Chapter 8. Application of
the Third Note of a True DevelopmentAssimilative
Power
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{355} SINCE religious systems, true and false, have
one and the same great and comprehensive subject-matter,
they necessarily interfere with one another as rivals,
both in those points in which they agree together, and in
those in which they differ. That Christianity on its rise
was in these circumstances of competition and
controversy, is sufficiently evident even from a
foregoing Chapter: it was surrounded by rites, sects, and
philosophies, which contemplated the same questions,
sometimes advocated the same truths, and in no slight
degree wore the same external appearance. It could not
stand still, it could not take its own way, and let them
take theirs: they came across its path, and a conflict
was inevitable. The very nature of a true philosophy
relatively to other systems is to be polemical, eclectic,
unitive: Christianity was polemical; it could not but be
eclectic; but was it also unitive? Had it the power,
while keeping its own identity, of absorbing its
antagonists, as Aaron's rod, according to St. Jerome's
illustration, devoured the rods of the sorcerers of
Egypt? Did it incorporate them into itself, or was it
dissolved into them? Did it assimilate them into its own
{356} substance, or, keeping its name, was it simply
infected by them? In a word, were its developments
faithful or corrupt? Nor is this a question merely of the
early centuries. When we consider the deep interest of
the controversies which Christianity raises, the various
characters of mind it has swayed, the range of subjects
which it embraces, the many countries it has entered, the
deep philosophies it has encountered, the vicissitudes it
has undergone, and the length of time through which it
has lasted, it requires some assignable explanation, why
we should not consider it substantially modified and
changed, that is, corrupted, from the first, by the
numberless influences to which it has been exposed.
2.
Now there was this cardinal distinction between
Christianity and the religions and philosophies by which
it was surrounded, nay even the Judaism of the day, that
it referred all truth and revelation to one source, and
that the Supreme and Only God. Pagan rites which honoured
one or other out of ten thousand deities; philosophies
which scarcely taught any source of revelation at all;
Gnostic heresies which were based on Dualism, adored
angels, or ascribed the two Testaments to distinct
authors, could not regard truth as one, unalterable,
consistent, imperative, and saving. But Christianity
started with the principle that there was but "one
God and one Mediator," and that He, "who at
sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past
unto the fathers by the Prophets, had in these last days
spoken unto us by His Son." He had never left
Himself without witness, and now He had come, not to undo
the past, but to fulfil and perfect it. His Apostles, and
they alone, possessed, venerated, and protected a Divine
Message, as both sacred and sanctifying; and, in the
collision and conflict of {357} opinions, in ancient
times or modern, it was that Message, and not any vague
or antagonist teaching, that was to succeed in purifying,
assimilating, transmuting, and taking into itself the
many-coloured beliefs, forms of worship, codes of duty,
schools of thought, through which it was ever moving. It
was Grace, and it was Truth.
§ 1. The Assimilating Power of Dogmatic
Truth
That there is a truth then; that there is one truth;
that religious error is in itself of an immoral nature;
that its maintainers, unless involuntarily such, are
guilty in maintaining it; that it is to be dreaded; that
the search for truth is not the gratification of
curiosity; that its attainment has nothing of the
excitement of a discovery; that the mind is below truth,
not above it, and is bound, not to descant upon it, but
to venerate it; that truth and falsehood are set before
us for the trial of our hearts; that our choice is an
awful giving forth of lots on which salvation or
rejection is inscribed; that "before all things it
is necessary to hold the Catholic faith;" that
"he that would be saved must thus think," and
not otherwise; that, "if thou criest after
knowledge, and liftest up thy voice for understanding, if
thou seekest her as silver, and searchest for her as for
hid treasure, then shalt thou understand the fear of the
Lord, and find the knowledge of God,"this is
the dogmatical principle, which has strength.
That truth and falsehood in religion are but matter of
opinion; that one doctrine is as good as another; that
the Governor of the world does not intend that we should
gain the truth; that there is no truth; that we are not
more acceptable to God by believing this than by
believing that; that no one is answerable for his
opinions; that they are a matter of necessity or
accident; that it is enough if we sincerely hold what we
profess; that our merit lies in {358} seeking, not in
possessing; that it is a duty to follow what seems to us
true, without a fear lest it should not be true; that it
may be a gain to succeed, and can be no harm to fail;
that we may take up and lay down opinions at pleasure;
that belief belongs to the mere intellect, not to the
heart also; that we may safely trust to ourselves in
matters of Faith, and need no other guide,this is
the principle of philosophies and heresies, which is very
weakness.
2.
Two opinions encounter; each may be abstractedly true;
or again, each may be a subtle, comprehensive doctrine,
vigorous, elastic, expansive, various; one is held as a
matter of indifference, the other as a matter of life and
death; one is held by the intellect only, the other also
by the heart: it is plain which of the two must succumb
to the other. Such was the conflict of Christianity with
the old established Paganism, which was almost dead
before Christianity appeared; with the Oriental
Mysteries, flitting wildly to and fro like spectres; with
the Gnostics, who made Knowledge all in all, despised the
many, and called Catholics mere children in the Truth;
with the Neo-platonists, men of literature, pedants,
visionaries, or courtiers; with the Manichees, who
professed to seek Truth by Reason, not by Faith; with the
fluctuating teachers of the school of Antioch, the
time-serving Eusebians, and the reckless versatile
Arians; with the fanatic Montanists and harsh Novatians,
who shrank from the Catholic doctrine, without power to
propagate their own. These sects had no stay or
consistence, yet they contained elements of truth amid
their error, and had Christianity been as they, it might
have resolved into them; but it had that hold of the
truth which gave its teaching a gravity, a directness, a
consistency, a sternness, and a force, to which {359} its
rivals for the most part were strangers. It could not
call evil good, or good evil, because it discerned the
difference between them; it could not make light of what
was so solemn, or desert what was so solid. Hence, in the
collision, it broke in pieces its antagonists, and
divided the spoils.
