith of Jesus, pour- ed out their souls in prayer and praise. There they excavated little recesses and called them churches, where they could assemble in larger numbers for the common worship of God and the communion of the Lord's Supper ; and there many a hardened heart was melted into love, and many a broken spirit was healed by the balm of Gilead, and many an afflicted soul was comforted of God. There must have been THE JESUITS AT ROME. 207 an inexpressible charm in the words of Holy Scrip- ture under such touching circumstances, and there must have been a marvelous power in the Gospel preached faithfully in such strange scenes and stran- ger times. Nor was this all. Even when persecu- tion relaxed in violence, and Christians were not nec- essarily exposed to death for their profession ; and when, therefore, they were enabled to steal forth from these dark caves, and return to home and relatives, ^till there was no relaxation of violence against any thing approaching to a public celebration of Christian worship. It was necessary, therefore, to conduct it with the strictest secrecy — a secrecy so strict as to be unknown to all but those whose faithfulness could be entirely depended on ; and it was thence invested intentionally with a veil of mystery, so as to insure its being kept secret from the uninitiated. This se- crecy became the more necessary, when discovery would have been the certain martyrdom of the most zealous and devoted of the ministry of the Church. All this led to the worship of the Christians being se- cretly and mysteriously celebrated in the Catacombs ; and those Christians who, living in the upper world, breathing the air and enjoying the light of heaven, yet loved to join in the common service and in the holy communion, were obliged to resort in the silent hours of night to those holes in the Campagna which led through many a long and winding intricacy to the secret recesses where they could enjoy the ministra- tions of the Church. And further still, these dark and dreary scenes were destined to receive a yet further source of interest. 208 MORNINGS AMONG The Christians who fled there and found safety there were not unmindful of their brethren who in the up- per world were called to the trials of martyrdom ; who, not escaping as others, or perhaps arrested in the mo-- ment of escaping, were doomed to the sword, or to the scaffold, or to the wild beasts of the Colosseum. They used to steal from their hiding-places by night, and bear away the mangled bodies and scattered bones of these martyred men, and, bringing them among their brethren, thank God for the faithfulness of their tes- timony, pray to God to be enabled to follow the ex- ample of patience and faith, and then bury them in the recesses of the Catacombs. The Catacombs thus became the graves of the martyrs. Too soon and too often, alas ! they became the scenes of martyrdom. On some occasions, when the fury of persecution raged with more than ordinary malignancy, the per- secutors would enter the Catacombs and slay the un- happy Christians even in th^ir hiding-places ; and though, in the intricacy of these deep recesses, the unhappy ones were able easily to stop passages and remain only in those places where none but those well acquainted with the place could possibly trace them, yet at times they were treacherously betrayed and surprised, so as that the Catacombs became not only the graves of martyrs, but the scenes of martyr- dom ; and besides this, the Christians usually buried their dead in these places. The pagan Romans, at least of the higher and wealthier classes, usually burn- ed their dead, and deposited the ashes in small cine- rary urns or vessels. The Christian Romans, on the other hand, seem invariably to have adopted the prac- THE JESUITS AT EOME. 209 tice of burying their dead, perhaps from the Jewish custom, or from the prevalent opinion that the end of the world was at hand, and that their bodies would soon arise again for immortality. At all events, whatever was the motive, the practice was universal. They made no burial-places above ground, but taking the relics of the dead into the recesses of the Cata- combs, where so many of the slaves and poorer class- es of the heathens were buried, they there deposited their brethren. They cut a cavity in the side wall, so to speak, of the passage or gallery, sufficiently large to contain the body, and there they laid it. This system continued for years, even for centuries ; and as the numbers of Christians multiplied at Rome, so the number of burials multiplied in proportion, till all through the Catacombs, the walls of the passages and galleries at both sides are full of these graves, arrang- ed sometimes two and three deep, so that the stran- ger now walking through the Catacombs is walking through long galleries of the dead, sleeping on either hand in numbers beyond counting. There lie buried the mangled forms of the most faithful of martyrs — men who counted not their lives dear to themselves ; there lie buried the bones of many an afflicted and per- secuted saint, who lived and died in the hope of glory ; there rest the mortal remains of many a faithful Chris- tian, whose life adorned the Gospel he professed, and commended it to the admiration of all men ; and there lie the moldering bodies of ten thousand times ten thousand of those men who have professed the name of Christian, but whose hearts are known only to Him who shall reveal all secrets at the judgment day. 210 MORNINGS AMONG Such is the interest associated with the Catacombs. It is purely the interest of association, as in them- selves they possess nothing of attraction even to the curious ; but associated as they are w^ith the perse- cutions of the primitive Church, consecrated by being the place where the sacred services were celebrated, and hallowed as the resting-place of so many Christians, ihey possess an enduring charm to the Christian. And yet it seems strange that they should have been so long neglected and forgotten. It is certain that soon after Christianity had triumphed over pagan- ism, and had become the established religion of the empire, the Catacombs ceased to be resorted to as the sacred and cherished burial-place of the Christian dead. They were closed. From being unused they soon be- came neglected, and from being neglected they soon became forgotten. It is a remarkable fact, that for many centuries the memory of the Catacombs was forgotten, and even their existence totally unknown. For ages all tradition of their uses — their sacredness — ^their moldering contents — and even of their very existence, was utterly lost. In the city of Rome, with all its crowding memories, this was lost. In the Church of Rome, with all its supposed congeniality with antiquity — with all its boasted veneration and devotion to the ancient — with all its priests and its monks, its convents and its monasteries — in the Church of Rome, all memory of the Catacombs as the refuge of the persecuted Christian — as the place of the services of the persecuted Church — as the