Part I.
The Motives, Progress,
And Effects Of The Conversion Of
Constantine. Legal
Establishment And Constitution Of The
Christian Or Catholic
Church.
The public establishment of Christianity
may be considered as one of those important and domestic
revolutions which excite the most lively curiosity,
and afford the most valuable instruction. The
victories and the civil policy of Constantine no longer
influence the state of Europe; but a considerable
portion of the globe still retains the impression
which it received from the conversion of that monarch;
and the ecclesiastical institutions of his reign are
still connected, by an indissoluble chain, with the
opinions, the passions, and the interests of the present
generation.
In the consideration of a subject
which may be examined with impartiality, but cannot
be viewed with indifference, a difficulty immediately
arises of a very unexpected nature; that of ascertaining
the real and precise date of the conversion of Constantine.
The eloquent Lactantius, in the midst of his
court, seems impatient to proclaim to the world the
glorious example of the sovereign of Gaul; who, in
the first moments of his reign, acknowledged and adored
the majesty of the true and only God. The learned
Eusebius has ascribed the faith of Constantine to
the miraculous sign which was displayed in the heavens
whilst he meditated and prepared the Italian expedition.
The historian Zosimus maliciously asserts, that the
emperor had imbrued his hands in the blood of his
eldest son, before he publicly renounced the gods of
Rome and of his ancestors. The perplexity produced
by these discordant authorities is derived from the
behavior of Constantine himself. According to
the strictness of ecclesiastical language, the first
of the Christian emperors was unworthy of that name,
till the moment of his death; since it was only during
his last illness that he received, as a catechumen,
the imposition of hands, and was afterwards admitted,
by the initiatory rites of baptism, into the number
of the faithful. The Christianity of Constantine
must be allowed in a much more vague and qualified
sense; and the nicest accuracy is required in tracing
the slow and almost imperceptible gradations by which
the monarch declared himself the protector, and at
length the proselyte, of the church. It was an
arduous task to eradicate the habits and prejudices
of his education, to acknowledge the divine power
of Christ, and to understand that the truth of his
revelation was incompatible with the worship of the
gods. The obstacles which he had probably experienced
in his own mind, instructed him to proceed with caution
in the momentous change of a national religion; and
he insensibly discovered his new opinions, as far
as he could enforce them with safety and with effect.
During the whole course of his reign, the stream of
Christianity flowed with a gentle, though accelerated,
motion: but its general direction was sometimes
checked, and sometimes diverted, by the accidental
circumstances of the times, and by the prudence, or
possibly by the caprice, of the monarch. His
ministers were permitted to signify the intentions
of their master in the various language which was best
adapted to their respective principles; and he artfully
balanced the hopes and fears of his subjects, by publishing
in the same year two edicts; the first of which enjoined
the solemn observance of Sunday, and the second directed
the regular consultation of the Aruspices.
While this important revolution yet remained in suspense,
the Christians and the Pagans watched the conduct
of their sovereign with the same anxiety, but with
very opposite sentiments. The former were prompted
by every motive of zeal, as well as vanity, to exaggerate
the marks of his favor, and the evidences of his faith.
The latter, till their just apprehensions were changed
into despair and resentment, attempted to conceal
from the world, and from themselves, that the gods
of Rome could no longer reckon the emperor in the
number of their votaries. The same passions and
prejudices have engaged the partial writers of the
times to connect the public profession of Christianity
with the most glorious or the most ignominious aera
of the reign of Constantine.
Whatever symptoms of Christian piety
might transpire in the discourses or actions of Constantine,
he persevered till he was near forty years of age
in the practice of the established religion; and the
same conduct which in the court of Nicomedia might
be imputed to his fear, could be ascribed only to
the inclination or policy of the sovereign of Gaul.
His liberality restored and enriched the temples of
the gods; the medals which issued from his Imperial
mint are impressed with the figures and attributes
of Jupiter and Apollo, of Mars and Hercules; and his
filial piety increased the council of Olympus by the
solemn apotheosis of his father Constantius.
But the devotion of Constantine was more peculiarly
directed to the genius of the Sun, the Apollo of Greek
and Roman mythology; and he was pleased to be represented
with the symbols of the God of Light and Poetry.
The unerring shafts of that deity, the brightness
of his eyes, his laurel wreath, immortal beauty, and
elegant accomplishments, seem to point him out as
the patron of a young hero. The altars of Apollo
were crowned with the votive offerings of Constantine;
and the credulous multitude were taught to believe,
that the emperor was permitted to behold with mortal
eyes the visible majesty of their tutelar deity; and
that, either walking or in a vision, he was blessed
with the auspicious omens of a long and victorious
reign. The Sun was universally celebrated as
the invincible guide and protector of Constantine;
and the Pagans might reasonably expect that the insulted
god would pursue with unrelenting vengeance the impiety
of his ungrateful favorite.
As long as Constantine exercised a
limited sovereignty over the provinces of Gaul, his
Christian subjects were protected by the authority,
and perhaps by the laws, of a prince, who wisely left
to the gods the care of vindicating their own honor.
If we may credit the assertion of Constantine himself,
he had been an indignant spectator of the savage cruelties
which were inflicted, by the hands of Roman soldiers,
on those citizens whose religion was their only crime.
In the East and in the West, he had seen the different
effects of severity and indulgence; and as the former
was rendered still more odious by the example of Galerius,
his implacable enemy, the latter was recommended to
his imitation by the authority and advice of a dying
father. The son of Constantius immediately
suspended or repealed the edicts of persecution, and
granted the free exercise of their religious ceremonies
to all those who had already professed themselves
members of the church. They were soon encouraged
to depend on the favor as well as on the justice of
their sovereign, who had imbibed a secret and sincere
reverence for the name of Christ, and for the God
of the Christians.
About five months after the conquest
of Italy, the emperor made a solemn and authentic
declaration of his sentiments by the celebrated edict
of Milan, which restored peace to the Catholic church.
In the personal interview of the two western princes,
Constantine, by the ascendant of genius and power,
obtained the ready concurrence of his colleague, Licinius;
the union of their names and authority disarmed the
fury of Maximin; and after the death of the tyrant
of the East, the edict of Milan was received as a
general and fundamental law of the Roman world.
The wisdom of the emperors provided
for the restitution of all the civil and religious
rights of which the Christians had been so unjustly
deprived. It was enacted that the places of worship,
and public lands, which had been confiscated, should
be restored to the church, without dispute, without
delay, and without expense; and this severe injunction
was accompanied with a gracious promise, that if any
of the purchasers had paid a fair and adequate price,
they should be indemnified from the Imperial treasury.
The salutary regulations which guard the future tranquillity
of the faithful are framed on the principles of enlarged
and equal toleration; and such an equality must have
been interpreted by a recent sect as an advantageous
and honorable distinction. The two emperors proclaim
to the world, that they have granted a free and absolute
power to the Christians, and to all others, of following
the religion which each individual thinks proper to
prefer, to which he has addicted his mind, and which
he may deem the best adapted to his own use.
They carefully explain every ambiguous word, remove
every exception, and exact from the governors of the
provinces a strict obedience to the true and simple
meaning of an edict, which was designed to establish
and secure, without any limitation, the claims of religious
liberty. They condescend to assign two weighty
reasons which have induced them to allow this universal
toleration: the humane intention of consulting
the peace and happiness of their people; and the pious
hope, that, by such a conduct, they shall appease
and propitiate the Deity, whose seat is in heaven.
They gratefully acknowledge the many signal proofs
which they have received of the divine favor; and they
trust that the same Providence will forever continue
to protect the prosperity of the prince and people.
From these vague and indefinite expressions of piety,
three suppositions may be deduced, of a different,
but not of an incompatible nature. The mind of
Constantine might fluctuate between the Pagan and
the Christian religions. According to the loose
and complying notions of Polytheism, he might acknowledge
the God of the Christians as one of the many deities
who compose the hierarchy of heaven. Or perhaps
he might embrace the philosophic and pleasing idea,
that, notwithstanding the variety of names, of rites,
and of opinions, all the sects, and all the nations
of mankind, are united in the worship of the common
Father and Creator of the universe.