3.
This was but another form of the spirit that made
martyrs. Dogmatism was in teaching, what confession was
in act. Each was the same strong principle of life in a
different aspect, distinguishing the faith which was
displayed in it from the world's philosophies on the one
side, and the world's religions on the other. The heathen
sects and the heresies of Christian history were
dissolved by the breath of opinion which made them;
paganism shuddered and died at the very sight of the
sword of persecution, which it had itself unsheathed.
Intellect and force were applied as tests both upon the
divine and upon the human work; they prevailed with the
human, they did but become instruments of the Divine.
"No one," says St. Justin, "has so
believed Socrates as to die for the doctrine which he
taught." "No one was ever found undergoing
death for faith in the sun." [Note 1] Thus Christianity grew in its
proportions, gaining aliment and medicine from all that
it came near, yet preserving its original type, from its
perception and its love of what had been revealed once
for all and was no private imagination.
4.
There are writers who refer to the first centuries of
the Church as a time when opinion was free, and the
conscience exempt from the obligation or temptation to
take on trust what it had not proved; and that,
apparently on the mere {360} ground that the series of
great theological decisions did not commence till the
fourth. This seems to be M. Guizot's meaning when he says
that Christianity "in the early ages was a belief, a
sentiment, an individual conviction;" [Note 2] that "the
Christian society appears as a pure association of men
animated by the same sentiments and professing the same
creed. The first Christians," he continues,
"assembled to enjoy together the same emotions, the
same religious convictions. We do not find any doctrinal
system established, any form of discipline or of laws, or
any body of magistrates." [Note 3] What can be meant by saying
that Christianity had no magistrates in the earliest
ages?but, any how, in statements such as these the
distinction is not properly recognized between a
principle and its exhibitions and instances, even if the
fact were as is represented. The principle indeed of
Dogmatism developes into Councils in the course of time;
but it was active, nay sovereign from the first, in every
part of Christendom. A conviction that truth was one;
that it was a gift from without, a sacred trust, an
inestimable blessing; that it was to be reverenced,
guarded, defended, transmitted; that its absence was a
grievous want, and its loss an unutterable calamity; and
again, the stern words and acts of St. John, of Polycarp,
Ignatius, Irenćus, Clement, Tertullian, and
Origen;all this is quite consistent with perplexity
or mistake as to what was truth in particular cases, in
what way doubtful questions were to be decided, or what
were the limits of the Revelation. Councils and Popes are
the guardians and instruments of the dogmatic principle:
they are not that principle themselves; they presuppose
the principle; they are summoned into action at the call
of the principle, and the principle might act even before
they had their legitimate place, and exercised a
recognized power, in the movements of the Christian body.
{361}
5.
The instance of Conscience, which has already served
us in illustration, may assist us here. What Conscience
is in the history of an individual mind, such was the
dogmatic principle in the history of Christianity. Both
in the one case and the other, there is the gradual
formation of a directing power out of a principle. The
natural voice of Conscience is far more imperative in
testifying and enforcing a rule of duty, than successful
in determining that duty in particular cases. It acts as
a messenger from above, and says that there is a right
and a wrong, and that the right must be followed; but it
is variously, and therefore erroneously, trained in the
instance of various persons. It mistakes error for truth;
and yet we believe that on the whole, and even in those
cases where it is ill-instructed, if its voice be
diligently obeyed, it will gradually be cleared,
simplified, and perfected, so that minds, starting
differently will, if honest, in course of time converge
to one and the same truth. I do not hereby imply that
there is indistinctness so great as this in the theology
of the first centuries; but so far is plain, that the
early Church and Fathers exercised far more a ruler's
than a doctor's office: it was the age of Martyrs, of
acting not of thinking. Doctors succeeded Martyrs, as
light and peace of conscience follow upon obedience to
it; yet, even before the Church had grown into the full
measure of its doctrines, it was rooted in its
principles.
6.
So far, however, may be granted to M. Guizot, that
even principles were not so well understood and so
carefully handled at first, as they were afterwards. In
the early period, we see traces of a conflict, as well as
of a variety, in theological elements, which were in
course of combination, but which required adjustment and
management {362} before they could be used with precision
as one. In a thousand instances of a minor character, the
statements of the early Fathers are but tokens of the
multiplicity of openings which the mind of the Church was
making into the treasure-house of Truth; real openings,
but incomplete or irregular. Nay, the doctrines even of
the heretical bodies are indices and anticipations of the
mind of the Church. As the first step in settling a
question of doctrine is to raise and debate it, so
heresies in every age may be taken as the measure of the
existing state of thought in the Church, and of the
movement of her theology; they determine in what way the
current is setting, and the rate at which it flows.
7.
