THE CHURCH
(1838)
A period and a movement certainly among
the most remarkable in the Christendom of the
last three and a half centuries; probably more remarkable
than the movement associated with the name of Port
Royal, for that has passed away and left hardly
a trace behind; but this has left ineffaceable
marks upon the English church and nation. GLADSTONE
(1891).
It was the affinity of great natures
for great issues that made Mr. Gladstone from his
earliest manhood onwards take and hold fast the affairs
of the churches for the objects of his most absorbing
interest. He was one and the same man, his genius
was one. His persistent incursions all through
his long life into the multifarious doings, not only
of his own anglican communion, but of the Latin church
of the west, as well as of the motley Christendom
of the east, puzzled and vexed political whippers-in,
wire-pullers, newspaper editors, leaders, colleagues;
they were the despair of party caucuses; and they made
the neutral man of the world smile, as eccentricities
of genius and rather singularly chosen recreations.
All this was, in truth, of the very essence of his
character, the manifestation of its profound unity.
The quarrel upon church comprehension
that had perplexed Elizabeth and Burleigh, had distracted
the councils of Charles I. and of Cromwell, had bewildered
William of Orange and Tillotson and Burnet, was once
more aglow with its old heat. The still mightier
dispute, how wide or how narrow is the common ground
between the church of England and the church of Rome,
broke into fierce flame.
THE RELIGIOUS
QUESTION
Then by and by these familiar contests
of ancient tradition, thus quickened in the eternal
ebb and flow of human things into fresh vitality,
were followed by a revival, with new artillery and
larger strategy, of a standing war that is roughly
described as the conflict between reason and faith,
between science and revelation. The controversy
of Laudian divines with puritans, of Hoadly with non-jurors,
of Hanoverian divines with deists and free-thinkers,
all may seem now to us narrow and dry when compared
with such a drama, of so many interesting characters,
strange evolutions, and multiple and startling climax,
as gradually unfolded itself to Mr. Gladstone’s
ardent and impassioned gaze.
His is not one of the cases, like
Pascal, or Baxter, or Rutherford, or a hundred others,
where a man’s theological history is to the world,
however it may seem to himself, the most important
aspect of his career or character. This is not
the place for an exploration of Mr. Gladstone’s
strictly theological history, nor is mine the hand
by which such exploration could be attempted.
In the sphere of dogmatic faith, apart from ecclesiastical
politics and all the war of principles connected with
such politics, Mr. Gladstone, by the time when he was
thirty, had become a man of settled questions.
Nor was he for his own part, with a remarkable exception
in respect of one particular doctrine towards the
end of his life, ever ready to re-open them. What
is extraordinary in the career of this far-shining
and dominant character of his age, is not a development
of specific opinions on dogma, or discipline, or ordinance,
on article or sacrament, but the fact that with a
steadfast tread he marched along the high anglican
road to the summits of that liberalism which it was
the original object of the new anglicans to resist
and overthrow.
The years from 1831 to 1840 Mr. Gladstone
marked as an era of a marvellous uprising of religious
energy throughout the land; it saved the church, he
says. Not only in Oxford but in England he declares
that party spirit within the church had fallen to
a low ebb. Coming hurricanes were not foreseen.
In Lord Liverpool’s government patronage was
considered to have been respectably dispensed, and
church reform was never heard of. This dreamless
composure was rudely broken. The repeal of the
test and corporation Acts in 1828 first roused the
church; and her sons rubbed their eyes when they beheld
parliament bringing frankly to an end the odious monopoly
of office under the crown, all corporate office, all
magistracy, in men willing to take the communion at
the altar of the privileged establishment. The
next year a deadlier blow fell after a more embittered
fight the admission of Roman catholics
to parliament and place. The Reform bill of 1832
followed. Even when half spent, the forces that
had been gathering for many years in the direction
of parliamentary reform, and had at last achieved more
than one immense result, rolled heavily forward against
the church. The opening of parliament and of
close corporations was taken to involve an opening
to correspond in the grandest and closest of all corporations.
The resounding victory of the constitutional bill of
1832 was followed by a drastic handling of the church
in Ireland, and by a proposal to divert a surplus
of its property to purposes not ecclesiastical.
A long and peculiarly unedifying crisis ensued.