burial- -place of the martyrs and the saints of Christ, was as thoroughly lost^ and as perfectly a forgotten and neg- THE JESUITS AT HOME. 2ll leoted thing as in the mosques of Mecca. It was not till the sixteenth century that the evidence of their existence and their uses called attention to them, and the interest and importance of the subject were forced upon the lazy and slumbering inmates of the innu- merable convents of Rome. And even then they were destined to be desecrated by a use that could scarcely have been anticipated. They were invaded by innumerable bands of monks and friars, collecting from their graves the bones of the long-buried dead — disturbing the moldering relics of mortality — dragging them into the upper world — hawking them from city to city, and from country to country, and driving an execrable traffic in them un- der the name of relics. Every grave was rifled, every skeleton was rent asunder, every bone was pounded in order to multiply splinters ; and when once the grave of some martyr or saint was said to be discovered, the head was severed and sent to one country, and the leg was severed and sent to another, an arm was for- warded to one land and a thigh to another, a tooth was extracted from the skull and sent to some con- vent, and a rib severed from the back sent to some monastery. And, at the same time, a traffic of the most disgraceful and degrading nature was driven in all these, as lawful articles of ecclesiastical merchand- ise. The demand for such articles was so great in the superstition and ignorance of the times, and the miraculous properties of such relics were so extrava- gantly extolled, as of incalculable advantage to the temporal and spiritual interest of the possessors, that the demand of the market soon called forth an ade- 512 MORNINGS AMONG quate supply ; and such was the unscrupulousness of the authorities at Rome, and so utterly profligate the monks who were the merchants in this matter, that they not unfrequently sold several different skulls as the only true skull of some particular martyr, and sev- eral different arms as the veritable arms of some fa- vorite saint, so that even at the present day some saints have several different heads and arms in differ- ent places. Sometimes the traveler in Italy discovers some martyr who has had two or three heads, and some saint who has had four or five arms, and per- haps a still greater superfluity of legs. The enormous amount of wealth which this traffic brought into Rome is incalculable. The Catacombs, as a mine of bones, proved incomparably more precious than if they had been a mine of silver. But disgusting and sickening as was all this as an indecency and an outrage upon the dead, and revolt- ing as it was to every gentle and Christian feeling, it yet could not alter the facts of past history, nor strip the Catacombs of their touching interest and real im- portance to the student of Christian history. There the Catacombs remained, there the graves of the Christians remained, there the monuments of the dead remained ; and while these remained, it might be hoped that they would supply some evidences — .some items of primitive customs and primitive opinions, that might serve to illustrate the opinions and the practices of primitive Christianity. The best mode of visiting these scenes, at least those Catacombs most generally, because most easily, visited and explored, is by entering them through the THE JESUITS AT ROME. 213 Church of the Convent of St. Sebastian. It is narrated in the legend of that saint that he was a young and handsome soldier ; that for the crime of believing in Christianity he was bound to a tree as a target for the arrows of his comrades ; that having been shot through every limb till he br^tled with arrows, a human por- cupine, he yet survived by a miracle ; that he again accused himself before the tribunals, and was dispatch- ed by decapitation. This, or something of this kind, is the legend of St. Sebastian, one of the most favored and popular of the saints at Rome ; not so much from any thing extraordinary in the saint himself, as from his being so useful and fine a subject for the pencils of the artists. The iine and youthful figure — the fleshiness and nakedness-^the grace of the position, and the expression of the face, all supply a noble sub- ject for the artist ; and the multiplication of the pic- tures creates a multiplication of votaries. It is said by the monks of the Convent of St. Sebastian that their church or chapel is built over that part of the Catacomb where the body of the saint was buried. This is by no means improbable ; at all events, there is an entrance — and it is by far the best and most convenient — into the Catacombs through the church of the convent. The monk who acted as guide or cicerone, on our visit to these interesting scenes was selected for his office with admirable judgment and as admirable taste. He looked like a moving plague — a personifi- cation of the malaria — a walking pestilence. There he was, an attenuated thing, a living skeleton, with his brown cloak around him to conceal the bones from 214 MORNINGS AMONG view ; you might fancy you could almost see the light of the candles shining through his ribs ; and, withal, he looked a meek and subdued man, one who spoke with vivacity — indeed, with enthusiasm, though his voice was toned with a sad and melancholy cadence. He was very calm, thoughtful, and silent if left to himself, but exceedingly animated and communicative when questioned. He spoke in raptures of the sub- terranean chapel, and gave all real and needful in- formation, as well as a good deal that was unreal, respecting the Catacombs, that the general visitor could require. He supplied each of our party "vV^ith a lighted candle. He led the way himself with steps slow and solemn, and as stealthy as if he feared to disturb the slumbers of the dead. On he moved, or rather glided, through those dark passages and damp galleries, looking for all the world like a ghost ; and, but for the color of his brown monkish dress, With his thin, haggard, attenuated look, and, at the same time, his earnest and impressive manner, he might well have passed for one of the ancient inhabitants of the Catacombs called again to life. He would stop at times, and carefully explain all the details of some grave more remarkable than the rest, and at oiher times he would pause, hold his candle in one hand, and mysteriously point with his other bony hand to some spot or object — look unutterably mysterious, and then drop his eyes to the ground, and pass on without another word. And then, when all was over, he looked so poor and sad — so miserable and meek, and stood so modestly looking for the gratuity usual- ly given on those occasions, with an expression that THE JESUITS AT ROME. 215 seemed designed to move the visitor to more than or- dinary liberality, that there really was no resisting the incomparable acting of his silent begging. Poor man ! he earns hardly the money he receives. The graves of the Catacombs are excavated