Predominance of catholicity.
No one who is acquainted with the present tone of
thought in Christendom can hide from himself the fact
that an intellectual, a religious crisis is impending.
In all directions we see the lowering
skies, we hear the mutterings of the coming storm.
In Germany, the national party is arraying itself
against the ultramontane; in France, the men of progress
are struggling against the unprogressive, and in their
contest the political supremacy of that great country
is wellnigh neutralized or lost. In Italy, Rome
has passed into the hands of an excommunicated king.
The sovereign pontiff, feigning that he is a prisoner,
is fulminating from the Vatican his anathemas, and,
in the midst of the most convincing proofs of his
manifold errors, asserting his own infallibility.
A Catholic archbishop with truth declares that the
whole civil society of Europe seems to be withdrawing
itself in its public life from Christianity. In
England and America, religious persons perceive with
dismay that the intellectual basis of faith has been
undermined by the spirit of the age. They prepare
for the approaching disaster in the best manner they
can.
The most serious trial through which
society can pass is encountered in the exuviation
of its religious restraints. The history of Greece
and the history of Rome exhibit to us in an impressive
manner how great are the perils. But it is not
given to religions to endure forever. They necessarily
undergo transformation with the intellectual development
of man. How many countries are there professing
the same religion now that they did at the birth of
Christ?
It is estimated that the entire population
of Europe is about three hundred and one million.
Of these, one hundred and eighty-five million are
Roman Catholics, thirty-three million are Greek Catholics.
Of Protestants there are seventy-one million, separated
into many sects. Of Jews, five million; of Mohammedans,
seven million.
Of the religious subdivisions of America
an accurate numerical statement cannot be given.
The whole of Christian South America is Roman Catholic,
the same may be said of Central America and of Mexico,
as also of the Spanish and French West India possessions.
In the United States and Canada the Protestant population
predominates. To Australia the same remark applies.
In India the sparse Christian population sinks into
insignificance in presence of two hundred million Mohammedans
and other Oriental denominations. The Roman Catholic
Church is the most widely diffused and the most powerfully
organized of all modern societies. It is far
more a political than a religious combination.
Its principle is that all power is in the clergy,
and that for laymen there is only the privilege of
obedience. The republican forms under which the
Churches existed in primitive Christianity have gradually
merged into an absolute centralization, with a man
as vice-God at its head. This Church asserts
that the divine commission under which it acts comprises
civil government; that it has a right to use the state
for its own purposes, but that the state has no right
to intermeddle with it; that even in Protestant countries
it is not merely a coordinate government, but the
sovereign power. It insists that the state has
no rights over any thing which it declares to be in
its domain, and that Protestantism, being a mere rebellion,
has no rights at all; that even in Protestant communities
the Catholic bishop is the only lawful spiritual pastor.
It is plain, therefore, that of professing
Christians the vast majority are Catholic; and such
is the authoritative demand of the papacy for supremacy,
that, in any survey of the present religious condition
of Christendom, regard must be mainly had to its acts.
Its movements are guided by the highest intelligence
and skill. Catholicism obeys the orders of one
man, and has therefore a unity, a compactness, a power,
which Protestant denominations do not possess.
Moreover, it derives inestimable strength from the
souvenirs of the great name of Rome.
Unembarrassed by any hesitating sentiment,
the papacy has contemplated the coming intellectual
crisis. It has pronounced its decision, and occupied
what seems to it to be the most advantageous ground.
This definition of position we find
in the acts of the late Vatican Council.
The oecumenical council.
Pius IX., by a bull dated June 29, 1868, convoked
an Oecumenical Council, to meet in Rome, on December
8, 1869. Its sessions ended in July, 1870.
Among other matters submitted to its consideration,
two stand forth in conspicuous prominence they
are the assertion of the infallibility of the Roman
pontiff, and the definition of the relations of religion
to science.
But the convocation of the Council
was far from meeting with general approval.
The views of the Oriental Churches
were, for the most part, unfavorable. They affirmed
that they saw a desire in the Roman pontiff to set
himself up as the head of Christianity, whereas they
recognized the Lord Jesus Christ alone as the head
of the Church. They believed that the Council
would only lead to new quarrels and scandals.
The sentiment of these venerable Churches is well
shown by the incident that, when, in 1867, the Nestorian
Patriarch Simeon had been invited by the Chaldean
Patriarch to return to Roman Catholic unity, he, in
his reply, showed that there was no prospect for harmonious
action between the East and the West: “You
invite me to kiss humbly the slipper of the Bishop
of Rome; but is he not, in every respect, a man like
yourself is his dignity superior to yours?
We will never permit to be introduced into our holy
temples of worship images and statues, which are nothing
but abominable and impure idols. What! shall
we attribute to Almighty God a mother, as you dare
to do? Away from us, such blasphemy!”
Expectations of the
papacy. Eventually, the patriarchs, archbishops,
and bishops, from all regions of the world, who took
part in this Council, were seven hundred and four.
Rome had seen very plainly that Science
was not only rapidly undermining the dogmas of the
papacy, but was gathering great political power.
She recognized that all over Europe there was a fast-spreading
secession among persons of education, and that its
true focus was North Germany.
She looked, therefore, with deep interest
on the Prusso-Austrian War, giving to Austria whatever
encouragement she could. The battle of Sadowa
was a bitter disappointment to her.
With satisfaction again she looked
upon the breaking out of the Franco-Prussian War,
not doubting that its issue would be favorable to
France, and therefore favorable to her. Here,
again, she was doomed to disappointment at Sedan.
Having now no further hope, for many
years to come, from external war, she resolved to
see what could be done by internal insurrection, and
the present movement in the German Empire is the result
of her machinations.
Had Austria or had France succeeded,
Protestantism would have been overthrown along with
Prussia.
But, while these military movements
were being carried on, a movement of a different,
an intellectual kind, was engaged in. Its principle
was, to restore the worn-out mediaeval doctrines and
practices, carrying them to an extreme, no matter
what the consequences might be.
Encyclical letter and
syllabus. Not only was it asserted that the
papacy has a divine right to participate in the government
of all countries, coordinately with their temporal
authorities, but that the supremacy of Rome in this
matter must be recognized; and that in any question
between them the temporal authority must conform itself
to her order.
And, since the endangering of her
position had been mainly brought about by the progress
of science, she presumed to define its boundaries,
and prescribe limits to its authority. Still
more, she undertook to denounce modern civilization.
These measures were contemplated soon
after the return of his Holiness from Gaeta in 1848,
and were undertaken by the advice of the Jesuits,
who, lingering in the hope that God would work the
impossible, supposed that the papacy, in its old age,
might be reinvigorated. The organ of the Curia
proclaimed the absolute independence of the Church
as regards the state; the dependence of the bishops
on the pope; of the diocesan clergy on the bishops;
the obligation of the Protestants to abandon their
atheism, and return to the fold; the absolute condemnation
of all kinds of toleration. In December, 1854,
in an assembly of bishops, the pope had proclaimed
the dogma of the immaculate conception. Ten years
subsequently he put forth the celebrated Encyclical
Letter and the Syllabus.
The Encyclical Letter is dated December
8, 1864. It was drawn up by learned ecclesiastics,
and subsequently debated at the Congregation of the
Holy Office, then forwarded to prelates, and finally
gone over by the pope and cardinals.