Stanley and Graham, two of the most eminent members
of the reforming whig cabinet, on this proposal at
once resigned. The Grey ministry was thus split
in 1834, and the Peel ministry ejected in 1835, on
the ground of the absolute inviolability of the property
of the Irish church. The tide of reaction set
slowly in. The shock in political party was in
no long time followed by shock after shock in the
church. As has happened on more than one occasion
in our history, alarm for the church kindled the conservative
temper in the nation. Or to put it in another
way, that spontaneous attachment to the old order
of things, with all its symbols, institutes, and deep
associations, which the radical reformers had both
affronted and ignored, made the church its rallying-point.
The three years of tortuous proceedings on the famous
Appropriation clause proceedings that political
philosophers declared to have disgraced this country
in the face of Europe, and that were certainly an
ignominy and a scandal in a party called reforming were
among the things that helped most to prepare the way
for the fall of the whigs and the conservative triumph
of 1841. Within ten years from the death of Canning
the church transfixed the attention of the politician.
The Duke of Wellington was hardly a wizard in political
foresight, but he had often a good soldier’s
eye for things that stood straight up in front of him.
’The real question,’ said the duke in
1838, ’that now divides the country and which
truly divides the House of Commons, is church or no
church. People talk of the war in Spain, and
the Canada question. But all that is of little
moment. The real question is church or no church.’
CHANGED POSITION
OF THE CHURCH
The position of the tory party as
seen by its powerful recruit was, when he entered
public life, a state of hopeless defeat and discomfiture.
‘But in my imagination,’ wrote Mr. Gladstone,
’I cast over that party a prophetic mantle and
assigned to it a mission distinctly religious as the
champion in the state field of that divine truth which
it was the office of the Christian ministry to uphold
in the church. Neither then did I, nor now can
I, see on what ground this inviolability could for
a moment be maintained, except the belief that the
state had such a mission.’ He soon discovered
how hard it is to adjust to the many angles of an
English political party the seamless mantle of ecclesiastical
predominance.
The changes in the political constitution
in 1828, in 1829, and in 1832, carried with them a
deliberate recognition that the church was not the
nation; that it was not identical with the parliament
who spoke for the nation; that it had no longer a
title to compose the governing order; and a
more startling disclosure still to the minds of churchmen that
laws affecting the church would henceforth be made
by men of all churches and creeds, or even men of
none. This hateful circumstance it was that inevitably
began in multitudes of devout and earnest minds to
produce a revolution in their conception of a church,
and a resurrection in curiously altered forms of that
old ideal of Milton’s austere and lofty school the
ideal of a purely spiritual association that should
leave each man’s soul and conscience free from
‘secular chains’ and ‘hireling wolves.’
CHANGED SOCIAL
CONDITIONS
Strange social conditions were emerging
on every side. The factory system established
itself on a startling scale. Huge aggregates of
population collected with little regard to antique
divisions of diocese and parish. Colonies over
the sea extended in boundaries and numbers, and churchmen
were zealous that these infant societies should be
blessed by the same services, rites, ecclesiastical
ordering and exhortation, as were believed to elevate
and sanctify the parent community at home. The
education of the people grew to be a formidable problem,
the field of angry battles and campaigns that never
end. Trade, markets, wages, hours, and all the
gaunt and haggard economics of the labour question,
added to the statesman’s load. Pauperism
was appalling. In a word, the need for social
regeneration both material and moral was in the spirit
of the time. Here were the hopes, vague, blind,
unmeasured, formless, that had inspired the wild clamour
for the bill, the whole bill, and nothing but the
bill. The whig patricians carried away the prizes
of great office, though the work had been done by
men of a very different stamp. It was the utilitarian
radicals who laid the foundations of social improvement
in a reasoned creed. With admirable ability,
perseverance, unselfishness, and public spirit, Bentham
and his disciples had regenerated political opinion,
and fought the battle against debt, pauperism, class-privilege,
class-monopoly, abusive patronage, a monstrous criminal
law, and all the host of sinister interests. As
in every reforming age, men approached the work from
two sides. Evangelical religion divides with rationalism
the glory of more than one humanitarian struggle.
Brougham, a more potent force than we now realise,
plunged with the energy of a Titan into a thousand
projects, all taking for granted that ignorance is
the disease and useful knowledge the universal healer,
all of them secular, all dealing with man from the
outside, none touching imagination or the heart.
March-of-mind became to many almost as wearisome a
cry as wisdom-of-our-ancestors had been. According
to some eager innovators, dogma and ceremony were
to go, the fabrics to be turned into mechanics’
institutes, the clergy to lecture on botany and statistics.
