HOLY WRIT
Of the many signs that tell of the
adversaries’ mistrust of their own cause, none
declares it so loudly as the shameful outrage they
put upon the majesty of the Holy Bible. After
they have dismissed with scorn the utterances and
suffrages of the rest of the witnesses, they
are nevertheless brought to such straits that they
cannot hold their own otherwise than by laying violent
hands on the divine volumes themselves, thereby showing
beyond all question that they are brought to their
last stand, and are having recourse to the hardest
and most extreme of expedients to retrieve their desperate
and ruined fortunes. What induced the Manichees
to tear out the Gospel of Matthew and the Acts of the
Apostles? Despair For these volumes were
a torment to men who denied Christ’s birth of
a Virgin, and who pretended that the Spirit then first
descended upon Christians when their peculiar Paraclete,
a good-for-nothing Persian, made his appearance.
What induced the Ebionites to reject all St Paul’s
Epistles? Despair For while those Letters
kept their credit, the custom of circumcision, which
these men had reintroduced, was set aside as an anachronism.
What induced that crime-laden apostate Luther to call
the Epistle of James contentious, turgid, arid, a thing
of straw, and unworthy of the Apostolic spirit?
Despair For by this writing the wretched man’s
argument of righteousness consisting in faith alone
was stabbed through and rent assunder What induced
Luther’s whelps to expunge off-hand from the
genuine canon of Scripture, Tobias, Ecclesiasticus,
Maccabees, and, for hatred of these, several other
books involved in the same false charge? Despair
For by these Oracles they are most manifestly confuted
whenever they argue about the patronage of Angels,
about free will, about the faithful departed, about
the intercession of Saints. Is it possible?
So much perversity, so much audacity? After trampling
underfoot Church, Councils, Episcopal Sees, Fathers,
Martyrs, Potentates, Peoples, Laws, Universities,
Histories, all vestiges of Antiquity and Sanctity,
and declaring that they would settle their disputes
by the written word of God alone, to think that they
should have emasculated that same Word, which alone
was left, by cutting out of the whole body so many
excellent and goodly parts! Seven whole books,
to ignore lesser diminutions, have the Calvinists
cut out of the Old Testament The Lutherans take
away the Epistle of James besides, and, in their dislike
of that, five other Epistles, about which there had
been controversy of old in certain places and times.
To the number of these the latest authorities at Geneva
add the book of Esther and about three chapters of
Daniel, which their fellow-disciples, the Anabaptists,
had some time before condemned and derided. How
much greater was the modesty of Augustine (De doct Christ lib 2, c 8.), who, in making his
catalogue of the Sacred Books, did not take for his
rule the Hebrew Alphabet, like the Jews, nor private
judgment, like the Sectaries, but that Spirit wherewith
Christ animates the whole Church. The Church,
the guardian of this treasure, not its mistress (as
heretics falsely make out), vindicated publicly in
former times by very ancient Councils this entire
treasure, which the Council of Trent has taken up
and embraced. Augustine also in a special discussion
on one small portion of Scripture cannot bring himself
to think that any man’s rash murmuring should
be permitted to thrust out of the Canon the book of
Wisdom, which even in his time had obtained a sure
place as a well-authenticated and Canonical book in
the reckoning of the Church, the judgment of ages,
the testimony of ancients, and the sense of the faithful.
