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- Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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- The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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-
- ROME OR REASON.
- PART I
- 1888
-
- THE CHURCH ITS OWN WITNESS.
- by
- Cardinal Manning.
-
- The Vatican Council, in its Decree on Faith has these words:
- "The Church itself, by its marvelous propagation, its eminent
- sanctity, its inexhaustible fruitfulness in all good things, its
- catholic unity and invincible stability, is a vast and perpetual
- motive of credibility, and an irrefragable witness of its own
- Divine legation." ("Const. Dogm. de Fide Catholica, c.iii.) Its
- Divine Founder said: "I am the light of the world;" and, to His
- Apostles, He said also, "ye are the light of the world," and of His
- Church He added, "A city seated on a hill cannot be hid." The
- Vatican Council says, "The Church is its own witness." My purpose
- is to draw out this assertion more fully.
-
- These words affirm that the Church is self-evident, as light
- is to the eye, and through sense, to the intellect. Next to the sun
- at noonday, there is nothing in the world more manifest than the
- one visible Universal Church. Both the faith and the infidelity of
- the world bear witness to it. It is loved and hated, trusted and
- feared, served and assaulted, honored and blasphemed: it is Christ
- or Antichrist, the Kingdom of God or the imposture of Satan. It
- pervades the civilized world. No man and no nation can ignore it,
- none can be indifferent to it. Why is all this? How is its
- existence to be accounted for?
-
- Let me suppose that I am an unbeliever in Christianity, and
- that some friend should make me promise to examine the evidence to
- show that Christianity is a Divine revelation; I should then sift
- and test the evidence as strictly as if it were in a court of law,
- and in a cause of life and death; my will would be in suspense; it
- would in no way control the process of my intellect. If it had any
- inclination from the equilibrium, it would be towards mercy and
- hope; but this would not add a feather's weight to the evidence,
- nor sway the intellect a hair's breadth.
-
- After the examination has been completed, and my intellect
- convinced, the evidence being sufficient to prove that Christianity
- is a divine revelation, nevertheless I am not yet a Christian. All
- this sifting brings me to the conclusion of a chain of reasoning;
- but I am not yet a believer. The last act of reason has brought me
-
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- ROME OR REASON - PART I
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- to the brink of the first act of faith. They are generically
- distinct and separable. The acts of reason are intellectual, and
- jealous of the interference of the will. The act of faith is an
- imperative act of the will, founded on and justified by the process
- and conviction of the intellect. Hitherto I have been a critic:
- henceforward, if I will, I become a disciple.
-
- It may here be objected that no man can so far suspend the
- inclination of the will when the question is, has God indeed spoken
- to man or no? Is the revealed law of purity, generosity,
- perfection, divine, or only the poetry of imagination? Can a man be
- indifferent between two such sides of the problem? Will he not
- desire the higher and better side to be true? and if he desire,
- will he not incline to the side that he desires to find true? Can
- a moral being be absolutely between two such issues? and can two
- such issues be equally attractive to a moral agent? Can it be
- indifferent and all the same to us whether God has made Himself and
- His will known to us or not? Is there no attraction in light, no
- repulsion in darkness? Does not the intrinsic and eternal
- distinction of good and evil make itself felt in spite of the will?
- Are we not responsible to "receive the truth in the love of it?"
- Nevertheless, evidence has its own limits and quantities, and
- cannot be made more or less by any act of the will. And yet, what
- is good or bad, high or mean, lovely or hateful, ennobling or
- degrading, must attract or repel men as they are better or worse in
- their moral sense; for an equilibrium between good and evil, to God
- or to man, is impossible.
-
- The last act of my reason, then, is distinct from my first act
- of faith precisely in this: so long as I was uncertain I suspended
- the inclination of my will, as an act of fidelity to conscience and
- of loyalty to truth; but the process once complete, and the
- conviction once attained, my will imperatively constrains me to
- believe, and I become a disciple of a Divine revelation.
-
- My friend next tells me that there are Christian Scriptures,
- and I go through precisely the same process of critical examination
- and final conviction, the last act of reasoning preceding, as
- before, the first act of faith.
-
- He then tells me that there is a Church claiming to be
- divinely founded, divinely guarded, and divinely guided in its
- custody of Christianity and of the Christian Scriptures.
-
- Once more I have the same twofold process of reasoning and of
- believing to go through.
-
- There is, however, this difference in the subject-matter:
- Christianity is an order of supernatural truth appealing
- intellectually to my reason; the Christian Scriptures are
- voiceless, and need a witness. They cannot prove their own mission,
- much less their own authority or inspiration. But the Church is
- visible to the eye, audible to the ear, self-manifesting and self-
- asserting: I cannot escape from it. If I go to the east, it is
- there; if I go to the west, it is there also. If I stay at home, it
- is before me, seated on the hill; if I turn away from it, I am
- surrounded by its light. It pursues me and calls to me. I cannot
-
-
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- ROME OR REASON - PART I
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- deny its existence; I cannot be indifferent to it; I must either
- listen to it or willfully stop my ears; I must heed it or defy it,
- love it or hate it. But my first attitude towards it is to try it
- with forensic strictness, neither pronouncing it to be Christ nor
- Antichrist till I have tested its origin, claim, and character. Let
- us take down the case in short-hand.
-
- 1. It says that it interpenetrates all the nations of the
- civilized world. In some it holds the whole nation in its unity, in
- others it holds fewer; but in all it is present, visible, audible,
- naturalized, and known as the one Catholic Church, a name that none
- can appropriate. Though often claimed and controversially assumed,
- none can retain it; it falls off. The world knows only one Catholic
- Church, and always restores the name to the right owner.
-
- 2. It is not a national body, but extra-national, accused of
- its foreign relations and foreign dependence. It is international,
- and independent in a supernational unity.
-
- 3. In faith, divine worship, sacred ceremonial, discipline,
- government, from the highest to the lowest, it is the same in every
- place.
-
- 4. It speaks all languages in the civilized world.
-
- 5. It is obedient to one Head, outside of all nations, except
- one only; and in that nation, his leadership is not national but
- world-wide.