But the counsels of princes are more
frequently influenced by views of temporal advantage,
than by considerations of abstract and speculative
truth. The partial and increasing favor of Constantine
may naturally be referred to the esteem which he entertained
for the moral character of the Christians; and to
a persuasion, that the propagation of the gospel would
inculcate the practice of private and public virtue.
Whatever latitude an absolute monarch may assume in
his own conduct, whatever indulgence he may claim
for his own passions, it is undoubtedly his interest
that all his subjects should respect the natural and
civil obligations of society. But the operation
of the wisest laws is imperfect and precarious.
They seldom inspire virtue, they cannot always restrain
vice. Their power is insufficient to prohibit
all that they condemn, nor can they always punish
the actions which they prohibit. The legislators
of antiquity had summoned to their aid the powers of
education and of opinion. But every principle
which had once maintained the vigor and purity of
Rome and Sparta, was long since extinguished in a
declining and despotic empire. Philosophy still
exercised her temperate sway over the human mind,
but the cause of virtue derived very feeble support
from the influence of the Pagan superstition.
Under these discouraging circumstances, a prudent
magistrate might observe with pleasure the progress
of a religion which diffused among the people a pure,
benevolent, and universal system of ethics, adapted
to every duty and every condition of life; recommended
as the will and reason of the supreme Deity, and enforced
by the sanction of eternal rewards or punishments.
The experience of Greek and Roman history could not
inform the world how far the system of national manners
might be reformed and improved by the precepts of
a divine revelation; and Constantine might listen
with some confidence to the flattering, and indeed
reasonable, assurances of Lactantius. The
eloquent apologist seemed firmly to expect, and almost
ventured to promise, that the establishment of Christianity
would restore the innocence and felicity of the primitive
age; that the worship of the true God would extinguish
war and dissension among those who mutually considered
themselves as the children of a common parent; that
every impure desire, every angry or selfish passion,
would be restrained by the knowledge of the gospel;
and that the magistrates might sheath the sword of
justice among a people who would be universally actuated
by the sentiments of truth and piety, of equity and
moderation, of harmony and universal love.
The passive and unresisting obedience,
which bows under the yoke of authority, or even of
oppression, must have appeared, in the eyes of an
absolute monarch, the most conspicuous and useful of
the evangelic virtues. The primitive Christians
derived the institution of civil government, not from
the consent of the people, but from the decrees of
Heaven. The reigning emperor, though he had usurped
the sceptre by treason and murder, immediately assumed
the sacred character of vicegerent of the Deity.
To the Deity alone he was accountable for the abuse
of his power; and his subjects were indissolubly bound,
by their oath of fidelity, to a tyrant, who had violated
every law of nature and society. The humble Christians
were sent into the world as sheep among wolves; and
since they were not permitted to employ force even
in the defence of their religion, they should be still
more criminal if they were tempted to shed the blood
of their fellow-creatures in disputing the vain privileges,
or the sordid possessions, of this transitory life.
Faithful to the doctrine of the apostle, who in the
reign of Nero had preached the duty of unconditional
submission, the Christians of the three first centuries
preserved their conscience pure and innocent of the
guilt of secret conspiracy, or open rebellion.
While they experienced the rigor of persecution, they
were never provoked either to meet their tyrants in
the field, or indignantly to withdraw themselves into
some remote and sequestered corner of the globe.
The Protestants of France, of Germany, and of Britain,
who asserted with such intrepid courage their civil
and religious freedom, have been insulted by the invidious
comparison between the conduct of the primitive and
of the reformed Christians. Perhaps, instead
of censure, some applause may be due to the superior
sense and spirit of our ancestors, who had convinced
themselves that religion cannot abolish the unalienable
rights of human nature. Perhaps the patience
of the primitive church may be ascribed to its weakness,
as well as to its virtue. A sect of unwarlike
plebeians, without leaders, without arms, without
fortifications, must have encountered inevitable destruction
in a rash and fruitless resistance to the master of
the Roman legions. But the Christians, when they
deprecated the wrath of Diocletian, or solicited the
favor of Constantine, could allege, with truth and
confidence, that they held the principle of passive
obedience, and that, in the space of three centuries,
their conduct had always been conformable to their
principles. They might add, that the throne of
the emperors would be established on a fixed and permanent
basis, if all their subjects, embracing the Christian
doctrine, should learn to suffer and to obey.
In the general order of Providence,
princes and tyrants are considered as the ministers
of Heaven, appointed to rule or to chastise the nations
of the earth. But sacred history affords many
illustrious examples of the more immediate interposition
of the Deity in the government of his chosen people.
The sceptre and the sword were committed to the hands
of Moses, of Joshua, of Gideon, of David, of the Maccabees;
the virtues of those heroes were the motive or the
effect of the divine favor, the success of their arms
was destined to achieve the deliverance or the triumph
of the church. If the judges of Israel were occasional
and temporary magistrates, the kings of Judah derived
from the royal unction of their great ancestor an
hereditary and indefeasible right, which could not
be forfeited by their own vices, nor recalled by the
caprice of their subjects. The same extraordinary
providence, which was no longer confined to the Jewish
people, might elect Constantine and his family as
the protectors of the Christian world; and the devout
Lactantius announces, in a prophetic tone, the
future glories of his long and universal reign.
Galerius and Maximin, Maxentius and Licinius, were
the rivals who shared with the favorite of heaven the
provinces of the empire. The tragic deaths of
Galerius and Maximin soon gratified the resentment,
and fulfilled the sanguine expectations, of the Christians.
The success of Constantine against Maxentius and Licinius
removed the two formidable competitors who still opposed
the triumph of the second David, and his cause might
seem to claim the peculiar interposition of Providence.
The character of the Roman tyrant disgraced the purple
and human nature; and though the Christians might enjoy
his precarious favor, they were exposed, with the
rest of his subjects, to the effects of his wanton
and capricious cruelty. The conduct of Licinius
soon betrayed the reluctance with which he had consented
to the wise and humane regulations of the edict of
Milan. The convocation of provincial synods was
prohibited in his dominions; his Christian officers
were ignominiously dismissed; and if he avoided the
guilt, or rather danger, of a general persecution,
his partial oppressions were rendered still more
odious by the violation of a solemn and voluntary engagement.
While the East, according to the lively expression
of Eusebius, was involved in the shades of infernal
darkness, the auspicious rays of celestial light warmed
and illuminated the provinces of the West. The
piety of Constantine was admitted as an unexceptionable
proof of the justice of his arms; and his use of victory
confirmed the opinion of the Christians, that their
hero was inspired, and conducted, by the Lord of Hosts.
The conquest of Italy produced a general edict of toleration;
and as soon as the defeat of Licinius had invested
Constantine with the sole dominion of the Roman world,
he immediately, by circular letters, exhorted all
his subjects to imitate, without delay, the example
of their sovereign, and to embrace the divine truth
of Christianity.
Part II.