What would he say now if he were alive on earth, and
saw men like Luther and Calvin manufacturing Bibles,
filing down Old and New Testament with a neat pretty
little file of their own, setting aside, not the book
of wisdom alone, but with it very many others from
the list of Canonical Books? Thus whatever does
not come out from their shop, by a mad decree, is
liable to be, spat upon by all as a rude and barbarous
composition. They who have stooped to this dire
and execrable way of saving themselves surely are beaten,
overthrown, and flung rolling in the dust, for all
their fine praises that are in the mouths of their
admirers, for all their traffic in priesthoods, for
all their bawling in pulpits, for all their sentencing
of Catholics to chains, rack and gallows. Seated
in their armchairs as censors, as though any one had
elected them to that office, they seize their pens
and mark passages as spurious even in God’s
own Holy Writ, putting their pens through whatever
they cannot stomach. Can any fairly educated man
be afraid of battalions of such enemies? If in
the midst of your learned body they had recourse to
such trickster’s arts, calling like wizards
upon their familiar spirit, you would shout at them, you
would stamp your feet at them. For instance I
would ask them what right they have to rend and mutilate
the body of the Bible. They would answer that
they do not cut out true Scriptures, but prune away
supposititious accretions. By authority of what
judge? By the Holy Ghost This is the answer
prescribed by Calvin (Instit lib I, c
7), for escaping this judgment of the Church whereby
spirits of prophesy are examined. Why then do
some of you tear out one piece of Scripture, and others
another, whereas you all boast of being led by the
same Spirit? The Spirit of the Calvinists receives
six Epistles which do not please the Lutheran Spirit,
both all the while in full confidence reposing on
the Holy Ghost The Anabaptists call the book
of Job a fable, intermixed with tragedy and comedy.
How do they know? The Spirit has taught them.
Whereas the Song of Solomon is admired by Catholics
as a paradise of the soul, a hidden manna, and rich
delight in Christ, Castalio, a lewd rogue, has
reckoned it nothing better than a love-song about
a mistress, and an amorous conversation with Court
flunkeys. Whence drew he that intimation?
From the Spirit In the Apocalypse of John, every
jot and tittle of which Jerane declares to bear some
lofty and magnificent meaning, Luther and Brent and
Kemnitz, critics hard to please, find something wanting,
and are inclined to throw over the whole book.
Whom have they consulted? The Spirit Luther
with preposterous heat pits the Four Gospels one against
another (Praef. in Nov Test ), and far
prefers Paul’s Epistles to the first three,
while he declares the Gospel of St John above the
rest to be beautiful, true, and worthy of mention
in the first place, thereby enrolling even
the Apostles, so far as in him lay, as having a hand
in his quarrels. Who taught him to do that?
The Spirit Nay this imp of a friar has not hesitated
in petulant style to assail Luke’s Gospel because
therein good and virtuous works are frequently commended
to us. Whom did he consult? The Spirit
Theodore Beza has dared to carp at, as a corruption
and perversion of the original, that mystical word
from the twenty-second chapter of Luke, this is
the chalice, the new testament in my blood, which
(chalice) shall be shed for you [Greek:
potaerion ekchunomenon], because this language admits
of no explanation other than that of the wine in the
chalice being converted into the true blood of Christ
Who pointed that out? The Spirit In short,
in believing all things every man in the faith of
his own spirit, they horribly belie and blaspheme
the name of the Holy Ghost So acting, do they
not give themselves away? are they not easily refuted?
In an assembly of learned men, such as yours, Gentlemen
of the University, are they not caught and throttled
without trouble? Should I be afraid on behalf
of the Catholic faith to dispute with these men, who
have handled with the utmost ill faith not human but
heavenly utterances? I say nothing here of their
perverse versions of Scripture, though I could accuse
them in this respect of intolerable doings. I
will not take the bread out of the mouth of that great
linguist, my fellow-Collegian, Gregory Martin, who
will do this work with more learning and abundance
of detail than I could; nor from others whom I understand
already to have that task in hand. More wicked
and more abominable is the crime that I am now prosecuting,
that there have been found upstart Doctors who have
made a drunken onslaught on the handwriting that is
of heaven; who have given judgment against it as being
in many places defiled, defective, false, surreptitious;
who have corrected some passages, tampered with others;
torn out others; who have converted every bulwark
wherewith it was guarded into Lutheran “spirits,”
what I may call phantom ramparts and parted walls.
All this they have done that they might not be utterly
dumbfounded by falling upon Scripture texts contrary
to their errors, texts which they would have found
it as hard to get over as to swallow hot ashes or
chew stones. This then has been my First Reason,
a strong and a just one. By revealing the shadowy
and broken powers of the adverse faction, it has certainly
given new courage to a Christian man, not unversed
in these studies, to fight for the Letters Patent
of the Eternal King against the remnant of a routed
foe.