-
- 6. The world-wide sympathy of the Church in all lands with its
- Head has been manifested in our days, and before our eyes, by a
- series of public assemblages in Rome, of which nothing like or
- second to it can be found. In 1854, 350 Bishops of all nations
- surrounded their Head when he defined the Immaculate Conception. In
- 1862, 400 Bishops assembled at the canonization of the Martyrs of
- Japan. In 1867, 500 Bishops came to keep the eighteenth centenary
- of St. Peters martyrdom. In 1870, Bishops assembled in the Vatican
- Council. On the Feast of the Epiphany, 1870, the Bishops of thirty
- nations during two whole hours made profession of faith in their
- own languages, kneeling before their head. Add to this, that in
- 1869, in the sacerdotal jubilee of Pius IX., Rome was filled for
- months by pilgrims from all lands in Europe and beyond the sea,
- from the Old World and from the New, bearing all manner of gifts
- and oblations to the Head of the Universal Church. To this, again,
- must be added the world-wide outcry and protest of all the Catholic
- unity against the seizure of sacrilege of September, 1870, when
- Rome was taken by the Italian Revolution.
-
- 7. All this came to pass not only by reason of the great love
- of the Catholic world for Pius IX., but because they revered him as
- the successor of St. Peter and the Vicar of Jesus Christ. For that
- undying reason the same events have been reproduced in the time of
- Leo XIII. In the early months of this year Rome was once more
- filled with pilgrims of all nations, coming in thousands as
- representatives of millions in all nations, to celebrate the
- sacerdotal jubilee of the Sovereign Pontiff. The courts of the
- Vatican could not find room for the multitude of gifts and
- offerings of every kind which were sent from all quarters of the
- world.
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- ROME OR REASON - PART I
-
- 8. These things are here said, not because of any other
- importance, but because they set forth in the most visible and
- self-evident way the living unity and the luminous universality of
- the One Catholic and Roman Church.
-
- 9. What has thus far been said is before our eyes at this
- hour. It is no appeal to history, but to a visible and palpable
- fact. Men may explain it as they will; deny it, they cannot. They
- see the Head of the Church year by year speaking to the nations of
- the world; treating with Empires, Republics and Governments. There
- is no other man on earth that can so bear himself. Neither from
- Canterbury nor from Constantinople can such a voice go forth to
- which rulers and people listen.
-
- This is the century of revolutions. Rome has in our time been
- besieged three times; three Popes have been driven out of it, two
- have been shut up in the Vatican. The city is now full of the
- Revolution. The whole Church has been tormented by Falck laws,
- Mancini laws, and Crispi laws. An unbeliever in Germany said some
- years ago, "The net is now drawn so tight about the Church, that if
- it escapes this time I will believe in it," Whether he believes, or
- is even alive now to believe, I cannot say.
-
- Nothing thus far has been said as proof. The visible,
- palatable facts, which are at this moment before the eyes of all
- men, speak for themselves. There is one, and only one, world-wide
- unity of which these things can be said. It is a fact and a
- phenomenon for which an intelligible account must be rendered. If
- it be only a human system built up by the intellect, will and
- energy of men, let the adversaries prove it. The burden is upon
- them; and they will have more to do as we go on.
-
- Thus far we have rested upon the evidence of sense and fact.
- We must now go on to history and reason.
-
- Every religion and every religious body known to history has
- varied from itself and broken up. Brahminism has given birth to
- Buddhism; Mahometanism is parted into the Arabian and European
- Khalifates; the Greek schism into the Russian, Constantinopolitan,
- and Bulgarian autocephalous fragment; Protestantism into its
- multitudinous diversities. All have departed from their original
- type, and all are continually developing new and irreconcilable,
- intellectual and ritualistic, diversities and repulsions. How is it
- that, with all diversities of language, civilization, race,
- interest, and conditions, social and political, including
- persecution and warfare, the Catholic nations are at this day, even
- when in warfare, in unchanged unity of faith, communion, worship
- and spiritual sympathy with each other and with their Head? This
- needs a rational explanation.
-
- It may be said in answer, endless divisions have come out of
- the Church, from Arius to Photius, and from Photius to Luther.
-
- Yes, but they all came out. There is the difference. They did
- not remain in the Church, corrupting the faith. They came out, and
- ceased to belong to the Catholic unity, as a branch broken from a
- tree ceases to belong to the tree. But the identity of the tree
-
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- ROME OR REASON - PART I
-
- remains the same. A branch is not a tree, nor a tree a branch. A
- tree may lose branches, but it rests upon its root, and renews its
- loss. Not so the religions, so to call them, that have broken away
- from unity. Not one has retained its members or its doctrines. Once
- separated from the sustaining unity of the Church, all separations
- lose their spiritual cohesion, and then their intellectual
- identity. Ramus proecisus arescit.
-
- For the present it is enough to say that no human,
- legislation, authority or constraint can ever create internal unity
- of intellect and will; and that the diversities and contradictions
- generated by all human systems prove the absence of Divine
- authority. Variations or contradictions are proof of the absence of
- a Divine mission to mankind. All natural causes run to
- disintegration. Therefore, they can render no account of the world-
- wide unity of the One Universal Church.
-
- Such, then, are the facts before our eyes at this day. We will
- seek out the origin of the body or system called the Catholic
- Church, and pass at once to its outset eighteen hundred years ago.
-
- I affirm, then, three things: (1) First, that no adequate
- account can be given of this undeniable fact from natural causes;
- (2) that the history of the Catholic Church demands causes above
- nature; and (3) that it has always claimed for itself a Divine
- origin and Divine authority.
-
- I. And, first, before we examine what it was and what it has
- done, we will recall to mind what was the world in the midst of
- which it arose.
-
- The most comprehensive and complete description of the old
- world, before Christianity came in upon it, is given in the first
- chapter of the Epistle to the Romans. Mankind had once the
- knowledge of God: that knowledge was obscured by the passions of
- sense; in the darkness of the human intellect, with the light of
- nature still before them, the nations worshiped the creature --
- that is, by pantheism, polytheism, idolatry; and, having lost the
- knowledge of God and of His perfections, they lost the knowledge of
- their own nature and of its laws, even of the natural and rational
- laws, which thenceforward ceased to guide, restrain, or govern
- them. They became perverted and inverted with every possible abuse,
- defeating the end and destroying the powers of creation. The lights
- of nature were put out, and the world rushed headlong into
- confusions, of which the beasts that perish were innocent. This is
- analytically the history of all nations but one. A line of light
- still shone from Adam to Enoch, from Enoch to Abraham, to whom the
- command was given, "Walk before Me and be perfect." And it ran on
- from Abraham to Caiaphas, who crucified the founder of
- Christianity. Through all anthropomorphisms of thought and language
- this line of light still passed inviolate and inviolable. But in
- the world, on either side of that radiant stream, the whole earth
- was dark. The intellectual and moral state of the Greek world may
- be measured in its highest excellence in Athens: and of the Roman
- world in Rome. The state of Athens -- its private, domestic, and
- public morality -- may be seen in Aristophanes.