Thus, St. Clement may be called the representative of
the eclectic element, and Tertullian of the dogmatic,
neither element as yet being fully understood by
Catholics; and Clement perhaps went too far in his
accommodation to philosophy, and Tertullian asserted with
exaggeration the immutability of the Creed. Nay, the two
antagonist principles of dogmatism and assimilation are
found in Tertullian alone, though with some deficiency of
amalgamation, and with a greater leaning towards the
dogmatic. Though the Montanists professed to pass over
the subject of doctrine, it is chiefly in Tertullian's
Montanistic works that his strong statements occur of the
unalterableness of the Creed; and extravagance on the
subject is not only in keeping with the stern and
vehement temper of that Father, but with the general
severity and harshness of his sect. On the other hand the
very foundation of Montanism is development, though not
of doctrine, yet of discipline and conduct. It is said
that its founder professed himself the promised
Comforter, through whom the Church was to be perfected;
he provided prophets {363} as organs of the new
revelation, and called Catholics Psychici or animal.
Tertullian distinctly recognizes even the process of
development in one of his Montanistic works. After
speaking of an innovation upon usage, which his newly
revealed truth required, he proceeds, "Therefore
hath the Lord sent the Paraclete, that, since human
infirmity could not take all things in at once,
discipline might be gradually directed, regulated and
brought to perfection by the Lord's Vicar, the Holy
Ghost. 'I have yet many things to say to you,' He saith,
&c. What is this dispensation of the Paraclete but
this, that discipline is directed, Scriptures opened,
intellect reformed, improvements effected? Nothing can
take place without age, and all things wait their time.
In short, the Preacher says 'There is a time for all
things.' Behold the creature itself gradually advancing
to fruit. At first there is a seed, and a stalk springs
out of the seed, and from the stalk bursts out a shrub,
and then its branches and foliage grow vigorous, and all
that we mean by a tree is unfolded; then there is the
swelling of the bud, and the bud is resolved into a
blossom, and the blossom is opened into a fruit, and is
for a while rudimental and unformed, till, by degrees
following out its life, it is matured into mellowness of
flavour. So too righteousness, (for there is the same God
both of righteousness and of the creation,) was at first
in its rudiments, a nature fearing God; thence, by means
of Law and Prophets, it advanced into infancy; thence, by
the gospel, it burst forth into its youth; and now by the
Paraclete, it is fashioned into maturity." [Note 4]
8.
Not in one principle or doctrine only, but in its
whole system, Montanism is a remarkable anticipation or
presage {364} of developments which soon began to show
themselves in the Church, though they were not perfected
for centuries after. Its rigid maintenance of the
original Creed, yet its admission of a development, at
least in the ritual, has just been instanced in the
person of Tertullian. Equally Catholic in their
principle, whether in fact or anticipation, were most of
the other peculiarities of Montanism: its rigorous fasts,
its visions, its commendation of celibacy and martyrdom,
its contempt of temporal goods, its penitential
discipline, and its maintenance of a centre of unity. The
doctrinal determinations and the ecclesiastical usages of
the middle ages are the true fulfilment of its
self-willed and abortive attempts at precipitating the
growth of the Church. The favour shown to it for a while
by Pope Victor is an evidence of its external resemblance
to orthodoxy; and the celebrated Martyrs and Saints in
Africa, in the beginning of the third century, Perpetua
and Felicitas, or at least their Acts, betoken that same
peculiar temper of religion, which, when cut off from the
Church a few years afterwards, quickly degenerated into a
heresy. A parallel instance occurs in the case of the
Donatists. They held a doctrine on the subject of Baptism
similar to that of St. Cyprian: "Vincentius
Lirinensis," says Gibbon, referring to Tillemont's
remarks on that resemblance, "has explained why the
Donatists are eternally burning with the devil, while St.
Cyprian reigns in heaven with Jesus Christ." [Note 5] And his reason
is intelligible: it is, says Tillemont, "as St.
Augustine often says, because the Donatists had broken
the bond of peace and charity with the other Churches,
which St. Cyprian had preserved so carefully." [Note 6]
9.
These are specimens of the raw material, as it may be
{365} called, which, whether as found in individual
Fathers within the pale of the Church, or in heretics
external to it, she had the power, by means of the
continuity and firmness of her principles, to convert to
her own uses. She alone has succeeded in thus rejecting
evil without sacrificing the good, and in holding
together in one things which in all other schools are
incompatible. Gnostic or Platonic words are found in the
inspired theology of St. John; to the Platonists
Unitarian writers trace the doctrine of our Lord's
divinity; Gibbon the idea of the Incarnation to the
Gnostics. The Gnostics too seem first to have
systematically thrown the intellect upon matters of
faith; and the very term "Gnostic" has been
taken by Clement to express his perfect Christian. And,
though ascetics existed from the beginning, the notion of
a religion higher than the Christianity of the many, was
first prominently brought forward by the Gnostics,
Montanists, Novatians, and Manichees. And while the
prophets of the Montanists prefigure the Church's
Doctors, and their professed inspiration her
infallibility, and their revelations her developments,
and the heresiarch himself is the unsightly anticipation
of St. Francis, in Novatian again we discern the
aspiration of nature after such creations of grace as St.
Benedict or St. Bruno. And so the effort of Sabellius to
complete the enunciation of the mystery of the
Ever-blessed Trinity failed: it became a heresy; grace
would not be constrained; the course of thought could not
be forced;at length it was realized in the true
Unitarianism of St Augustine.
10.
Doctrine too is percolated, as it were, through
different minds, beginning with writers of inferior
authority in the Church, and issuing at length in the
enunciation of her Doctors. Origen, Tertullian, nay
Eusebius and the Antiochenes, {366} supply the materials,
from which the Fathers have wrought out comments or
treatises. St. Gregory Nazianzen and St. Basil digested
into form the theological principles of Origen; St.
Hilary and St. Ambrose are both indebted to the same
great writer in their interpretations of Scripture; St.