The reaction against this dusty dominion of secularity
kindled new life in rival schools. They insisted
that if society is to be improved and civilisation
saved, it can only be through improvement in the character
of man, and character is moulded and inspired by more
things than are dreamed of by societies for useful
knowledge. The building up of the inward man
in all his parts, faculties, and aspirations, was seen
to be, what in every age it is, the problem of problems.
This thought turned the eyes of many of
Mr. Gladstone first among them to the church,
and stirred an endeavour to make out of the church
what Coleridge describes as the sustaining, correcting,
befriending opposite of the world, the compensating
counterforce to the inherent and inevitable defects
of the state as a state. Such was the new movement
of the time between 1835 and 1845.
‘It is surprising,’ said
Proudhon, the trenchant genius of French socialism
in 1840 and onwards, ’how at the bottom of our
politics we always found theology.’ It
is true at any rate that the association of political
and social change with theological revolution was the
most remarkable of all the influences in the first
twenty years of Mr. Gladstone’s public life.
Then rose once more into active prominence the supreme
debate, often cutting deep into the labours of the
modern statesman, always near to the heart of the
speculations of the theologian, in many fields urgent
in its interest alike to ecclesiastic, historian,
and philosopher, the inquiry: what is a church?
This opened the sluices and let out the floods.
What is the church of England? To ask that question
was to ask a hundred others. Creeds, dogmas,
ordinances, hierarchy, parliamentary institution, judicial
tribunals, historical tradition, the prayer-book,
the Bible all these enormous topics sacred
and profane, with all their countless ramifications,
were rapidly swept into a tornado of such controversy
as had not been seen in England since the Revolution.
Was the church a purely human creation, changing with
time and circumstance, like all the other creations
of the heart and brain and will of man? Were
its bishops mere officers, like high ministers of
mundane state, or were they, in actual historic truth
as in supposed theological necessity, the direct lineal
successors of the first apostles, endowed from the
beginning with the mystical prerogatives on which
the efficacy of all sacramental rites depended?
What were its relations to the councils of the first
four centuries, what to the councils of the fifteenth
century and the sixteenth, what to the Fathers?
The Scottish presbyterians held the conception of a
church as strongly as anybody; but England, broadly
speaking, had never been persuaded that there could
be a church without bishops.
In the answers to this group of hard
questions, terrible divisions that had been long muffled
and huddled away burst into view. The stupendous
quarrel of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
again broke out. To the erastian lawyer the church
was an institution erected on principles of political
expediency by act of parliament. To the school
of Whately and Arnold it was a corporation of divine
origin, devised to strengthen men in their struggle
for goodness and holiness by the association and mutual
help of fellow-believers. To the evangelical it
was hardly more than a collection of congregations
commended in the Bible for the diffusion of the knowledge
and right interpretation of the Scriptures, the commemoration
of gospel events, and the linking of gospel truths
to a well-ordered life. To the high anglican
as to the Roman catholic, the church was something
very different from this; not a fabric reared by man,
nor in truth any mechanical fabric at all, but a mystically
appointed channel of salvation, an indispensable element
in the relation between the soul of man and its creator.
To be a member of it was not to join an external association,
but to become an inward partaker in ineffable and
mysterious graces to which no other access lay open.
Such was the Church Catholic and Apostolic as set
up from the beginning, and of this immense mystery,
of this saving agency, of this incommensurable spiritual
force, the established church of England was the local
presence and the organ.
HARD QUESTIONS
REVIVED
The noble restlessness of the profounder
and more penetrating minds was not satisfied, any
more than Bossuet had been, to think of the church
as only an element in a scheme of individual salvation.
They sought in it the comprehensive solution of all
the riddles of life and time. Newman drew in
powerful outline the sublime and sombre anarchy of
human history.
This is the enigma, this the solution
in faith and spirit, in which Mr. Gladstone lived
and moved. In him it gave to the energies of life
their meaning, and to duty its foundation. While
poetic voices and the oracles of sages Goethe,
Scott, Wordsworth, Shelley, Byron, Coleridge were
drawing men one way or another, or else were leaving
the void turbid and formless, he, in the midst of
doubts, distractions, and fears, saw a steadfast light
where the Oxford men saw it; in that concrete representation
of the unseen Power that, as he believed, had made
and guides and rules the world, in that Church Catholic
and Apostolic which alone would have the force and
the stoutness necessary to serve for a breakwater
against the deluge. Yet to understand Mr. Gladstone’s
case, we have ever to remember that what is called
the catholic revival was not in England that which
the catholic counter-revolution had been on the continent
of Europe, primarily a political movement. Its
workings were inward, in the sphere of the mind, in
thought and faith, in idealised associations of historic
grandeur.