-
-
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- ROME OR REASON - PART I
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- The state of Rome is visible in Juvenal, and in the fourth
- book of St. Augustine's "City of God." There was only one evil
- wanting. The world was not Atheist. Its polytheism was the example
- and the warrant of all forms of moral abominations. Imitary quod
- colis plunged the nations in crime. Their theology was their
- degradation; their text-book of an elaborate corruption of
- intellect and will.
-
- Christianity came in "the fullness of time." What that
- fullness may mean, is one of the mysteries of times and seasons
- which it is not for us to know. But one motive for the long delay
- of four thousand years is not far to seek. It gave time, full and
- ample, for the utmost development and consolidation of all the
- falsehood and evil of which the intellect and will of man are
- capable. The four great empires were each of them the concentration
- of a supreme effort of human power. The second inherited from the
- first, the third from both, the fourth from all three. It was, as
- it was foretold or described, as a beast, "exceeding terrible; his
- teeth and claws were of iron; he devoured and broke in pieces; and
- the rest he stamped upon with his feet." (Daniel, vii. 19.) The
- empire of man over man was never so widespread, so absolute, so
- hardened into one organized mass, as in Imperial Rome. The world
- had never seen a military power so disciplined, irresistible,
- invincible; a legislation so just, so equitable, so strong in its
- execution; a government so universal, so local, so minute. It
- seemed to be imperishable. Rome was called the eternal. The
- religions of all nations were enshrined in Dea Roma; adopted,
- practiced openly, and taught. They were all religiones licitoe,
- known to the law; not tolerated only, but recognized. The
- theologies of Egypt, Greece, and of the Latin world, met in an
- empyreuma, consecrated and guarded by the Imperial law, and
- administered by the Pontifex Maximus. No fanaticism ever surpassed
- the religious cruelties of Rome. Add to all this the colluvies of
- false philosophies of every land, and of every date. They both
- blinded and hardened the intellect of public opinion and of private
- men against the invasion of anything except contempt, and hatred of
- both the philosophy of sophists and of the religion of the people.
- Add to all this the sensuality of the most refined and of the
- grossest luxury the world had ever seen, and a moral confusion and
- corruption which violated every law of nature.
-
- The god of this world had built his city. From foundation to
- parapet, everything that the skill and power of man could do had
- been done without stint of means or limit of will. The Divine hand
- was stayed, or rather, as St. Augustine says, an unsurpassed
- natural greatness was the reward of certain natural virtues,
- degraded as they were in unnatural abominations. Rome was the
- climax of the power of man without God, the apotheosis of the human
- will, the direct and supreme antagonist of God in His own world. In
- this the fullness of time was come. Man built all this for himself.
- Certainly, man could not also build the City of God. They are not
- the work of one and the same architect, who capriciously chose to
- build first the city of confusion, suspending for a time his skill
- and power to build some day the City of God. Such a hypothesis is
- folly. Of two things, one. Disputers must choose one or the other.
- Both cannot be asserted, and the assertion needs no answer -- it
- refutes itself. So much for the first point.
-
-
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- II. In the reign of Augustus, and in a remote and powerless
- Oriental race, a Child was born in a stable of a poor Mother. For
- thirty years He lived a hidden life; for three years He preached
- the Kingdom of God, and gave laws hitherto un-known to men. He died
- in ignominy upon the Cross; on the third day He rose again; and
- after forty days He was seen no more. This unknown Man created the
- world-wide unity of intellect and will which is visible to the eye,
- and audible, in all languages, to the ear. It is in harmony with
- the reason and moral nature of all nations, in all ages, to this
- day. What proportion is there between the cause and the effect?
- What power was there in this isolated Man? What unseen virtues went
- out of Him to change the world? For change the world He did; and
- that not in the line or on the level of nature as men had corrupted
- it, but in direct contradiction to all that was then supreme in the
- world. He taught the dependence of the intellect against its self-
- trust, the submission of the will against its license, the
- subjugation of the passions by temperate control or by absolute
- subjection against their willful indulgence. This was to reverse
- what men believed to be the laws of nature: to make water climb
- upward and fire to point downward. He taught mortification of the
- lusts of the flesh, contempt of the lusts of the eyes, and hatred
- of the pride of life. What hope was there that such a teacher
- should convert imperial Rome? that such a doctrine should exorcise
- the fullness of human pride and lust? Yet so it has come to pass;
- and how? Twelve men more obscure than Himself, absolutely without
- authority or influence of this world, preached throughout the
- empire and beyond it. They asserted two facts: the one, that God
- had been made man; the other, that He died and rose again. What
- could be more incredible? To the Jews the unity and spirituality of
- God were axioms of reason and faith; to the Gentiles, however
- cultured, the resurrection of the flesh was impossible. The Divine
- Person Who had died and risen could not be called in evidence as
- the chief witness. He could not be produced in court. Could
- anything be more suspicious if credible, or less credible even if
- He were there to say so? All that they could do was to say, "We
- knew Him for three years, both before His death and after He rose
- from the dead. If you will believe us, you will believe what we
- say. If you will not believe us, we can say no more. He is not
- here, but in heaven. We cannot call him down." It is true, as we
- read, that Peter cured a lame man at the gate of the Temple. The
- Pharisees could not deny it, but they would not believe what Peter
- said; they only told him to hold his tongue. And yet thousands in
- one day in Jerusalem believed in the Incarnation and the
- Resurrection; and when the Apostles were scattered by persecution,
- wherever they went men believed their word. The most intense
- persecution was from the Jews, the people of faith and of Divine
- traditions. In the name of God and of religion they stoned Stephen,
- and sent Saul to persecute at Damascus. More than this, they
- stirred up the Romans in every place. As they had forced Pilate to
- crucify Jesus of Nazareth, so they swore to slay Paul. And yet, in
- spite of all, the faith spread.