The assurance that the elevation of
Constantine was intimately connected with the designs
of Providence, instilled into the minds of the Christians
two opinions, which, by very different means, assisted
the accomplishment of the prophecy. Their warm
and active loyalty exhausted in his favor every resource
of human industry; and they confidently expected that
their strenuous efforts would be seconded by some
divine and miraculous aid. The enemies of Constantine
have imputed to interested motives the alliance which
he insensibly contracted with the Catholic church,
and which apparently contributed to the success of
his ambition. In the beginning of the fourth
century, the Christians still bore a very inadequate
proportion to the inhabitants of the empire; but among
a degenerate people, who viewed the change of masters
with the indifference of slaves, the spirit and union
of a religious party might assist the popular leader,
to whose service, from a principle of conscience,
they had devoted their lives and fortunes. The
example of his father had instructed Constantine to
esteem and to reward the merit of the Christians;
and in the distribution of public offices, he had the
advantage of strengthening his government, by the choice
of ministers or generals, in whose fidelity he could
repose a just and unreserved confidence. By the
influence of these dignified missionaries, the prosélytes
of the new faith must have multiplied in the court
and army; the Barbarians of Germany, who filled the
ranks of the legions, were of a careless temper, which
acquiesced without resistance in the religion of their
commander; and when they passed the Alps, it may fairly
be presumed, that a great number of the soldiers had
already consecrated their swords to the service of
Christ and of Constantine. The habits of mankind
and the interests of religion gradually abated the
horror of war and bloodshed, which had so long prevailed
among the Christians; and in the councils which were
assembled under the gracious protection of Constantine,
the authority of the bishops was seasonably employed
to ratify the obligation of the military oath, and
to inflict the penalty of excommunication on those
soldiers who threw away their arms during the peace
of the church. While Constantine, in his own dominions,
increased the number and zeal of his faithful adherents,
he could depend on the support of a powerful faction
in those provinces which were still possessed or usurped
by his rivals. A secret disaffection was diffused
among the Christian subjects of Maxentius and Licinius;
and the resentment, which the latter did not attempt
to conceal, served only to engage them still more
deeply in the interest of his competitor. The
regular correspondence which connected the bishops
of the most distant provinces, enabled them freely
to communicate their wishes and their designs, and
to transmit without danger any useful intelligence,
or any pious contributions, which might promote the
service of Constantine, who publicly declared that
he had taken up arms for the deliverance of the church.
The enthusiasm which inspired the
troops, and perhaps the emperor himself, had sharpened
their swords while it satisfied their conscience.
They marched to battle with the full assurance, that
the same God, who had formerly opened a passage to
the Israelites through the waters of Jordan, and had
thrown down the walls of Jericho at the sound of the
trumpets of Joshua, would display his visible majesty
and power in the victory of Constantine. The
evidence of ecclesiastical history is prepared to
affirm, that their expectations were justified by the
conspicuous miracle to which the conversion of the
first Christian emperor has been almost unanimously
ascribed. The real or imaginary cause of so important
an event, deserves and demands the attention of posterity;
and I shall endeavor to form a just estimate of the
famous vision of Constantine, by a distinct consideration
of the standard, the dream, and the celestial sign;
by separating the historical, the natural, and the
marvellous parts of this extraordinary story, which,
in the composition of a specious argument, have been
artfully confounded in one splendid and brittle mass.
I. An instrument of the tortures which
were inflicted only on slaves and strangers, became
on object of horror in the eyes of a Roman citizen;
and the ideas of guilt, of pain, and of ignominy, were
closely united with the idea of the cross. The
piety, rather than the humanity, of Constantine soon
abolished in his dominions the punishment which the
Savior of mankind had condescended to suffer; but the
emperor had already learned to despise the prejudices
of his education, and of his people, before he could
erect in the midst of Rome his own statue, bearing
a cross in its right hand; with an inscription which
referred the victory of his arms, and the deliverance
of Rome, to the virtue of that salutary sign, the
true symbol of force and courage. The same symbol
sanctified the arms of the soldiers of Constantine;
the cross glittered on their helmet, was engraved
on their shields, was interwoven into their banners;
and the consecrated emblems which adorned the person
of the emperor himself, were distinguished only by
richer materials and more exquisite workmanship.
But the principal standard which displayed the triumph
of the cross was styled the Labarum, an obscure, though
celebrated name, which has been vainly derived from
almost all the languages of the world. It is
described as a long pike intersected by a transversal
beam. The silken veil, which hung down from the
beam, was curiously inwrought with the images of the
reigning monarch and his children. The summit
of the pike supported a crown of gold which enclosed
the mysterious monogram, at once expressive of the
figure of the cross, and the initial letters, of the
name of Christ. The safety of the labarum was
intrusted to fifty guards, of approved valor and fidelity;
their station was marked by honors and emoluments;
and some fortunate accidents soon introduced an opinion,
that as long as the guards of the labarum were engaged
in the execution of their office, they were secure
and invulnerable amidst the darts of the enemy.
In the second civil war, Licinius felt and dreaded
the power of this consecrated banner, the sight of
which, in the distress of battle, animated the soldiers
of Constantine with an invincible enthusiasm, and
scattered terror and dismay through the ranks of the
adverse legions. The Christian emperors, who
respected the example of Constantine, displayed in
all their military expeditions the standard of the
cross; but when the degenerate successors of Theodosius
had ceased to appear in person at the head of their
armies, the labarum was deposited as a venerable but
useless relic in the palace of Constantinople.
Its honors are still preserved on the medals of the
Flavian family. Their grateful devotion has placed
the monogram of Christ in the midst of the ensigns
of Rome. The solemn epithets of, safety of the
republic, glory of the army, restoration of public
happiness, are equally applied to the religious and
military trophies; and there is still extant a medal
of the emperor Constantius, where the standard
of the labarum is accompanied with these memorable
words, By This Sign Thou Shalt Conquer.
II. In all occasions of danger
and distress, it was the practice of the primitive
Christians to fortify their minds and bodies by the
sign of the cross, which they used, in all their ecclesiastical
rites, in all the daily occurrences of life, as an
infallible preservative against every species of spiritual
or temporal evil. The authority of the church
might alone have had sufficient weight to justify the
devotion of Constantine, who in the same prudent and
gradual progress acknowledged the truth, and assumed
the symbol, of Christianity. But the testimony
of a contemporary writer, who in a formal treatise
has avenged the cause of religion, bestows on the
piety of the emperor a more awful and sublime character.
He affirms, with the most perfect confidence, that
in the night which preceded the last battle against
Maxentius, Constantine was admonished in a dream
to inscribe the shields of his soldiers with the celestial
sign of God, the sacred monogram of the name of Christ;
that he executed the commands of Heaven, and that
his valor and obedience were rewarded by the decisive
victory of the Milvian Bridge. Some considerations
might perhaps incline a sceptical mind to suspect the
judgment or the veracity of the rhetorician, whose
pen, either from zeal or interest, was devoted to
the cause of the prevailing faction. He appears
to have published his deaths of the persecutors at
Nicomedia about three years after the Roman victory;
but the interval of a thousand miles, and a thousand
days, will allow an ample latitude for the invention
of declaimers, the credulity of party, and the tacit
approbation of the emperor himself who might listen
without indignation to a marvellous tale, which exalted
his fame, and promoted his designs. In favor
of Licinius, who still dissembled his animosity to
the Christians, the same author has provided a similar
vision, of a form of prayer, which was communicated
by an angel, and repeated by the whole army before
they engaged the legions of the tyrant Maximin.
The frequent repetition of miracles serves to provoke,
where it does not subdue, the reason of mankind; but
if the dream of Constantine is separately considered,
it may be naturally explained either by the policy
or the enthusiasm of the emperor. Whilst his
anxiety for the approaching day, which must decide
the fate of the empire, was suspended by a short and
interrupted slumber, the venerable form of Christ,
and the well-known symbol of his religion, might forcibly
offer themselves to the active fancy of a prince who
reverenced the name, and had perhaps secretly implored
the power, of the God of the Christians. As readily
might a consummate statesman indulge himself in the
use of one of those military stratagems, one of those
pious frauds, which Philip and Sertorius had employed
with such art and effect. The praeternatural origin
of dreams was universally admitted by the nations
of antiquity, and a considerable part of the Gallic
army was already prepared to place their confidence
in the salutary sign of the Christian religion.