Encyclical letter and
syllabus. Many of the clergy objected to
its condemnation of modern civilization. Some
of the cardinals were reluctant to concur in it.
The Catholic press accepted it, not, however, without
misgivings and regrets. The Protestant governments
put no obstacle in its way; the Catholic were embarrassed
by it. France allowed the publication only of
that portion proclaiming the jubilee; Austria and
Italy permitted its introduction, but withheld their
approval. The political press and legislatures
of Catholic countries gave it an unfavorable reception.
Many deplored it as likely to widen the breach between
the Church and modern society. The Italian press
regarded it as determining a war, without truce or
armistice, between the papacy and modern civilization.
Even in Spain there were journals that regretted “the
obstinacy and blindness of the court of Rome, in branding
and condemning modern civilization.”
It denounces that “most pernicious
and insane opinion, that liberty of conscience and
of worship is the right of every man, and that this
right ought, in every well-governed state, to be proclaimed
and asserted by law; and that the will of the people,
manifested by public opinion (as it is called), or
by other means, constitutes a supreme law, independent
of all divine and human rights.” It denies
the right of parents to educate their children outside
the Catholic Church. It denounces “the
impudence” of those who presume to subordinate
the authority of the Church and of the Apostolic See,
“conferred upon it by Christ our Lord, to the
judgment of the civil authority.” His Holiness
commends, to the venerable brothers to whom the Encyclical
is addressed, incessant prayer, and, “in order
that God may accede the more easily to our and your
prayers, let us employ in all confidence, as our mediatrix
with him, the Virgin Mary, mother of God, who sits
as a queen upon the right hand of her only-begotten
Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, in a golden vestment,
clothed around with various adornments. There
is nothing she cannot obtain from him.”
Convocation of the
council. Plainly, the principle now avowed
by the papacy must bring it into collision even with
governments which had heretofore maintained amicable
relations with it. Great dissatisfaction was
manifested by Russia, and the incidents that ensued
drew forth from his Holiness an allocution (November,
1866) condemnatory of the course of that government.
To this, Russia replied, by declaring the Concordat
of 1867 abrogated.
Undeterred by the result of the battle
of Sadowa (July, 1866), though it was plain that the
political condition of Europe was now profoundly affected,
and especially the relations of the papacy, the pope
delivered an allocution (June 27, 1867), confirming
the Encyclical and Syllabus. He announced his
intention of convoking an Oecumenical Council.
Accordingly, as we have already mentioned,
in the following year (June 29, 1868), a bull was
issued convoking that Council. Misunderstandings,
however, had now sprung up with Austria. The Austrian
Reichsrath had adopted laws introducing equality of
civil rights for all the inhabitants of the empire,
and restricting the influence of the Church.
This produced on the part of the papal government an
expostulation. Acting as Russia had done, the
Austrian Government found it necessary to abrogate
the Concordat of 1855.
In France, as above stated, the publication
of the entire Syllabus was not permitted; but Prussia,
desirous of keeping on good terms with the papacy,
did not disallow it. The exacting disposition
of the papacy increased. It was openly declared
that the faithful must now sacrifice to the Church,
property, life, and even their intellectual convictions.
The Protestants and the Greeks were invited to tender
their submission.
The Vatican council.
On the appointed day, the Council opened. Its
objects were, to translate the Syllabus into practice,
to establish the dogma of papal infallibility, and
define the relations of religion to science.
Every preparation had been made that the points determined
on should be carried. The bishops were informed
that they were coming to Rome not to deliberate, but
to sanction decrees previously made by an infallible
pope. No idea was entertained of any such thing
as free discussion. The minutes of the meetings
were not permitted to be inspected; the prelates of
the opposition were hardly allowed to speak.
On January 22, 1870, a petition, requesting that the
infallibility of the pope should be defined, was presented;
an opposition petition of the minority was offered.
Hereupon, the deliberations of the minority were forbidden,
and their publications prohibited. And, though
the Curia had provided a compact majority, it was
found expedient to issue an order that to carry any
proposition it was not necessary that the vote should
be near unanimity, a simple majority sufficed.
The remonstrances of the minority were altogether
unheeded.
As the Council pressed forward to
its object, foreign authorities became alarmed at
its reckless determination. A petition drawn up
by the Archbishop of Vienna, and signed by several
cardinals and archbishops, entreated his Holiness
not to submit the dogma of infallibility for consideration,
“because the Church has to sustain at present
a struggle unknown in former times, against men who
oppose religion itself as an institution baneful to
human nature, and that it is inopportune to impose
upon Catholic nations, led into temptation by so many
machinations, more dogmas than the Council of Trent
proclaimed.” It added that “the definition
demanded would furnish fresh arms to the enemies of
religion, to excite against the Catholic Church the
resentment of men avowedly the best.” The
Austrian prime-minister addressed a protest to the
papal government, warning it against any steps that
might lead to encroachments on the rights of Austria.
The French Government also addressed a note, suggesting
that a French bishop should explain to the Council
the condition and the rights of France. To this
the papal government replied that a bishop could not
reconcile the double duties of an ambassador and a
Father of the Council. Hereupon, the French Government,
in a very respectful note, remarked that, to prevent
ultra opinions from becoming dogmas, it reckoned on
the moderation of the bishops, and the prudence of
the Holy Father; and, to defend its civil and political
laws against the encroachments of the theocracy, it
had counted on public reason and the patriotism of
French Catholics. In these remonstrances the
North-German Confederation joined, seriously pressing
them on the consideration of the papal government.
On April 23d, Von Arnim, the Prussian
embassador, united with Daru, the French minister,
in suggesting to the Curia the inexpediency of reviving
mediaeval ideas. The minority bishops, thus encouraged,
demanded now that the relations of the spiritual to
the secular power should be determined before the
pope’s infallibility was discussed, and that
it should be settled whether Christ had conferred
on St. Peter and his successors a power over kings
and emperors.
Infallibility of the
pope. No regard was paid to this, not even
delay was consented to. The Jesuits, who were
at the bottom of the movement, carried their measures
through the packed assembly with a high hand.
The Council omitted no device to screen itself from
popular criticism. Its proceedings were conducted
with the utmost secrecy; all who took part in them
were bound by a solemn oath to observe silence.
On July 13th, the votes were taken.
Of 601 votes, 451 were affirmative. Under the
majority rule, the measure was pronounced carried,
and, five days subsequently, the pope proclaimed the
dogma of his infallibility. It has often been
remarked that this was the day on which the French
declared war against Prussia. Eight days afterward
the French troops were withdrawn from Rome. Perhaps
both the statesman and the philosopher will admit
that an infallible pope would be a great harmonizing
element, if only common-sense could acknowledge him.
Hereupon, the King of Italy addressed
an autograph letter to the pope, setting forth in
very respectful terms the necessity that his troops
should advance and occupy positions “indispensable
to the security of his Holiness, and the maintenance
of order;” that, while satisfying the national
aspirations, the chief of Catholicity, surrounded by
the devotion of the Italian populations, “might
preserve on the banks of the Tiber a glorious seat,
independent of all human sovereignty.”