Ambrose again has taken his comment on St. Luke from
Eusebius, and certain of his Tracts from Philo; St.
Cyprian called Tertullian his Master; and traces of
Tertullian, in his almost heretical treatises, may be
detected in the most finished sentences of St. Leo. The
school of Antioch, in spite of the heretical taint of
various of its Masters, formed the genius of St.
Chrysostom. And the Apocryphal gospels have contributed
many things for the devotion and edification of Catholic
believers [Note 7].
The deep meditation which seems to have been exercised
by the Fathers on points of doctrine, the disputes and
turbulence yet lucid determination which characterize the
Councils, the indecision of Popes, are all in different
ways, at least when viewed together, portions and
indications of the same process. The theology of the
Church is no random combination of various opinions, but
a diligent, patient working out of one doctrine from many
materials. The conduct of Popes, Councils, Fathers,
betokens the slow, painful, anxious taking up of new
truths into an existing body of belief. St. Athanasius,
St. Augustine, St. Leo are conspicuous for the repetition
in terminis of their own theological statements;
on the contrary, it has been observed of the heterodox
Tertullian, that his works "indicate no ordinary
fertility of mind in that he so little repeats himself or
recurs to favourite thoughts, as is frequently the case
even with the great St. Augustine." [Note 8] {367}
11.
Here we see the difference between originality of mind
and the gift and calling of a Doctor in the Church; the
holy Fathers just mentioned were intently fixing their
minds on what they taught, grasping it more and more
closely, viewing it on various sides, trying its
consistency, weighing their own separate expressions. And
thus if in some cases they were even left in ignorance,
the next generation of teachers completed their work, for
the same unwearied anxious process of thought went on.
St. Gregory Nyssen finishes the investigations of St.
Athanasius; St. Leo guards the polemical statements of
St. Cyril. Clement may hold a purgatory, yet tend to
consider all punishment purgatorial; St. Cyprian may hold
the unsanctified state of heretics, but include in his
doctrine a denial of their baptism; St. Hippolytus may
believe in the personal existence of the Word from
eternity, yet speak confusedly on the eternity of His
Sonship; the Council of Antioch might put aside the
Homoüsion, and the Council of Nicća impose it; St.
Hilary may believe in a purgatory, yet confine it to the
day of judgment; St. Athanasius and other Fathers may
treat with almost supernatural exactness the doctrine of
our Lord's incarnation, yet imply, as far as words go,
that He was ignorant viewed in His human nature; the
Athanasian Creed may admit the illustration of soul and
body, and later Fathers may discountenance it; St.
Augustine might first be opposed to the employment of
force in religion, and then acquiesce in it. Prayers for
the faithful departed may be found in the early
liturgies, yet with an indistinctness which included the
Blessed Virgin and the Martyrs in the same rank with the
imperfect Christian whose sins were as yet unexpiated;
and succeeding times might keep what was exact, and
supply what was deficient. Aristotle might be reprobated
by certain early Fathers, yet {368} furnish the
phraseology for theological definitions afterwards. And
in a different subject-matter, St. Isidore and others
might be suspicious of the decoration of Churches; St.
Paulinus and St. Helena advance it. And thus we are
brought on to dwell upon the office of grace, as well as
of truth, in enabling the Church's creed to develope and
to absorb without the risk of corruption.
§ 2. The Assimilating Power of
Sacramental Grace
There is in truth a certain virtue or grace in the
Gospel which changes the quality of doctrines, opinions,
usages, actions, and personal characters when
incorporated with it, and makes them right and acceptable
to its Divine Author, whereas before they were either
infected with evil, or at best but shadows of the truth.
This is the principle, above spoken of, which I have
called the Sacramental. "We know that we are of God,
and the whole world lieth in wickedness," is an
enunciation of the principle;or, the declaration of
the Apostle of the Gentiles, "If any man be in
Christ, he is a new creature; old things are passed away,
behold all things are become new." Thus it is that
outward rites, which are but worthless in themselves,
lose their earthly character and become Sacraments under
the Gospel; circumcision, as St. Paul says, is carnal and
has come to an end, yet Baptism is a perpetual ordinance,
as being grafted upon a system which is grace and truth.
Elsewhere, he parallels, while he contrasts, "the
cup of the Lord" and "the cup of devils,"
in this respect, that to partake of either is to hold
communion with the source from which it comes; and he
adds presently, that "we have been all made to drink
into one spirit." So again he says, no one is
justified by the works of the old Law; while both he
implies, and St. James declares, that Christians are
justified by works of the New {369} Law. Again he
contrasts the exercises of the intellect as exhibited by
heathen and Christian. "Howbeit," he says,
after condemning heathen wisdom, "we speak wisdom
among them that are perfect, yet not the wisdom of this
world;" and it is plain that nowhere need we look
for more glowing eloquence, more distinct profession of
reasoning, more careful assertion of doctrine, than is to be found in the Apostle's writings.
2.
In like manner when the Jewish exorcists attempted to
"call over them which had evil spirits the name of
the Lord Jesus," the evil spirit professed not to
know them, and inflicted on them a bodily injury; on the
other hand, the occasion of this attempt of theirs was a
stupendous instance or type, in the person of St. Paul,
of the very principle I am illustrating. "God
wrought special miracles by the hands of Paul, so that
from his body were brought unto the sick handkerchiefs
and aprons, and the diseases departed from them, and the
evil spirits went out of them." The grace given him
was communicable, diffusive; an influence passing from
him to others, and making what it touched spiritual, as
enthusiasm may be or tastes or panics.