on both sides of these passages. They are excavated in the soil or tufo which forms the sides of the passages, and therefore can be examined with the greatest possible facility. They are often smaller — much smaller than Height be expected ; indeed, so very small sometimes as to raise the question as to the manner in which the bodies of the dead could have found room in them. That these graves, at least for the greater portion, were the graves of Christians, is very generally be- lieved. The grounds of that belief are not so certain as might be desirable. It was certainly the custom of the pagan Romans to hum their dead. But this was true generally, and not universally, for it was customary to bury the slaves and the poorer classes ; and there is not a shadow of doubt as to the Cata- combs having been frequently used as the burial-place of those classes of the heathen population long before their being made the refuge of the persecuted Chris- tians. And, besides this, there is every probability that the Christians often buried the bodies of their heathen relatives among those of other Christian mem- bers of the same family. The bones of many who had continued in heathenism were laid in affectionate remembrance beside those of others, near and loved, who had embraced Christianity ; and thus heathen and Christian sleep side by side, in the last and com- mon resting-place of humanity. 21Q MORNINGS AMONG This fact has been placed beyond a shadow of doubt by the number of monumental inscriptions, which are certainly heathen, found in the Catacombs. Nor is it a sufficient answer to this to suggest that possibly they may have taken the monumental tablets of heathens, and employed them to cover the graves of Christians, as this would only prove that there were the tombs of heathens close at hand; indeed, this seems very certain, for some stones have heathen in- scriptions on one side, and Christian inscriptions on the other, showing that they had taken a heathen stone, and, reversing it, placed it on a Christian grave, and then wrote a suitable inscription. It was almost universal among the pagan Romans to place over the monumental inscription the words " Divis manibus^''^ which they sometimes contracted to the first two letters, " D. M.," the allusion being to the gods presiding over the place of the dead. This and other allusions to their gods occur frequently on the monumental tablets of the Catacombs, thus de- monstrating the fact of the burial of heathens in those places. The non-observance of this has led to some ludi- crous mistakes — even to the enrolling some heathens in the roll of saints, and the worship of the bones of heathens as the relics of saints. The following is a well-known instance of this : D. M. Julia Evodia, filia fecit castas matri. This is a heathen inscription. The tablet is dedi- cated to the manes, " Divis manibus," and is similar to thousands of others found on the graves and urns THE JESUITS AT ROME. 217 of heathens. It is a mement© which Julia Evodia, a daughter, raised to her mother ; and, without ever considering that the lady was a heathen, the monks have disposed of her bones as the relics of a saint and martyr ; and never observing that it was the grave of the mother, whose name is not given, they have christened the bones by the name of the daughter, as the relics of Saint Julia Evodia, who had erected the tablet! This is a well-known and amusing instance of the mistakes into which either their ignorance or their avarice seduced the clergy of Rome in former days. They now, indeed, exhibit some ingenuity in suggest- ing that the D. M. of the heathen monuments may possibly have been adopted among some Christians to express Deo Maximo or perhaps Divus Martyr, and thus endeavor to Christianize all those monuments of the heathens found in the Catacombs ! The enlight- ened and candid among them laugh at the whole af- fair as much as ourselves ; and this they can do the more easily, as all that could have been gained by the mistakes or deceptions of the old monks has long since been accomplished. On asking our emaciated and ghastly guide for the signs by which he could ascertain the grave of a Christian from that of a heathen, he replied by point- ing to little crosses scratched on the wall beside or above the graves. He pronounced these to be the signs of the Christian faith of the departed dead. This seemed reasonable ; but it occurred at the moment that, as these Catacombs were in the possession of these monks for some centuries, so they could scratch K 218 MORNINGS AMONG these crosses over any number of graves that might seem desirable. It was clear they could never be de- tected, and the character of monks has never been such as to secure them from all suspicion of " pious frauds." This appeared still more probable, when, having lingered a little behind our party in order to examine some grave more accurately, I observed a gentleman occupying himself the mean time in mak- ing these crosses with the iron end of his walking stick ! We agreed that there was no appearance of difference between these and the other crosses, and so our young friend amused himself with making a few more ; and when w^e left the Catacombs, he congratu- lated himself on having made half a dozen saints or Christians at least during his visit ! I was particularly anxious to learn the means by which the monks were able to ascertain the bones of a saint — the bones of a martyr — from the bones of any ordinary Christian. As the Catacombs were the great treasure-house of relics, I wished to learn the tests or signs by which those bones which were to be venerated as relics of saints were to be discerned from the bones of others. While residing far away in the distant scenes of England, a man is compelled to rest satisfied with what information he can gather from books on such subjects, and there is scarcely a strong statement can be made by one party that is not im- mediately contradicted by the other, so that the mind of an inquirer is held in suspense, amid the hardihood of assertion generated by the odium theologicum, by that compound of the gall and vinegar of Calvary. But I have sometimes thought that there would be a THJE JESUITS AT ROME. 219 satisfaction in making the inquiry and receiving the answer on the spot. I resolved, therefore, to ask the question, amid tlie dark vaults and dreary graves of the Catacombs, and to obtain my answer amid the fleshless skeletons and long-silent bones of the primi- tive Christians. , < The poor attenuated skeleton of a monk, who seem- ed to me as pious as he was poor, and as sincere as he was attenug.ted, stated that one sign was a red mark, which was sometimes observed beside a grave. This, he said, was the blood of the martyr, which was thus sprinkled on this spot, in order to remain as a sign of martyrdom. Another sign was a small bottle, which was found at many graves, but not at all. This bottle was found to contain some deposit of a reddish hue, which it has been inferred was blood— the blood of the person there buried, and