To this his Holiness replied in a
brief and caustic letter: “I give thanks
to God, who has permitted your majesty to fill the
last days of my life with bitterness. For the
rest, I cannot grant certain requests, nor conform
with certain principles contained in your letter.
Again, I call upon God, and into his hands commit
my cause, which is his cause. I pray God to grant
your majesty many graces, to free you from dangers,
and to dispense to you his mercy which you so much
need.”
The Italian government.
The Italian troops met with but little resistance.
They occupied Rome on September 20, 1870. A manifesto
was issued, setting forth the details of a plebiscitum,
the vote to be by ballot, the question, “the
unification of Italy.” Its result showed
how completely the popular mind in Italy is emancipated
from theology. In the Roman provinces the number
of votes on the lists was 167,548; the number who
voted, 135,291; the number who voted for annexation,
133,681; the number who voted against it, 1,507; votes
annulled, 103. The Parliament of Italy ratified
the vote of the Roman people for annexation by a vote
of 239 to 20. A royal decree now announced the
annexation of the Papal States to the kingdom of Italy,
and a manifesto was issued indicating the details
of the arrangement. It declared that “by
these concessions the Italian Government seeks to
prove to Europe that Italy respects the sovereignty
of the pope in conformity with the principle of a
free Church in a free state.”
Affairs in Prussia.
In the Prusso-Austrian War it had been the hope of
the papacy, to restore the German Empire under Austria,
and make Germany a Catholic nation. In the Franco-German
War the French expected ultramontane sympathies in
Germany. No means were spared to excite Catholic
sentiment against the Protestants. No vilification
was spared. They were spoken of as atheists;
they were declared incapable of being honest men;
their sects were pointed out as indicating that their
secession was in a state of dissolution. “The
followers of Luther are the most abandoned men in
all Europe.” Even the pope himself, presuming
that the whole world had forgotten all history, did
not hesitate to say, “Let the German people
understand that no other Church but that of Rome is
the Church of freedom and progress.”
Meantime, among the clergy of Germany
a party was organized to remonstrate against, and
even resist, the papal usurpation. It protested
against “a man being placed on the throne of
God,” against a vice-God of any kind, nor would
it yield its scientific convictions to ecclesiastical
authority. Some did not hesitate to accuse the
pope himself of being a heretic. Against these
insubordinates excommunications began to be fulminated,
and at length it was demanded that certain professors
and teachers should be removed from their offices,
and infallibilists substituted. With this demand
the Prussian Government declined to comply.
The Prussian Government had earnestly
desired to remain on amicable terms with the papacy;
it had no wish to enter on a theological quarrel;
but gradually the conviction was forced upon it that
the question was not a religious but a political one whether
the power of the state should be used against the
state. A teacher in a gymnasium had been excommunicated;
the government, on being required to dismiss him,
refused. The Church authorities denounced this
as an attack upon faith. The emperor sustained
his minister. The organ of the infallible party
threatened the emperor with the opposition of all good
Catholics, and told him that, in a contention with
the pope, systems of government can and must change.
It was now plain to every one that the question had
become, “Who is to be master in the state, the
government or the Roman Church? It is plainly
impossible for men to live under two governments,
one of which declares to be wrong what the other commands.
If the government will not submit to the Roman Church,
the two are enemies.” A conflict was thus
forced upon Prussia by Rome a conflict in
which the latter, impelled by her antagonism to modern
civilization, is clearly the aggressor.
Action of the Prussian
government. The government, now recognizing
its antagonist, defended itself by abolishing the
Catholic department in the ministry of Public Worship.
This was about midsummer, 1871. In the following
November the Imperial Parliament passed a law that
ecclesiastics abusing their office, to the disturbance
of the public peace, should be criminally punished.
And, guided by the principle that the future belongs
to him to whom the school belongs, a movement arose
for the purpose of separating the schools from the
Church.
The church A political
power. The Jesuit party was extending and
strengthening an organization all over Germany, based
on the principle that state legislation in ecclesiastical
matters is not binding. Here was an act of open
insurrection. Could the government allow itself
to be intimidated? The Bishop of Ermeland declared
that he would not obey the laws of the state if they
touched the Church. The government stopped the
payment of his salary; and, perceiving that there could
be no peace so long as the Jesuits were permitted
to remain in the country, their expulsion was resolved
on, and carried into effect. At the close of
1872 his Holiness delivered an allocution, in which
he touched on the “persecution of the Church
in the German Empire,” and asserted that the
Church alone has a right to fix the limits between
its domain and that of the state a dangerous
and inadmissible principle, since under the term morals
the Church comprises all the relations of men to each
other, and asserts that whatever does not assist her
oppresses her. Hereupon, a few days subsequently
(January 9, 1873), four laws were brought forward
by the government: 1. Regulating the means
by which a person might sever his connection with
the Church; 2. Restricting the Church in the
exercise of ecclesiastical punishments; 3. Regulating
the ecclesiastical power of discipline, forbidding
bodily chastisement, regulating fines and banishments
granting the privilege of an appeal to the Royal Court
of Justice for Ecclesiastical Affairs, the decision
of which is final; 4. Ordaining the preliminary
education and appointment of priests. They must
have had a satisfactory education, passed a public
examination conducted by the state, and have a knowledge
of philosophy, history, and German literature.
Institutions refusing to be superintended by the state
are to be closed.
These laws demonstrate that Germany
is resolved that she will no longer be dictated to
nor embarrassed by a few Italian noble families; that
she will be master of her own house. She sees
in the conflict, not an affair of religion or of conscience,
but a struggle between the sovereignty of state legislation
and the sovereignty of the Church. She treats
the papacy not in the aspect of a religious, but of
a political power, and is resolved that the declaration
of the Prussian Constitution shall be maintained,
that “the exercise of religious freedom must
not interfere with the duties of a citizen toward
the community and the state.”
Dual government in
Europe. With truth it is affirmed that the
papacy is administered not oecumenically, not as a
universal Church, for all the nations, but for the
benefit of some Italian families. Look at its
composition! It consists of pope, cardinal bishops,
cardinal deacons, who at the present moment are all
Italians; cardinal priests, nearly all Italians; ministers
and secretaries of the Sacred Congregation in Rome,
all Italians. France has not given a pope since
the middle ages. It is the same with Austria,
Portugal, Spain. In spite of all attempts to
change this system of exclusion, to open the dignities
of the Church to all Catholicism, no foreigner can
reach the holy chair. It is recognized that the
Church is a domain given by God to the princely Italian
families. Of fifty-five members of the present
College of Cardinals, forty are Italians that
is, thirty-two beyond their proper share.
The stumbling-block to the progress
of Europe has been its dual system of government.
So long as every nation had two sovereigns, a temporal
one at home and a spiritual one in a foreign land there
being different temporal masters in different nations,
but only one foreign master for all, the pontiff at
Rome how was it possible that history should
present us with any thing more than a narrative of
the strifes of these rival powers? Whoever will
reflect on this state of things will see how it is
that those nations which have shaken off the dual form
of government are those which have made the greatest
advance. He will discern what is the cause of
the paralysis which has befallen France. On one
hand she wishes to be the leader of Europe, on the
other she clings to a dead past. For the sake
of propitiating her ignorant classes, she enters upon
lines of policy which her intelligence must condemn.