Parallel instances occur of the operation of this
principle in the history of the Church, from the time
that the Apostles were taken from it. St. Paul denounces
distinctions in meat and drink, the observance of
Sabbaths and holydays, and of ordinances, and the worship
of Angels; yet Christians, from the first, were rigid in
their stated fastings, venerated, as St. Justin tells us,
the Angelic intelligences [Note 9], and established the
observance of the Lord's day as soon as persecution
ceased. {370}
3.
In like manner Celsus objects that Christians did not
"endure the sight of temples, altars, and
statues;" Porphyry, that "they blame the rites
of worship, victims, and frankincense;" the heathen
disputant in Minucius asks, "Why have Christians no
altars, no temples, no conspicuous images?" and
"no sacrifices;" and yet it is plain from
Tertullian that Christians had altars of their own, and
sacrifices and priests. And that they had churches is
again and again proved by Eusebius who had seen "the
houses of prayer levelled" in the Dioclesian
persecution; from the history too of St. Gregory
Thaumaturgus, nay from Clement [Note 10]. Again, St. Justin and
Minucius speak of the form of the Cross in terms of
reverence, quite inconsistent with the doctrine that
external emblems of religion may not be venerated.
Tertullian speaks of Christians signing themselves with
it whatever they set about, whether they walk, eat, or
lie down to sleep. In Eusebius's life of Constantine, the
figure of the Cross holds a most conspicuous place; the
Emperor sees it in the sky and is converted; he places it
upon his standards; he inserts it into his own hand when
he puts up his statue; wherever the Cross is displayed in
his battles, he conquers; he appoints fifty men to carry
it; he engraves it on his soldiers' arms; and Licinius
dreads its power. Shortly after, Julian plainly accuses
Christians of worshipping the wood of the Cross, though
they refused to worship the ancile. In a later age the
worship of images was introduced [Note 11]. {371}
4.
The principle of the distinction, by which these
observances were pious in Christianity and superstitious
in paganism, is implied in such passages of Tertullian,
Lactantius, and others, as speak of evil spirits lurking
under the pagan statues. It is intimated also by Origen,
who, after saying that Scripture so strongly
"forbids temples, altars, and images," that
Christians are "ready to go to death, if necessary,
rather than pollute their notion of the God of all by any
such transgression," assigns as a reason "that,
as far as possible, they might not fall into the notion
that images were gods." St. Augustine, in replying
to Porphyry, is more express; "Those," he says,
"who are acquainted with Old and New Testament do
not blame in the pagan religion the erection of temples
or institution of priesthoods, but that these are done to
idols and devils ... True religion blames in their
superstitions, not so much their sacrificing, for the
ancient saints sacrificed to the True God, as their
sacrificing to false gods." [Note 12] To Faustus the Manichee he
answers, "We have some things in common with the
gentiles, but our purpose is different." [Note 13] And St.
Jerome asks Vigilantius, who made objections to lights
and oil, "Because we once worshipped idols, is that
a reason why we should not worship God, for fear of
seeming to address him with an honour like that which was
paid to idols and then was detestable, whereas this is
paid to Martyrs and therefore to be received?" [Note 14]
5.
Confiding then in the power of Christianity to resist
the infection of evil, and to transmute the very
instruments {372} and appendages of demon-worship to an
evangelical use, and feeling also that these usages had
originally come from primitive revelations and from the
instinct of nature, though they had been corrupted; and
that they must invent what they needed, if they did not
use what they found; and that they were moreover
possessed of the very archetypes, of which paganism
attempted the shadows; the rulers of the Church from
early times were prepared, should the occasion arise, to
adopt, or imitate, or sanction the existing rites and
customs of the populace, as well as the philosophy of the
educated class.
St. Gregory Thaumaturgus supplies the first instance
on record of this economy. He was the Apostle of Pontus,
and one of his methods for governing an untoward
population is thus related by St. Gregory of Nyssa.
"On returning," he says, "to the city,
after revisiting the country round about, he increased
the devotion of the people everywhere by instituting
festive meetings in honour of those who had fought for
the faith. The bodies of the Martyrs were distributed in
different places, and the people assembled and made
merry, as the year came round, holding festival in their
honour. This indeed was a proof of his great wisdom ...
for, perceiving that the childish and untrained populace
were retained in their idolatrous error by creature
comforts, in order that what was of first importance
should at any rate be secured to them, viz. that they
should look to God in place of their vain rites, he
allowed them to be merry, jovial, and gay at the
monuments of the holy Martyrs, as if their behaviour
would in time undergo a spontaneous change into greater
seriousness and strictness, since faith would lead them
to it; which has actually been the happy issue in that
population, all carnal gratification having turned into a
spiritual form of rejoicing." [Note 15] There is no reason to
suppose {373} that the licence here spoken of passed the
limits of harmless though rude festivity; for it is
observable that the same reason, the need of holydays for
the multitude, is assigned by Origen, St. Gregory's
master, to explain the establishment of the Lord's Day
also, and the Paschal and the Pentecostal festivals,
which have never been viewed as unlawful compliances;
and, moreover, the people were in fact eventually
reclaimed from their gross habits by his indulgent
policy, a successful issue which could not have followed
an accommodation to what was sinful.
6.
The example set by St. Gregory in an age of
persecution was impetuously followed when a time of peace
succeeded. In the course of the fourth century two
movements or developments spread over the face of
Christendom, with a rapidity characteristic of the
Church; the one ascetic, the other ritual or ceremonial.