who therefore must have died the death of a martyr. It at once suggest- ed itself that it was an easy matter for the monks to multiply the number of their images, whenever they were in need of a new supply of relics for the market, as they had only to place a red mark upon any grave, or deposit one of these little bottles of terra cotta be- side it. I felt that at least I could have no great de- pendence on them, even supposing the signs were real and not fictitious ; for there is no authority — no ground whatever — not the shadow of authority or ground for supposing that either the red spot or the bottle are signs of martyrdom or saintship, any more than of that Christianity which holds salvation by the blood of the cross. If they are signs of any thing par- ticular, they seem rather the sign of men who died de- 220 MOENINGS AMONG pending on the blood of Christ, and whose surviving friends gave to their graves that sign of their faith. The truth is, no dependence whatever can be placed on these signs ; and I afterward found that they were laughed at by the more learned clergy of Rome. Our interesting but most credulous guide seemed fully to believe what he was stating ; and when I in- quired as to the signs or tests of a saint — the means by which the bones of a saint — not a martyr, but a saint — might be discerned from those of ordinary Christians, he replied with the most perfect simplici- ty, that when they were first discovered they emitted a sweet odor — a delicious fragrance, that ravished the senses ; and as this certainly was not the ordinary property of dead men's bones, it seemed to argue — if true — something most marvelous and saintly. But this was not all. When these bones were brought forth into the upper world, they wrought the most wonderful miracles : the sick were healed, the dead were raised, the heretics were converted at the touch or sight of these bones, thus demonstrated to be the relics of some saint. There is one instance on record. It was the case of a skull — a fleshless, eyeless, tongue- less, noseless skull. It was questioned, after certain exorcisms, as to the rightful owner, and it answered its name, its residence, and told the circumstances un- der which its owner was decapitated, dying a martyr's death ! What other persons may think of such mar- velous doings — such exquisite perfumes from bones, and such interesting colloquies from skulls — -it is Eipt for me to say or determine. The poor monk who guided us through these dreary Catacombs seemed THE JESUITS AT ROME. 221 religiously to believe them, and he was not singular in doing so. The enlightened portion of the eccle- siastical body, however, are quite as unbelieving as Protestants on these particulars. It was not possible that a source of evidence, so calculated to illustrate and prove the character of primitive Christianity as the inscriptions in the Cat- acombs, should fail to attract universal attention. It was fortunate for me that I had paid much close atten- tion to the great mass of such inscriptions, collected from the Catacombs, and deposited with admirable ar- rangement in the Vatican, as otherwise I should have been taken by surprise, and have been wholly unable to deal with the arguments of my friends the Jesuits, derived from those inscriptions. I was one day in the Collegio Romano, in company with the librarian, the professor of Antiquities or Archaeology, the professor of Dogmatic Theology, and the professor of Candn Law, and some others of the priesthood. These learned, and courteous, and agreeable persons were members of the order of Jesuits, and were an orna- ment to any society with which they were connected ; and they were not likely, when showing to me some tablets taken from the Catacombs, and selected on ac- count of their inscriptions, and deposited in the Col- legio Romano, to omit the fair opportunity which they offered of impressing me with the value of those in- scriptions as evidences of the ancient faith and prac- tice of the Church of Rome. I stated frankly that I had spent some time in the Catacombs, and that I had no great faith in the con- clusions which some of my kind friends of Rome ha- bitually deduced from them. 222 morMngs among They asked me what were the conclusions to which T referred, and why I should doubt what seemed so evident to them. I replied, that " the Congregation of Relics" once came to a decision as to the relics found, in the Cata- combs ; that that decision was to the effect that the appearance of a palm branch graven on a tombstone, and the appearance of a vessel tinged with blood, were to be received as sure and certain signs of a martyr's grave. Such was their decision. But, since that decision was recorded, much more has been brought to light, which has proved the erroneous character of that conclusion of the congregation. For example : some of those vessels, supposed thus to have been ves- sels of martyr's blood, have been found, on careful ex- amination, to be of a form and make long subsequent to the age of persecution, and to exhibit signs painted or graven upon them which could not have been so graven or painted till after the times of martyrdom, inasmuch as they were not invented till years long subsequent. And again, in reference to the palm branch, it has been clearly ascertained that the grav- ing of a sprig or branch, which they call a palm, is frequently found on the graves of those who were un- doubted heathens; and also on the graves of infants too young for martyrdom ; and also on graves of a period subsequent to the age of martyrdom. The de- cision, therefore, of the congregation of relics, has been altogether rejected of late years, even among all the learned of the Roman Church. It is altogether rejected even by yourselves. I added, that the decis- ion of the congregation was well enough for the few THE JESUITS AT ROME. 223 items of knowledge then in their possession ; but, in- asmuch as their confident decision is now universally- exploded, it had shaken all confidence on my part in the peremptory statements so frequently made at Rome in reference to the inscriptions found in the Catacombs. I felt constrained to examine and judge for myself. I perceived that this remark on my part had its ef- fect — the effect which I desired — in lowering the tone of confident assertion and bold statement which my friends had been exhibiting while we Were looking over the library. They at once stated, however, that they were not referring to the decisions of the con- gregation of relics respecting the graves of martyrs as distinct from the graves of other saints, but to the inscriptions and figures graven upon the tablets as in- dicative of the fact that certain religious practices, against which Protestants objected in the Church of Rome, and which were made a ground of protestation and separation, were religious practices prevalent among those who were the saints and martyrs of the primitive Church. On my asking to what religious practice they especially alluded, one of my friends replied by referring to the