-
- It is true, indeed, that the Empire of Alexander, the spread
- of the Hellenistic Greek, the prevalence of Greek in Rome itself,
- the Roman roads which made the Empire traversable, the Roman peace
- which sheltered the preachers of the faith in the outset of their
- work, gave them facilities to travel and to be understood. But
-
-
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- these were only external facilities, which in no way rendered more
- credible or more acceptable the voice of penance and mortification,
- or the mysteries of the faith, which was immutably "to the Jews a
- stumbling-block and to the Greeks foolishness." It was in
- changeless opposition to nature as man had marred it; but it was in
- absolute harmony with nature as God had made it to His own
- likeness. Its power was its persuasiveness; and its persuasiveness
- was in its conformity to the highest and noblest aspirations and
- aims of the soul in man. The master-key so long lost was found at
- last; and its conformity to the wards of the lock was its
- irrefragable witness to its own mission and message.
-
- But if it is beyond belief that Christianity in its outset
- made good its foothold by merely human causes and powers, how much
- more does this become incredible in every age as we come down from
- the first century to the nineteenth, and from the Apostolic mission
- to the world-wade Church, Catholic and Roman, at this day.
-
- Not only did the world in the fullness of its power give to
- the Christian faith no help to root or to spread itself, but it
- wreaked all the fullness of its power upon it to uproot and to
- destroy it. Of the first thirty Pontiffs in Rome, twenty-nine were
- martyred. Ten successive persecutions, or rather one universal and
- continuous persecution of two hundred years, with ten more bitter
- excesses of enmity in every province of the Empire, did all that
- man can do to extinguish the Christian name. The Christian name may
- be blotted out here and there in blood, but the Christian faith can
- nowhere be slain. It is inscrutable, and beyond the reach of man.
- In nothing is the blood of the martyrs more surely the seed of the
- faith. Every martyrdom was a witness to the faith, and the ten
- persecutions were the sealing of the work of the twelve Apostles.
- The destroyer defeated himself. Christ crucified was visibly set
- forth before all the nations, the world was a Calvary, and the
- blood of the martyrs preached in every tongue the Passion of Jesus
- Christ. The world did its worst, and ceased only for weariness and
- conscious defeat.
-
- Then came the peace, and with peace the peril of the Church.
- The world outside had failed; the world inside began to work. It no
- longer destroyed life; it perverted the intellect, and, through
- intellectual perversion, assailed the faith at its center. The
- Angel of light preached heresy. The Baptismal Creed was assailed
- all along the line; Gnosticism assailed the Father and Creator of
- all things; Arianism, the God-head of the Son; Nestorianism, the
- unity of His person; Monophysites, the two natures; Monothelites,
- the divine and human wills; Macedonians, the person of the Holy
- Ghost. So throughout the centuries, from Nicasa to the Vatican,
- every article has been in succession perverted by heresy and
- defined by the Church. But of this we shall speak hereafter. If the
- human intellect could fasten its perversions on the Christian
- faith, it would have done so long ago; and if the Christian faith
- had been guarded by no more than human intellect, it would long ago
- have been disintegrated, as we see in every religion outside the
- unity of the one Catholic Church. There is no example in which
- fragmentary Christianities have not departed from their original
- type. No human system is immutable; no thing human is changeless.
- The human intellect, therefore, can give no sufficient account of
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- the identity of the Catholic faith in all places and in all ages by
- any of its own natural processes or powers. The force of this
- argument is immensely increased when we trace the tradition of the
- faith through the nineteen Ecumenical Councils which, with one
- continuous intelligence, have guarded and unfolded the deposit of
- faith, defining every truth as it has been successively assailed,
- in absolute harmony and unity of progression.
-
- What the Senate is to your great Republic, or the Parliament
- to our English monarchy, such are the nineteen Councils of the
- Church, with this only difference: the secular Legislatures must
- meet year by year with short recesses; Councils have met on the
- average once in a century. The reason of this is that the
- metabolites of national life, which are as the water -- floods,
- need constant remedies; the stability of the Church seldom needs
- new legislation. The faith needs no definition except in rare
- intervals of periodical intellectual disorder. The discipline of
- the Church reigns by an universal common law which seldom needs a
- change, and by local laws which are provided on the spot.
- Nevertheless, the legislation of the Church, the Corpus Juris, or
- Cannon Law, is a creation of wisdom and justice, to which no
- Statutes at large or Imperial pandects can bear comparison. Human
- intellect has reached its climax in jurisprudence, but the world-
- wide and secular legislation of the Church has a higher character.
- How the Christian law connected, elevated, and completed the
- Imperial law, may be seen in a learned and able work by an American
- author, far from the Catholic faith, but in the main just and
- accurate in his facts and arguments -- the gesta Christi of Charles
- Loring Brace. Water cannot rise above its source, and if the Church
- by mere human wisdom corrected and perfected the Imperial law, its
- source must be higher than the sources of the world. This makes a
- heavy demand on our credulity.
-
- Starting from St. Peter to Leo XIII., there have been some 258
- Pontiffs claiming to be, and recognized by the whole Catholic unity
- as, successors of St. Peter and Vicars of Jesus Christ. To them has
- been rendered in every age not only the external obedience of
- outward submission, but the internal obedience of faith. They have
- borne the onset of the nations who destroyed Imperial Rome, and the
- tyranny of heretical Emperors of Byzantium; and, worse than this,
- the alternate despotism and patronage of the Emperors of the West,
- and the substraction of obedience in the great Western schisms,
- when the unity of the Church and the authority of its Head were, as
- men thought, gone for ever. It was the last assault -- the forlorn
- hope of the gates of hell. Every art of destruction had been tried:
- martyrdom, heresy, secularity, schism; at last, two, and three, and
- four claimants, or, as the world says, rival Popes, were set up,
- that men might believe that St. Peter had no longer a successor,
- and our Lord no Vicar, upon earth; for, though all might be
- illegitimate, only one could be the lawful and true Head of the
- Church. Was it only by the human power of man that the unity,
- external and internal, which for fourteen hundred years had been
- supreme, was once more restored in the Council of Constance, never
- to be broken again? The succession of the English monarchy has
- been, indeed, often broken, and always restored, in these thousand
- years. But here is a monarchy of eighteen hundred years, powerless
- in worldly force or support, claiming and receiving not only
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- outward allegiance, but inward unity of intellect and will. If any
- man tell us that these two phenomena are on the same level of
- merely human causes, it is too severe a tax upon our natural reason
- to believe it.