We are told in various ways by Eusebius [Note 16], that
Constantine, in order to recommend the new religion to
the heathen, transferred into it the outward ornaments to
which they had been accustomed in their own. It is not
necessary to go into a subject which the diligence of
Protestant writers has made familiar to most of us. The
use of temples, and these dedicated to particular saints,
and ornamented on occasions with branches of trees;
incense, lamps, and candles; votive offerings on recovery
from illness; holy water; asylums; holydays and seasons,
use of calendars, processions, blessings on the fields;
sacerdotal vestments, the tonsure, the ring in marriage,
turning to the East, images at a later date, perhaps the
ecclesiastical chant, and the Kyrie Eleison [Note 17], are all of
pagan origin, and sanctified by their adoption into the
Church. {374}
7.
The eighth book of Theodoret's work Adversus
Gentiles, which is "On the Martyrs," treats
so largely on the subject, that we must content ourselves
with only a specimen of the illustrations which it
affords, of the principle acted on by St. Gregory
Thaumaturgus. "Time, which makes all things
decay," he says, speaking of the Martyrs, "has
preserved their glory incorruptible. For as the noble
souls of those conquerors traverse the heavens, and take
part in the spiritual choirs, so their bodies are not
consigned to separate tombs, but cities and towns divide
them among them; and call them saviours of souls and
bodies, and physicians, and honour them as the protectors
and guardians of cities, and, using their intervention
with the Lord of all, obtain through them divine gifts.
And though each body be divided, the grace remains
indivisible; and that small, that tiny particle is equal
in power with the Martyr that hath never been dispersed
about. For the grace which is ever blossoming distributes
the gifts, measuring the bounty according to the faith of
those who come for it.
"Yet not even this persuades you to celebrate
their God, but ye laugh and mock at the honour which is
paid them by all, and consider it a pollution to approach
their tombs. But though all men made a jest of them, yet
at least the Greeks could not decently complain, to whom
belonged libations and expiations, and heroes and
demigods and deified men. To Hercules, though a man ...
and compelled to serve Eurystheus, they built temples,
and constructed altars, and offered sacrifices in honour,
and allotted feasts; and that, not Spartans only and
Athenians, but the whole of Greece and the greater part
of Europe." {375}
8.
Then, after going through the history of many heathen
deities, and referring to the doctrine of the
philosophers about great men, and to the monuments of
kings and emperors, all of which at once are witnesses
and are inferior, to the greatness of the Martyrs, he
continues: "To their shrines we come, not once or
twice a year or five times, but often do we hold
celebrations; often, nay daily, do we present hymns to
their Lord. And the sound in health ask for its
preservation, and those who struggle with any disease for
a release from their sufferings; the childless for
children, the barren to become mothers, and those who
enjoy the blessing for its safe keeping. Those too who
are setting out for a foreign land beg that the Martyrs
may be their fellow-travellers and guides of the journey;
those who have come safe back acknowledge the grace, not
coming to them as to gods, but beseeching them as divine
men, and asking their intercession. And that they obtain
what they ask in faith, their dedications openly witness,
in token of their cure. For some bring likenesses of
eyes, others of feet, others of hands; some of gold,
others of silver; and their Lord accepts even the small
and cheap, measuring the gift by the offerer's ability
Philosophers and Orators are consigned to
oblivion, and kings and captains are not known even by
name to the many; but the names of the Martyrs are better
known to all than the names of those dearest to them. And
they make a point of giving them to their children, with
a view of gaining for them thereby safety and protection
Nay, of the so called gods, so utterly have the
sacred places been destroyed, that not even their outline
remains, nor the shape of their altars is known to men of
this generation, while their materials have been
dedicated to the shrines of the Martyrs. For the Lord has
introduced His {376} own dead in place of your gods; of
the one He hath made a riddance, on the other He hath
conferred their honours. For the Pandian festival, the
Diasia, and the Dionysia, and your other such, we have
the feasts of Peter, of Paul, of Thomas, of Sergius, of
Marcellus, of Leontius, of Panteleëmon, of Antony, of
Maurice, and of the other Martyrs; and for that old-world
procession, and indecency of work and word, are held
modest festivities, without intemperance, or revel, or
laughter, but with divine hymns, and attendance on holy
discourses and prayers, adorned with laudable
tears." This was the view of the "Evidences of
Christianity" which a Bishop of the fifth century
offered for the conversion of unbelievers.
9.
The introduction of Images was still later, and met
with more opposition in the West than in the East. It is
grounded on the same great principle which I am
illustrating; and as I have given extracts from Theodoret
for the developments of the fourth and fifth centuries,
so will I now cite St. John Damascene in defence of the
further developments of the eighth.
"As to the passages you adduce," he says to his
opponents, "they abominate not the worship paid to
our Images, but that of the Greeks, who made them gods.
It needs not therefore, because of the absurd use of the
Greeks, to abolish our use which is so pious. Enchanters
and wizards use adjurations, so does the Church over its
Catechumens; but they invoke devils, and she invokes God
against devils. Greeks dedicate images to devils, and
call them gods; but we to True God Incarnate, and to
God's servants and friends, who drive away the troops of
devils." [Note 18]
Again, "As the holy Fathers overthrew the temples
and shrines of the devils, and raised in their places
shrines in the {377} names of Saints and we worship them,
so also they overthrew the images of the devils, and in
their stead raised images of Christ, and God's Mother,
and the Saints. And under the Old Covenant, Israel
neither raised temples in the name of men, nor was memory
of man made a festival; for, as yet, man's nature was
under a curse, and death was condemnation, and therefore
was lamented, and a corpse was reckoned unclean and he
who touched it; but now that the Godhead has been
combined with our nature, as some life-giving and saving
medicine, our nature has been glorified and is
trans-elemented into incorruption. Wherefore the death of
Saints is made a feast, and temples are raised to them,
and Images are painted ... For the Image is a triumph,
and a manifestation, and a monument in memory of the
victory of those who have done nobly and excelled, and of
the shame of the devils defeated and overthrown."