II
HIS RELIGIOUS
GROWTH
The reader has already been told how
at Rome and in Naples in 1832, Mr. Gladstone was suddenly
arrested by the new idea of a church, interweaving
with the whole of human life a pervading and equalised
spirit of religion. Long years after, in an unfinished
fragment, he began to trace the golden thread of his
religious growth:
My environment in my childhood was
strictly evangelical. My dear and noble
mother was a woman of warm piety but broken health,
and I was not directly instructed by her.
But I was brought up to believe that Doyly and
Mant’s Bible (then a standard book of the colour
ruling in the church) was heretical, and that
every unitarian (I suppose also every heathen)
must, as matter of course, be lost forever.
This deplorable servitude of mind oppressed me in a
greater or less degree for a number of years.
As late as in the year (I think) 1836, one of
my brothers married a beautiful and in every
way charming person, who had been brought up in a family
of the unitarian profession, yet under a mother
very sincerely religious. I went through
much mental difficulty and distress at the time,
as there had been no express renunciation [by her]
of the ancestral creed, and I absurdly busied
myself with devising this or that religious test
as what if accepted might suffice.
So, as will be seen, the first access
of churchlike ideas to my mind by no means sufficed
to expel my inherited and bigoted misconception,
though in the event they did it as I hope effectively.
But I long retained in my recollection an observation
made to me in (I think) the year 1829, by Mrs.
Benjamin Gaskell of Thornes, near Wakefield,
a seed which was destined long to remain in my
mind without germinating. I fell into religious
conversation with this excellent woman, the mother
of my Eton friend Milnes Gaskell, himself the
husband of an unitarian. She said to me, Surely
we cannot entertain a doubt as to the future condition
of any person truly united to Christ by faith
and love, whatever may be the faults of his opinions.
Here she supplied me with the key to the whole
question. At this hour I feel grateful to her
accordingly, for the scope of her remark is very
wide; and it is now my rule to remember her in
prayer before the altar.
There was nothing at Eton to subvert
this frame of mind; for nothing was taught us
either for it or against it. But in the spring
and summer of 1828, I set to work on Hooker’s
Ecclesiastical Polity, and read it straight
through. Intercourse with my elder sister
Anne had increased my mental interest in religion,
and she, though generally of evangelical sentiments,
had an opinion that the standard divines of the
English church were of great value. Hooker’s
exposition of the case of the church of England
came to me as a mere abstraction; but I think that
I found the doctrine of Baptismal Regeneration,
theretofore abhorred, impossible to reject, and
the way was thus opened for further changes.
In like manner at Oxford, I do not
doubt that in 1830 and 1831 the study of Bishop
Butler laid the ground for new modes of thought in
religion, but his teaching in the sermons on our
moral nature was not integrated, so to speak,
until several years later by larger perusal of
the works of Saint Augustine. I may, however,
say that I was not of a mind ill disposed to
submit to authority.
The Oxford Movement, properly so called,
began in the year 1833, but it had no direct
effect upon me. I did not see the Tracts, and
to this hour I have read but few of them.
Indeed, my first impressions and emotions in
connection with it were those of indignation
at what I thought the rash intemperate censures pronounced
by Mr. Hurrell Froude upon the reformers. My chief
tie with Oxford was the close friendship I had
formed in 1830 with Walter Hamilton. His
character, always loving and loved, had, not
very greatly later, become deeply devout. But
I do not think he at this time sympathised with
Newman and his friends; and he had the good sense,
in conjunction with Mr. Denison, afterwards bishop,
to oppose the censure upon Dr. Hampden, to which
I foolishly and ignorantly gave in, without,
however, being an active or important participator.