-
- But the inadequacy of human causes to account for the
- universality, unity, and immutability of the Catholic Church, will
- stand out more visibly if we look at the intellectual and moral
- revolution which Christianity has wrought in the world and upon
- mankind.
-
- The first effect of Christianity was to fill the world with
- the true knowledge of the One True God, and to destroy utterly all
- idols, not by fire but by light. Before the Light of the world no
- false god and no polytheism could stand. The unity and spirituality
- of God swept away all theogonies and theologies of the first four
- thousand years. The stream of light which descended from the
- beginning expanded into a radiance, and the radiance into a flood,
- which illuminated all nations, as it had been foretold, "The earth
- is filled with the knowledge of the Lord, as the covering waters of
- the sea;" "And idols shall be utterly destroyed." (Isaias, xi. 9-
- 11, 18.) In this true knowledge of the Divine Nature was revealed
- to men their own relation to a Creator as of sons to a father. The
- Greeks called the chief of the gods Zeus Pater, and the Jupiter;
- but neither realized the dependence and love of sonship as revealed
- by the Founder of Christianity.
-
- The monotheism of the world comes down from a primeval and
- Divine source. Polytheism is the corruption of men and of nations.
- Yet in the multiplicity of all polytheism, one supreme Deity was
- always recognized. The Divine unity was imperishable. Polytheism is
- of human imagination: it is of men's manufacture. The deification
- of nature and passions and heroes had filled the world with an
- elaborate and tenacious superstition, surrounded by reverence,
- fear, religion, and awe. Every perversion of what is good in man
- surrounded it with authority; everything that is evil in man
- guarded it with jealous care. Against this world-wide and imperious
- demonology the science of one God, all holy and supreme, advanced
- with resistless force. Beelzebub is not divided against himself;
- and if polytheism is not Divine, monotheism must be. The overthrow
- of idolatry and demonology was the mastery of forces that are above
- nature. This conclusion is enough for our present purpose.
-
- A second visible effect of Christianity of which nature cannot
- offer any adequate cause is to be found in the domestic life of the
- Christian world. In some nations the existence of marriage was not
- so much as recognized. In others, if recognized, it was dishonored
- by profuse concubinage. Even in Israel, the most advanced nation,
- the law of divorce was permitted for the hardness of their hearts.
- Christianity republished the primitive law by which marriage unites
- only one man and one woman indissolubly in a perpetual contract, It
- raised their mutual and perpetual contract to a sacrament. This at
- one blow condemned all other relations between man and woman, all
- the legal gradations of the Imperial law, and all forms and pleas
- of divorce. Beyond this the spiritual legislation of the Church
- framed most elaborate tables of consanguinity and affinity,
- prohibiting all marriages between persons in certain degrees of
- kinship or relation. This law has created the purity and peace of
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- domestic life. Neither the Greek nor the Roman world had any true
- conception of a home. The Eoria or Vesta was a sacred tradition
- guarded by vestals like a temple worship. It was not a law and a
- power in the homes of the people. Christianity, by enlarging the
- circles of prohibition within which men and women were as brothers
- and sisters, has created the home with all its purities and
- safeguards.
-
- Such a law of unity and indissolubility, encompassed by a
- multitude of prohibitions, no mere human legislation could impose
- on the passions and will of mankind. And yet the Imperial laws
- gradually yielded to its resistless pressure, and incorporated it
- in its world-wide legislation. The passions and practices of four
- thousand years were against the change; yet it was accomplished,
- and it reigns inviolate to this day, though the relaxations of
- schism in the East and the laxities of the West have revived the
- abuse of divorces, and have partially abolished the wise and
- salutary prohibitions which guard the homes of the faithful. These
- relaxations prove that all natural forces have been, and are,
- hostile to the indissoluble law of Christian marriage. Certainly,
- then, it was not by natural forces that the Sacrament of Matrimony
- and the legislation springing from it were enacted. If these are
- restraints of human liberty and license, either they do not spring
- from nature, or they have had a supernatural cause whereby they
- exist. It was this that redeemed woman from the traditional
- degradation in which the world had held her. The condition of women
- in Athens and in Rome -- which may be taken as the highest points
- of civilization -- is too well known to need recital, Women had no
- rights, no property, no independence. Plato looked upon them as
- State property; Aristotle aschattels; They were the prey, the
- sport, the slaves of man. Even in Israel, though they were raised
- incomparably higher than in the Gentile world, they were far below
- the dignity and authority of Christian women. Libanius, the friend
- of Julian, the Apostate, said, "O ye gods of Greece, how great are
- the women of the Christians!" Whence came the elevation of
- womanhood? Not from the ancient civilization, for it degraded them;
- not from Israel, for among the Jews the highest state of womanhood
- was the marriage state. The daughter of Jepthe went into the
- mountains to mourn not her death but her virginity. The marriage
- state in the Christian world, though holy and good, is not the
- highest state. The state of virginity unto death is the highest
- condition of man and woman. But this is above the law of nature. It
- belongs to a higher order. And this life of virginity, in
- repression of natural passion and lawful instinct, is both above
- and against the tendencies of human nature. It begins in a
- mortification, and ends in a mastery, over the movements and
- ordinary laws of human nature. Who will ascribe this to natural
- causes? and, if so, why did it not appear in the first four
- thousand years? And when has it ever appeared except in a handful
- of vestal virgins, or in Oriental recluses, with what reality
- history shows? An exception proves a rule. No one will imagine that
- a life of chastity is impossible to nature; but the restriction is
- a repression of nature which individuals may acquire, but the
- multitude have never attained. A religion which imposes chastity on
- the unmarried, and upon its priesthood, and upon the multitudes of
- women in every age who devote themselves to the service of One Whom
- they have never seen, is a mortification of nature in so high a
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- degree as to stand out as a fact and a phenomenon, of which mere
- natural causes afford no adequate solution. Its existence, not in
- a hand full out of the millions of the world, but its prevalence
- and continuity in multitudes scattered throughout the Christian
- world, proves the presence of a cause higher than the laws of
- nature. So true is this, that jurists teach that the three vows of
- chastity, poverty, and obedience are contrary to "the policy of the
- law," that is, to the interests of the commonwealth, which desires
- the multiplication, enrichment, and liberty of its members.