Once more, "If because of the Law thou dost forbid
Images, you will soon have to sabbatize and be
circumcised, for these ordinances the Law commands as
indispensable; nay, to observe the whole law, and not to
keep the festival of the Lord's Pascha out of Jerusalem:
but know that if you keep the Law, Christ hath profited
you nothing
But away with this, for whoever of you
are justified in the Law have fallen from grace." [Note 19]
10.
It is quite consistent with the tenor of these remarks
to observe, or to allow, that real superstitions have
sometimes obtained in parts of Christendom from its
intercourse with the heathen; or have even been admitted,
or all but admitted, though commonly resisted
strenuously, by authorities in the Church, in consequence
of the resemblance which exists between the heathen rites
and certain portions of her ritual. As philosophy has at
times corrupted her {378} divines, so has paganism
corrupted her worshippers; and as the more intellectual
have been involved in heresy, so have the ignorant been
corrupted by superstition. Thus St. Chrysostom is
vehement against the superstitious usages which Jews and
Gentiles were introducing among Christians at Antioch and
Constantinople. "What shall we say," he asks in
one place, "about the amulets and bells which are
hung upon the hands, and the scarlet woof, and other
things full of such extreme folly; when they ought to
invest the child with nothing else save the protection of
the Cross? But now that is despised which hath converted
the whole world, and given the sore wound to the devil,
and overthrown all his power; while the thread, and the
woof, and the other amulets of that kind, are entrusted
with the child's safety." After mentioning further
superstitions, he proceeds, "Now that among Greeks
such things should be done, is no wonder; but among the
worshippers of the Cross, and partakers in unspeakable
mysteries, and professors of such morality, that such
unseemliness should prevail, this is especially to be
deplored again and again." [Note 20]
And in like manner St. Augustine suppressed the feasts
called Agapć, which had been allowed the African
Christians on their first conversion. "It is
time," he says, "for men who dare not deny that
they are Christians, to begin to live according to the
will of Christ, and, now being Christians, to reject what
was only allowed that they might become Christians."
The people objected the example of the Vatican Church at
Rome, where such feasts were observed every day; St.
Augustine answered, "I have heard that it has been
often prohibited, but the place is far off from the
Bishop's abode (the Lateran), and in so large a city
there is a multitude of carnal persons, especially of
strangers who resort daily thither." [Note 21] And {379} in
like manner it certainly is possible that the
consciousness of the sanctifying power in Christianity
may have acted as a temptation to sins, whether of deceit
or of violence; as if the habit or state of grace
destroyed the sinfulness of certain acts, or as if the
end justified the means.
11.
It is but enunciating in other words the principle we
are tracing, to say that the Church has been entrusted
with the dispensation of grace. For if she can convert
heathen appointments into spiritual rites and usages,
what is this but to be in possession of a treasure, and
to exercise a discretionary power in its application?
Hence there has been from the first much variety and
change, in the Sacramental acts and instruments which she
has used. While the Eastern and African Churches baptized
heretics on their reconciliation, the Church of Rome, as
the Catholic Church since, maintained that imposition of
hands was sufficient, if their prior baptism had been
formally correct. The ceremony of imposition of hands was
used on various occasions with a distinct meaning; at the
rite of Catechumens, on admitting heretics, in
Confirmation, in Ordination, in Benediction. Baptism was
sometimes administered by immersion, sometimes by
infusion. Infant Baptism was not at first enforced as
afterwards. Children or even infants were admitted to the
Eucharist in the African Church and the rest of the West,
as now in the Greek. Oil had various uses, as for healing
the sick, or as in the rite of extreme unction.
Indulgences in works or in periods of penance, had a
different meaning, according to circumstances. In like
manner the Sign of the Cross was one of the earliest
means of grace; then holy seasons, and holy places, and
pilgrimage to them; holy water; prescribed prayers, or
other observances; garments, as the {380} scapular, and
sacred vestments; the rosary; the crucifix. And for some
wise purpose doubtless, such as that of showing the power
of the Church in the dispensation of divine grace, as
well as the perfection and spirituality of the
Eucharistic Presence, the Chalice is in the West withheld
from all but the celebrant in the Holy Eucharist.
12.
Since it has been represented as if the power of
assimilation, spoken of in this Chapter, is in my meaning
nothing more than a mere accretion of doctrines or rites
from without, I am led to quote the following passage in
further illustration of it from my "Essays,"
vol. ii. p. 231:
"The phenomenon, admitted on all hands, is
this:That great portion of what is generally
received as Christian truth is, in its rudiments or in
its separate parts, to be found in heathen philosophies
and religions. For instance, the doctrine of a Trinity is
found both in the East and in the West; so is the
ceremony of washing; so is the rite of sacrifice. The
doctrine of the Divine Word is Platonic; the doctrine of
the Incarnation is Indian; of a divine kingdom is Judaic;
of Angels and demons is Magian; the connexion of sin with
the body is Gnostic; celibacy is known to Bonze and
Talapoin; a sacerdotal order is Egyptian; the idea of a
new birth is Chinese and Eleusinian; belief in
sacramental virtue is Pythagorean; and honours to the
dead are a polytheism. Such is the general nature of the
fact before us; Mr. Milman argues from it,'These
things are in heathenism, therefore they are not
Christian:' we, on the contrary, prefer to say, 'these
things are in Christianity, therefore they are not
heathen.' That is, we prefer to say, and we think that
Scripture bears us out in saying, that from the beginning
the Moral Governor of the world has scattered the seeds
of truth far and wide over its extent; that these have
variously taken root, and grown as in the wilderness,
wild plants indeed but living; and hence that, as the
inferior animals have tokens of an immaterial {381}
principle in them, yet have not souls, so the
philosophies and religions of men have their life in
certain true ideas, though they are not directly divine.