The secret vision of Constantine could be disproved
only by the event; and the intrepid hero who had passed
the Alps and the Apennine, might view with careless
despair the consequences of a defeat under the walls
of Rome. The senate and people, exulting in their
own deliverance from an odious tyrant, acknowledged
that the victory of Constantine surpassed the powers
of man, without daring to insinuate that it had been
obtained by the protection of the Gods. The triumphal
arch, which was erected about three years after the
event, proclaims, in ambiguous language, that by the
greatness of his own mind, and by an instinct or impulse
of the Divinity, he had saved and avenged the Roman
republic. The Pagan orator, who had seized an
earlier opportunity of celebrating the virtues of the
conqueror, supposes that he alone enjoyed a secret
and intimate commerce with the Supreme Being, who
delegated the care of mortals to his subordinate deities;
and thus assigns a very plausible reason why the subjects
of Constantine should not presume to embrace the new
religion of their sovereign.
III. The philosopher, who with
calm suspicion examines the dreams and omens, the
miracles and prodigies, of profane or even of ecclesiastical
history, will probably conclude, that if the eyes of
the spectators have sometimes been deceived by fraud,
the understanding of the readers has much more frequently
been insulted by fiction. Every event, or appearance,
or accident, which seems to deviate from the ordinary
course of nature, has been rashly ascribed to the
immediate action of the Deity; and the astonished
fancy of the multitude has sometimes given shape and
color, language and motion, to the fleeting but uncommon
meteors of the air. Nazarius and Eusebius are
the two most celebrated orators, who, in studied panegyrics,
have labored to exalt the glory of Constantine.
Nine years after the Roman victory, Nazarius describes
an army of divine warriors, who seemed to fall from
the sky: he marks their beauty, their spirit,
their gigantic forms, the stream of light which beamed
from their celestial armor, their patience in suffering
themselves to be heard, as well as seen, by mortals;
and their declaration that they were sent, that they
flew, to the assistance of the great Constantine.
For the truth of this prodigy, the Pagan orator appeals
to the whole Gallic nation, in whose presence he was
then speaking; and seems to hope that the ancient
apparitions would now obtain credit from this recent
and public event. The Christian fable of Eusebius,
which, in the space of twenty-six years, might arise
from the original dream, is cast in a much more correct
and elegant mould. In one of the marches of Constantine,
he is reported to have seen with his own eyes the
luminous trophy of the cross, placed above the meridian
sun and inscribed with the following words: By
This Conquer. This amazing object in the sky
astonished the whole army, as well as the emperor himself,
who was yet undetermined in the choice of a religion:
but his astonishment was converted into faith by the
vision of the ensuing night. Christ appeared
before his eyes; and displaying the same celestial
sign of the cross, he directed Constantine to frame
a similar standard, and to march, with an assurance
of victory, against Maxentius and all his enemies.
The learned bishop of Caesarea appears to be sensible,
that the recent discovery of this marvellous anecdote
would excite some surprise and distrust among the
most pious of his readers. Yet, instead of ascertaining
the precise circumstances of time and place, which
always serve to detect falsehood or establish truth;
instead of collecting and recording the evidence of
so many living witnesses who must have been spectators
of this stupendous miracle; Eusebius contents himself
with alleging a very singular testimony; that of the
deceased Constantine, who, many years after the event,
in the freedom of conversation, had related to him
this extraordinary incident of his own life, and had
attested the truth of it by a solemn oath. The
prudence and gratitude of the learned prelate forbade
him to suspect the veracity of his victorious master;
but he plainly intimates, that in a fact of such a
nature, he should have refused his assent to any meaner
authority. This motive of credibility could not
survive the power of the Flavian family; and the celestial
sign, which the Infidels might afterwards deride,
was disregarded by the Christians of the age which
immediately followed the conversion of Constantine.
But the Catholic church, both of the East and of the
West, has adopted a prodigy which favors, or seems
to favor, the popular worship of the cross. The
vision of Constantine maintained an honorable place
in the legend of superstition, till the bold and sagacious
spirit of criticism presumed to depreciate the triumph,
and to arraign the truth, of the first Christian emperor.
The Protestant and philosophic readers
of the present age will incline to believe, that in
the account of his own conversion, Constantine attested
a wilful falsehood by a solemn and deliberate perjury.
They may not hesitate to pronounce, that in the choice
of a religion, his mind was determined only by a sense
of interest; and that (according to the expression
of a profane poet ) he used the altars of the church
as a convenient footstool to the throne of the empire.
A conclusion so harsh and so absolute is not, however,
warranted by our knowledge of human nature, of Constantine,
or of Christianity. In an age of religious fervor,
the most artful statesmen are observed to feel some
part of the enthusiasm which they inspire, and the
most orthodox saints assume the dangerous privilege
of defending the cause of truth by the arms of deceit
and falsehood. Personal interest is often the
standard of our belief, as well as of our practice;
and the same motives of temporal advantage which might
influence the public conduct and professions of Constantine,
would insensibly dispose his mind to embrace a religion
so propitious to his fame and fortunes. His vanity
was gratified by the flattering assurance, that he
had been chosen by Heaven to reign over the earth;
success had justified his divine title to the throne,
and that title was founded on the truth of the Christian
revelation. As real virtue is sometimes excited
by undeserved applause, the specious piety of Constantine,
if at first it was only specious, might gradually,
by the influence of praise, of habit, and of example,
be matured into serious faith and fervent devotion.
The bishops and teachers of the new sect, whose dress
and manners had not qualified them for the residence
of a court, were admitted to the Imperial table; they
accompanied the monarch in his expeditions; and the
ascendant which one of them, an Egyptian or a Spaniard,
acquired over his mind, was imputed by the Pagans
to the effect of magic. Lactantius, who has
adorned the precepts of the gospel with the eloquence
of Cicero, and Eusebius, who has consecrated the learning
and philosophy of the Greeks to the service of religion,
were both received into the friendship and familiarity
of their sovereign; and those able masters of controversy
could patiently watch the soft and yielding moments
of persuasion, and dexterously apply the arguments
which were the best adapted to his character and understanding.
Whatever advantages might be derived from the acquisition
of an Imperial proselyte, he was distinguished by the
splendor of his purple, rather than by the superiority
of wisdom, or virtue, from the many thousands of his
subjects who had embraced the doctrines of Christianity.
Nor can it be deemed incredible, that the mind of an
unlettered soldier should have yielded to the weight
of evidence, which, in a more enlightened age, has
satisfied or subdued the reason of a Grotius, a Pascal,
or a Locke. In the midst of the incessant labors
of his great office, this soldier employed, or affected
to employ, the hours of the night in the diligent
study of the Scriptures, and the composition of theological
discourses; which he afterwards pronounced in the
presence of a numerous and applauding audience.
In a very long discourse, which is still extant, the
royal preacher expatiates on the various proofs still
extant, the royal preacher expatiates on the various
proofs of religion; but he dwells with peculiar complacency
on the Sibylline verses, and the fourth eclogue of
Virgil. Forty years before the birth of Christ,
the Mantuan bard, as if inspired by the celestial
muse of Isaiah, had celebrated, with all the pomp of
oriental metaphor, the return of the Virgin, the fall
of the serpent, the approaching birth of a godlike
child, the offspring of the great Jupiter, who should
expiate the guilt of human kind, and govern the peaceful
universe with the virtues of his father; the rise and
appearance of a heavenly race, primitive nation throughout
the world; and the gradual restoration of the innocence
and felicity of the golden age. The poet was
perhaps unconscious of the secret sense and object
of these sublime predictions, which have been so unworthily
applied to the infant son of a consul, or a triumvir;
but if a more splendid, and indeed specious interpretation
of the fourth eclogue contributed to the conversion
of the first Christian emperor, Virgil may deserve
to be ranked among the most successful missionaries
of the gospel.
Part III.
The awful mysteries of the Christian
faith and worship were concealed from the eyes of
strangers, and even of catechumens, with an affected
secrecy, which served to excite their wonder and curiosity.