practice of invocation of saints — praying to the saints ; adding that there was no doubt as to the existence of the practice, as it was evidenced in the inscriptions. I asked to what inscription and what words he al- luded, as I had observed nothing of the kind. He replied by boldly stating that some of the tab- lets were inscribed with the " orate pro nobis, ''^ or, rather, correcting himself, << ora pro nohisP 2tj4 MORNINrGS AMONG I said that I had seen nothing of the kind ; that I had carefully examined the great collection of inscrib- ed tablets deposited in the Vatican ; that some of them — indeed, the larger portion — had no evidence or trace of Christianity beyond a cross, or some anagram or emblem of Christ, as the ship or the fish, or the Greek letter X, or the A and fl, or some other of the various symbols of the Christian faith ; that some commenced with the solitary word " Pax ;" some con- cluded with the words " in pace''' or " in Christo,^^ implying that the person either lived or died in peace or in Christ — in the peace of God or in the faith of Christ ; that I had observed many inscriptions stating that the person lived in peace, *' vixit in pace^''^ and only one vivas in pace, expressive of the sigh or wish of the survivor that the person might live in peace, and very few others of the same import ; and that, in the large variety of inscriptions which I had had an opportunity of examining, I had never seen or heard of more than one with either ora or orate pro nobis. My friend replied that there was no doubt of the fact that there were such inscriptions, and that they actually possessed one in the college, and that he had seen the inscription, so that there could be no ques- tion as to the prevalence of the practice of saying the orate pro nobis — praying to the saints to pray for us. I reminded him that there were collected about two thousand inscriptions ; that these were taken chiefly from the monumental tablets of the Catacombs ; that they were cited as the representatives of the opinions of the primitive Christians ; and that all he was ena- bled to say was, that among these two thousand he THE JESUITS AT ROME. 225 had seen one with this inscription ! I then added, that, considering the heathens of Rome prayed to their departed heroes, it was no more than natural that some few of these, on embracing Christianity, more in profession than in reality, might ignorantly contin- ue the practice, and pray to some departed saint ; and that such an exception could prove nothing in favor of the practice ; that so isolated an instance as one inscription could only servcf like an exception, to prove the rule, and the real wonder was that more could not be found ; and the fact that more were not found among the thousands collected, proved powerfully that it was not the practice of the primitive Christians to inscribe the ora pro nobis on their tombs. The in- ference was, that they did not pray to the saints. He answered this by saying that I must at least acknowledge that the inscription implied that the saints in heaven prayed for us ; that after they died they did not lose their holy sympathies for us, nor their love of prayer for those whom they loved in life, and whom they left behind them in this vale of tears ; and that, if they thus prayed for us, it could not be wrong for us to ask their prayers, now that they are in heaven, as we had often asked them while they were yet upon earth. I replied that even his own interpretation of the in- scription implied rather that the saints in heaven prayed /or the saints on earth — that they prayed for us — and that I felt that there was a wide difference between our supposing that they prayed for us and our praying to them. I believed that it was a very early opinion among Christians that the departed Christians or saints were in the presence of God, and K 2 226 MORNINGS AMONG prayed to God for them ; but I felt this was widely different from our praying to them — offering those prayers to them which should be offered only to God. He expressed himself greatly pleased at my ac- knowledgment of such opinions as being prevalent very early in the Church, and he spoke as if he thought there was little or no difference between their praying ^ for us and owr praying to them., and then went on to say that there was a marked distinction to be observed in the inscriptions on the monuments of the Cata- combs. One class, he stated, contained such expres- sions as requiescat in pace — may he rest in peace — may he be refreshed, may he be comforted : all this class are the monuments of Christian persons gener- ally, and these inscriptions are prayers for the dead. The other class are the monuments of martyrs, who pass at once into the beatific vision of God, and who therefore do not need those prayers for their peace, re- freshment, or comfort. Therefore those prayers are omitted ; and this was the real cause of there being so many monuments without prayers. It was be- cause there were so many martyrs. I said that I could not assent to his ideas of either class ; that the fact of there being no prayers for the dead or to the dead inscribed on the monuments, was to me an evidence that the Christians of those days nei- ther prayed for the dead nor to the dead, and that this was a much easier way of accounting for the omission than supposing that all these were the monuments of martyrs, a supposition for which, as far as I could judge, there was not the faintest foundation. And as for the statement that the words requiescat in pace^ THE JESUITS AT ROME. 227 and such similar expressions, were inscribed on the tablets, I could only say I had never seen such among all I had examined, that is, among all the collection in the Vatican, a collection larger than all other col- lections in the world combined. Such an instance might be there ; I heard there was, but I saw noth- ing like it : on one tablet, indeed, I had seen the nat- ural and loving ejaculation vivas in pace^ may you have peace ! and this appeared to me no more than a wish expressed to the dead rather than a prayer ad- dressed to God. I added that I could only speak of what I had myself seen. It was possible he might have had larger and better opportunities of informing himself, and that he had probably examined them more closely ; but that I apprehended there might be some mistake on his part, and I would therefore feel obliged by his showing me some inscription of the kind. The reply to this was, conducting me to several tablets, and pointing to one on which was rudely en- graved or scratched the figure of a man in a kneeling posture. My friend, pointing to this, and observing that I was silent and could make nothing of it, said that there was a kind of manumental language well known and understood ; that it was derived from a compar- ison of a large number of inscriptions ; that when a tablet was found without a prayer for the dead, it WaS to be regarded as the tablet of a martyr ; and that, as martyrs go at once into the vision of God, they do not need any prayers, and