So evenly balanced are the two sovereignties under
which she lives, that sometimes one, sometimes the
other, prevails; and not unfrequently the one uses
the other as an engine for the accomplishment of its
ends.
Intentions of the pope.
But this dual system approaches its close. To
the northern nations, less imaginative and less superstitious,
it had long ago become intolerable; they rejected
it summarily at the epoch of the Reformation, notwithstanding
the protestations and pretensions of Rome, Russia,
happier than the rest, has never acknowledged the
influence of any foreign spiritual power. She
gloried in her attachment to the ancient Greek rite,
and saw in the papacy nothing more than a troublesome
dissenter from the primitive faith. In America
the temporal and the spiritual have been absolutely
divorced the latter is not permitted to
have any thing to do with affairs of state, though
in all other respects liberty is conceded to it.
The condition of the New World also satisfies us that
both forms of Christianity, Catholic and Protestant,
have lost their expansive power; neither can pass beyond
its long-established boundary-line the
Catholic republics remain Catholic, the Protestant
Protestant. And among the latter the disposition
to sectarian isolation is disappearing; persons of
different denominations consort without hesitation
together. They gather their current opinions
from newspapers, not from the Church.
Pius IX., in the movements we have
been considering, has had two objects in view:
1. The more thorough centralization of the papacy,
with a spiritual autocrat assuming the prerogatives
of God at its head; 2. Control over the intellectual
development of the nations professing Christianity.
The logical consequence of the former
of these is political intervention. He insists
that in all cases the temporal must subordinate itself
to the spiritual power; all laws inconsistent with
the interests of the Church must be repealed.
They are not binding on the faithful. In the
preceding pages I have briefly related some of the
complications that have already occurred in the attempt
to maintain this policy.
The syllabus. I now
come to the consideration of the manner in which the
papacy proposes to establish its intellectual control;
how it defines its relation to its antagonist, Science,
and, seeking a restoration of the mediaeval condition,
opposes modern civilization, and denounces modern
society.
The Encyclical and Syllabus present
the principles which it was the object of the Vatican
Council to carry into practical effect. The Syllabus
stigmatizes pantheism, naturalism, and absolute rationalism,
denouncing such opinions as that God is the world;
that there is no God other than Nature; that theological
matters must be treated in the same manner as philosophical
ones, that the methods and principles by which the
old scholastic doctors cultivated theology are no longer
suitable to the demands of the age and the progress
of science; that every man is free to embrace and
profess the religion he may believe to be true, guided
by the light of his reason; that it appertains to the
civil power to define what are the rights and limits
in which the Church may exercise authority; that the
Church has not the right of availing herself of force
or any direct or indirect temporal power; that the
Church ought to be separated from the state and the
state from the Church; that it is no longer expedient
that the Catholic religion shall be held as the only
religion of the state, to the exclusion of all other
modes of worship; that persons coming to reside in
Catholic countries have a right to the public exercise
of their own worship; that the Roman pontiff can and
ought to reconcile himself to, and agree with, the
progress of modern civilization. The Syllabus
claims the right of the Church to control public schools,
and denies the right of the state in that respect;
it claims the control over marriage and divorce.
Such of these principles as the Council
found expedient at present to formularize, were set
forth by it in “The Dogmatic Constitution of
the Catholic Faith.” The essential points
of this constitution, more especially as regards the
relations of religion to science, we have now to examine.
It will be understood that the following does not present
the entire document, but only an abstract of what appear
to be its more important parts.
Constitution of Catholic
faith. This definition opens with a severe
review of the principles and consequences of the Protestant
Reformation:
“The rejection of the divine
authority of the Church to teach, and the subjection
of all things belonging to religion to the judgment
of each individual, have led to the production of
many sects, and, as these differed and disputed with
each other, all belief in Christ was overthrown in
the minds of not a few, and the Holy Scriptures began
to be counted as myths and fables. Christianity
has been rejected, and the reign of mere Reason as
they call it, or Nature, substituted; many falling
into the abyss of pantheism, materialism, and atheism,
and, repudiating the reasoning nature of man, and
every rule of right and wrong, they are laboring to
overthrow the very foundations of human society.
As this impious heresy is spreading everywhere, not
a few Catholics have been inveigled by it. They
have confounded human science and divine faith.
“But the Church, the Mother
and Mistress of nations, is ever ready to strengthen
the weak, to take to her bosom those that return, and
carry them on to better things. And, now the
bishops of the whole world being gathered together
in this Oecumenical Council, and the Holy Ghost sitting
therein, and judging with us, we have determined to
declare from this chair of St. Peter the saving doctrine
of Christ, and proscribe and condemn the opposing
errors.
“Of god, the
creator of all things. The
Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church believes that
there is one true and living God, Creator and Lord
of Heaven and Earth, Almighty, Eternal, Immense, Incomprehensible,
Infinite in understanding and will, and in all perfection.
He is distinct from the world. Of his own most
free counsel he made alike out of nothing two created
creatures, a spiritual and a temporal, angelic and
earthly. Afterward he made the human nature, composed
of both. Moreover, God by his providence protects
and governs all things, reaching from end to end mightily,
and ordering all things harmoniously. Every thing
is open to his eyes, even things that come to pass
by the free action of his creatures.”
“Of revelation. The
Holy Mother Church holds that God can be known with
certainty by the natural light of human reason, but
that it has also pleased him to reveal himself and
the eternal decrees of his will in a supernatural
way. This supernatural revelation, as declared
by the Holy Council of Trent, is contained in the
books of the Old and New Testament, as enumerated
in the decrees of that Council, and as are to be had
in the old Vulgate Latin edition. These are sacred
because they were written under the inspiration of
the Holy Ghost. They have God for their author,
and as such have been delivered to the Church.
“And, in order to restrain restless
spirits, who may give erroneous explanations, it is
decreed renewing the decision of the Council
of Trent that no one may interpret the
sacred Scriptures contrary to the sense in which they
are interpreted by Holy Mother Church, to whom such
interpretation belongs.”
“Of faith. Inasmuch
as man depends on God as his Lord, and created reason
is wholly subject to uncreated truth, he is bound when
God makes a revelation to obey it by faith. This
faith is a supernatural virtue, and the beginning
of man’s salvation who believes revealed things
to be true, not for their intrinsic truth as seen
by the natural light of reason, but for the authority
of God in revealing them. But, nevertheless that
faith might be agreeable to reason, God willed to
join miracles and prophecies, which, showing forth
his omnipotence and knowledge, are proofs suited to
the understanding of all. Such we have in Moses
and the prophets, and above all in Christ. Now,
all those things are to be believed which are written
in the word of God, or handed down by tradition, which
the Church by her teaching has proposed for belief.
“No one can be justified without
this faith, nor shall any one, unless he persevere
therein to the end, attain everlasting life. Hence
God, through his only-begotten Son, has established
the Church as the guardian and teacher of his revealed
word. For only to the Catholic Church do all
those signs belong which make evident the credibility
of the Christian faith. Nay, more, the very Church
herself, in view of her wonderful propagation, her
eminent holiness, her exhaustless fruitfulness in
all that is good, her Catholic unity, her unshaken
stability, offers a great and evident claim to belief,
and an undeniable proof of her divine mission.