But the blow struck by the prayer-book
in 1832 set my mind in motion, and that motion
was never arrested. I found food for the new
ideas and tendencies in various quarters, not least
in the religious writings of Alexander Knox,
all of which I perused. Moreover, I had
an inclination to ecclesiastical conformity, and obedience
as such, which led me to concur with some zeal in the
plans of Bishop Blomfield. In the course
of two or three years, Manning turned from a
strongly evangelical attitude to one as strongly
anglican, and about the same time converted his acquaintance
with me into a close friendship. In the same manner
James Hope, whom I had known but slightly at Eton
or Oxford, made a carefully considered change
of the same kind; which also became the occasion
of a fast friendship. Both these intimacies led
me forward; Hope especially had influence over
me, more than I think any other person at any
period of my life.
When I was preparing in 1837-8 The
State in its Relations with the Church, he
took a warm interest in the work, which, during my
absence on the continent, he corrected for the
press. His attitude towards the work, however,
included a desire that its propositions should
be carried further. The temper of the times among
young educated men was working in the same direction.
I had no low churchmen among my near friends,
except Walter Farquhar. Anstice, a great
loss, died very early in his beautiful married life.
While I was busy about my book, Hope made known
to me Palmer’s work on the Church, which
had just appeared. I read it with care and great
interest. It took hold upon me; and gave
me at once the clear, definite, and strong conception
of the church which, through all the storm and
strain of a most critical period, has proved for me
entirely adequate to every emergency, and saved
me from all vacillation. I did not, however,
love the extreme rigour of the book in its treatment
of non-episcopal communions. It was
not very long after this, I think in 1842, that
I reduced into form my convictions of the large
and important range of subjects which recent
controversy had brought into prominence. I conceive
that in the main Palmer completed for me the
work which inspection of the prayer-book had
begun.
Before referring further to my ‘redaction’
of opinions, I desire to say that at this moment
I am as closely an adherent to the doctrines
of grace generally, and to the general sense of Saint
Augustine, as at the date from which this narrative
set out. I hope that my mind has dropped
nothing affirmative. But I hope also that there
has been dropped from it all the damnatory part of
the opinions taught by the evangelical school;
not only as regards the Roman catholic religion,
but also as to heretics and heathens; nonconformists
and presbyterians I think that I always let off pretty
easily....
III
INFLUENCE OF
FRIENDS AND BOOKS
The Tractarian movement is by this
time one of the most familiar chapters in our history,
and it has had singular good fortune in being told
by three masters of the most winning, graphic, and
melodious English prose of the century to which the
tale belongs. Whether we call it by the ill name
of Oxford counter-reformation or the friendlier name
of catholic revival, it remains a striking landmark
in the varied motions of English religious thought
and feeling for the three-quarters of a century since
the still unfinished journey first began. In its
early stages, the movement was exclusively theological.
Philanthropic reform still remained with the evangelical
school that so powerfully helped to sweep away the
slave trade, cleansed the prisons, and aided in humanising
the criminal law. It was they who ’helped
to form a conscience, if not a heart, in the callous
bosom of English politics,’ while the very foremost
of the Oxford divines was scouting the fine talk about
black men, because they ’concentrated in themselves
all the whiggery, dissent, cant, and abomination that
had been ranged on their side.’ Nor can
we forget that Shaftesbury, the leader in that beneficent
crusade of human mercy and national wisdom which ended
in the deliverance of women and children in mines
and factories, was also a leader of the evangelical
party.
The Tractarian movement, as all know,
opened, among other sources, in antagonism to utilitarian
liberalism. Yet J. S. Mill, the oracle of rationalistic
liberalism in Oxford and other places in the following
generation, had always much to say for the Tractarians.
He used to tell us that the Oxford theologians had
done for England something like what Guizot, Villemain,
Michelet, Cousin had done a little earlier for France;
they had opened, broadened, deepened the issues and
meanings of European history; they had reminded us
that history is European; that it is quite unintelligible
if treated as merely local. He would say, moreover,
that thought should recognise thought and mind always
welcome mind; and the Oxford men had at least brought
argument, learning, and even philosophy of a sort,
to break up the narrow and frigid conventions of reigning
system in church and college, in pulpits and professorial
chairs. They had made the church ashamed of the
evil of her ways, they had determined that spirit
of improvement from within ’which, if this sect-ridden
country is ever really to be taught, must proceed pari
passu with assault from without.’