therefore no prayers are in- scribed on their tablets ; that, instead of such pray- ers, there was some emblem, as a representation of a 228 MORNINGS AMONG person standing in the attitude of prayer, or as the figure of a kneeling man, that is, the figure of a man praying to the martyred dead, and thus im bodying, not indeed the words, but the idea of the ora pro no- bis. He said that this was a matter very well known and understood by those who were acquainted with the language of the monumental inscriptions. I could not but smile at this statement. I had seen so many of these monuments without any thing that could imply a prayer for the dead, that I had concluded from thence that the primitive Christians did not cherish such a practice as praying for the dead ia the age of the Catacombs ; but my friend of the order of Jesuits assigned as the reason for so marked an omission, that all such monuments are those of the martyrs, who were in no need of such prayers ! Thus variously do different minds look upon the same things. I remarked, in a doubting tone, that my friend seemed to regard the kneeling or praying figure as the representation, not of the martyr, but of some liv- ing friend. He said that the monumental language demanded this. A martyr could not require prayer, and there- fore the figure could not represent the martyr him- self; that it must therefore represent some one else, perhaps his friend, or relative, or follower, who erect- ed the tablet, and who engraved his own representa- tion on the tablet, to show himself in the act of pray- ing to the departed and glorified martyr ; that this was the well-understood language of such inscriptions, and that I might depend on this interpretation. THE JESUITS AT ROME. §29 I replied that his process of reasoning did not strike me as very logical. He found tablets without pray- ers for the dead, and at once concluded that they were the monuments of martyrs who needed no prayers ; and now he found a figure of a praying man, and at once concluded it could not represent the man buried beneath the monument, but the living man who erect- ed the monument. I understood that the monument was always the monument of the dead ; that the in- scription was always with reference to the dead ; that any picture, or image, or other representation was de- signed for the dead, and that it was quite new to me to hear of their representing the living. I regarded it as representing the dead, and accordingly, in the mon- uments of the Catacombs, such figures are always of the same sex as the dead person. [In a subsequent conversation at my own residenqe with one of my friends from the Collegio Romano, this subject was renewed, and I was not a little surprised at finding a new and different interpretation given of this figure. It was then argued that the kneeling fig- ure represented the buried dead ; that it represented him as kneeling in prayer, and that it thus showed that the saints and martyrs in heaven pray, and that, as they can not pray for themselves, so they must be praying for us. In the Collegio Romano, the figure was said to represent the living ; but at my own res- idence it was said to represent the dead or departed ! These inconsistencies are very frequent when arguing with different persons.] My friend replied that I was quite mistaken in re- garding the figure as the representation of the depart- 230 MORNINGS AMONG ed one, for that the known language of inscriptions required it should be the representation of the living Christian who erected the tablet ; and it was design- ed to show his belief in the martyr's enjoyment of the beatific vision of God, and that he was thus praying to the martyr to pray to God for him^ — asking for the intercession of the martyr — ^really, an ora pro nobis ; and it was thus a clear proof or justification of "the Catholic Church" in praying to the departed saints to pray for us. I answered this by saying that I could not think the figure represented the living Christian who erected the tablet ; that such an interpretation was forced and unnatural, for that it was the custom of all ages and of all nations to represent the dead rather than the living on their monuments. I could not but think that the figure was designed to represent the dead, as one who had lived and died a praying man. He at once caught at my words, and said that if I regarded the figure as representing the departed saint, then I must acknowledge it as evidence that in the primitive Church they thought the departed saints prayed ; and that, as they needed not to pray for themselves, they must be praying for us. I said that I did not regard the figure as repre- senting the departed saint as praying for us in heav- en, but as having been a praying man in his life ; that as the words ''in peace" and "in Christ" implied that the departed had lived or died in the peace of God and in the faith of Christ, so the kneeling posture might imply that he lived or died in prayer. I thought this the natural interpretation of the figure ; and I said THE JESUITS AT ROME. 231 that in England, and I believed in other countries, and certainly in the Church of St. Peter at Rome, the monumental statues always represent the departed persons ; that it was usual to represent them, not as they were when dead, but as they were when alive — the warrior as a warrior — the orator as an orator — the painter as a painter — the clergyman as a clergy- man ; and I observed that all the monumental figures of popes and nuns in St. Peter's represented them as popes or nuns — represented them as they were on earth, and not as they are supposed to be in heaven; and that, in the same way, we ought to regard this kneeling figure as representing the departed Christian as he lived or died on earth, a praying man. He was represented kneeling, to show he was a man of prayer — a Christian man. There is an example of it in Scripture, where the conversion of St. Paul is described in the simple words, " Behold, he prayeth I" There was no direct reply to this, but it was stated that I could not deny that the saints departed prayed for the Christians still on earth ; and that it was customary in the primitive Church to pray for the dead. I said that I believed it was a very early practice in the Church to pray for the dead ; that I thought it a very foolish, though perhaps natural practice ; that it always seemed to me to be praying when it was too late, like praying for yesterday — for a thing gone by ; but that, at all events, praying for the dead was a very different thing from praying to the dead ; that the two seemed very inconsistent, the former being wholly useless as being too late, and the latter idola- 232 MORNINGS AMONG * trous, as offering a prayer to a creature which ought only to be oftered to the Creator. It was evident that we were not likely to agree. The truth was, that, surrounded and assailed as I was by four of the reverend professors in their own college, I was not disposed to be as gentle and as cautious as I might otherwise have been. One of the party