1827.
Such seemeth to me to be the scheme
of the Faith in Christ. The written Word, the
Spirit and the Church, are co-ordinate, the indispensable
conditions and the working causes of the perpetuity
and continued re-nascence and spiritual life of Christ
still militant. The Eternal Word, Christ from
everlasting, is the ‘prothesis’ or identity; the
Scriptures and the Church are the two poles, or the
‘thesis’ and ‘antithesis’;
the Preacher in direct line under the Spirit, but likewise
the point of junction of the written Word and the Church,
being the ‘synthesis’. And here is
another proof of a principle elsewhere by me asserted
and exemplified, that divine truths are ever a ‘tetractys’,
or a triad equal to a ‘tetractys’:
4=1 or 3=4=1. But the entire scheme is a pentad God’s
hand in the world.
It may be not amiss that I should
leave a record in my own hand, how far, in what sense,
and under what conditions, I agree with my friend,
Edward Irving, respecting the second coming of the
Son of Man.
I. How far? First, instead of
the full and entire conviction, the positive assurance,
which Mr. Irving entertains, I even in those
points in which my judgment most coincides with his, profess
only to regard them as probable, and to vindicate
them as nowise inconsistent with orthodoxy. They
may be believed, and they may be doubted, ’salva
Catholica fide’. Further, from these
points I exclude all prognostications of time and
event; the mode, the persons, the places, of the accomplishment;
and I decisively protest against all parts of Mr.
Irving’s and of Lacunza’s scheme grounded
on the books of Daniel or the Apocalypse, interpreted
as either of the two, Irving or Lacunza, understands
them. Again, I protest against all identification
of the coming with the Apocalyptic Millennium, which
in my belief began under Constantine.
II. In what sense? In this
and no other, that the objects of the Christian Redemption
will be perfected on this earth; that the
kingdom of God and his Word, the latter as the Son
of Man, in which the divine will shall ‘be done
on earth as it is in heaven’, will ’come’; and
that the whole march of nature and history, from the
first impregnation of Chaos by the Spirit, converges
toward this kingdom as the final cause of the world.
Life begins in detachment from Nature, and ends in
union with God.
III. Under what conditions?
That I retain my former convictions respecting St.
Michael, and the ex-saint Lucifer, and the Genie Prince
of Persia, and the re-institution of bestial sacrifices
in the Temple at Jerusalem, and the rest of this class.
All these appear to me so many pimples on the face
of my friend’s faith from inward heats, leaving
it indeed a fine handsome intelligent face, but certainly
not adding to its comeliness.
Such are the convictions of S. T. Coleridge, May,
1827.
P.S. I fully agree with Mr. Irving
as to the literal fulfilment of all the prophecies
which respect the restoration of the Jews. (’Deuteron.’
xx-8.)
It may be long before Edward Irving
sees what I seem at least to see so clearly, and
yet, I doubt not, the time will come when he too will
see with the same evidentness, how much
grander a front his system would have presented to
judicious beholders; on how much more defensible a
position he would have placed it, and the
remark applies equally to Ben Ezra (that is, Emanuel
Lacunza) had he trusted the proof to Scriptures
of undisputed catholicity, to the spirit of the whole
Bible, to the consonance of the doctrine with the
reason, its fitness to the needs and capacities of
mankind, and its harmony with the general plan of the
divine dealings with the world, and had
left the Apocalypse in the back ground. But alas!
instead of this he has given it such prominence, such
prosiliency of relief, that he has made the main strength
of his hope appear to rest on a vision, so obscure
that his own author and faith’s-mate claims
a meaning for its contents only on the supposition
that the meaning is yet to come!
Preliminary Discourse, p. lxxx.
Now of these three, the office of Christ,
as our prophet, is the means used by the Holy Spirit
for working the redemption of the understanding
of men; that faculty by which we acquire the knowledge
on which proceed both our inward principles of conduct
and our outward acts of power.
I cannot forbear expressing my regret
that Mr. Irving has not adhered to the clear and distinct
exposition of the understanding, ’génère
et gradu’, given in the Aids to Reflection.
What can be plainer than to say:
the understanding is the medial faculty or faculty
of means, as reason on the other hand is the source
of ideas or ultimate ends. By reason we determine
the ultimate end: by the understanding we are
enabled to select and adapt the appropriate means
for the attainment of, or approximation to, this end,
according to circumstances. But an ultimate end
must of necessity be an idea, that is, that which
is not representable by the sense, and has no entire
correspondent in nature, or the world of the senses.
For in nature there can be neither a first nor a last: all
that we can see, smell, taste, touch, are means, and
only in a qualified sense, and by the defect of our
language, entitled ends. They are only relatively
ends in a chain of motives. B. is the end to
A.; but it is itself a mean to C., and in like manner
C. is a mean to D., and so on. Thus words are
the means by which we reduce appearances, or things
presented through the senses, to their several kinds,
or ‘genera’; that is, we generalize, and
thus think and judge. Hence the understanding,
considered specially as an intellective power, is
the source and faculty of words; and on
this account the understanding is justly defined,
both by Archbishop Leighton, and by Immanuel Kant,
the faculty that judges by, or according to, sense.
However, practical or intellectual, it is one and the
same understanding, and the definition, the medial
faculty, expresses its true character in both directions
alike. I am urgent on this point, because on
the right conception of the same, namely, that understanding
and sense (to which the sensibility supplies the material
of outness, ’materiam objectivam’,) constitute
the natural mind of man, depends the comprehension
of St. Paul’s whole theological system.
And this natural mind, which is named the mind of
the flesh, [Greek: phronaema sarkos], as likewise
[Greek: psychikae synesis], the intellectual power
of the living or animal soul, St. Paul everywhere
contradistinguishes from the spirit, that is, the
power resulting from the union and co-inherence of
the will and the reason; and this spirit
both the Christian and elder Jewish Church named,
‘sophia’, or wisdom.
Ben-Ezra. Part I. c. v. .
Eusebius and St. Epiphanius name Cerinthusas
the inventor of many corruptions. That
heresiarch being given up to the belly and the palate,
placed therein the happiness of man. And so taught
his disciples, that after the Resurrection,
. And what appeared most important, each would
be master of an entire seraglio, like a Sultan, &c.
I find very great difficulty in crediting
these black charges on Cerinthus, and know not
how to reconcile them with the fact that the Apocalypse
itself was by many attributed to Cerinthus.
But Mr. Hunt is not more famous for blacking than
some of the Fathers.
Ib. pp. 73, 4.
Against whom a very eloquent man, Dionysius
Alexandrinus, a Father of the Church, wrote
an elegant work, to ridicule the Millennarian fable,
the golden and gemmed Jerusalem on the earth, the
renewal of the Temple, the blood of victims.
If the book of St. Dionysius had contained nothing
but the derision and confutation of all we have just
read, it is certain that he doth in no way concern
himself with the harmless Millennarians, but with
the Jews and Judaizers. It is to be clearly
seen that Dionysius had nothing in his eye, but the
ridiculous excesses of Nepos, and his peculiar tenets
upon circumcision, &c.
Lacunza, I suspect, was ignorant of
Greek: and seems not to have known that the object
of Dionysius was to demonstrate that the Apocalypse
was neither authentic nor a canonical book.
Ib. .
The ruin of Antichrist, with all that
is comprehended under that name, being entirely
consummated, and the King of kings remaining master
of the field, St. John immediately continues in
the 20th chapter, which thus commenceth: ’And
I saw an angel come down from heaven, &c. And
I saw thrones, &c. And when a thousand years
are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison.’
It is only necessary to know that
the whole book from the first verse to the last is
written in symbols, to be satisfied that the true meaning
of this passage is simply, that only the great Confessors
and Martyrs will be had in remembrance and honour
in the Church after the establishment of Christianity
throughout the Roman Empire. And observe, it is
the souls that the Seer beholds: there
is not a word of the resurrection of the body; for
this would indeed have been the appropriate symbol
of a resurrection in a real and personal sense.
Ib. c. vi. .
Now this very thing St. John likewise
declareth to wit, ’that they who have
been beheaded for the testimony of Jesus, and for the
word of God, and they who have not worshipped the
beast’, these shall live, ‘or be raised’
at the coming of the Lord, ’which is the first
resurrection.’
Aye! but by what authority is this
synonimizing “or” asserted? The Seer
not only does not speak of any resurrection, but by
the word [Greek: psychas], souls, expressly asserts
the contrary. In no sense of the word can souls,
which descended in Christ’s train (’chorus
sacer animarum et Christi comitatus’)
from Heaven, be said ‘resurgere’.
Resurrection is always and exclusively resurrection
in the body; not indeed a rising of the
‘corpus’ [Greek: phantastikon], that
is, the few ounces of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen,
and phosphate of lime, the ‘copula’ of
which that gave the form no longer exists, and
of which Paul exclaims; ’Thou fool!
not this’, &c. but the ‘corpus’
[Greek: hypostatikon, ae noumenon].
But there is yet another and worse
wresting of the text. Who that reads Lacunza,
, last line but twelve, would not understand
that the Apocalypt had asserted this enthronement
of the souls of the Gentile and Judaeo-Christian Martyrs
which he beheld in the train or suite of the descending
Messiah; and that he had first seen them in the descent,
and afterward saw thrones assigned to them? Whereas
the sentence precedes, and has positively no connection
with these souls. The literal interpretation
of the symbols c. xx. , is, “I then beheld
the Christian religion the established religion of
the state throughout the Roman empire; emperors,
kings, magistrates, and the like, all Christians,
and administering laws in the name of Christ, that
is, receiving the Scriptures as the supreme and paramount
law. Then in all the temples the name of Jesus
was invoked as the King of glory, and together with
him the old afflicted and tormented fellow-laborers
with Christ were revived in high and reverential commemoration,”
&c. But that the whole Vision from first to last,
in every sentence, yea, every word, is symbolical,
and in the boldest, largest style of symbolic language;
and secondly, that it is a work of disputed canonicity,
and at no known period of the Church could truly lay
claim to catholicity; but for this, I think
this verse would be worth a cartload of the texts which
the Romanist divines and catechists ordinarily cite
as sanctioning the invocation of Saints.
Ib. .
You will say nevertheless, that even the
wicked will be raised incorruptible to inherit incorruption,
because being once raised, their bodies will no
more change or be dissolved, but must continue entire,
for ever united with their sad and miserable souls.
Well, and would you call this corruption or incorruptibility?
Certainly this is not the sense of the Apostle,
when he formally assures us, yea, even threatens
us, that corruption cannot inherit incorruption.
’Neither doth corruption inherit incorruption’.
What then may this singular expression mean?
This is what it manifestly means; that no
person, whoever he may be, without any exception,
who possesseth a corrupt heart and corrupt actions,
and therein persevereth unto death, shall have reason
to expect in the resurrection a pure, subtile, active
and impassible body.
This is actually dangerous tampering
with the written letter.
Without touching on the question whether
St. Paul in this celebrated chapter (1 ‘Cor’.
xv.) speaks of a partial or of the general resurrection,
or even conceding to Lacunza that the former opinion
is the more probable; I must still vehemently object
to this Jesuitical interpretation of corruption, as
used in a moral sense, and distinctive of the wicked
souls. St. Paul nowhere speaks dogmatically or
preceptively (not popularly and incidentally,) of a
soul as the proper ‘I’. It is always
‘we’, or the man. How could a regenerate
saint put off corruption at the sound of the trump,
if up to that hour it did not in some sense or other
appertain to him? But what need of many words?
It flashes on every reader whose imagination supplies
an unpreoccupied, unrefracting, ‘medium’
to the Apostolic assertion, that corruption in this
passage is a descriptive synonyme of the
material sensuous organism common to saint and sinner, standing
in precisely the same relation to the man that the
testaceous offensive and defensive armour does to the
crab and tortoise. These slightly combined and
easily decomponible stuffs are as incapable of subsisting
under the altered conditions of the earth as an hydatid
in the blaze of a tropical sun. They would be
no longer ‘media’ of communion between
the man and his circumstances.
A heavy difficulty presses, as it
appears to me, on Lacunza’s system, as soon
as we come to consider the general resurrection.
Our Lord (in books of indubitable and never doubted
catholicity) speaks of some who rise to bliss and
glory, others who at the same time rise to shame and
condemnation. Now if the former class live not
during the whole interval from their death to the
general resurrection, including the Millennium, or
’Dies Messiae’, how should they,
whose imperfect or insufficient merits excluded them
from the kingdom of the Messiah on earth, be all at
once fitted for the kingdom of heaven?
Ib. ch. vii. .
It appears to me that this sentence, being
looked to attentively, means in good language this
only, that the word ‘quick’, which the
Apostles, full of the Holy Spirit, set down, is a
word altogether useless, which might without loss
have been omitted, and that it were enough to have
set down the word ‘dead’: for by that
word alone is the whole expressed, and with much
more clearness and brevity.
The narrow outline within which the
Jesuits confined the theological reading of their
‘alumni’ is strongly marked in this (in
so many respects) excellent work: for example,
the “most believing mind,” with which
Lacunza takes for granted the exploded fable of the
Catechumens’ (’vulgo’ Apostles’)
Creed having been the quotient of an Apostolic ‘pic-nic’,
to which each of the twelve contributed his several
‘symbolum’.
Ib. ch. ix. .
The Apostle, St. Peter, speaking of the
day of the Lord, says, that
that day will come suddenly, &c. (2 Pet.
ii.)
There are serious difficulties besetting
the authenticity of the Catholic Epistles under the
name of Peter; though there exist no grounds for doubting
that they are of the Apostolic age. A large portion
too of the difficulties would be removed by the easy
and nowise improbable supposition, that Peter, no
great scholar or grammarian, had dictated the substance,
the matter, and left the diction and style to his
‘amanuensis’, who had been an auditor of
St. Paul. The tradition which connects, not only
Mark, but Luke the Evangelist, the friend and biographer
of Paul, with Peter, as a secretary, is in favour of
this hypothesis. But what is of much greater
importance, especially for the point in discussion,
is the character of these and other similar descriptions
of the ‘Dies Messiae’, the ‘Dies
ultima’, and the like. Are we bound to
receive them as articles of faith? Is there sufficient
reason to assert them to have been direct revelations
immediately vouchsafed to the sacred writers?
I cannot satisfy my judgment that there is; first,
because I find no account of any such events having
been revealed to the Patriarchs, or to Moses, or to
the Prophets; and because I do find these events asserted,
and (for aught I have been able to discover,) for
the first time, in the Jewish Church by uninspired
Rabbis, in nearly or altogether the same words
as those of the Apostles, and know that before and
in the Apostolic age, these anticipations had become
popular, and generally received notions; and lastly,
because they were borrowed by the Jews from the Greek
philosophy, and like several other notions, taken
from less respectable quarters, adapted to their ancient
and national religious belief. Now I know of no
revealed truth that did not originate in Revelation,
and find it hard to reconcile my mind to the belief
that any Christian truth, any essential article of
faith, should have been first made known by the father
of lies, or the guess-work of the human understanding
blinded by Paganism, or at best without the knowledge
of the true God. Of course I would not apply this
to any assertion of any New Testament writer, which
was the final aim and primary intention of the whole
passage; but only to sentences ’in ordine
ad’ some other doctrine or precept, ‘illustrandi
causa’, or ’ad hominem’, or
‘more suasorio sive ad ornaturam, et
rhetorice’.
Ib. Part II. .
Second characteristic. ’The
kingdom shall be divided.’ Third
characteristic. ’The kingdom shall be
partly strong and partly brittle.’ Fourth
characteristic. ’They shall mingle themselves
with the seed of men: but they shall not cleave
one to another.’
How exactly do these characters apply
to the Greek Empire under the successors of Alexander, when
the Greeks were dispersed over the civilized world,
as artists, rhetoricians, ‘grammatici’,
secretaries, private tutors, parasites, physicians,
and the like!
Ib. .
’For to them he thus speaketh in
the Gospel: And then shall they see the Son
of man coming in a cloud with power and great glory.
And when these things begin to come to pass, then
look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption
draweth nigh.’
I cannot deny that there is great
force and an imposing verisimilitude in this and the
preceding chapter, and much that demands silent thought
and respectful attention. But still the great
question presses on me: ’coming in
a cloud’! What is the true import of this
phrase? Has not God himself expounded it?
To the Son of Man, the great Apostle assures us, all
power is given in heaven and on earth. He became
Providence, that is, a Divine Power behind
the cloudy veil of human agency and worldly events
and incidents, controlling, disposing, and directing
acts and events to the gradual unfolding and final
consummation of the great scheme of Redemption; the
casting forth of the evil and alien nature from man,
and thus effecting the union of the creature with
the Creator, of man with God, in and through the Son
of Man, even the Son of God made manifest. Now
can it be doubted by the attentive and unprejudiced
reader of St. Matthew, c. xxiv, that the Son of Man,
in fact, came in the utter destruction and devastation
of the Jewish Temple and State, during the period
from Vespasian to Hadrian, both included; and is it
a sufficient reason for our rejecting the teaching
of Christ himself, of Christ glorified and in his kingly
character, that his Apostles, who disclaim all certain
knowledge of the awful event, had understood his words
otherwise, and in a sense more commensurate with their
previous notions and the prejudices of their education?
They communicated their conjectures, but as conjectures,
and these too guarded by the avowal, that they had
no revelation, no revealed commentary on their Master’s
words, upon this occasion, the great apocalypse of
Jesus Christ while yet in the flesh. For by this
title was this great prophecy known among the Christians
of the Apostolic age.
Ib. .
Never, Oh! our Lady! never, Oh! our Mother!
shalt thou fall again into
the crime of idolatry.
Was ever blindness like unto this
blindness? I can imagine but one way of making
it seem possible, namely, that this round square or
rectilineal curve this honest Jesuit, I
mean had confined his conception of idolatry
to the worship of false gods; whereas his
saints are genuine godlings, and his ‘Magna
Mater’ a goddess in her own right; and
that thus he overlooked the meaning of the word.
Ib. .
The entire text of the Apostle is as follows: ’Now
we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord
Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto
him, that ye be not soon shaken in mind’, &c.
(2 Thess. i-10.)
O Edward Irving! Edward Irving!
by what fascination could your spirit be drawn away
from passages like this, to guess and dream over the
rhapsodies of the Apocalypse? For rhapsody,
according to your interpretation, the Poem undeniably
is; though, rightly expounded, it is a
well knit and highly poetical evolution of a part of
this and our Lord’s more comprehensive prediction,
‘Luke’ xvii.
Ib. .
On the ordinary ideas of the coming of
Christ in glory and majesty, it will doubtless appear
an extravagance to name the Jews, or to take them
into consideration; for, according to those ideas,
they should hardly have the least particle of our
attention.
In comparing this with the preceding
chapter I could not help exclaiming; What an excellent
book would this Jesuit have written, if Daniel and
the Apocalypse had not existed, or had been unknown
to, or rejected by, him!
You may divide Lacunza’s points
of belief into two parallel columns; the
first would be found to contain much that is demanded
by, much that is consonant to, and nothing that is
not compatible with, reason, the harmony of Holy Writ,
and the idea of Christian faith. The second would
consist of puerilities and anilities, some impossible,
most incredible; and all so silly, so sensual, as
to befit a dreaming Talmudist, not a Scriptural Christian.
And this latter column would be found grounded on
Daniel and the Apocalypse!