One of the ablest of the Oxford writers
talking of the non-jurors, remarks how very few of
the movements that are attended with a certain romance,
and thus bias us for a time in their favour, will stand
full examination; they so often reveal some gross
offence against common sense. Want of common sense
is not the particular impression left by the Tractarians,
after we have put aside the plausible dialectic and
winning periods of the leader, and proceed to look
at the effect, not on their general honesty but on
their intellectual integrity, of their most peculiar
situation and the methods which they believed that
situation to impose. Nobody will be so presumptuous
or uncharitable as to deny that among the divines
of the Oxford movement were men as pure in soul, as
fervid lovers of truth, as this world ever possessed.
On the other hand it would be nothing short of a miracle
in human nature, if all that dreadful tangle of economies
and reserves, so largely practised and for a long
time so insidiously defended, did not familiarise a
vein of subtlety, a tendency to play fast and loose
with words, a perilous disposition to regard the non-natural
sense of language as if it were just as good as the
natural, a willingness to be satisfied with a bare
and rigid logical consistency of expression, without
respect to the interpretation that was sure to be
put upon that expression by the hearer and the reader.
The strain of their position in all these respects
made Newman and his allies no exemplary school.
Their example has been, perhaps rightly, held to account
for something that was often under the evil name of
sophistry suspected and disliked in Mr. Gladstone
himself, in his speeches, his writings, and even in
his public acts.
MISCHIEVOUS EFFECTS OF
OXFORD ENTANGLEMENTS
It is true that to the impartial eye
Newman is no worse than teachers in antagonistic sects;
he is, for instance, no subtler than Maurice.
The theologian who strove so hard in the name of anglican
unity to develop all the catholic elements and hide
out of sight all the calvinistic, was not driven to
any hardier exploits of verbal legerdemain, than the
theologian who strove against all reason and clear
thinking to devise common formulae that should embrace
both catholic and calvinistic explanations together,
or indeed anything else that anybody might choose
to bring to the transfusing alchemy of his rather smoky
crucible. Nor was the third, and at that moment
the strongest, of the church parties at Oxford and
in the country, well able to fling stones at the other
two. What better right, it was asked, had low
churchmen to shut their eyes to the language of rubrics,
creeds, and offices, than the high churchmen had to
twist the language of the articles?
The confusion was grave and it was
unfathomable. Newman fought a skilful and persistent
fight against liberalism, as being nothing else than
the egregious doctrine that there is no positive truth
in religion, and that one creed is as good as another.
Dr. Arnold, on the other hand, denounced Newmanism
as idolatry; declared that if you let in the little
finger of tradition, you would soon have in the whole
monster, horns and tail and all; and even complained
of the English divines in general, with the noble
exceptions of Butler and Hooker, that he found in them
a want of believing or disbelieving anything because
it was true or false, as if that were a question that
never occurred to them. The plain man, who was
but a poor master either of theology or of the history
of the church of England, but who loved the prayer-book
and hated confession, convents, priest-craft, and
mariolatry, was wrought to madness by a clergyman
who should describe himself, as did R. H. Froude,
as a catholic without the popery, and a church of England
man without the protestantism. The plain man
knew that he was not himself clever enough to form
any distinct idea of what such talk meant. But
then his helplessness only deepened his conviction
that the more distinct his idea might become, the
more intense would his aversion be, both to the thing
meant and to the surpliced conjurer who, as he bitterly
supposed, was by sophistic tricks trying hard to take
him in.
Other portents were at the same time
beginning to disturb the world. The finds and
the theories of geologists made men uncomfortable,
and brought down sharp anathemas. Wider speculations
on cosmic and creative law came soon after, and found
their way into popular reading. In prose literature,
in subtler forms than the verse of Shelley, new dissolving
elements appeared that were destined to go far.
Schleiermacher, between 1820 and 1830, opened the
sluices of the theological deep, whether to deluge
or to irrigate. In 1830 an alarming note was sounded
in the publication by a learned clergyman of a history
of the Jews. We have seen how Mr. Gladstone
was horrified by it. Milman’s book was
the beginning of a new rationalism within the fold.
A line of thought was opened that seemed to make the
history of religious ideas more interesting than their
truth. The special claims of an accepted creed
were shaken by disclosing an unmistakeable family likeness
to creeds abhorred. A belief was deemed to be
accounted for and its sanctity dissolved, by referring
it historically to human origins, and showing it to
be only one branch of a genealogical trunk. Historic
explanation became a graver peril than direct attack.
IV
NEW IDEAS AND
TENDENCIES
The first skirmish in a dire conflict
that is not even now over or near its end happened
in 1836. Lord Melbourne recommended for the chair
of divinity at Oxford Dr. Hampden, a divine whose
clumsy handling of nice themes had brought him, much
against his intention, under suspicion of unsound
doctrine, and who was destined eleven years later to
find himself the centre of a still louder uproar.