calK ed on me some days afterward, in company with a lay brother, and we resumed the subject in detail ; but there was nothing very important elicited. As much use is made by the priests at Rome of arguments derived from the Catacombs, a few more words may be added on the subject. Those Cata« combs have for centuries been in the possession of the monks of certain conveats, and no one is permit- ted to enter without the attendance of one or more of these ; and they are constantly talking of new and won- derful discoveries of inscriptions, and relics, and chap- els, which are sure to confound all opponents of the Church of Rome. In truth, they are able to invent any discovery that may suit them, and make any ar- rangements within the Catacombs that may serve their purpose. They have exclusive charge of the Catacombs, and they can not be regarded as over- scrupulous in their reported discoveries. It is not, however, in the Catacombs themselves that an anxious and earnest inquirer can obtain much satisfactory information respecting the practices or opinions of the first Christians. It may be, and un- doubtedly is, satisfactory to one's curiosity to witness those dark recesses which were the scenes and theater of some of the most striking events in Christian story. THE JESUITS AT ROME. 233 But all, or almost all, the monuments — the real me- mentoes of the past, have been removed. The marble slabs that sealed the graves, the tablets with their in- scriptions, and all else that was real and certain — all that could be depended on as likely to throw light on the past, have been removed. Some have found their way into private collections, a few have a place in the Capitol, a few more may be seen preserved in the Jes- uits' College, while the great mass has been removed to the Vatican, where they form a great collection, great in number, in importance, and in interest. It may indeed take away somewhat of the interest of such monuments, the seeing them, not in their own position beside the graves of the Catacombs ; but still, as there is no security against the Catacombs falling in and burying them forever, it was of immense im- portance that they should be removed to some place of safety, where they may be preserved forever. No place could be more suitably selected than their pres- ent position in the Vatican. In the long gallery, called, I believe, la galleria lapidaria, by which the series of galleries of sculpture are approached, there are said to be deposited and ex- hibited for examination four thousand monuments or works of antiquity. Of these there is a very consid- erable portion connected with Christian antiquity. Inserted in the wall on one side are a vast number of monuments, tablets, inscriptions, being memorials of the heathen dead. In the wall, on the other hand, are inserted a similar series of analogous monuments, in- scriptions, and tablets, the memorials of the Christian dead. The inquirer thus possesses at a glance all he 234 MORNINGS AMDNG requires for a comparison of the practices and opinions of both heathens and Christians on these occasions. There is but little difference between them beyond that of the heathens beginning with the words ^' Divis Manibus,''^ and those of the Christian ending with the words ^' in pace.'''' Nor, indeed, ought much to be ex- pected. The ties of near relationship are the same, whether among heathens or among Christians. The natural love of husband and wife — the mutual bond of parent and child — the pure affection of brother and sister, are one and the same, whether among heathens or among Christians; and as the griefs are as sad, and the mourning as deep in one as in the other, so the language of affectionate and sorrowing remembrance — the expressions of monumental inscriptions must be expected to be much the same, whether on the tablets of the cinerary urns of heathen Rome, or on the monuments beside the Catacomb graves of Christian Rome.^ Day after day and week after week have I paused in this gallery to examine these monumental inscrip- tions. It always occurred to me that if a belief in the sufferings of the dead in purgatory — if a belief in the efficacy of the prayers of the living in behalf of the dead — if a belief in the matter of fact of the de- parted saints praying for the living — if a belief in the efficacy of any praying to or invocation of the depart- ed saints, was held among the Christians of the * Among the heathen inscriptions is one which struck me as a beauti- ful memorial from a husband to his wife. It was to the effect that never, during their union, had she done any thing to displease him but once, and that was by dying. * THE JESUITS AT ROME. 235 Church in those early ages, when the Church used to hide herself, used to celebrate her worship, and used to bury her dead in the Catacombs, there ought to be, and there should be, some evidence of such belief in the inscriptions so numerous to be found in the Cat- acombs. The absence — the total and perfect absence of every thing of the kind, seems to argue powerfully that no such things entered into the religious belief of the Christians of those ages. There are two things observable in those inscrip- tions. The first is, that while some begin with the single word PAX, almost all of them end with the words NPACE or IN PACE, or IN CHRISTO, or somc cross or other anagram of Christ expressing the same thing. There is seldom any word connected with this. The in- scription will generally be found to contain the name of the dead, and the age or number of years he may have lived, as thus: '«To Julius, a pious and well- deserving son : he lived XX. years in peace f or <' To Evodia : she lived XXX. years in Christ P A careful examination of a large number of these inscriptions gave the impression that the intention was to convey the idea that the person had died " in peace," that is, in the peace of God or "in Christ," that is, in the faith of Christ, and that nothing more or less was intended. It is observable that in a modern grave-yard in any Roman Catholic country there are always expressions in the monumental inscriptions which intimate the belief of the Church of Rome. There is a request to the passing traveler to offer a prayer for the dead ; there is a statement setting forth that it is a good 236 MORNINGS AMONG thing to pray for the dead ; there is a prayer that the dead may rest in peace ; there is a request for the assisting prayers of the saints. These and others of a similar tendency are found in every cemetery in Roman Catholic countries. But there is nothing like this — nothing that has the faintest resemblance of this, or of any opinion approaching to any of these, to be found among the innumerable inscriptions col- lected from the Catacombs. The whole collection of inscriptions thus argues unanswerably that those opin- ions that have been of late years so universally re- ceived in the Church of Rome were wholly unknown in the primitive Church. The other peculiarity in these inscriptions which deserves attention is the systern of graving signs