-
- To what has been said may be added the change wrought by
- Christianity upon the social, political, and international
- relations of the world. The root of this ethical change, private
- and public, is the Christian home. The authority of parents, the
- obedience of children, the love of brotherhood, are the three
- active powers which have raised the society of man above the level
- of the old world. Israel was head and shoulders above the world
- around it; but Christendom is high above Israel. The new
- Commandment of brotherly love, and the Sermon on the Mount, have
- wrought a revolution, both in private and public life. From this
- come the laws of justice and sympathy which bind together the
- nations of the Christian world. In the old world, even the most
- refined races, worshiped by our modern philosophers, held and
- taught that man could hold property in man. In its chief cities
- there were more slaves than free men. Who has taught the equality
- of men before the law, and extinguished the impious thought that
- man can hold property in man? It was no philosopher: It was no
- lawgiver, for all taught the lawfulness of slavery till
- Christianity denied it. The Christian law has taught that man can
- lawfully sell his labor, but that he cannot lawfully he sold, or
- sell himself.
-
- The necessity of being brief, the impossibility of drawing out
- the picture of the old world, its profound immoralities, its un-
- imaginable cruelties, compels me to argue with my right hand tied
- behind me. I can do no more than point again to Mr. Brace's "Gesta
- Christi," or to Dr. Dollinger's "Gentile and Jew," as witnesses to
- the facts which I have stated or implied. No one who has not read
- such books, or mastered their contents by original study, can judge
- of the force of the assertion that Christianity has reformed the
- world by direct antagonism to the human will, and by a searching
- and firm repression of human passion. It has ascended the stream of
- human license, contra ictum fluminis, by a power mightier than
- nature, and by laws of a higher order than the relaxations of this
- world.
-
- Before Christianity came on earth, the civilization of man by
- merely natural force had culminated. It could not rise above its
- source; all that it could do was done; and the civilization in
- every race and empire had ended in decline and corruption. The old
- civilization was not regenerated. It passed away to give place to
- a new. But the new had a higher source, nobler laws and
- supernatural powers. The highest excellence of men and of nations
- is the civilization of Christianity. The human race has ascended
- into what we call Christendom, that is, into the new creation of
- charity and justice among men. Christendom was created by the
- worldwide Church as we see it before our eyes at this day.
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- Philosophers and statesmen believe it to be the work of their own
- hands: they did not make it; but they have for three hundred years
- been unmaking it by reformations and revolutions. These are
- destructive forces. They build up nothing. It has been well said by
- Donoso Cortez that "the history of civilization is the history of
- Christianity, the history of Christianity is the history of the
- Church, the history of the Church is the history of the Pontiffs,
- the greatest statesmen and rulers that the world has ever seen."
-
- Some years ago, a Professor of great literary reputation in
- England, who was supposed even then to be, as his subsequent
- writings have proved, a skeptic or non-Christian, published a well-
- known and very candid book, under the title of "Ecce Homo." The
- writer placed himself, as it were, outside of Christianity. He
- took, not the Church in the world as in this article, but the
- Christian Scriptures as a historical record, to be judged with
- forensic severity and absolute impartiality of mind. To the credit
- of the author, he fulfilled this pledge; and his conclusion shall
- here be given. After an examination of the life and character of
- the Author of Christianity, he proceeded to estimate His teaching
- and its effects under the following heads:
-
- 1. The Christian Legislation.
- 2. The Christian Republic.
- 3. Its Universality.
- 4. The Enthusiasm of Humanity,
- 5. The Lord's Supper.
- 6. Positive Morality.
- 7. Philanthropy.
- 8. Edification.
- 9. Mercy.
- 10. Resentment.
- 11. Forgiveness.
-
- He then draws his conclusion as follows:
-
- "The achievement of Christ in founding by his single will and
- power a structure so durable and so universal is like no other
- achievement which history records. The masterpieces of the men of
- action are coarse and commonplace in comparison with it, and the
- masterpieces of speculation flimsy and unsubstantial. When we speak
- of it the commonplaces of admiration fail us altogether. Shall we
- speak of the originality of the design, or the skill displayed in
- the execution? All such terms are inadequate. Originality and
- contriving skill operate indeed, but, as it were, implicitly. The
- creative effort which produced that against which it is said the
- gates of hell shall not prevail cannot be analyzed. No architect's
- designs were furnished for the New Jerusalem; no committee drew up
- rules for the universal commonwealth. If in the works of nature we
- can trace the indications of calculation, of a struggle with
- difficulties, of precaution, of ingenuity, then in Christ's work it
- may be that the same indications occur. But these inferior and
- secondary powers were not consciously exercised; they were
- implicitly present in the manifold yet simple creative act. The
- inconceivable work was done in calmness: before the eyes of men it
- was noiselessly accomplished, attracting little attention. Who can
- describe that which unites men? Who has entered into the formation
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- of speech, which is the symbol of their union? Who can describe
- exhaustively the origin of civil society? He who can do these
- things can explain the origin of the Christian Church. For others
- it must be enough to say, 'The Holy Ghost fell on those that
- believed.' No man saw the building of the New Jerusalem, the
- workmen crowded together, the unfinished walls and unpaved streets;
- no man heard the clink of trowel and pickaxe: 'it descended out of
- heaven from God.'"
-
- And yet the writer is, as he was then, still outside of
- Christianity.
-
- We come now to our third point, that Christianity has always
- claimed a Divine origin and a Divine presence as the source of its
- authority and powers.
-
- To prove this by texts from the New Testament would be to
- transcribe the volume; and if the evidence of the whole New
- Testament were put in, not only might some men deny its weight as
- evidence, but we should place our whole argument upon a false
- foundation. Christianity was anterior to the New Testament and is
- independent of it. The Christian Scriptures presuppose both the
- faith and the Church as already existing, known, and believed.
- Prior liber quam stylus: as Tertullian argued. The Gospel was
- preached before it was written. The four books were written to
- those who already believed, to confirm their faith. They were
- written at intervals: St. Matthew in Hebrew in the year 39, in
- Greek in 45. St. Mark in 43, St. Luke in 57, St. John about 90, in
- different places and for different motives. Four Gospels did not
- exist for sixty years, or two generations of men. St. Peter and St.