Evangelicals and Tractarians flew to arms, and the
two hosts who were soon to draw their swords upon
one another, now for the first time, if not the last,
swarmed forth together side by side against the heretic.
What was rather an affront than a penalty was inflicted
upon Hampden by a majority of some five to one of
the masters of arts of the university, and in accord
with that majority, as he has just told us, though
he did not actually vote, was Mr. Gladstone.
Twenty years after, when he had risen to be a shining
light in the world’s firmament, he wrote to Hampden
to express regret for the injustice of which in this
instance ’the forward precipitancy of youth’
had made him guilty. The case of Hampden gave
a sharp actuality to the question of the relations
of church and crown. The particular quarrel was
of secondary importance, but it brought home to the
high churchmen what might be expected in weightier
matters than the affair of Dr. Hampden from whig ministers,
and confirmed the horrible apprehension that whig
ministers might possibly have to fill all the regius
chairs and all the sees for a whole generation to come.
Not less important than the theology
of the Oxford divines in its influence on Mr. Gladstone’s
line of thought upon things ecclesiastical was the
speculation of Coleridge on the teaching and polity
of a national church. His fertile book on Church
and State was given to the world in 1830, four
years before his death, and this and the ideas proceeding
from it were the mainspring, if not of the theology
of the movement, at least of Mr. Gladstone’s
first marked contribution to the stirring controversies
of the time. He has described the profound effect
upon his mind of another book, the Treatise on the
Church of Christ, by William Palmer of Worcester
College (1838), and to the end of his life it held
its place in his mind among the most masterly performances
of the day in the twin hemispheres of theology and
church polity. Newman applauded the book for its
magnificence of design, and undoubtedly it covers
much ground, including a stiff rejection of Locke’s
theory of toleration, and the assertion of the strong
doctrine that the Christian prince has a right by
temporal penalties to protect the church from the
gathering together of the froward and the insurrection
of wicked doers. It has at least the merit, so
far from universal in the polemics of that day, of
clear language, definite propositions, and formal
arguments capable of being met by a downright yes
or no. The question, however, that has often slumbered
yet never dies, of the right relations between the
Christian prince or state and the Christian church,
was rapidly passing away from logicians of the cloister.
’Hawarden, Chester, November
9, 1856. MY LORD BISHOP, Your
lordship will probably be surprised at receiving
a letter from me, as a stranger. The simple
purpose of it is to discharge a debt of the smallest
possible importance to you, yet due I think from me,
by expressing the regret with which I now look
back on my concurrence in a vote of the University
of Oxford in the year 1836, condemnatory of some
of your lordship’s publications. I did not
take actual part in the vote; but upon reference
to a journal kept at the time, I find that my
absence was owing to an accident.
’For a good many years past I
have found myself ill able to master books of
an abstract character, and I am far from pretending
to be competent at this time to form a judgment
on the merits of any propositions then at issue.
I have learned, indeed, that many things which,
in the forward precipitancy of my youth, I should
have condemned, are either in reality sound, or
lie within the just limits of such discussion
as especially befits an University. But that
which (after a delay, due, I think, to the cares and
pressing occupations of political life) brought
back to my mind the injustice of which I had
unconsciously been guilty in 1836, was my being
called upon, as a member of the Council of King’s
College in London, to concur in a measure similar
in principle with respect to Mr. Maurice; that
is to say, in a condemnation couched in general terms
which did not really declare the point of imputed guilt,
and against which perfect innocence could have
no defence. I resisted to the best of my
power, though ineffectually, the grievous wrong done
to Mr. Maurice, and urged that the charges should be
made distinct, that all the best means of investigation
should be brought to bear on them, ample opportunity
given for defence, and a reference then made,
if needful, to the Bishop in his proper capacity.
But the majority of laymen in the Council were inexorable.
It was only, as I have said, after mature reflection
that I came to perceive the bearing of the case
on that of 1836, and to find that by my resistance
I had condemned myself. I then lamented
very sincerely that I had not on that occasion, now
so remote, felt and acted in a different manner.
’I beg your lordship
to accept this expression of my cordial
regret, and to allow
me to subscribe myself, very respectfully,
your obedient and humble
servant, W. E. GLADSTONE.’