But the severe rules of discipline which the prudence
of the bishops had instituted, were relaxed by the
same prudence in favor of an Imperial proselyte, whom
it was so important to allure, by every gentle condescension,
into the pale of the church; and Constantine was permitted,
at least by a tacit dispensation, to enjoy most of
the privileges, before he had contracted any of the
obligations, of a Christian. Instead of retiring
from the congregation, when the voice of the deacon
dismissed the profane multitude, he prayed with the
faithful, disputed with the bishops, preached on the
most sublime and intricate subjects of theology, celebrated
with sacred rites the vigil of Easter, and publicly
declared himself, not only a partaker, but, in some
measure, a priest and hierophant of the Christian mysteries.
The pride of Constantine might assume, and his services
had deserved, some extraordinary distinction:
and ill-timed rigor might have blasted the unripened
fruits of his conversion; and if the doors of the church
had been strictly closed against a prince who had
deserted the altars of the gods, the master of the
empire would have been left destitute of any form
of religious worship. In his last visit to Rome,
he piously disclaimed and insulted the superstition
of his ancestors, by refusing to lead the military
procession of the equestrian order, and to offer the
public vows to the Jupiter of the Capitoline Hill.
Many years before his baptism and death, Constantine
had proclaimed to the world, that neither his person
nor his image should ever more be seen within the
walls of an idolatrous temple; while he distributed
through the provinces a variety of medals and pictures,
which represented the emperor in an humble and suppliant
posture of Christian devotion.
The pride of Constantine, who refused
the privileges of a catechumen, cannot easily be explained
or excused; but the delay of his baptism may be justified
by the maxims and the practice of ecclesiastical antiquity.
The sacrament of baptism was regularly administered
by the bishop himself, with his assistant clergy,
in the cathedral church of the diocese, during the
fifty days between the solemn festivals of Easter
and Pentecost; and this holy term admitted a numerous
band of infants and adult persons into the bosom of
the church. The discretion of parents often suspended
the baptism of their children till they could understand
the obligations which they contracted: the severity
of ancient bishops exacted from the new converts a
novitiate of two or three years; and the catechumens
themselves, from different motives of a temporal or
a spiritual nature, were seldom impatient to assume
the character of perfect and initiated Christians.
The sacrament of baptism was supposed to contain a
full and absolute expiation of sin; and the soul was
instantly restored to its original purity, and entitled
to the promise of eternal salvation. Among the
prosélytes of Christianity, there are many who
judged it imprudent to precipitate a salutary rite,
which could not be repeated; to throw away an inestimable
privilege, which could never be recovered. By
the delay of their baptism, they could venture freely
to indulge their passions in the enjoyments of this
world, while they still retained in their own hands
the means of a sure and easy absolution. The
sublime theory of the gospel had made a much fainter
impression on the heart than on the understanding of
Constantine himself. He pursued the great object
of his ambition through the dark and bloody paths
of war and policy; and, after the victory, he abandoned
himself, without moderation, to the abuse of his fortune.
Instead of asserting his just superiority above the
imperfect heroism and profane philosophy of Trajan
and the Antonines, the mature age of Constantine forfeited
the reputation which he had acquired in his youth.
As he gradually advanced in the knowledge of truth,
he proportionally declined in the practice of virtue;
and the same year of his reign in which he convened
the council of Nice, was polluted by the execution,
or rather murder, of his eldest son. This date
is alone sufficient to refute the ignorant and malicious
suggestions of Zosimus, who affirms, that, after the
death of Crispus, the remorse of his father accepted
from the ministers of Christianity the expiation which
he had vainly solicited from the Pagan pontiffs.
At the time of the death of Crispus, the emperor could
no longer hesitate in the choice of a religion; he
could no longer be ignorant that the church was possessed
of an infallible remedy, though he chose to defer
the application of it till the approach of death had
removed the temptation and danger of a relapse.
The bishops whom he summoned, in his last illness,
to the palace of Nicomedia, were edified by the fervor
with which he requested and received the sacrament
of baptism, by the solemn protestation that the remainder
of his life should be worthy of a disciple of Christ,
and by his humble refusal to wear the Imperial purple
after he had been clothed in the white garment of
a Neophyte. The example and reputation of Constantine
seemed to countenance the delay of baptism. Future
tyrants were encouraged to believe, that the innocent
blood which they might shed in a long reign would
instantly be washed away in the waters of regeneration;
and the abuse of religion dangerously undermined the
foundations of moral virtue.
The gratitude of the church has exalted
the virtues and excused the failings of a generous
patron, who seated Christianity on the throne of the
Roman world; and the Greeks, who celebrate the festival
of the Imperial saint, seldom mention the name of
Constantine without adding the title of equal to the
Apostles. Such a comparison, if it allude to
the character of those divine missionaries, must be
imputed to the extravagance of impious flattery.
But if the parallel be confined to the extent and
number of their evangelic victories the success of
Constantine might perhaps equal that of the Apostles
themselves. By the edicts of toleration, he removed
the temporal disadvantages which had hitherto retarded
the progress of Christianity; and its active and numerous
ministers received a free permission, a liberal encouragement,
to recommend the salutary truths of revelation by every
argument which could affect the reason or piety of
mankind. The exact balance of the two religions
continued but a moment; and the piercing eye of ambition
and avarice soon discovered, that the profession of
Christianity might contribute to the interest of the
present, as well as of a future life. The hopes
of wealth and honors, the example of an emperor, his
exhortations, his irresistible smiles, diffused conviction
among the venal and obsequious crowds which usually
fill the apartments of a palace. The cities which
signalized a forward zeal by the voluntary destruction
of their temples, were distinguished by municipal
privileges, and rewarded with popular donatives; and
the new capital of the East gloried in the singular
advantage that Constantinople was never profaned by
the worship of idols. As the lower ranks of society
are governed by imitation, the conversion of those
who possessed any eminence of birth, of power, or
of riches, was soon followed by dependent multitudes.
The salvation of the common people was purchased at
an easy rate, if it be true that, in one year, twelve
thousand men were baptized at Rome, besides a proportionable
number of women and children, and that a white garment,
with twenty pieces of gold, had been promised by the
emperor to every convert. The powerful influence
of Constantine was not circumscribed by the narrow
limits of his life, or of his dominions. The
education which he bestowed on his sons and nephews
secured to the empire a race of princes, whose faith
was still more lively and sincere, as they imbibed,
in their earliest infancy, the spirit, or at least
the doctrine, of Christianity. War and commerce
had spread the knowledge of the gospel beyond the confines
of the Roman provinces; and the Barbarians, who had
disdained as humble and proscribed sect, soon learned
to esteem a religion which had been so lately embraced
by the greatest monarch, and the most civilized nation,
of the globe. The Goths and Germans, who enlisted
under the standard of Rome, revered the cross which
glittered at the head of the legions, and their fierce
countrymen received at the same time the lessons of
faith and of humanity. The kings of Iberia and
Armenia worshipped the god of their protector; and
their subjects, who have invariably preserved the
name of Christians, soon formed a sacred and perpetual
connection with their Roman brethren. The Christians
of Persia were suspected, in time of war, of preferring
their religion to their country; but as long as peace
subsisted between the two empires, the persecuting
spirit of the Magi was effectually restrained by the
interposition of Constantine. The rays of the
gospel illuminated the coast of India. The colonies
of Jews, who had penetrated into Arabia and Ethiopia,
opposed the progress of Christianity; but the labor
of the missionaries was in some measure facilitated
by a previous knowledge of the Mosaic revelation; and
Abyssinia still reveres the memory of Frumentius,
who, in the time of Constantine, devoted his life
to the conversion of those sequestered regions.
Under the reign of his son Constantius, Theophilus,
who was himself of Indian extraction, was invested
with the double character of ambassador and bishop.
He embarked on the Red Sea with two hundred horses
of the purest breed of Cappadocia, which were sent
by the emperor to the prince of the Sabaeans, or Homerites.
Theophilus was intrusted with many other useful or
curious presents, which might raise the admiration,
and conciliate the friendship, of the Barbarians; and
he successfully employed several years in a pastoral
visit to the churches of the torrid zone.