Thus the Church shows to her children that the faith
they hold rests on a most solid foundation. Wherefore,
totally unlike is the condition of those who, by the
heavenly gift of faith, have embraced the Catholic
truth, and of those who, led by human opinions, are
following, a false religion.”
“Of faith and
reason. Moreover, the Catholic Church
has ever held and now holds that there exists a twofold
order of knowledge, each of which is distinct from
the other, both as to its principle and its object.
As to its principle, because in the one we know by
natural reason, in the other by divine faith; as to
the object, because, besides those things which our
natural reason can attain, there are proposed to our
belief mysteries hidden in God, which, unless by him
revealed, cannot come to our knowledge.
“Reason, indeed, enlightened
by faith, and seeking, with diligence and godly sobriety,
may, by God’s gift, come to some understanding,
limited in degree, but most wholesome in its effects,
of mysteries, both from the analogy of things which
are naturally known and from the connection of the
mysteries themselves with one another and with man’s
last end. But never can reason be rendered capable
of thoroughly understanding mysteries as it does those
truths which form its proper object. For God’s
mysteries, in their very nature, so far surpass the
reach of created intellect, that, even when taught
by revelation and received by faith, they remain covered
by faith itself, as by a veil, and shrouded, as it
were, in darkness as long as in this mortal life.
“But, although faith be above
reason, there never can be a real disagreement between
them, since the same God who reveals mysteries and
infuses faith has given man’s soul the light
of reason, and God cannot deny himself, nor can one
truth ever contradict another. Wherefore the
empty shadow of such contradiction arises chiefly from
this, that either the doctrines of faith are not understood
and set forth as the Church really holds them, or
that the vain devices and opinions of men are mistaken
for the dictates of reason. We therefore pronounce
false every assertion which is contrary to the enlightened
truth of faith. Moreover, the Church, which,
together with her apostolic office of teaching, is
charged also with the guardianship of the deposits
of faith, holds likewise from God the right and the
duty to condemn ’knowledge, falsely so called,’
‘lest any man be cheated by philosophy and vain
deceit.’ Hence all the Christian faithful
are not only forbidden to defend, as legitimate conclusions
of science, those opinions which are known to be contrary
to the doctrine of faith, especially when condemned
by the Church, but are rather absolutely bound to
hold them for errors wearing the deceitful appearance
of truth.”
The Vatican anathemas.
“Not only is it impossible for faith and reason
ever to contradict each other, but they rather afford
each other mutual assistance. For right reason
establishes the foundation of faith, and, by the aid
of its light, cultivates the science of divine things;
and faith, on the other hand, frees and preserves
reason from errors, and enriches it with knowledge
of many kinds. So far, then, is the Church from
opposing the culture of human arts and sciences, that
she rather aids and promotes it in many ways.
For she is not ignorant of nor does she despise the
advantages which flow from them to the life of man;
on the contrary, she acknowledges that, as they sprang
from God, the Lord of knowledge, so, if they be rightly
pursued, they will, through the aid of his grace,
lead to God. Nor does she forbid any of those
sciences the use of its own principles and its own
method within its own proper sphere; but, recognizing
this reasonable freedom, she takes care that they
may not, by contradicting God’s teaching, fall
into errors, or, overstepping the due limits, invade
or throw into confusion the domain of faith.
“For the doctrine of faith revealed
by God has not been proposed, like some philosophical
discovery, to be made perfect by human ingenuity, but
it has been delivered to the spouse of Christ as a
divine deposit, to be faithfully guarded and unerringly
set forth. Hence, all tenets of holy faith are
to be explained always according to the sense and meaning
of the Church; nor is it ever lawful to depart therefrom
under pretense or color of a more enlightened explanation.
Therefore, as generations and centuries roll on, let
the understanding, knowledge, and wisdom of each and
every one, of individuals and of the whole Church,
grow apace and increase exceedingly, yet only in its
kind; that is to say retaining pure and inviolate
the sense and meaning and belief of the same doctrine.”
Among other canons the following were promulgated.
“Let him be anathema
“Who denies the one true God,
Creator and Lord of all things, visible and invisible.
“Who unblushingly affirms that, besides matter,
nothing else exists.
“Who says that the substance
or essence of God, and of all things, is one and the
same.
“Who says that finite things,
both corporeal and spiritual, or at least spiritual
things, are emanations of the divine substance; or
that the divine essence, by manifestation or development
of itself, becomes all things.
“Who does not acknowledge that
the world and all things which it contains were produced
by God out of nothing.
“Who shall say that man can
and ought to, of his own efforts, by means of, constant
progress, arrive, at last, at the possession of all
truth and goodness.
“Who shall refuse to receive,
for sacred and canonical, the books of Holy Scripture
in their integrity, with all their parts, according
as they were enumerated by the holy Council of Trent,
or shall deny that they are Inspired by God.
“Who shall say that human reason
is in such wise independent, that faith cannot be
demanded of it by God.
“Who shall say that divine revelation
cannot be rendered credible by external evidences.
“Who shall say that no miracles
can be wrought, or that they can never be known with
certainty, and that the divine origin of Christianity
cannot be proved by them.
“Who shall say that divine revelation
includes no mysteries, but that all the dogmas of
faith may be understood and demonstrated by reason
duly cultivated.
“Who shall say that human sciences
ought to be pursued in such a spirit of freedom that
one may be allowed to hold as true their assertions,
even when opposed to revealed doctrine.
“Who shall say that it may at
any time come to pass, in the progress of science,
that the doctrines set forth by the Church must be
taken in another sense than that in which the Church
has ever received and yet receives them.”
The evangelical alliance.
The extraordinary and, indeed, it may be said, arrogant
assumptions contained in these decisions were far from
being received with satisfaction by educated Catholics.
On the part of the German universities there was resistance;
and, when, at the close of the year, the decrees of
the Vatican Council were generally acquiesced in,
it was not through conviction of their truth, but through
a disciplinary sense of obedience.
By many of the most pious Catholics
the entire movement and the results to which it had
led were looked upon with the sincerest sorrow.
Pere Hyacinthe, in a letter to the superior of his
order, says: “I protest against the divorce,
as impious as it is insensate, sought to be effected
between the Church, which is our eternal mother, and
the society of the nineteenth century, of which we
are the temporal children, and toward which we have
also duties and regards. It is my most profound
conviction that, if France in particular, and the Latin
race in general, are given up to social, moral, and
religious anarchy, the principal cause undoubtedly
is not Catholicism itself, but the manner in which
Catholicism has for a long time been understood and
practised.”
Notwithstanding his infallibility,
which implies omniscience, his Holiness did not foresee
the issue of the Franco-Prussian War. Had the
prophetical talent been vouchsafed to him, he would
have detected the inopportuneness of the acts of his
Council. His request to the King of Prussia for
military aid to support his temporal power was denied.
The excommunicated King of Italy, as we have seen,
took possession of Rome. A bitter papal encyclical,
strangely contrasting with the courteous politeness
of modern state-papers, was issued, November 1, 1870,
denouncing the acts of the Piedmontese court, “which
had followed the counsel of the sects of perdition.”
In this his Holiness declares that he is in captivity,
and that he will have no agreement with Belial.