- Paul knew of only three of our four. In those sixty years the faith
- had spread from east to west. Saints and Martyrs had gone up to
- their crown who never saw a sacred book. The Apostolic Epistles
- prove the antecedent existence of the Churches to which they were
- addressed. Rome and Corinth, and Galatia and Ephesus, Philippi and
- Colossae, were Churches with pastors and people before St. Paul
- wrote to them. The Church had already attested and executed its
- Divine legation before the New Testament existed; and when all its
- books were written they were not as yet collected into a volume.
- The earliest collection was about the beginning of the second
- century, and in the custody of the Church in Rome. We must,
- therefore, seek to know what was and is Christianity before and
- outside of the written books; and we have the same evidence for the
- oral tradition of the faith as we have for the New Testament
- itself. Both alike were in the custody of the Church; both are
- delivered to us by the same witness and on the same evidence. To
- reject either, is logically to reject both. Happily men are not
- saved by logic, but by faith. The millions of men in all ages have
- believed by inheritance of truth divinely guarded and delivered to
- them. They have no need of logical analysis. They have believed
- from their childhood. Neither children nor those who infantibus
- aequiparantur are logicians. It is the penance of the doubter and
- the unbeliever to regain by toil his lost inheritance. It is a hard
- penance, like the suffering of those who eternally debate on
- "predestination, freewill, fate."
-
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- Between the death of St. John and the mature lifetime of St.
- Irenaeus fifty years elapsed. St. Polycarp was disciple of St.
- John. St. Irenaeus was disciple of St. Polycarp, The mind of St.
- John and the mind of St. Irenaeus had only one intermediate
- intelligence, in contact with each. It would be an affectation of
- minute criticism to treat the doctrine of St. Irenaeus as a
- departure from the doctrine of St. Polycarp, or the doctrine of St.
- Polycarp as a departure from the doctrine of St. John. Moreover,
- St. John ruled the Church at Ephesus, and St. Irenaeus was born in
- Asia Minor about the year A.D. 120 -- that is, twenty years after
- St. John's death, when the Church in Asia Minor was still full of
- the light of his teaching and of the accents of his voice. Let us
- see how St. Irenaeus describes the faith and the Church. In his
- work against Heresies, in Book iii. chap. i., he says, "We have
- known the way of our salvation by those through whom the Gospel
- came to us; which, indeed, they then preached, but afterwards, by
- the will of God, delivered to us in Scriptures, the future
- foundation and pillar of our faith. It is not lawful to say that
- they preached before they had perfect knowledge, as some dare to
- affirm, boasting themselves to be correctors of the Apostles. For
- after our Lord rose from the dead, and when they had been clothed
- with the power of the Holy Ghost, Who came upon them from on high,
- they were filled with all truths, and had knowledge which was
- perfect." In chapter ii. he adds that, "When they are refuted out
- of Scripture, they turn and accuse the Scriptures as erroneous,
- unauthoritative, and of various readings, so that the truth cannot
- be found by those who do not know tradition" -- that is, their own.
- "But when we challenge them to come to the tradition of the
- Apostles, which is in custody of the succession of Presbyters in
- the Church, they turn against tradition, saying that they are not
- only wiser than the Presbyters, but even the Apostles, and have
- found the truth." "It therefore comes to pass that they will not
- agree either with the Scriptures or with tradition." "Therefore,
- all who desire to know the truth ought to look to the tradition of
- the Apostles, which is manifest in all the world and in all the
- Church. We are able to count up the Bishops who were instituted in
- the Church by the Apostles, and their successors to our day. They
- never taught nor knew such things as these men madly assert." "But
- as it would be too long in such a book as this to enumerate the
- successions of all the Churches, we point to the tradition of the
- greatest, most ancient Church, known to all, founded and
- constituted in Rome by the two glorious Apostles Peter and Paul,
- and to the faith announced to all men, coming down to us by the
- succession of Bishops, thereby confounding all those who, in any
- way, by self-pleasing, or vainglory, or blindness, or an evil mind,
- teach as they ought not. For with this Church, by reason of its
- greater principality, it is necessary that all churches should
- agree; that is, the faithful, wheresoever they be, for in that
- Church the tradition of the Apostles has been preserved." No
- comment need be made on the words the "greater principality," which
- have been perverted by every anti-Catholic writer from the time
- they were written to this day. But if any one will compare them
- with the words of St. Paul to the Colossians (chap. i. 18),
- describing the primacy of the Head of the Church in heaven, it will
- appear almost certain that the original Greek of St. Irenaeus,
- which is unfortunately lost, contained either -a -eo*,;a, (*) or
- some inflection of "xru"o" * (* GREEK - computer will not generate
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- Greek characters.) which signifies primacy. However this may be,
- St. Irenaeus goes on: "The blessed Apostles, having founded and
- instructed the Church, gave in charge the Episcopate, for the
- administration of the same, to Linus. Of this Linus, Paul, in his
- Epistle to Timothy, makes mention. To him succeeded Anacletus, and
- after him, in the third place from the Apostles, Clement received
- the Episcopate, he who saw the Apostles themselves and conferred
- with them, while as yet he had the preaching of the Apostles in his
- ears and the tradition before his eyes; and not he only, but many
- who had been taught by Apostles still survived. In the time of this
- Clement, when no little dissension had arisen among the brethren in
- Corinth, the Church in Rome wrote very powerful letters
- potentissimas litteras to the Corinthians, recalling them to peace,
- restoring their faith, and declaring the tradition which it had so
- short a time ago received from the Apostles." These letters of St.
- Clement are well known, but have lately become more valuable and
- complete by the discovery of fragments published in a new edition
- by Lightfoot. In these fragments there is a tone of authority fully
- explaining the words of St. Irenaeus. He then traces the succession
- of the Bishops of Rome to his own day, and adds: "This
- demonstration is complete to show that it is one and the same life-
- giving faith which has been preserved in the Church from the
- Apostles until now, and is handed on in truth." "Polycarp was not
- only taught by the Apostles, and conversed with many of those who
- had seen our Lord, but he also was constituted by the Apostles in
- Asia to be Bishop in the Church of Smyrna. We also saw him in our
- early youth, for he lived long, and when very old departed from
- this life most gloriously and nobly by martyrdom. He ever taught
- that what he had learned from the Apostles, and what the Church had
- delivered, those things only are true." In the fourth chapter, St.