What man is amid the brute creation, such is the Church
among the schools of the world; and as Adam gave names to
the animals about him, so has the Church from the first
looked round upon the earth, noting and visiting the
doctrines she found there. She began in Chaldea, and then
sojourned among the Canannites, and went down into Egypt,
and thence passed into Arabia, till she rested in her own
land. Next she encountered the merchants of Tyre, and the
wisdom of the East country, and the luxury of Sheba. Then
she was carried away to Babylon, and wandered to the
schools of Greece. And wherever she went, in trouble or
in triumph, still she was a living spirit, the mind and
voice of the Most High; 'sitting in the midst of the
doctors, both hearing them and asking them questions;'
claiming to herself what they said rightly, correcting
their errors, supplying their defects, completing their
beginnings, expanding their surmises, and thus gradually
by means of them enlarging the range and refining the
sense of her own teaching. So far then from her creed
being of doubtful credit because it resembles foreign
theologies, we even hold that one special way in which
Providence has imparted divine knowledge to us has been
by enabling her to draw and collect it together out of
the world, and, in this sense, as in others, to 'suck the
milk of the Gentiles and to suck the breast of kings.'
"How far in fact this process has gone, is a
question of history; and we believe it has before now
been grossly exaggerated and misrepresented by those who,
like Mr. Milman, have thought that its existence told
against Catholic doctrine; but so little antecedent
difficulty have we in the matter, that we could readily
grant, unless it were a question of fact not of theory,
that Balaam was an Eastern sage, or a Sibyl was inspired,
or Solomon learnt of the sons of Mahol, or Moses was a
scholar of the Egyptian hierophants. We are not
distressed to be told that the doctrine of the angelic
host came from Babylon, while we know that they did sing
at the Nativity; nor that the vision of a Mediator is in
Philo, if in very deed {382} He died for us on Calvary.
Nor are we afraid to allow, that, even after His coming,
the Church has been a treasure-house, giving forth things
old and new, casting the gold of fresh tributaries into
her refiner's fire, or stamping upon her own, as time
required it, a deeper impress of her Master's image.
"The distinction between these two theories is broad
and obvious. The advocates of the one imply that
Revelation was a single, entire, solitary act, or nearly
so, introducing a certain message; whereas we, who
maintain the other, consider that Divine teaching has
been in fact, what the analogy of nature would lead us to
expect, 'at sundry times and in divers manners,' various,
complex, progressive, and supplemental of itself. We
consider the Christian doctrine, when analyzed, to
appear, like the human frame, 'fearfully and wonderfully
made;' but they think it some one tenet or certain
principles given out at one time in their fulness,
without gradual enlargement before Christ's coming or
elucidation afterwards. They cast off all that they also
find in Pharisee or heathen; we conceive that the Church,
like Aaron's rod, devours the serpent of the magicians.
They are ever hunting for a fabulous primitive
simplicity; we repose in Catholic fulness. They seek what
never has been found; we accept and use what even they
acknowledge to be a substance. They are driven to
maintain, on their part, that the Church's doctrine was
never pure; we say that it can never be corrupt. We
consider that a divine promise keeps the Church Catholic
from doctrinal corruption; but on what promise, or on
what encouragement, they are seeking for their visionary
purity does not appear."
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Notes
1. Justin, Apol. ii. 10, Tryph. 121.
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2. Europ. Civ. p. 56, tr.
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3. p. 58.
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4. De Virg. Vel. 1.
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5. Hist. t. 3, p. 312.
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6. Mem. Eccl. t. 6, p. 83.
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7. Galland. t. 3, p. 673, note 3.
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8. Vid. Preface to Oxford Transl.
of Tertullian, where the character of his mind is
admirably drawn out.
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9. Infra. pp. 411-415, &c.
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10. Orig. c. Cels. vii. 63, viii.
17 (vid. not. Bened. in loc.), August. Ep. 102, 16;
Minuc. F. 10, and 32; Tertull. de Orat. fin. ad Uxor. i.
fin. Euseb. Hist. viii. 2; Clem. Strom. vii. 6, p. 846.
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11. Tertull. de Cor. 3; Just.
Apol. i. 55; Minuc. F. 29; Julian ap. Cyr. vi. p. 194,
Spanh.
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12. Epp. 102, 18.
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13. Contr. Faust, 20, 23.
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14. Lact. ii. 15, 16; Tertull.
Spect. 12; Origen, c. Cels. vii. 64-66, August. Ep. 102,
18; Contr. Faust. xx. 23; Hieron. c. Vigil. 8.
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15. Vit. Thaum. p. 1006.
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16. V. Const. iii. 1, iv. 23,
&c.
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17. According to Dr. E. D.
Clarke, Travels, vol. i. p. 352.
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18. De Imag. i. 24.
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19. Ibid. ii. 11, 14.
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20. Hom. xii. in Cor. 1, Oxf. Tr.
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21. Fleury, Hist. xx. 11, Oxf.
Tr.
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