He pronounces the greater excommunication, with censures
and penalties, against his antagonists, and prays
for “the intercession of the immaculate Virgin
Mary, mother of God, and that of the blessed apostles
Peter and Paul.”
Of the various Protestant denominations,
several had associated themselves, for the purposes
of consultation, under the designation of the Evangelical
Alliance. Their last meeting was held in New York,
in the autumn of 1873. Though, in this meeting,
were gathered together many pious representatives
of the Reformed Churches, European and American, it
had not the prestige nor the authority of the Great
Council that had just previously closed its sessions
in St. Peters, at Rome. It could not appeal to
an unbroken ancestry of far more than a thousand years;
it could not speak with the authority of an equal and,
indeed, of a superior to emperors and kings.
While profound intelligence and a statesmanlike, worldly
wisdom gleamed in every thing that the Vatican Council
had done, the Evangelical Alliance met without a clear
and precise view of its objects, without any definitely-marked
intentions. Its wish was to draw into closer
union the various Protestant Churches, but it had
no well-grounded hope of accomplishing that desirable
result. It illustrated the necessary working,
of the principle on which those Churches originated.
They were founded on dissent and exist by separation.
Yet in the action of the Evangelical
Alliance may be discerned certain very impressive
facts. It averted its eyes from its ancient antagonist that
antagonist which had so recently loaded the Reformation
with contumely and denunciation it fastened
them, as the Vatican Council had done, on Science.
Under that dreaded name there stood before it what
seemed to be a spectre of uncertain form, of hourly-dilating
proportions, of threatening aspect. Sometimes
the Alliance addressed this stupendous apparition
in words of courtesy, sometimes in tones of denunciation.
The Vatican constitution
criticised. The Alliance failed to perceive that
modern Science is the legitimate sister indeed,
it is the twin-sister of the Reformation.
They were begotten together and were born together.
It failed to perceive that, though there is an impossibility
of bringing into coalition the many conflicting sects,
they may all find in science a point of connection;
and that, not a distrustful attitude toward it, but
a cordial union with it, is their true policy.
It remains now to offer some reflections
on this “Constitution of the Catholic Faith,”
as defined by the Vatican Council.
For objects to present themselves
under identical relations to different persons, they
must be seen from the same point of view. In the
instance we are now considering, the religious man
has his own especial station; the scientific man another,
a very different one. It is not for either to
demand that his co-observer shall admit that the panorama
of facts spread before them is actually such as it
appears to him to be.
The Dogmatic Constitution insists
on the admission of this postulate, that the Roman
Church acts under a divine commission, specially and
exclusively delivered to it. In virtue of that
great authority, it requires of all men the surrender
of their intellectual convictions, and of all nations
the subordination of their civil power.
But a claim so imposing must be substantiated
by the most decisive and unimpeachable credentials;
proofs, not only of an implied and indirect kind,
but clear, emphatic, and to the point; proofs that
it would be impossible to call in question.
The Church, however, declares, that
she will not submit her claim to the arbitrament of
human reason; she demands that it shall be at once
conceded as an article of faith.
If this be admitted, all bar requirements
must necessarily be assented to, no matter how exorbitant
they may be.
With strange inconsistency the Dogmatic
Constitution deprecates reason, affirming that it
cannot determine the points under consideration, and
yet submits to it arguments for adjudication.
In truth, it might be said that the whole composition
is a passionate plea to Reason to stultify itself
in favor of Roman Christianity.
With points of view so widely asunder,
it is impossible that Religion and Science should
accord in their representation of things. Nor
can any conclusion in common be reached, except by
an appeal to Reason as a supreme and final judge.
There are many religions in the world,
some of them of more venerable antiquity, some having
far more numerous adherents, than the Roman. How
can a selection be made among them, except by such
an appeal to Reason? Religion and Science must
both submit their claims and their dissensions to
its arbitrament.
Against this the Vatican Council protests.
It exalts faith to a superiority over reason; it says
that they constitute two separate orders of knowledge,
having respectively for their objects mysteries and
facts. Faith deals with mysteries, reason with
facts. Asserting the dominating superiority of
faith, it tries to satisfy the reluctant mind with
miracles and prophecies.
On the other hand, Science turns away
from the incomprehensible, and rests herself on the
maxim of Wiclif: “God forceth not a man
to believe that which he cannot understand.”
In the absence of an exhibition of satisfactory credentials
on the part of her opponent, she considers whether
there be in the history of the papacy, and in the biography
of the popes, any thing that can adequately sustain
a divine commission, any thing that can justify pontifical
infallibility, or extort that unhesitating obedience
which is due to the vice-God.
One of the most striking and vet contradictory
features of the Dogmatic Constitution is, the reluctant
homage it pays to the intelligence of man. It
presents a definition of the philosophical basis of
Catholicism, but it veils from view the repulsive
features of the vulgar faith. It sets forth the
attributes of God, the Creator of all things, in words
fitly designating its sublime conception, but it abstains
from affirming that this most awful and eternal Being
was born of an earthly mother, the wife of a Jewish
carpenter, who has since become the queen of heaven.
The God it depicts is not the God of the middle ages,
seated on his golden throne, surrounded by choirs
of angels, but the God of Philosophy. The Constitution
has nothing to say about the Trinity, nothing of the
worship due to the Virgin on the contrary,
that is by implication sternly condemned; nothing
about transubstantiation, or the making of the flesh
and blood of God by the priest; nothing of the invocation
of the saints. It bears on its face subordination
to the thought of the age, the impress of the intellectual
progress of man.
The passage of Europe
to Llamaism. Such being the exposition
rendered to us respecting the attributes of God, it
next instructs us as to his mode of government of
the world. The Church asserts that she possesses
a supernatural control over all material and moral
events. The priesthood, in its various grades,
can determine issues of the future, either by the
exercise of its inherent attributes, or by its influential
invocation of the celestial powers. To the sovereign
pontiff it has been given to bind or loose at his
pleasure. It is unlawful to appeal from his judgments
to an Oecumenical Council, as if to an earthly arbiter
superior to him. Powers such as these are consistent
with arbitrary rule, but they are inconsistent with
the government of the world by immutable law.
Hence the Dogmatic Constitution plants itself firmly
in behalf of incessant providential interventions;
it will not for a moment admit that in natural things
there is an irresistible sequence of events, or in
the affairs of men an unavoidable course of acts.
But has not the order of civilization
in all parts of the world been the same? Does
not the growth of society resemble individual growth?
Do not both exhibit to us phases of youth, of maturity,
of decrepitude? To a person who has carefully
considered the progressive civilization of groups
of men in regions of the earth far apart, who has observed
the identical forms under which that advancing civilization
has manifested itself, is it not clear that the procedure
is determined by law? The religious ideas of
the Incas of Peru and the emperors of Mexico, and the
cérémonials of their court-life, were the same
as those in Europe the same as those in
Asia. The current of thought had been the same.
A swarm of bees carried to some distant land will
build its combs and regulate its social institutions
as other unknown swarms would do, and so with separated
and disconnected swarms of men. So invariable
is this sequence of thought and act, that there are
philosophers who, transferring the past example offered
by Asiatic history to the case of Europe, would not
hesitate to sustain the proposition given
a bishop of Rome and some centuries, and you will
have an infallible pope: given an infallible
pope and a little more time, and you will have Llamaism Llamaism
to which Asia has long, ago attained.
As to the origin of corporeal and
spiritual things, the Dogmatic Constitution adds a
solemn emphasis to its declarations, by anathematizing
all those who bold the doctrine of emanation, or who
believe that visible Nature is only a manifestation
of the Divine Essence. In this its authors had
a task of no ordinary difficulty before them.
They must encounter those formidable ideas, whether
old or new, which in our times are so strongly forcing
themselves on thoughtful men. The doctrine of
the conservation and correlation of Force yields as
its logical issue the time-worn Oriental emanation
theory; the doctrines of Evolution and Development
strike at that of successive creative acts. The
former rests on the fundamental principle that the
quantity of force in the universe is invariable.
Though that quantity can neither be increased nor
diminished, the forms under which Force expresses itself
may be transmuted into each other. As yet this
doctrine has not received complete scientific demonstration,
but so numerous and so cogent are the arguments adduced
in its behalf, that it stands in an imposing, almost
in an authoritative attitude. Now, the Asiatic
theory of emanation and absorption is seen to be in
harmony with this grand idea. It does not hold
that, at the conception of a human being, a soul is
created by God out of nothing and given to it, but
that a portion of the already existing, the divine,
the universal intelligence, is imparted, and, when
life is over, this returns to and is absorbed in the
general source from which it originally came.
The authors of the Constitution forbid these ideas
to be held, under pain of eternal punishment.
In like manner they dispose of the
doctrines of Evolution and Development, bluntly insisting
that the Church believes in distinct creative acts.
The doctrine that every living form is derived from
some preceding form is scientifically in a much more
advanced position than that concerning Force, and
probably may be considered as established, whatever
may become of the additions with which it has recently
been overlaid.
In her condemnation of the Reformation,
the Church carries into effect her ideas of the subordination
of reason to faith. In her eyes the Reformation
is an impious heresy, leading to the abyss of pantheism,
materialism, and atheism, and tending to overthrow
the very foundations of human society. She therefore
would restrain those “restless spirits”
who, following Luther, have upheld the “right
of every man to interpret the Scriptures for himself.”
She asserts that it is a wicked error to admit Protestants
to equal political privileges with Catholics, and that
to coerce them and suppress them is a sacred duty;
that it is abominable to permit them to establish
educational institutions. Gregory XVI. denounced
freedom of conscience as an insane folly, and the freedom
of the press a pestilent error, which cannot be sufficiently
detested.
But how is it possible to recognize
an inspired and infallible oracle on the Tiber, when
it is remembered that again and again successive popes
have contradicted each other; that popes have denounced
councils, and councils have denounced popes; that
the Bible of Sixtus V. had so many admitted errors nearly
two thousand that its own authors had to
recall it? How is it possible for the children
of the Church to regard as “delusive errors”
the globular form of the earth, her position as a
planet in the solar system, her rotation on her axis,
her movement round the sun? How can they deny
that there are antipodes, and other worlds than ours?
How can they believe that the world was made out of
nothing, completed in a week, finished just as we
see it now; that it has undergone no change, but that
its parts have worked so indifferently as to require
incessant interventions?
The errors of ecclesiasticism.
When Science is thus commanded to surrender her intellectual
convictions, may she not ask the ecclesiastic to remember
the past? The contest respecting the figure of
the earth, and the location of heaven and hell, ended
adversely to him. He affirmed that the earth
is an extended plane, and that the sky is a firmament,
the floor of heaven, through which again and again
persons have been seen to ascend. The globular
form demonstrated beyond any possibility of contradiction
by astronomical facts, and by the voyage of Magellan’s
ship, he then maintained that it is the central body
of the universe, all others being in subordination
to it, and it the grand object of God’s regard.
Forced from this position, he next affirmed that it
is motionless, the sun and the stars actually revolving,
as they apparently do, around it. The invention
of the telescope proved that here again he was in
error. Then he maintained that all the motions
of the solar system are regulated by providential
intervention; the “Principia” of Newton
demonstrated that they are due to irresistible law.
He then affirmed that the earth and all the celestial
bodies were created about six thousand years ago,
and that in six days the order of Nature was settled,
and plants and animals in their various tribes introduced.
Constrained by the accumulating mass of adverse evidence,
he enlarged his days into periods of indefinite length only,
however, to find that even this device was inadequate.
The six ages, with their six special creations, could
no longer be maintained, when it was discovered that
species, slowly emerged in one age, reached a culmination
in a second, and gradually died out in a third:
this overlapping from age to age would not only have
demanded creations, but re-creations also. He
affirmed that there had been a deluge, which covered
the whole earth above the tops of the highest mountains,
and that the waters of this flood were removed by
a wind. Correct ideas respecting the dimensions
of the atmosphere, and of the sea, and of the operation
of evaporation, proved how untenable these statements
are. Of the progenitors of the human race, he
declared that they had come from their Maker’s
hand perfect, both in body and mind, and had subsequently
experienced a fall. He is now considering how
best to dispose of the evidence continually accumulating
respecting the savage condition of prehistoric man.
Is it at all surprising that the number
of those who hold the opinions of the Church in light
esteem should so rapidly increase? How can that
be received as a trustworthy guide in the invisible,
which falls into so many errors in the visible?
How can that give confidence in the moral, the spiritual,
which has so signally failed in the physical?
It is not possible to dispose of these conflicting
facts as “empty shadows,” “vain
devices,” “fictions coming from knowledge
falsely so called,” “errors wearing the
deceitful appearance of truth,” as the Church
stigmatizes them. On the contrary, they are stern
witnesses, bearing emphatic and unimpeachable testimony
against the ecclesiastical claim to infallibility,
and fastening a conviction of ignorance and blindness
upon her.
Convicted of so many errors, the papacy
makes no attempt at explanation. It ignores the
whole matter Nay, more, relying on the efficacy of
audacity, though confronted by these facts, it lays
claim to infallibility.
Separation of catholicism
and civilization. But, to the pontiff,
no other rights can be conceded than those he can
establish at the bar of Reason. He cannot claim
infallibility in religious affairs, and decline it
in scientific. Infallibility embraces all things.
It implies omniscience. If it holds good for
theology, it necessarily holds good for science.
How is it possible to coordinate the infallibility
of the papacy with the well-known errors into which
it has fallen?
Does it not, then, become needful
to reject the claim of the papacy to the employment
of coercion in the maintenance of its opinions; to
repudiate utterly the declaration that “the Inquisition
is an urgent necessity in view of the unbelief of
the present age,” and in the name of human nature
to protest loudly against the ferocity and terrorism
of that institution? Has not conscience inalienable
rights?
An impassable and hourly-widening
gulf intervenes between Catholicism and the spirit
of the age. Catholicism insists that blind faith
is superior to reason; that mysteries are of more
importance than facts. She claims to be the sole
interpreter of Nature and revelation, the supreme
arbiter of knowledge; she summarily rejects all modern
criticism of the Scriptures, and orders the Bible
to be accepted in accordance with the views of the
theologians of Trent; she openly avows her hatred
of free institutions and constitutional systems, and
declares that those are in damnable error who regard
the reconciliation of the pope with modern civilization
as either possible or desirable.
Science and Protestantism.
But the spirit of the age demands is the
human intellect to be subordinated to the Tridentine
Fathers, or to the fancy of illiterate and uncritical
persons who wrote in the earlier ages of the Church?
It sees no merit in blind faith, but rather distrusts
it. It looks forward to an improvement in the
popular canon of credibility for a decision between
fact and fiction. It does not consider itself
bound to believe fables and falsehoods that have been
invented for ecclesiastical ends. It finds no
argument in behalf of their truth, that traditions
and legends have been long-lived; in this respect,
those of the Church are greatly inferior to the fables
of paganism. The longevity of the Church itself
is not due to divine protection or intervention, but
to the skill with which it has adapted its policy to
existing circumstances. If antiquity be the criterion
of authenticity, the claims of Buddhism must be respected;
it has the superior warrant of many centuries.
There can be no defense of those deliberate falsifications
of history, that concealment of historical facts,
of which the Church has so often taken advantage.
In these things the end does not justify the means.
Then has it in truth come to this,
that Roman Christianity and Science are recognized
by their respective adherents as being absolutely
incompatible; they cannot exist together; one must
yield to the other; mankind must make its choice it
cannot have both.
Science and faith.
While such is, perhaps, the issue as regards Catholicism,
a reconciliation of the Reformation with Science is
not only possible, but would easily take place, if
the Protestant Churches would only live up to the
maxim taught by Luther, and established by so many
years of war. That maxim is, the right of private
interpretation of the Scriptures. It was the
foundation of intellectual liberty. But, if a
personal interpretation of the book of Revelation is
permissible, how can it be denied in the case of the
book of Nature? In the misunderstandings that
have taken place, we must ever bear in mind the infirmities
of men. The generations that immediately followed
the Reformation may perhaps be excused for not comprehending
the full significance of their cardinal principle,
and for not on all occasions carrying it into effect.
When Calvin caused Servetus, to be burnt, he was animated,
not by the principles of the Reformation, but by those
of Catholicism, from which he had not been able to
emancipate himself completely. And when the clergy
of influential Protestant confessions have stigmatized
the investigators of Nature as infidels and atheists,
the same may be said. For Catholicism to reconcile
itself to Science, there are formidable, perhaps insuperable
obstacles in the way. For Protestantism to achieve
that great result there are not. In the one case
there is a bitter, a mortal animosity to be overcome;
in the other, a friendship, that misunderstandings
have alienated, to be restored.
Civilization and religion.
But, whatever may be the preparatory incidents of
that great impending intellectual crisis which Christendom
must soon inevitably witness, of this we may rest assured,
that the silent secession from the public faith, which
in so ominous a manner characterizes the present generation,
will find at length political expression. It
is not without significance that France reenforces
the ultramontane tendencies of her lower population,
by the promotion of pilgrimages, the perpetration
of miracles, the exhibition of celestial apparitions.
Constrained to do this by her destiny, she does it
with a blush. It is not without significance
that Germany resolves to rid herself of the incubus
of a dual government, by the exclusion of the Italian
element, and to carry to its completion that Reformation
which three centuries ago she left unfinished.
The time approaches when men must take their choice
between quiescent, immobile faith and ever-advancing
Science faith, with its mediaeval consolations,
Science, which is incessantly scattering its material
blessings in the pathway of life, elevating the lot
of man in this world, and unifying the human race.
Its triumphs are solid and enduring. But the glory
which Catholicism might gain from a conflict with
material ideas is at the best only like that of other
celestial meteors when they touch the atmosphere of
the earth transitory and useless.
Though Guizot’s affirmation
that the Church has always sided with despotism is
only too true, it must be remembered that in the policy
she follows there is much of political necessity.
She is urged on by the pressure of nineteen centuries.
But, if the irresistible indicates itself in her action,
the inevitable manifests itself in her life. For
it is with the papacy as with a man. It has passed
through the struggles of infancy, it has displayed
the energies of maturity, and, its work completed,
it must sink into the feebleness and querulousness
of old age. Its youth can never be renewed.
The influence of its souvenirs alone will remain.
As pagan Rome threw her departing shadow over the
empire and tinctured all its thoughts, so Christian
Rome casts her parting shadow over Europe.
Inadmissible claims of
catholicism. Will modern civilization consent
to abandon the career of advancement which has given
it so much power and happiness? Will it consent
to retrace its steps to the semi-barbarian ignorance
and superstition of the middle ages? Will it submit
to the dictation of a power, which, claiming divine
authority, can present no adequate credentials of
its office; a power which kept Europe in a stagnant
condition for many centuries, ferociously suppressing
by the stake and the sword every attempt at progress;
a power that is founded in a cloud of mysteries; that
sets itself above reason and common-sense; that loudly
proclaims the hatred it entertains against liberty
of thought and freedom in civil institutions; that
professes its intention of repressing the one and
destroying the other whenever it can find the opportunity;
that denounces as most pernicious and insane the opinion
that liberty of conscience and of worship is the right
of every man; that protests against that right being
proclaimed and asserted by law in every well-governed
state; that contemptuously repudiates the principle
that the will of the people, manifested by public opinion
(as it is called) or by other means, shall constitute
law; that refuses to every man any title to opinion
in matters of religion, but holds that it is simply
his duty to believe what he is told by the Church,
and to obey her commands; that will not permit any
temporal government to define the rights and prescribe
limits to the authority of the Church; that declares
it not only may but will resort to force to discipline
disobedient individuals; that invades the sanctify
of private life, by making, at the confessional, the
wife and daughters and servants of one suspected,
spies and informers against him; that tries him without
an accuser, and by torture makes him bear witness
against himself; that denies the right of parents
to educate their children outside of its own Church,
and insists that to it alone belongs the supervision
of domestic life and the control of marriages and
divorces; that denounces “the impudence”
of those who presume to subordinate the authority of
the Church to the civil authority, or who advocate
the separation of the Church from the state; that
absolutely repudiates all toleration, and affirms
that the Catholic religion is entitled to be held as
the only religion in every country, to the exclusion
of all other modes of worship; that requires all laws
standing in the way of its interests to be repealed,
and, if that be refused, orders all its followers to
disobey them?
Issue of the conflict.
This power, conscious that it can work no miracle
to serve itself, does not hesitate to disturb society
by its intrigues against governments, and seeks to
accomplish its ends by alliances with despotism.
Claims such as these mean a revolt
against modern civilization, an intention of destroying
it, no matter at what social cost. To submit to
them without resistance, men must be slaves indeed!
As to the issue of the coming conflict,
can any one doubt? Whatever is resting on fiction
and fraud will be overthrown. Institutions that
organize impostures and spread delusions must
show what right they have to exist. Faith must
render an account of herself to Reason. Mysteries
must give place to facts. Religion must relinquish
that imperious, that domineering position which she
has so long maintained against Science. There
must be absolute freedom for thought. The ecclesiastic
must learn to keep himself within the domain he has
chosen, and cease to tyrannize over the philosopher,
who, conscious of his own strength and the purity
of his motives, will bear such interference no longer.
What was written by Esdras near the willow-fringed
rivers of Babylon, more than twenty-three centuries
ago, still holds good: “As for Truth it
endureth and is always strong; it liveth and conquereth
for evermore.”