- Irenaeus goes on to say: "Since, then, there are such proofs (of
- the faith), the truth is no longer to be sought for among others,
- which it is easy to receive from the Church, forasmuch as the
- Apostles laid up all truth in fullness in a rich depository, that
- all who will may receive from it the water of life." "But what if
- the Apostles had not left us the Scriptures: ought we not to follow
- the order of tradition, which they gave in charge to them to whom
- they intrusted the Churches? To which order (of tradition) many
- barbarous nations yield assent, who believe in Christ without paper
- and ink, having salvation written by the Spirit in their hearts,
- and diligently holding the ancient tradition." In the twenty-sixth
- chapter of the same book he says: "Therefore, it is our duty to
- obey the Presbyters who are in the Church, who have succession from
- the Apostles, as we have already shown; who also with the
- succession of the Episcopate have the charisma veritatis certum"
- the spiritual and certain gift of truth.
-
- I have quoted these passages at length, not so much as proofs
- of the Catholic Faith as to show the identity of the Church at its
- outset with the Church before our eyes at this hour, proving that
- the acorn has grown up into its oak, or, if you will, the identity
- of the Church at this hour with the Church of the Apostolic
- mission. These passages show the Episcopate, its central
- principality, its succession, its custody of the faith, its
- subsequent reception and guardianship of the Scriptures. Its Divine
- tradition, and the charisma or Divine assistance by which its
- perpetuity is secured in the succession of the Apostles. This is
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- almost verbally, after eighteen hundred years, the decree of the
- Vatican Council: Veritatis et fidei nunquam deficientis charisma.
- ("Const. Dogmatica Prima de Ecclesia Christi," cap. iv.)
-
- But St.Irenaeus draws out in full the Church of this day. He
- shows the parallel of the first creation and of the second; of the
- first Adam and the Second; and of the analogy between the
- Incarnation or natural body, and the Church or mystical body of
- Christ. He says:
-
- Our faith "we received from the Church, and guard . . . as an
- excellent gift in a noble vessel, always full of youth, and making
- youthful the vessel itself in which it is. For this gift of God is
- intrusted to the Church, as the breath of life (was imparted) to
- the first man, so this end, that all the members partaking of it
- might be quickened with life. And thus the communication of Christ
- is imparted; that is, the Holy Ghost, the earnest of incorruption,
- the confirmation of the faith, the way of ascent to God. For in the
- Church (St. Paul says) God placed Apostles, Prophets, Doctors, and
- all other operations of the Spirit, of which none are partakers who
- do not come to the Church, thereby depriving themselves of life by
- a perverse mind and worse deeds. For where the Church is, there is
- also the Spirit of God; and where the Spirit of God is, there is
- the Church, and all grace. But the Spirit is truth. Wherefore, they
- who do not partake of Him (the Spirit) and are not nurtured unto
- life at the breast of the mother (the Church), do not receive of
- that most pure fountain which proceeds from the Body of Christ, but
- dig out for themselves broken pools from the trenches of the earth,
- and drink water soiled with mire, because they turn aside from the
- faith of the Church lest they should be convicted, and reject the
- Spirit lest they should be taught." Again he says:
-
- "The Church, scattered throughout the world, even unto the
- ends of the earth, received from the Apostles and their disciples
- the faith in one God the Father Almighty, that made the heaven and
- the earth, and the seas, and all things that are in them." &c.
-
- He then recites the doctrines of the Holy Trinity, the
- Incarnation, the Passion, Resurrection, and Ascension of our Lord
- Jesus Christ, and His coming again to raise all men, to judge men
- and angels, and to give sentence of condemnation or of life
- everlasting. How much soever the language may vary from other
- forms, such is the substance of the Baptismal Creed. He then adds:
-
- "The Church having received this preaching and this faith, as
- we have said before, although it be scattered abroad through the
- whole world, carefully preserves it, dwelling as in one habitation,
- and believes alike in these (doctrines) as though she had one soul
- and the same heart: and in strict accord, as though she had one
- mouth, proclaims, and teaches, and delivers onward these things,
- And although there may be many diverse languages in the world, yet
- the power of the tradition is one and the same. And neither do the
- Churches planted in Germany believe otherwise, or otherwise deliver
- (the faith), nor those in Iberia, nor among the Celtae, nor in the
- East, nor in Egypt, nor in Libya, nor they that are planted in the
- mainland. But as the sun, which is God's creature, in all the world
- is one and the same, so also the preaching of the truth shineth
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- everywhere, and lightened all men that are willing to come to the
- knowledge of the truth. And neither will any ruler of the Church,
- though he be mighty in the utterance of truth, teach otherwise than
- thus (for no man is above the master), nor will he that is weak in
- the same diminish from the tradition; for the faith being one and
- the same, he that is able to say most of it hath nothing over, and
- he that is able to say least hath no lack." (St. Irenaeus, lib. i.
- c. x.)
-
- To St. Irenaeus, then, the Church was "the irrefragable
- witness of its own legation." When did it cease so to be? It would
- be easy to multiply quotations from Tertullian in A.D. 200, from
- St. Cyprian A.D. 250, from St. Augustine and St. Optatus in A.D.
- 350, from St. Leo in A.D. 450, all of which are on the same
- traditional lines of faith in a divine mission to the world and of
- a divine assistance in its discharge. But I refrain from doing so
- because I should have to write not an article but a folio. Any
- Catholic theology will give the passages which are now before me;
- or one such book as the Loci Theologici of Melchior Canus will
- suffice to show the continuity and identity of the tradition of St.
- Irenaeus and the tradition of the Vatican Council, in which the
- universal church last declared the immutable faith and its own
- legation to mankind.
-
- The world-wide testimony of the Catholic Church is a
- sufficient witness to prove the coming of the Incarnate Son to
- redeem mankind, and to return to His Father; it is also sufficient
- to prove the advent of the Holy Ghost to abide with us for ever.
- The work of the Son in this world was accomplished by the Divine
- acts and facts of His three-and-thirty years of life, death,
- Resurrection, and Ascension. The office of the Holy Ghost is
- perpetual, not only as the Illuminator and Sanctifier of all who
- believe, but also as the Life and Guide of the Church. I may quote
- now the words of the Founder of the Church: "It is expedient to you
- that I go: for if I go not, the Paraclete will not come to you; but
- if I go, I will send Him to you." (St. John, xvi. 7.) "I will ask
- the Father, and He shall give you another Paraclete, that He may
- abide with you for ever." (Ibid, xiv. 16.) "The Spirit of Truth,
- Whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth