The necessities for moral compromise
I have traced in the army, in the law, and in the
fields of politics may be found in another form not
less conspicuously in the Church. The members,
and still more the ministers, of an ancient Church
bound to formularies and creeds that were drawn up
in long bygone centuries, are continually met by the
difficulties of reconciling these forms with the changed
conditions of human knowledge, and there are periods
when the pressure of these difficulties is felt with
more than common force. Such, for example, were
the periods of the Renaissance and the Reformation,
when changes in the intellectual condition of Europe
produced a widespread conviction of the vast amount
of imposture and delusion which had received the sanction
of a Church that claimed to be infallible, the result
being in some countries a silent evanescence of all
religious belief among the educated class, even including
a large number of the leaders of the Church, and in
other countries a great outburst of religious zeal
aiming at the restoration of Christianity to its primitive
form and a repudiation of the accretions of superstition
that had gathered around it. The Copernican theory
proving that our world is not, as was long believed,
the centre of the universe, but a single planet moving
with many others around a central sun, and the discovery,
by the instrumentality of the telescope, of the infinitesimally
small place which our globe occupies in the universe,
altered men’s measure of probability and affected
widely, though indirectly, their theological beliefs.
A similar change was gradually produced
by the Newtonian discovery that the whole system of
the universe was pervaded by one great law, and by
the steady growth of scientific knowledge, proving
that vast numbers of phenomena which were once attributed
to isolated and capricious acts of spiritual intervention
were regulated by invariable, inexorable, all-pervasive
law. Many of the formularies by which we still
express our religious beliefs date from periods when
comets and eclipses were believed to have been sent
to portend calamity; when every great meteorological
change was attributed to some isolated spiritual agency;
when witchcraft and diabolical possession, supernatural
diseases, and supernatural cures were deemed indubitable
facts: and when accounts of contemporary miracles,
Divine or Satanic, carried with them no sense of strangeness
or improbability. It is scarcely surprising that
these formularies sometimes seem incongruous with
an age when the scientific spirit has introduced very
different conceptions of the government of the universe,
and when the miraculous, if it is not absolutely discredited,
is, at least in the eyes of most educated men, relegated
to a distant past.
The present century has seen some
powerful reactions towards older religious beliefs,
but it has also been to an unusual extent fertile in
the kind of changes that most deeply affect them.
Not many years have passed since the whole drama of
the world’s history was believed to have been
comprised in the framework of ‘Paradise Lost’
and ’Paradise Regained.’ Man appeared
in the universe a faultless being in a faultless world,
but he soon fell from his first estate, and his fall
entailed world-wide consequences. It introduced
into our globe sin, death, suffering, disease, imperfection
and decay; all the mischievous and ferocious instincts
and tendencies of man and beast; all the multitudinous
forms of struggle, terror, anxiety and grief; all that
makes life bitter to any living being, and, even as
the Fathers were accustomed to say, the briars and
weeds and sterility of the earth. Paradise Regained
was believed to be indissolubly connected with Paradise
Lost. The one was the explanation of the other.
The one introduced the disease, the other provided
the remedy.
It is idle to deny that the main outlines
of this picture have been wholly changed. First
came the discovery that the existence of our globe
stretches far beyond the period once assigned to the
Creation, and that for countless ages before the time
when Adam was believed to have lost Paradise, death
had been its most familiar fact and its inexorable
law; that the animals who inhabited it preyed upon
and devoured each other as at present, their claws
and teeth being specially adapted for that purpose.
Even their half-digested remains have been preserved
in fossil.
‘Death,’ wrote a Pagan
philosopher, in sharp contrast to the teaching of
the Church, ‘is a law and not a punishment,’
and geology has fully justified his assertion.
Then came decisive evidence showing
that for many thousands of years before his supposed
origin man had lived and died upon our globe a
being, as far as can be judged from the remains that
have been preserved, not superior but greatly inferior
to ourselves, whose almost only art was the manufacture
of rude instruments for killing, who appears in structure
and in life to have approximated closely to the lowest
existing forms of savage life.
Then came the Darwinian theory maintaining
that the whole history of the living world is a history
of slow and continuous evolution, chiefly by means
of incessant strife, from lower to higher forms; that
man himself had in this way gradually emerged from
the humblest forms of the animal world; that most
of the moral deflections which were attributed to the
apple in Eden are the remains and traditions of the
earlier and lower stages of his existence. The
theory of continuous ascent from a lower to a higher
stage took the place of the theory of the Fall as the
explanation of human history. It is a doctrine
which is certainly not without hope for the human
race. It gives no explanation of the ultimate
origin of things, and it is in no degree inconsistent
with the belief either in a Divine and Creative origin
or in a settled and Providential plan. But it
is as far as possible removed from the conception of
human history and human nature which Christendom during
eighteen centuries accepted as fundamental truth.
With these things have come influences
of another kind. Comparative Mythology has accumulated
a vast amount of evidence, showing how myths and miracles
are the natural product of certain stages of human
history, of certain primitive misconceptions of the
course of nature; how legends essentially of the same
kind, though with some varieties of detail, have sprung
up in many different quarters, and how they have migrated
and interacted on each other. Biblical criticism
has at the same time decomposed and analysed the Jewish
writings, assigning to them dates and degrees of authority
very different from those recognised by the Church.
It has certainly not impaired their significance as
records of successive developments of religious and
moral progress, nor has it diminished their value
as expressions of the loftiest and most enduring religious
sentiments of mankind; but in the eyes of a great section
of the educated world it has deprived them of the
authoritative and infallible character that was once
attributed to them. At the same time historical
criticism has brought with it severer standards of
proof, more efficient means of distinguishing the
historical from the fabulous. It has traced the
phases and variations of religions, and the influences
that governed them, with a fulness of knowledge and
an independence of judgment unknown in the past, and
it has led its votaries to regard in these matters
a sceptical and hesitating spirit as a virtue, and
credulity and easiness of belief as a vice.
This is not a book of theology, and
I have no intention of dilating on these things.
It must, however, be manifest to all who are acquainted
with contemporary thought how largely these influences
have displaced theological beliefs among great numbers
of educated men; how many things that were once widely
believed have become absolutely incredible; how many
that were once supposed to rest on the plane of certainty
have now sunk to the lower plane of mere probability
or perhaps possibility. From the time of Galileo
downwards, these changes have been denounced as incompatible
with the whole structure of Christian belief.
No less an apologist than Bishop Berkeley declared
that the belief that the date of the existence of
the world was approximately that which could be deduced
from the book of Genesis was one of the fundamental
beliefs which could not be given up. When the
traveller Brydone published his travels in Sicily
in 1773, conjecturing, from the deposits of lava, that
the world must be much older than the Mosaic cosmogony
admitted, his work was denounced as subverting the
foundations of the Christian faith. The same
charges were brought against the earlier geologists,
and in our own day against the early supporters of
the Darwinian theory; and many now living can remember
the outbursts of indignation against those who first
introduced the principles of German criticism into
English thought, and who impugned the historical character
and the assumed authorship of the Pentateuch.
It is not surprising or unreasonable
that it should have been so, for it is impossible
to deny that these changes have profoundly altered
large portions of the beliefs that were once regarded
as essential. One main object of a religion was
believed to have been to furnish what may be called
a theory of the universe to explain its
origin, its destiny, and the strange contradictions
and imperfections it presents. The Jewish theory
was a very clear and definite one, but it is certainly
not that of modern science.
Yet few things are more remarkable
than the facility with which these successive changes
have gradually found their places within the Established
Church, and how little that Church has been shaken
by this fact. Even the Darwinian theory, though
it has not yet passed into the circle of fully established
truth, is in its main lines constantly mentioned with
approbation by the clergy of the Church. The theory
of evolution largely pervades their teaching.
The doctrine that the Bible was never intended to
teach science or scientific facts, and also the main
facts and conclusions of modern Biblical criticism,
have been largely accepted among the most educated
clergy. Very few of them would now deny the antiquity
of the world, the antiquity of man, or the antiquity
of death, or would maintain that the Mosaic cosmogony
was a true and literal account of the origin of the
globe and of man, or would very strenuously argue
either for the Mosaic authorship or the infallibility
of the Pentateuch.
And while changes of this kind have
been going on in one direction, another great movement
has been taking place in an opposite one. The
Church of England was essentially a Protestant Church;
though, being constructed more than most other Churches
under political influences, by successive stages of
progress, and with a view to including large and varying
sections of opinion in its fold, it retained, more
than other Churches, formularies and tenets derived
from the Church it superseded. The earnest Protestant
and Puritan party which dominated in Scotland and
in the Continental Reformation, and which refused all
compromise with Rome, had not become powerful in English
public opinion till some time after the framework
of the Church was established. The spirit of
compromise and conservatism which already characterised
the English people; the great part which kings and
lawyers played in the formation of the Church; their
desire to maintain in England a single body, comprising
men who had broken away from the Papacy but who had
in other respects no great objection to Roman Catholic
forms and doctrines, and also men seriously imbued
with the strong Protestant feeling of Germany and
Switzerland; the strange ductility of belief and conduct
that induced the great majority of the English clergy
to retain their preferments and avoid persecution
during the successive changes of Henry VIII., Edward
VI., Mary, and Elizabeth, all assisted in forming a
Church of a very composite character. Two distinct
theories found their place within it. According
to one school it was simply the pre-Reformation Church
purified from certain abuses that had gathered around
it, organically united with it through a divinely
appointed episcopacy, resting on an authoritative
and ecclesiastical basis, and forming one of the three
great branches of the Catholic Church. According
to the other school it was one of several Protestant
Churches, retaining indeed such portions of the old
ecclesiastical organisation as might be justified
from Scripture, but not regarding them as among the
essentials of Christianity; agreeing with other Protestant
bodies in what was fundamental, and differing from
them mainly on points which were non-essential; accepting
cordially the principle that ’the Bible and
the Bible alone is the religion of Protestants,’
and at the same time separated by the gravest and
most vital differences from what they deemed the great
apostasy of Rome.
It was argued on the one hand that
in its ecclesiastical and legal organisation the Church
in England was identical with the Church in the reign
of Henry VII.; that there had been no breach of continuity;
that bishops, and often the same bishops, sat in the
same sees before and after the Reformation; that the
great majority of the parochial clergy were unchanged,
holding their endowments by the same titles and tenures,
subject to the same courts, and meeting in Convocation
in the same manner as their predecessors; that the
old Catholic services were merely translated and revised,
and that although Roman usurpations which
had never been completely acquiesced in had been decisively
rejected, and although many superstitious novelties
had been removed, the Church of England was still
the Church of St. Augustine; that it had never, even
in the darkest period, lost its distinct existence,
and that supernatural graces and sacerdotal powers
denied to all schismatics had descended to it through
the Episcopacy in an unbroken stream. On the
other hand it was argued that the essential of a true
Church lay in the accordance of its doctrines with
the language of Scripture and not in the methods of
Church government, and that whatever might be the case
in a legal point of view, the theory of the unity
of the Church before and after the Reformation was
in a theological sense a delusion. The Church
under Henry VII. was emphatically a theocracy or ecclesiastical
monarchy, the Pope, as the supposed successor of the
supposed prince of the Apostles, being the very keystone
of the spiritual arch. Under Henry VIII. and
Elizabeth the Church of England had become a kind of
aristocracy of bishops, governed very really as well
as theoretically by the Crown, totally cut off from
what called itself the Chair of Peter, and placed
under completely new relations with the Catholic Church
of Christendom. In this space of time Anglican
Christianity had discarded not only the Papacy but
also great part of what for centuries before the change
had been deemed vitally and incontestably necessary
both in its theology and in its devotions. Though
much of the old organisation and many of the old formularies
had been retained, its articles, its homilies, the
constant teaching of its founders, breathed a spirit
of unquestionable Protestantism. The Church which
remained attached to Rome, and which held the same
doctrines, practised the same devotions, and performed
the same ceremonies as the English Church under Henry
VII., professed to be infallible, and it utterly repudiated
all connection with the new Church of England, and
regarded it as nothing more than a Protestant schism;
while the Church of England in her authorised formularies
branded some of the central beliefs and devotions
of the Roman Church as blasphemous, idolatrous, superstitious
and deceitful, and was long accustomed to regard that
Church as the Church of Antichrist; the Harlot of
the Apocalypse, drunk with the blood of the Saints.
Each Church during long periods and to the full measure
of its powers suppressed or persecuted the other.
In the eyes of the Erastian and also
in the eyes of the Puritan the theory of the spiritual
unity of these two bodies, and the various sacerdotal
consequences that were inferred from it, seemed incredible,
nor did the first generation of our reformers shrink
from communion, sympathy and co-operation with the
non-episcopal Protestants of the Continent. Although
they laid great stress on patristic authority, and
consented chiefly through political motives to
leave in the Prayer-book many things derived from
the older Church, yet the High Church theory of Anglicanism
is much more the product of the seventeenth-century
divines than of the reformers, just as Roman Catholicism
is much more akin to the later fathers than to primitive
Christianity. No one could doubt on what side
were the sympathies and what were the opinions of
Cranmer, Latimer, Ridley, Jewell and Hooper, and what
spirit pervades the articles and the homilies.
A Church which does not claim to be infallible; which
owes its special form chiefly to the sagacity of statesmen;
in which the supreme tribunal, deciding what doctrines
may be taught by the clergy, is a secular law court;
in which the bands of conformity are so loose that
the tendencies and sentiments of the nation give the
complexion to the Church, appears in the eyes of men
of these schools to have no possible right to claim
or share the authority of the Church of Rome.
It rests on another basis. It must be justified
on other grounds.
These two distinct schools, however,
have subsisted in the Church. Each of them can
find some support in the Prayer-book, and the old orthodox
High Church school which was chiefly elaborated and
which chiefly flourished under the Stuarts, has produced
a great part of the most learned theology of Christendom,
and had in its early days little or no tendency to
Rome. It was exclusive and repellent on the side
of Nonconformity, and it placed Church authority very
high; but the immense majority of its members were
intensely loyal to the Anglican Church, and lived
and died contentedly within its pale. There were,
however, always in that Church men of another kind
whose true ideal lay beyond its border. Falkland,
in a remarkable speech, delivered in 1640, speaks of
them with much bitterness. ‘Some,’
he says, ’have so industriously laboured to
deduce themselves from Rome that they have given great
suspicion that in gratitude they desire to return thither,
or at least to meet it half way. Some have evidently
laboured to bring in an English though not a Roman
Popery; I mean not only the outside and dress of it,
but equally absolute.... Nay, common fame is more
than ordinarily false if none of them have found a
way to reconcile the opinions of Rome to the preferments
of England, and be so absolutely, directly and cordially
Papists that it is all that 1,500_l._ a year can do
to keep them from confessing it.’
No wide secession to Rome, however,
followed the development of this seventeenth-century
school, though it played a large part in the nonjuror
schism, and with the decay of that schism and under
the latitudinarian tendencies of the eighteenth century
it greatly dwindled. Since, however, the Tractarian
movement, which carried so many leaders of the English
Church to Rome, men of Roman sympathies and Roman ideals
have multiplied within the Church to an extraordinary
degree. They have not only carried their theological
pretensions in the direction of Rome much further
than the nonjurors; they have also in many cases so
transformed the old and simple Anglican service by
vestments and candles, and banners and incense, and
génuflexions and whispered prayers, that a stranger
might well imagine that he was in a Roman Catholic
church. They have put forward sacerdotal pretensions
little, if at all, inferior to those of Rome.
The whole tendency of their devotional literature
and thought flows in the Roman channel, and even in
the most insignificant matters of ceremony and dress
they are accustomed to pay the greater Church the
homage of constant imitation.
It would be unjust to deny that there
are some real differences. The absolute authority
and infallibility of the Pope are sincerely repudiated
as an usurpation, the ritualist theory only conceding
to him a primacy among bishops. The discipline
and submission to ecclesiastical authority also, which
so eminently distinguish the Roman Church, are wholly
wanting in many of its Anglican imitators, and at the
same time the English sense of truth has proved sufficient
to save the party from the tolerance and propagation
of false miracles and of grossly superstitious practices
so common in Roman Catholic countries. In this
last respect, however, it is probable that English
and American Roman Catholics are almost equally distinguished
from Catholics in the Southern States of Europe and
of America. Still, when all this is admitted,
it can hardly be denied that there has grown up in
a great section of the English Church a sympathy with
Rome and an antipathy to Protestantism and to Protestant
types of thought and character utterly alien to the
spirit of the Reformers and to the doctrinal formularies
of the Church of England.
It is not very easy to form a just
estimate of the extent and depth of this movement.
There are wide variations in the High Church party;
the extreme men are not the most numerous and certainly
very far from the ablest, and many influences other
than convinced belief have tended to strengthen the
party. It has been, indeed, unlike the Tractarian
party which preceded it, remarkably destitute of literary
or theological ability, and has added singularly little
to the large and noble theological literature of the
English Church. The mere charm of novelty, which
is always especially powerful in the field of religion,
draws many to the ritualistic channel, and thousands
who care very little for ritualistic doctrines are
attracted by the music, the pageantry, the pictorial
beauty of the ritualistic services. AEsthetic
tastes have of late years greatly increased in England,
and the closing of places of amusement on Sunday probably
strengthens the craving for more attractive services.
The extreme High Church party has chiefly fostered
and chiefly benefited by this desire, but it has extended
much more widely. It has touched even puritanical
and non-episcopal bodies, and it is sometimes combined
with extremely latitudinarian opinions. There
is, indeed, a type of mind which finds in such services
a happy anodyne for half-suppressed doubt. Petitions
which in their poignant humiliation and profound emotion
no longer correspond to the genuine feelings of the
worshipper, seem attenuated and transformed when they
are intoned, and creeds which when plainly read shock
the understanding and the conscience are readily accepted
as parts of a musical performance. Scepticism
as well as belief sometimes fills churches. Large
classes who have no wish to cut themselves off from
religious services have lost all interest in the theological
distinctions which once were deemed supremely important
and all strong belief in great parts of dogmatic systems,
and such men naturally prefer services which by music
and ornament gratify their tastes and exercise a soothing
or stimulating influence over the imagination.
The extreme High Church party has,
however, other elements of attraction. Much of
its power is due to the new springs of real spiritual
life and the new forms of real usefulness and charity
that grew out of its highly developed sacerdotal system
and out of the semi-monastic confraternities which
at once foster and encourage and organise an active
zeal. The power of the party in acting not only
on the cultivated classes but also on the poor is
very manifest, and it has done much to give the Church
of England a democratic character which in past generations
it did not possess, and which in the conditions of
modern life is supremely important. The multiplication
not only of religious services but of communicants,
and the great increase in the interest taken in Church
life in quarters where the Ritualist party prevail,
cannot reasonably be questioned. Its highly ornate
services draw many into the churches who never entered
them before, and they are often combined with a familiar
and at the same time impassioned style of preaching,
something like that of a Franciscan friar or a Methodist
preacher, which is excellently fitted to act upon the
ignorant. If its clergy have been distinguished
for their insubordination to their bishops, if they
have displayed in no dubious manner a keen desire to
aggrandise their own position and authority, it is
also but just to add that they have been prominent
for the zeal and self-sacrifice with which they have
multiplied services, created confraternities, and penetrated
into the worst and most obscure haunts of poverty and
vice.
The result, however, of all this is
that the conflicting tendencies which have always
been present in the Church have been greatly deepened.
There are to be found within it men whose opinions
can hardly be distinguished from simple Deism or Unitarianism,
and men who abjure the name of Protestant and are
only divided by the thinnest of partitions from the
Roman Church. And this diversity exists in a Church
which is held together by articles and formularies
of the sixteenth century.
It might, perhaps, a priori
have been imagined that a Church with so much diversity
of opinion and of spirit was an enfeebled and disintegrated
Church, but no candid man will attribute such a character
to the Church of England. All the signs of corporate
vitality are abundantly displayed, and it is impossible
to deny that it is playing an active, powerful, and
most useful part in English life. Looking at it
first of all from the intellectual side, it is plain
how large a proportion of the best intellect of the
country is contented, not only to live within it,
but to take an active part in its ministrations.
Compare the amount of higher literature which proceeds
from clergymen of the Established Church with the
amount which proceeds from the vastly greater body
of Catholic priests scattered over the world; compare
the place which the English clergy, or laymen deeply
imbued with the teaching of the Church, hold in English
literature with the place which Catholic priests,
or sincere Catholic laymen, hold in the literature
of France, and the contrast will appear
sufficiently evident. There is hardly a branch
of serious English literature in which Anglican clergy
are not conspicuous. There is nothing in a false
and superstitious creed incompatible with some forms
of literature. It may easily ally itself with
the genius of a poet or with great beauty of style
either hortatory or narrative. But in the Church
of England literary achievement is certainly not restricted
to these forms. In the fields of physical science,
in the fields of moral philosophy, metaphysics, social
and even political philosophy, and perhaps still more
in the fields of history, its clergy have won places
in the foremost rank. It is notorious that a
large proportion of the most serious criticism, of
the best periodical writing in England, is the work
of Anglican clergymen. No one, in enumerating
the leading historians of the present century, would
omit such names as Milman, Thirlwall and Merivale,
in the generation which has just passed away, or Creighton
and Stubbs among contemporaries, and these are only
eminent examples of a kind of literature to which the
Church has very largely contributed. Their histories
are not specially conspicuous for beauty of style,
and not only conspicuous for their profound learning;
they are marked to an eminent degree by judgment,
criticism, impartiality, a desire for truth, a skill
in separating the proved from the false or the merely
probable. Compare them with the chief histories
that have been written by Catholic priests. In
past ages some of the greatest works of patient, lifelong
industry in all literary history were due to the Catholic
priesthood, and especially to members of the monastic
orders; even in modern times they have produced some
works of great learning, of great dialectic skill,
and of great beauty of style; but with scarcely an
exception these works bear upon them the stamp of
an advocate and are written for the purpose of proving
a point, concealing or explaining away the faults
on one side, and bringing into disproportioned relief
those of the other. No one would look in them
for a candid estimate of the merits of an opponent
or for a full statement of a hostile case. Doellinger,
who would probably once have been cited as the greatest
historian the Catholic priesthood had produced in the
nineteenth century, died under the anathema of his
Church; and how large a proportion of the best writing
in modern English Catholicism has come from writers
who have been brought up in Protestant universities
and who have learnt their skill in the Anglican Church!
It is at least one great test of a
living Church that the best intellect of the country
can enter into its ministry, that it contains men who
in nearly all branches of literature are looked upon
by lay scholars with respect or admiration. It
is said that the number of young men of ability who
take orders is diminishing, and that this is due, not
merely to the agricultural depression which has made
the Church much less desirable as a profession, and
indeed in many cases almost impossible for those who
have not some private fortune; not merely to the competitive
examination system, which has opened out vast and attractive
fields of ambition to the ablest laymen, but
also to the wide divergence of men of the best intellect
from the doctrines of the Church, and the conviction
that they cannot honestly subscribe its articles and
recite its formularies. But although this is,
I believe, true, it is also true that there is no
other Church which has shown itself so capable of
attracting and retaining the services of men of general
learning, criticism and ability. One of the most
important features of the English ecclesiastical system
has been the education of those who are intended for
the Church, in common with other students in the great
national universities. Other systems of education
may produce a clergy of greater professional learning
and more intense and exclusive zeal, but no other
system of education is so efficacious in maintaining
a general harmony of thought and tendency between the
Church and the average educated opinion of the nation.