or symbols on the tablets. The cross, the ship, the fish, are frequent ; and still more that common symbol of the cross, as the Greek X, with the R, as the first two letters of ;:^p«(7ro^, combined with the A and fi, the whole being intended to represent the dead as hav- ing died in the faith of Christ, the Alpha and the Omega. The ship, like the ark of Noah, seems to represent the Church ; and the dead is thus described as one saved in the Church of God. The fish, Ix^^^Ci a word composed of the initial letters of iTjasg Xptarog Qes vtoq SwTT/p, was a very favorite symbol, and ac- cordingly sometimes appears on the monumental tab- lets, implying that the dead had died in Christ. The dove is often added as the emblem of peace ; and Jo- nah and the fish, as the emblem of the resurrection. Indeed, in all those inscriptions, whatever form they assume, there is conveyed the one plain and simple THE JESUITS AT ROME. 237 statement, that the person who lay buried beneath the tablet was a Christian ; and all these several forms, assumed, perhaps, from the varying tastes of individuals, seem to regard it as enough to describe the dead as having died in the peace of God and in the faith of Christ. This simplicity of primitive Christianity is a very interesting characteristic of those early ages. Indeed, it is quite refreshing to the spirit, which is so oppress- ed by all the gairish show and complicated ceremo- nials of the present times. It is absolutely a relief — a throwing off a burden, to let the mind turn away from a series of difficult and complicated doctrines — from a mass of dogmatical mysteries and scholastical subtleties — from a round of symbolical forms and un- intelligible ceremonies, so associated with every phase of religion at Rome, and to let it rest for a while amid the simplicity that characterized the religion of those who were " the destitute, afflicted, tormented" of the Church, and were compelled to hide themselves " in dens and caves of the earth." The men who were faithful amid the fiercest persecutions, who counted it all joy to be able to worship God in the darkness of the Catacombs, and there lived and there died, were content to live in the peace of God and to die in the faith of Christ, and to inscribe on the tombs of those <' who resisted unto blood, striving against sin," the simple words in pace or in christo. It seems to imply that the times are changed, and that we are changed with them when we yearn for more. finis. WORKS OF STEELIIG VALUE HECENTLY PUBLISHED BY MESSRS. HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK. Comprising his Correspondence and other Papers, Official and Private, 4-c. With illustrative Portraits. New, revised, and cheap edition. 12 vols. 8vo, Muslin. $1 50 per volume. As historical records, Washington's letters are invaluable, delineating, as they do, more minutely and more truthfully than any other sources, the particulars of our revolution. They stand among the archives of our history, imperishable, being, in their truth and minuteness, from the hand of one who knew the things whereof he wrote. — Buffalo Courier. These volumes are replete with instruction. Every page serves to show how wise and good a man our great Washington was. If every man in our country would read these writings carefully, they would infuse a portion of his patriotism into the present generation. — Albany Evening Journal. 'f^xtntt^iVn fJltstors of ttie atouqueist of 3Peru, With a Preliminary View of the Civilization of the Incas. With Portraits, Maps, ifC. 2 vols. %vo. Sheep extra, $4 50; Muslin, $4 00. We can most conscientiously recommend this work as indispensable to complete that long line of English histories which is gradually appropriating to itself the most important events in the chronicles of mankind. — Quarterly Review, October, 1847. The world's history contains no chapter more striking and attractive than that comprising the narrative of Spanish conquest in the Americas. Teeming with interest to the historian and philosopher, to the lover of daring enterprise and marvelous adventure, it is full of fasci- nation. Mr. Prescott has added to his well-merited reputation by his narrative of the Con- quest of Peru. — Blackwood. H^vtBtotVB flltstorg of tfie Conqueist of flle^ico, With the Life of the Conqueror, Hernando Cortez, and a View of the Ancient Mexican Civilization. With Portrait and Maps. 3 vols. Svo, Sheep extra, $6 75; Muslin, $6 00. It abounds with sketches of scenery worthy of Scott, with battle-pieces rivaling those of Napier, with pictures of disaster and desolation scarcely less pathetic than those drawn by Thucydides. Mr. Prescott appears to us to possess almost every qualification for his task.— Edinburgh Review. One of the most remarkable historical compositions that has appeared for a long time. — Bibliotheque Universelle de Geneve. ^tBtotVB fl^istorg of jFertrinautr antr Ksatiella, The Catholic. With Portraits. 3 vols. 6vo, Sheep extra, $6 75 ; Muslin, $6 00. It is hj much the first historical work which America has as yet produced, and one that leed hardly fear a comparison with any that has issued from the European press since this century began. — Quarterly Review ^tntoiVn i^toflrajjivtcal antr (tvitital ^mtllanitn. With a finely-engraved Portrait. 6vo, Muslin. $2 00. The essays embrace a variety of literary subjects, and treat of American, Spanish, French, Italian, and English authors. All who love a light and pleasant style of observation thrown over topics of universal interest will Snd enough here to aford them acceptable infoimatioa •od rational pastime.— Literary Gazette. ^axptx'Q Nets Catalogue. A NEW Descriptive Catalogue op Harper & Brothers' Publications; embracing the most recent of their issues, is now ready for distribution and may be obtained gratuitously on application to the publishers person- ally, or by letter, post-paid. The attention of gentlemen, in town or country, designing to form Li braries or enrich their literary collections, is respectfully invited to this Catalogue, which will be found to comprise a large proportion of the stand- ard and most esteemed works in English Literature — comprehendinc about two thousand volumes — which are offered in most instances a1 less than one half the cost of similar productions in England. To Librarians and others connected with Colleges, Schools, etc., whc may not have access to a reliable guide in forming the true estimate ol literary productions, it is believed the present Catalogue will prove espe cially valuable as a manual of reference. To prevent disappointment, it is suggested that, whenever books car not be obtained through any bookseller or local agent, applications witt remittance should be addressed direct to the Publishers, which will be promptly attended to. 83 Cliff Strut, New York. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. Fine schedule: 25 cents on first day overdue 50 cents on fourth day overdue One dollar on seventh day overdue. APR 22 1947 JAN 21 197 8EC. CIR. FEB 1 19; -9 LD 21-100w-12,'46(A2012sl6)4120 YB 30076