The irresistible power of the Roman
emperors was displayed in the important and dangerous
change of the national religion. The terrors
of a military force silenced the faint and unsupported
murmurs of the Pagans, and there was reason to expect,
that the cheerful submission of the Christian clergy,
as well as people, would be the result of conscience
and gratitude. It was long since established,
as a fundamental maxim of the Roman constitution,
that every rank of citizens was alike subject to the
laws, and that the care of religion was the right
as well as duty of the civil magistrate. Constantine
and his successors could not easily persuade themselves
that they had forfeited, by their conversion, any
branch of the Imperial prerogatives, or that they
were incapable of giving laws to a religion which they
had protected and embraced. The emperors still
continued to exercise a supreme jurisdiction over
the ecclesiastical order, and the sixteenth book of
the Theodosian code represents, under a variety of
titles, the authority which they assumed in the government
of the Catholic church.
But the distinction of the spiritual
and temporal powers, which had never been imposed
on the free spirit of Greece and Rome, was introduced
and confirmed by the legal establishment of Christianity.
The office of supreme pontiff, which, from the time
of Numa to that of Augustus, had always been exercised
by one of the most eminent of the senators, was at
length united to the Imperial dignity. The first
magistrate of the state, as often as he was prompted
by superstition or policy, performed with his own
hands the sacerdotal functions; nor was there any order
of priests, either at Rome or in the provinces, who
claimed a more sacred character among men, or a more
intimate communication with the gods. But in
the Christian church, which intrusts the service of
the altar to a perpetual succession of consecrated
ministers, the monarch, whose spiritual rank is less
honorable than that of the meanest deacon, was seated
below the rails of the sanctuary, and confounded with
the rest of the faithful multitude. The emperor
might be saluted as the father of his people, but
he owed a filial duty and reverence to the fathers
of the church; and the same marks of respect, which
Constantine had paid to the persons of saints and
confessors, were soon exacted by the pride of the
episcopal order. A secret conflict between the
civil and ecclesiastical jurisdictions embarrassed
the operation of the Roman government; and a pious
emperor was alarmed by the guilt and danger of touching
with a profane hand the ark of the covenant. The
separation of men into the two orders of the clergy
and of the laity was, indeed, familiar to many nations
of antiquity; and the priests of India, of Persia,
of Assyria, of Judea, of AEthiopia, of Egypt, and of
Gaul, derived from a celestial origin the temporal
power and possessions which they had acquired.
These venerable institutions had gradually assimilated
themselves to the manners and government of their respective
countries; but the opposition or contempt of the civil
power served to cement the discipline of the primitive
church. The Christians had been obliged to elect
their own magistrates, to raise and distribute a peculiar
revenue, and to regulate the internal policy of their
republic by a code of laws, which were ratified by
the consent of the people and the practice of three
hundred years. When Constantine embraced the faith
of the Christians, he seemed to contract a perpetual
alliance with a distinct and independent society;
and the privileges granted or confirmed by that emperor,
or by his successors, were accepted, not as the precarious
favors of the court, but as the just and inalienable
rights of the ecclesiastical order.
The Catholic church was administered
by the spiritual and legal jurisdiction of eighteen
hundred bishops; of whom one thousand were seated
in the Greek, and eight hundred in the Latin, provinces
of the empire. The extent and boundaries of their
respective diocèses had been variously and
accidentally decided by the zeal and success of the
first missionaries, by the wishes of the people, and
by the propagation of the gospel. Episcopal churches
were closely planted along the banks of the Nile,
on the sea-coast of Africa, in the proconsular Asia,
and through the southern provinces of Italy.
The bishops of Gaul and Spain, of Thrace and Pontus,
reigned over an ample territory, and delegated their
rural suffragans to execute the subordinate duties
of the pastoral office. A Christian diocese might
be spread over a province, or reduced to a village;
but all the bishops possessed an equal and indelible
character: they all derived the same powers and
privileges from the apostles, from the people, and
from the laws. While the civil and military professions
were separated by the policy of Constantine, a new
and perpetual order of ecclesiastical ministers, always
respectable, sometimes dangerous, was established
in the church and state. The important review
of their station and attributes may be distributed
under the following heads: I. Popular Election.
II. Ordination of the Clergy. III.
Property. IV. Civil Jurisdiction. V.
Spiritual censures. VI. Exercise of public
oratory. VII. Privilege of legislative assemblies.
I. The freedom of election subsisted
long after the legal establishment of Christianity;
and the subjects of Rome enjoyed in the church the
privilege which they had lost in the republic, of choosing
the magistrates whom they were bound to obey.
As soon as a bishop had closed his eyes, the metropolitan
issued a commission to one of his suffragans to administer
the vacant see, and prepare, within a limited time,
the future election. The right of voting was
vested in the inferior clergy, who were best qualified
to judge of the merit of the candidates; in the senators
or nobles of the city, all those who were distinguished
by their rank or property; and finally in the whole
body of the people, who, on the appointed day, flocked
in multitudes from the most remote parts of the diocese,
and sometimes silenced by their tumultuous acclamations,
the voice of reason and the laws of discipline.
These acclamations might accidentally fix
on the head of the most deserving competitor; of some
ancient presbyter, some holy monk, or some layman,
conspicuous for his zeal and piety. But the episcopal
chair was solicited, especially in the great and opulent
cities of the empire, as a temporal rather than as
a spiritual dignity. The interested views, the
selfish and angry passions, the arts of perfidy and
dissimulation, the secret corruption, the open and
even bloody violence which had formerly disgraced
the freedom of election in the commonwealths of Greece
and Rome, too often influenced the choice of the successors
of the apostles. While one of the candidates
boasted the honors of his family, a second allured
his judges by the delicacies of a plentiful table,
and a third, more guilty than his rivals, offered
to share the plunder of the church among the accomplices
of his sacrilegious hopes The civil as well as ecclesiastical
laws attempted to exclude the populace from this solemn
and important transaction. The canons of ancient
discipline, by requiring several episcopal qualifications,
of age, station, &c., restrained, in some measure,
the indiscriminate caprice of the electors. The
authority of the provincial bishops, who were assembled
in the vacant church to consecrate the choice of the
people, was interposed to moderate their passions
and to correct their mistakes. The bishops could
refuse to ordain an unworthy candidate, and the rage
of contending factions sometimes accepted their impartial
mediation. The submission, or the resistance,
of the clergy and people, on various occasions, afforded
different precedents, which were insensibly converted
into positive laws and provincial customs; but it
was every where admitted, as a fundamental maxim of
religious policy, that no bishop could be imposed
on an orthodox church, without the consent of its members.
The emperors, as the guardians of the public peace,
and as the first citizens of Rome and Constantinople,
might effectually declare their wishes in the choice
of a primate; but those absolute monarchs respected
the freedom of ecclesiastical elections; and while
they distributed and resumed the honors of the state
and army, they allowed eighteen hundred perpetual
magistrates to receive their important offices from
the free suffrages of the people. It was
agreeable to the dictates of justice, that these magistrates
should not desert an honorable station from which
they could not be removed; but the wisdom of councils
endeavored, without much success, to enforce the residence,
and to prevent the translation, of bishops. The
discipline of the West was indeed less relaxed than
that of the East; but the same passions which made
those regulations necessary, rendered them ineffectual.
The reproaches which angry prelates have so vehemently
urged against each other, serve only to expose their
common guilt, and their mutual indiscretion.
II. The bishops alone possessed
the faculty of spiritual generation: and this
extraordinary privilege might compensate, in some degree,
for the painful celibacy which was imposed as a virtue,
as a duty, and at length as a positive obligation.
The religions of antiquity, which established a separate
order of priests, dedicated a holy race, a tribe or
family, to the perpetual service of the gods.
Such institutions were founded for possession, rather
than conquest. The children of the priests enjoyed,
with proud and indolent security, their sacred inheritance;
and the fiery spirit of enthusiasm was abated by the
cares, the pleasures, and the endearments of domestic
life. But the Christian sanctuary was open to
every ambitious candidate, who aspired to its heavenly
promises or temporal possessions. This office
of priests, like that of soldiers or magistrates,
was strenuously exercised by those men, whose temper
and abilities had prompted them to embrace the ecclesiastical
profession, or who had been selected by a discerning
bishop, as the best qualified to promote the glory
and interest of the church. The bishops (till
the abuse was restrained by the prudence of the laws)
might constrain the reluctant, and protect the distressed;
and the imposition of hands forever bestowed some
of the most valuable privileges of civil society.
The whole body of the Catholic clergy, more numerous
perhaps than the legions, was exempted by the emperors
from all service, private or public, all municipal
offices, and all personal taxes and contributions,
which pressed on their fellow-citizens with intolerable
weight; and the duties of their holy profession were
accepted as a full discharge of their obligations
to the republic. Each bishop acquired an absolute
and indefeasible right to the perpetual obedience of
the clerk whom he ordained: the clergy of each
episcopal church, with its dependent parishes, formed
a regular and permanent society; and the cathedrals
of Constantinople and Carthage maintained their peculiar
establishment of five hundred ecclesiastical ministers.
Their ranks and numbers were insensibly multiplied
by the superstition of the times, which introduced
into the church the splendid ceremonies of a Jewish
or Pagan temple; and a long train of priests, deacons,
sub-deacons, acolythes, exorcists, readers, singers,
and doorkeepers, contributed, in their respective
stations, to swell the pomp and harmony of religious
worship. The clerical name and privileges were
extended to many pious fraternities, who devoutly
supported the ecclesiastical throne. Six hundred
parabolani, or adventurers, visited the sick at Alexandria;
eleven hundred copiat, or grave-diggers, buried the
dead at Constantinople; and the swarms of monks, who
arose from the Nile, overspread and darkened the face
of the Christian world.
Part IV.
III. The edict of Milan secured
the revenue as well as the peace of the church.
The Christians not only recovered the lands and houses
of which they had been stripped by the persecuting
laws of Diocletian, but they acquired a perfect title
to all the possessions which they had hitherto enjoyed
by the connivance of the magistrate. As soon as
Christianity became the religion of the emperor and
the empire, the national clergy might claim a decent
and honorable maintenance; and the payment of an annual
tax might have delivered the people from the more oppressive
tribute, which superstition imposes on her votaries.
But as the wants and expenses of the church increased
with her prosperity, the ecclesiastical order was
still supported and enriched by the voluntary oblations
of the faithful. Eight years after the edict of
Milan, Constantine granted to all his subjects the
free and universal permission of bequeathing their
fortunes to the holy Catholic church; and their devout
liberality, which during their lives was checked by
luxury or avarice, flowed with a profuse stream at
the hour of their death. The wealthy Christians
were encouraged by the example of their sovereign.
An absolute monarch, who is rich without patrimony,
may be charitable without merit; and Constantine too
easily believed that he should purchase the favor
of Heaven, if he maintained the idle at the expense
of the industrious; and distributed among the saints
the wealth of the republic. The same messenger
who carried over to Africa the head of Maxentius,
might be intrusted with an epistle to Caecilian, bishop
of Carthage. The emperor acquaints him, that
the treasurers of the province are directed to pay
into his hands the sum of three thousand folles,
or eighteen thousand pounds sterling, and to obey
his further requisitions for the relief of the churches
of Africa, Numidia, and Mauritania. The liberality
of Constantine increased in a just proportion to his
faith, and to his vices. He assigned in each
city a regular allowance of corn, to supply the fund
of ecclesiastical charity; and the persons of both
sexes who embraced the monastic life became the peculiar
favorites of their sovereign. The Christian temples
of Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem, Constantinople
&c., displayed the ostentatious piety of a prince,
ambitious in a declining age to equal the perfect labors
of antiquity. The form of these religious edifices
was simple and oblong; though they might sometimes
swell into the shape of a dome, and sometimes branch
into the figure of a cross. The timbers were framed
for the most part of cedars of Libanus; the roof was
covered with tiles, perhaps of gilt brass; and the
walls, the columns, the pavement, were encrusted with
variegated marbles. The most precious ornaments
of gold and silver, of silk and gems, were profusely
dedicated to the service of the altar; and this specious
magnificence was supported on the solid and perpetual
basis of landed property. In the space of two
centuries, from the reign of Constantine to that of
Justinian, the eighteen hundred churches of the empire
were enriched by the frequent and unalienable gifts
of the prince and people. An annual income of
six hundred pounds sterling may be reasonably assigned
to the bishops, who were placed at an equal distance
between riches and poverty, but the standard of their
wealth insensibly rose with the dignity and opulence
of the cities which they governed. An authentic
but imperfect rent-roll specifies some houses, shops,
gardens, and farms, which belonged to the three Basilic
of Rome, St. Peter, St. Paul, and St. John Lateran,
in the provinces of Italy, Africa, and the East.
They produce, besides a reserved rent of oil, linen,
paper, aromatics, &c., a clear annual revenue of twenty-two
thousand pieces of gold, or twelve thousand pounds
sterling. In the age of Constantine and Justinian,
the bishops no longer possessed, perhaps they no longer
deserved, the unsuspecting confidence of their clergy
and people. The ecclesiastical revenues of each
diocese were divided into four parts for the respective
uses of the bishop himself, of his inferior clergy,
of the poor, and of the public worship; and the abuse
of this sacred trust was strictly and repeatedly checked.
The patrimony of the church was still subject to all
the public compositions of the state. The clergy
of Rome, Alexandria, Thessalonica, &c., might solicit
and obtain some partial exemptions; but the premature
attempt of the great council of Rimini, which aspired
to universal freedom, was successfully resisted by
the son of Constantine.
IV. The Latin clergy, who erected
their tribunal on the ruins of the civil and common
law, have modestly accepted, as the gift of Constantine,
the independent jurisdiction, which was the fruit of
time, of accident, and of their own industry.
But the liberality of the Christian emperors had actually
endowed them with some legal prerogatives, which secured
and dignified the sacerdotal characte. Under
a despotic government, the bishops alone enjoyed and
asserted the inestimable privilege of being tried
only by their peers; and even in a capital accusation,
a synod of their brethren were the sole judges of
their guilt or innocence. Such a tribunal, unless
it was inflamed by personal resentment or religious
discord, might be favorable, or even partial, to the
sacerdotal order: but Constantine was satisfied,
that secret impunity would be less pernicious than
public scandal: and the Nicene council was edited
by his public declaration, that if he surprised a
bishop in the act of adultery, he should cast his Imperial
mantle over the episcopal sinne. The domestic
jurisdiction of the bishops was at once a privilege
and a restraint of the ecclesiastical order, whose
civil causes were decently withdrawn from the cognizance
of a secular judge. Their venial offences were
not exposed to the shame of a public trial or punishment;
and the gentle correction which the tenderness of
youth may endure from its parents or instructors, was
inflicted by the temperate severity of the bishops.
But if the clergy were guilty of any crime which could
not be sufficiently expiated by their degradation
from an honorable and beneficial profession, the Roman
magistrate drew the sword of justice, without any regard
to ecclesiastical immunitie. The arbitration
of the bishops was ratified by a positive law; and
the judges were instructed to execute, without appeal
or delay, the episcopal decrees, whose validity had
hitherto depended on the consent of the parties.
The conversion of the magistrates themselves, and
of the whole empire, might gradually remove the fears
and scruples of the Christians. But they still
resorted to the tribunal of the bishops, whose abilities
and integrity they esteemed; and the venerable Austin
enjoyed the satisfaction of complaining that his spiritual
functions were perpetually interrupted by the invidious
labor of deciding the claim or the possession of silver
and gold, of lands and cattl. The ancient
privilege of sanctuary was transferred to the Christian
temples, and extended, by the liberal piety of the
younger Theodosius, to the precincts of consecrated
ground. The fugitive, and even guilty, suppliants
were permitted to implore either the justice, or the
mercy, of the Deity and his ministers. The rash
violence of despotism was suspended by the mild interposition
of the church; and the lives or fortunes of the most
eminent subjects might be protected by the mediation
of the bishop.
V. The bishop was the perpetual censor
of the morals of his people The discipline of penance
was digested into a system of canonical jurisprudence,
which accurately defined the duty of private or public
confession, the rules of evidence, the degrees of guilt,
and the measure of punishment. It was impossible
to execute this spiritual censure, if the Christian
pontiff, who punished the obscure sins of the multitude,
respected the conspicuous vices and destructive crimes
of the magistrate: but it was impossible to arraign
the conduct of the magistrate, without, controlling
the administration of civil government. Some
considerations of religion, or loyalty, or fear, protected
the sacred persons of the emperors from the zeal or
resentment of the bishops; but they boldly censured
and excommunicated the subordinate tyrants, who were
not invested with the majesty of the purple. St.
Athanasius excommunicated one of the ministers of Egypt;
and the interdict which he pronounced, of fire and
water, was solemnly transmitted to the churches of
Cappadocia. Under the reign of the younger Theodosius,
the polite and eloquent Synesius, one of the descendants
of Hercules, filled the episcopal seat of Ptolemais,
near the ruins of ancient Cyrene, and the philosophic
bishop supported with dignity the character which
he had assumed with reluctance. He vanquished
the monster of Libya, the president Andronicus, who
abused the authority of a venal office, invented new
modes of rapine and torture, and aggravated the guilt
of oppression by that of sacrilege. After a fruitless
attempt to reclaim the haughty magistrate by mild and
religious admonition, Synesius proceeds to inflict
the last sentence of ecclesiastical justice, which
devotes Andronicus, with his associates and their
families, to the abhorrence of earth and heaven.
The impenitent sinners, more cruel than Phalaris or
Sennacherib, more destructive than war, pestilence,
or a cloud of locusts, are deprived of the name and
privileges of Christians, of the participation of the
sacraments, and of the hope of Paradise. The bishop
exhorts the clergy, the magistrates, and the people,
to renounce all society with the enemies of Christ;
to exclude them from their houses and tables; and to
refuse them the common offices of life, and the decent
rites of burial. The church of Ptolemais, obscure
and contemptible as she may appear, addresses this
declaration to all her sister churches of the world;
and the profane who reject her decrees, will be involved
in the guilt and punishment of Andronicus and his
impious followers. These spiritual terrors were
enforced by a dexterous application to the Byzantine
court; the trembling president implored the mercy of
the church; and the descendants of Hercules enjoyed
the satisfaction of raising a prostrate tyrant from
the ground. Such principles and such examples
insensibly prepared the triumph of the Roman pontiffs,
who have trampled on the necks of kings.
VI. Every popular government
has experienced the effects of rude or artificial
eloquence. The coldest nature is animated, the
firmest reason is moved, by the rapid communication
of the prevailing impulse; and each hearer is affected
by his own passions, and by those of the surrounding
multitude. The ruin of civil liberty had silenced
the demagogues of Athens, and the tribunes of Rome;
the custom of preaching which seems to constitute
a considerable part of Christian devotion, had not
been introduced into the temples of antiquity; and
the ears of monarchs were never invaded by the harsh
sound of popular eloquence, till the pulpits of the
empire were filled with sacred orators, who possessed
some advantages unknown to their profane predecessors.
The arguments and rhetoric of the tribune were instantly
opposed with equal arms, by skilful and resolute antagonists;
and the cause of truth and reason might derive an
accidental support from the conflict of hostile passions.
The bishop, or some distinguished presbyter, to whom
he cautiously delegated the powers of preaching, harangued,
without the danger of interruption or reply, a submissive
multitude, whose minds had been prepared and subdued
by the awful ceremonies of religion. Such was
the strict subordination of the Catholic church, that
the same concerted sounds might issue at once from
a hundred pulpits of Italy or Egypt, if they were
tuned by the master hand of the Roman or Alexandrian
primate. The design of this institution was laudable,
but the fruits were not always salutary. The
preachers recommended the practice of the social duties;
but they exalted the perfection of monastic virtue,
which is painful to the individual, and useless to
mankind. Their charitable exhortations betrayed
a secret wish that the clergy might be permitted to
manage the wealth of the faithful, for the benefit
of the poor. The most sublime representations
of the attributes and laws of the Deity were sullied
by an idle mixture of metaphysical subtleties, puerile
rites, and fictitious miracles: and they expatiated,
with the most fervent zeal, on the religious merit
of hating the adversaries, and obeying the ministers
of the church. When the public peace was distracted
by heresy and schism, the sacred orators sounded the
trumpet of discord, and, perhaps, of sedition.
The understandings of their congregations were perplexed
by mystery, their passions were inflamed by invectives;
and they rushed from the Christian temples of Antioch
or Alexandria, prepared either to suffer or to inflict
martyrdom. The corruption of taste and language
is strongly marked in the vehement declamations of
the Latin bishops; but the compositions of Gregory
and Chrysostom have been compared with the most splendid
models of Attic, or at least of Asiatic, eloquence.
VII. The representatives of the
Christian republic were regularly assembled in the
spring and autumn of each year; and these synods diffused
the spirit of ecclesiastical discipline and legislation
through the hundred and twenty provinces of the Roman
world. The archbishop or metropolitan was empowered,
by the laws, to summon the suffragan bishops of his
province; to revise their conduct, to vindicate their
rights, to declare their faith, and to examine the
merits of the candidates who were elected by the clergy
and people to supply the vacancies of the episcopal
college. The primates of Rome, Alexandria, Antioch,
Carthage, and afterwards Constantinople, who exercised
a more ample jurisdiction, convened the numerous assembly
of their dependent bishops. But the convocation
of great and extraordinary synods was the prerogative
of the emperor alone. Whenever the emergencies
of the church required this decisive measure, he despatched
a peremptory summons to the bishops, or the deputies
of each province, with an order for the use of post-horses,
and a competent allowance for the expenses of their
journey. At an early period, when Constantine
was the protector, rather than the proselyte, of Christianity,
he referred the African controversy to the council
of Arles; in which the bishops of York of Treves, of
Milan, and of Carthage, met as friends and brethren,
to debate in their native tongue on the common interest
of the Latin or Western church. Eleven years
afterwards, a more numerous and celebrated assembly
was convened at Nice in Bithynia, to extinguish, by
their final sentence, the subtle disputes which had
arisen in Egypt on the subject of the Trinity.
Three hundred and eighteen bishops obeyed the summons
of their indulgent master; the ecclesiastics of every
rank, and sect, and denomination, have been computed
at two thousand and forty-eight persons; the Greeks
appeared in person; and the consent of the Latins
was expressed by the legates of the Roman pontiff.
The session, which lasted about two months, was frequently
honored by the presence of the emperor. Leaving
his guards at the door, he seated himself (with the
permission of the council) on a low stool in the midst
of the hall. Constantine listened with patience,
and spoke with modesty: and while he influenced
the debates, he humbly professed that he was the minister,
not the judge, of the successors of the apostles,
who had been established as priests and as gods upon
earth. Such profound reverence of an absolute
monarch towards a feeble and unarmed assembly of his
own subjects, can only be compared to the respect
with which the senate had been treated by the Roman
princes who adopted the policy of Augustus. Within
the space of fifty years, a philosophic spectator
of the vicissitudes of human affairs might have contemplated
Tacitus in the senate of Rome, and Constantine in the
council of Nice. The fathers of the Capitol and
those of the church had alike degenerated from the
virtues of their founders; but as the bishops were
more deeply rooted in the public opinion, they sustained
their dignity with more decent pride, and sometimes
opposed with a manly spirit the wishes of their sovereign.
The progress of time and superstition erased the memory
of the weakness, the passion, the ignorance, which
disgraced these ecclesiastical synods; and the Catholic
world has unanimously submitted to the infallible decrees
of the general councils.