Take another test. Compare the
Guardian, which represents better than any
other paper the opinions of moderate Churchmen, with
the papers which are most read by the French priesthood
and have most influence on their opinions. Certainly
few English journalists have equalled in ability Louis
Veuillot, and few papers have exercised so great an
influence over the clergy of the Church as the Univers
at the time when he directed it; but no one who read
those savagely scurrilous and intolerant pages, burning
with an impotent hatred of all the progressive and
liberal tendencies of the time, shrinking from no misrepresentation
of fact and from no apology for crime if it was in
the interest of the Church, could fail to perceive
how utterly out of harmony it was with the best lay
thought of France. English religious journalism
has sometimes, though in a very mitigated degree,
exhibited some of these characteristics, but no one
who reads the Guardian, which I suppose appeals
to a larger clerical public than any other paper, can
fail to realise the contrast. It is not merely
that it is habitually written in the style and temper
of a gentleman, but that it reflects most clearly
in its criticism, its impartiality, its tone of thought,
the best intellectual influences of the time.
Men may agree or differ about its politics or its
theology, but no one who reads it can fail to admit
that it is thoroughly in touch with cultivated lay
opinion, and it is in fact a favourite paper of many
who care only for its secular aspects.
The intellectual ability, however,
included among the ministers of a Church, though one
test, is by no means a decisive and infallible one
of its religious life. During the period of the
Renaissance, when genuine belief in the Catholic Church
had sunk to nearly its lowest point, most men of literary
tastes and talents were either members of the priesthood
or of the monastic orders. This was not due to
any fervour of belief, but simply to the fact that
the Church at that time furnished almost the only
sphere in which a literary life could be pursued with
comfort, without molestation, and with some adequate
reward. Much of the literary ability found in
the English Church is unquestionably due to the attraction
it offers and the facilities it gives to those who
simply wish for a studious life. The abolition
of many clerical sinécures, and the greatly increased
activity of clerical duty imposed by contemporary
opinion, have no doubt rendered the profession less
desirable from this point of view; but even now there
is no other profession outside the universities which
lends itself so readily to a literary life, and a
great proportion of the most eminent thinkers and writers
in the Church of England are eminent in fields that
have little or no connection with theology.
Other tests of a flourishing Church
are needed, but they can easily be found. Political
power is one test, though it is a very coarse and very
deceptive one. Perhaps it is not too much to say
that the most superstitious creeds are often those
which exercise the greatest political influence, for
they are those in which the priesthood acquires the
most absolute authority. Nor does the decline
of superstition among the educated classes always
bring with it a corresponding decline in ecclesiastical
influence. There have been instances, both in
Pagan and Christian times, of a sceptical and highly
educated ruling class supporting and allying themselves
with a superstitious Church as the best means of governing
or moralising the masses. Such Churches, by their
skilful organisation, by their ascendency over individual
rulers, or by their political alliances, have long
exercised an enormous influence, and in a democratic
age the preponderance of political power is steadily
passing from the most educated classes. At the
same time, in a highly civilised and perfectly free
country, in which all laws of religious disqualification
and coercion have disappeared, and all questions of
religion are submitted to perpetual discussion, the
political power which the Church of England retains
at least proves that she has a vast weight of genuine
and earnest opinion behind her. No politician
will deny the strength with which the united or greatly
preponderating influence of the Church can support
or oppose a party. It has been said by a cynical
observer that the three things outside their own families
that average Englishmen value the most are rank, money,
and the Church of England, and certainly no good observer
will form a low estimate of the strength or earnestness
of the Church feeling in every section of the English
people.
Still less can it be denied that the
Church retains in a high degree its educational influence.
For a long period national education was almost wholly
in its hands, and, since all disqualifications
and most privileges have been abolished, it still
exercises a part in English education which excites
the alarm of some and the admiration of others.
It has thrown itself heartily into the new political
conditions, and the vast number of voluntary schools
established under clerical influence, and the immense
sums that are annually raised for clerical purposes,
show beyond all doubt the amount of support and enthusiasm
behind it. In every branch of higher education
its clergy are conspicuous, and their influence in
training the nation is not confined to the pulpit,
the university, or the school. No candid observer
of English life will doubt the immense effect of the
parochial system in sustaining the moral level both
of principle and practice, and the multitude, activity,
and value of the philanthropic and moralising agencies
which are wholly or largely due to the Anglican Church.
Nor can it be reasonably doubted that
the Church has been very efficacious in promoting
that spiritual life which, whatever opinion men may
form of its origin and meaning, is at least one of
the great realities of human nature. The power
of a religion is not to be solely or mainly judged
by its corporate action; by the institutions it creates;
by the part which it plays in the government of the
world. It is to be found much more in its action
on the individual soul, and especially in those times
and circumstances when man is most isolated from society.
It is in furnishing the ideals and motives of individual
life; in guiding and purifying the emotions; in promoting
habits of thought and feeling that rise above the
things of earth; in the comfort it can give in age,
sorrow, disappointment and bereavement; in the seasons
of sickness, weakness, declining faculties, and approaching
death, that its power is most felt. No one creed
or Church has the monopoly of this power, though each
has often tried to identify it with something peculiar
to itself. It maybe found in the Catholic and
in the Quaker, in the High Anglican who attributes
it to his sacramental system, and in the Evangelical
in whose eyes that system holds only a very subordinate
place. All that need here be said is that no one
who studies the devotional literature of the English
Church, or who has watched the lives of its more devout
members, will doubt that this life can largely exist
and flourish within its pale.
The attitude which men who have been
born within that Church, but who have come to dissent
from large portions of its theology, should bear to
this great instrument of good, is certainly not less
perplexing than the questions we have been considering
in the preceding chapters. The most difficult
position is, of course, that of those who are its actual
ministers and who have subscribed its formularies.
Each man so situated must judge in the light of his
own conscience. There is a great difference between
the case of men who accept such a position in the
Church though they differ fundamentally from its tenets,
and the case of men who, having engaged in its service,
find their old convictions modified or shaken, perhaps
very gradually, by the advance of science or by more
matured thought and study. The stringency of the
old form of subscription has been much mitigated by
an Act of 1865 which substituted a general declaration
that the subscriber believed in the doctrine of the
Church as a whole, for a declaration that he believed
’all and everything’ in the Articles and
the Prayer-book. The Church of England does not
profess to be an infallible Church; it does profess
to be a National Church representing and including
great bodies of more or less divergent opinion, and
the whole tendency of legal decisions since the Gorham
case has been to enlarge the circle of permissible
opinion. The possibility of the National Church
remaining in touch with the more instructed and intellectual
portions of the community depends mainly on the latitude
of opinion that is accorded to its clergy, and on their
power of welcoming and adopting new knowledge, and
it may reasonably be maintained that few greater calamities
can befall a nation than the severance of its higher
intelligence from religious influences.
It should be remembered, too, that
on the latitudinarian side the changes that take place
in the teaching of the Church consist much less in
the open repudiation of old doctrines than in their
silent evanescence. They drop out of the exhortations
of the pulpit. The relative importance of different
portions of the religious teaching is changed.
Dogma sinks into the background. Narratives which
are no longer seriously believed become texts for
moral disquisitions. The introspective habits
and the stress laid on purely ecclesiastical duties
which once preponderated disappear. The teaching
of the pulpit tends rather to the formation of active,
useful and unselfish lives; to a clearer insight into
the great masses of remediable suffering and need
that still exist in the world; to the duty of carrying
into all the walks of secular life a nobler and more
unselfish spirit; to a habit of judging men and Churches
mainly by their fruits and very little by their beliefs.
The disintegration or decadence of old religious beliefs
which had long been closely associated with moral
teaching always brings with it grave moral dangers,
but those dangers are greatly diminished when the
change of belief is effected by a gradual transition,
without any violent convulsion or disruption severing
men from their old religious observances. Such
a transition has silently taken place in England among
great numbers of educated men, and in some measure
under the influence of the clergy. Nor has it,
I think, weakened the Church. The standard of
duty among such men has not sunk, but has in most
departments perceptibly risen: their zeal has
not diminished, though it flows rather in philanthropic
than in purely ecclesiastical channels. The conviction
that the special dogmas which divided other Protestant
bodies from the Establishment rested on no substantial
basis and have no real importance tells in favour
of the larger and the more liberal Church, and the
comprehensiveness which allows highly accentuated
sacerdotalism and latitudinarianism in the same Church
is in the eyes of many of them rather an element of
strength than of weakness.
Few men have watched the religious
tendencies of the time with a keener eye than Cardinal
Newman, and no man hated with a more intense hatred
the latitudinarian tendencies which he witnessed.
His judgment of their effect on the Establishment
is very remarkable. In a letter to his friend
Isaac Williams he says: ’Everything I hear
makes me fear that latitudinarian opinions are spreading
furiously in the Church of England. I grieve
deeply at it. The Anglican Church has been a most
useful breakwater against Scepticism. The time
might come when you, as well as I, might expect that
it would be said above, “Why cumbereth it the
ground?” but at present it upholds far more truth
in England than any other form of religion would,
and than the Catholic Roman Church could. But
what I fear is that it is tending to a powerful
Establishment teaching direct error, and more powerful
than it has ever been; thrice powerful because it
does teach error.’
It is, however, of course, evident
that the latitude of opinion which may be reasonably
claimed by the clergy of a Church encumbered with many
articles and doctrinal formularies is not unlimited,
and each man must for himself draw the line.
The fact, too, that the Church is an Established Church
imposes some special obligations on its ministers.
It is their first duty to celebrate public worship
in such a form that all members of the Church of England
may be able to join in it. Whatever interpretations
may be placed upon the ceremonies of the Church, those
ceremonies, at least, should be substantially the same.
A stranger who enters a church which he has never
before seen should be able to feel that he is certain
of finding public worship intelligibly and decently
performed, as in past generations it has been celebrated
in all sections of the Established Church. It
has, in my opinion, been a gross scandal, following
a gross neglect of duty, that this primary obligation
has been defied, and that services are held in English
churches which would have been almost unrecognisable
by the churchmen of a former generation, and which
are manifest attempts to turn the English public worship
into an imitation of the Romish Mass. Men have
a perfect right, within the widest limits, to perform
what religious services and to preach what religious
doctrines they please, but they have not a right to
do so in an Established Church.
The censorship of opinions is another
thing, and in the conditions of English life it has
never been very effectively maintained. The latitude
of opinion granted in an Established Church is, and
ought to be, very great, but it is, I think, obvious
that on some topics a greater degree of reticence
of expression should be observed by a clergyman addressing
a miscellaneous audience from the pulpit of an Established
Church than need be required of him in private life
or even in his published books.
The attitude of laymen whose opinions
have come to diverge widely from the Church formularies
is less perplexing, and except in as far as the recent
revival of sacerdotal pretensions has produced a reaction,
there has, if I mistake not, of late years been a
decided tendency in the best and most cultivated lay
opinion of this kind to look with increasing favour
on the Established Church. The complete abolition
of the religious and political disqualifications
which once placed its maintenance in antagonism with
the interests of large sections of the people; the
abolition of the indelibility of orders which excluded
clergymen who changed their views from all other means
of livelihood; the greater elasticity of opinion permitted
within its pale; and the elimination from the statute-book
of nearly all penalties and restrictions resting solely
upon ecclesiastical grounds, have all tended
to diminish with such men the objections to the Church.
It is a Church which does not injure those who are
external to it, or interfere with those who are mere
nominal adherents. It is more and more looked
upon as a machine of well-organised beneficence, discharging
efficiently and without corruption functions of supreme
utility, and constituting one of the main sources
of spiritual and moral life in the community.
None of the modern influences of society can be said
to have superseded it. Modern experience has
furnished much evidence of the insufficiency of mere
intellectual education if it is unaccompanied by the
education of character, and it is on this side that
modern education is most defective. While it
undoubtedly makes men far more keenly sensible than
in the past to the vast inequalities of human lots,
the habit of constantly holding out material prizes
as its immediate objects, and the disappearance of
those coercive methods of education which once disciplined
the will, make it perhaps less efficient as an instrument
of moral amelioration.
Some habits of thought also, that
have grown rapidly among educated men, have tended
powerfully in the same direction. The sharp contrasts
between true and false in matters of theology have
been considerably attenuated. The point of view
has changed. It is believed that in the history
of the world gross and material conceptions of religion
have been not only natural, but indispensable, and
that it is only by a gradual process of intellectual
evolution that the masses of men become prepared for
higher and purer conceptions. Superstition and
illusion play no small part in holding together the
great fabric of society. ‘Every falsehood,’
it has been said, ’is reduced to a certain malleability
by an alloy of truth,’ and, on the other hand,
truths of the utmost moment are, in certain stages
of the world’s history, only operative when
they are clothed with a vesture of superstition.
The Divine Spirit filters down to the human heart
through a gross and material medium. And what
is true of different stages of human history is not
less true of different contemporary strata of knowledge
and intelligence. In spite of democratic declamation
about the equality of man, it is more and more felt
that the same kind of teaching is not good for everyone.
Truth, when undiluted, is too strong a medicine for
many minds. Some things which a highly cultivated
intellect would probably discard, and discard without
danger, are essential to the moral being of multitudes.
There is in all great religious systems something that
is transitory and something that is eternal.
Theological interpretations of the phenomena of outward
nature which surround and influence us, and mythological
narratives which have been handed down to us from a
remote, uncritical and superstitious past, may be
transformed or discredited; but there are elements
in religion which have their roots much less in the
reason of man than in his sorrows and his affections,
and are the expression of wants, moral appetites and
aspirations which are an essential, indestructible
part of his nature.
No one, I think, can doubt that this
way of thinking, whether it be right or wrong, has
very widely spread through educated Europe, and it
is a habit of thought which commonly strengthens with
age. Young men discuss religious questions simply
as questions of truth or falsehood. In later
life they more frequently accept their creed as a working
hypothesis of life; as a consolation in innumerable
calamities; as the one supposition under which life
is not a melancholy anti-climax; as the indispensable
sanction of moral obligation; as the gratification
and reflection of needs, instincts and longings which
are planted in the deepest recesses of human nature;
as one of the chief pillars on which society rests.
The proselytising, the aggressive, the critical spirit
diminishes. Very often they deliberately turn
away their thoughts from questions which appear to
them to lead only to endless controversy or to mere
negative conclusions, and base their moral life on
some strong unselfish interest for the benefit of
their kind. In active, useful and unselfish work
they find the best refuge from the perplexities of
belief and the best field for the cultivation of their
moral nature, and work done for the benefit of others
seldom fails to react powerfully on their own happiness.
Nor is it always those who have most completely abandoned
dogmatic systems who are the least sensible to the
moral beauty which has grown up around them.
The music of the village church, which sounds so harsh
and commonplace to the worshipper within, sometimes
fills with tears the eyes of the stranger who sits
without, listening among the tombs.
It is difficult to say how far the
partial truce which has now fallen in England over
the great antagonisms of belief is likely to be permanent.
No one who knows the world can be insensible to the
fact that a large and growing proportion of those
who habitually attend our religious services have
come to diverge very widely, though in many different
degrees, from the beliefs which are expressed or implied
in the formularies they use. Custom, fashion,
the charm of old associations, the cravings of their
own moral or spiritual nature, a desire to support
a useful system of moral training, to set a good example
to their children, their household, or their neighbours,
keep them in their old place when the beliefs which
they profess with their lips have in a great measure
ebbed away. I do not undertake to blame or to
judge them. Individual conscience and character
and particular circumstances have, in these matters,
a decisive voice. But there are times when the
difference between professed belief and real belief
is too great for endurance, and when insincerity and
half-belief affect seriously the moral character of
a nation. ’The deepest, nay, the only theme
of the world’s history, to which all others
are subordinate,’ said Goethe, ’is the
conflict of faith and unbelief. The epochs in
which faith, in whatever form it may be, prevails,
are the marked epochs in human history, full of heart-stirring
memories and of substantial gains for all after times.
The epochs in which unbelief, in whatever form it may
be, prevails, even when for the moment they put on
the semblance of glory and success, inevitably sink
into insignificance in the eyes of posterity, which
will not waste its thoughts on things barren and unfruitful.’
Many of my readers have probably felt the force of such
considerations and the moral problems which they suggest, and there have been
perhaps moments when they have asked themselves the question of the poet
Tell me, my soul, what
is thy creed?
Is it a faith or only
a need?
They will reflect, however, that a
need, if it be universally felt when human nature
is in its highest and purest state, furnishes some
basis of belief, and also that no man can venture
to assign limits to the transformations which religion
may undergo without losing its essence or its power.
Even in the field of morals these have been very great,
though universal custom makes us insensible to the
extent to which we have diverged from a literal observance
of Evangelical precepts. We should hardly write
over the Savings Bank, ’Take no thought for the
morrow, for the morrow will take thought for itself,’
or over the Bank of England, ‘Lay not up for
yourselves treasures upon earth,’ ’How
hardly shall a rich man enter into the Kingdom of God,’
or over the Foreign Office, or the Law Court, or the
prison, ‘Resist not evil,’ ’He that
smiteth thee on thy right cheek turn to him the other
also,’ ’He that taketh away thy coat let
him have thy cloak also.’ Can it be said
that the whole force and meaning of such words are
represented by an industrial society in which the
formation of habits of constant providence with the
object of averting poverty or increasing comfort is
deemed one of the first of duties and a main element
and measure of social progress; in which the indiscriminate
charity which encourages mendicancy and discourages
habits of forethought and thrift is far more seriously
condemned than an industrial system based on the keenest,
the most deadly, and often the most malevolent competition;
in which wealth is universally sought, and universally
esteemed a good and not an evil, provided only it
is honestly obtained and wisely and generously used;
in which, although wanton aggression and a violent
and quarrelsome temper are no doubt condemned, it
is esteemed the duty of every good citizen to protect
his rights whenever they are unjustly infringed; in
which war and the preparation for war kindle the most
passionate enthusiasm and absorb a vast proportion
of the energies of Christendom, and in which no Government
could remain a week in power if it did not promptly
resent the smallest insult to the national flag?
It is a question of a different kind
whether the sacerdotal spirit which has of late years
so largely spread in the English Church can extend
without producing a violent disruption. To cut
the tap roots of priestcraft was one of the main aims
and objects of the Reformation, and, for reasons I
have already stated, I do not believe that the party
which would re-establish it has by any means the strength
that has been attributed to it. It is true that
the Broad Church party, though it reflects faithfully
the views of large numbers of educated laymen, has
never exercised an influence in active Church life
at all proportionate to the eminence of its leading
representatives. It is true also that the Evangelical
party has in a very remarkable degree lost its old
place in the Anglican pulpit and in religious literature,
though its tenets still form the staple of the preaching
of the Salvation Army and of most other street preachers
who exercise a real and widespread influence over the
poor. But the middle and lower sections of English
society are, I believe, at bottom, profoundly hostile
to priestcraft; and although the dread of Popery has
diminished, they are very far from being ready to
acquiesce in any attempt to restore the dominion which
their fathers discarded.
In one respect, indeed, sacerdotalism
in the Anglican Church is a worse thing than in the
Roman Church, for it is undisciplined and unregulated.
The history of the Church abundantly shows the dangers
that have sprung from the Confessional, though the
Roman Catholic will maintain that its habitually restraining
and moralising influence greatly outweighs these occasional
abuses. But in the Roman Church the practice of
confession is carried on under the most severe ecclesiastical
supervision and discipline. Confession can only
be made to a celibate priest of mature age, who is
bound to secrecy by the most solemn oath; who, except
in cases of grave illness, confesses only in an open
church; and who has gone through a long course of
careful education specially and skilfully designed
to fit him for the duty. None of these conditions
are observed in Anglican Confession.
In other respects, indeed, the sacerdotal
spirit is never likely to be quite the same as in
the Roman Church. A married clergy, who have mixed
in all the lay influences of an English university,
and who still take part in the pursuits, studies,
social intercourse and amusements of laymen, are not
likely to form a separate caste or to constitute a
very formidable priesthood. It is perhaps a little
difficult to treat their pretensions with becoming
gravity, and the atmosphere of unlimited discussion
which envelops Englishmen through their whole lives
has effectually destroyed the danger of coercive and
restrictive laws directed against opinion. Moral
coercion and the tendency to interfere by law on moral
grounds with the habits of men, even when those habits
in no degree interfere with others, have increased.
It is one of the marked tendencies of Anglo-Saxon
democracy, and it is very far from being peculiar
to, or even specially prominent in, any one Church.
But the desire to repress the expression of opinions
by force, which for so many centuries marked with
blood and fire the power of mediaeval sacerdotalism,
is wholly alien to modern English nature. Amid
all the fanaticisms, exaggerations, and superstitions
of belief, this kind of coercion, at least, is never
likely to be formidable, nor do I believe that in
the most extreme section of the sacerdotal clergy there
is any desire for it. There has been one significant
contrast between the history of Catholicism and Anglicanism
in the present century. In the Catholic Church
the Ultramontane element has steadily dominated, restricting
liberty of opinion, and important tenets which were
once undefined by the Church, and on which sincere
Catholics had some latitude of opinion, have been
brought under the iron yoke. This is no doubt
largely due to the growth of scepticism and indifference,
which have made the great body of educated laymen
hostile or indifferent to the Church, and have thrown
its management mainly into the hands of the priesthood
and the more bigoted, ignorant and narrow-minded laymen.
But in the Anglican Church educated laymen are much
less alienated from Church life, and a tribunal which
is mainly lay exercises the supreme authority.
As a consequence of these conditions, although the
sacerdotal element has greatly increased, the latitude
of opinion within the Church has steadily grown.
At the same time, it is difficult
to believe that serious dangers do not await the Church
if the unprotestantising influences that have spread
within it continue to extend. It is not likely
that the nation will continue to give its support
to the Church if that Church in its main tendencies
cuts itself off from the Reformation. The conversions
to Catholicism in England, though probably much exaggerated,
have been very numerous, and it is certainly not surprising
that it should be so. If the Church of Rome permitted
Protestantism to be constantly taught in her pulpits,
and Protestant types of worship and character to be
habitually held up to admiration, there can be little
doubt that many of her worshippers would be shaken.
If the Church of England becomes in general what it
already is in some of its churches, it is not likely
that English public opinion will permanently acquiesce
in its privileged position in the State. If it
ceases to be a Protestant Church, it will not long
remain an established one, and its disestablishment
would probably be followed by a disruption in which
opinions would be more sharply defined, and the latitude
of belief and the spirit of compromise that now characterise
our English religious life might be seriously impaired.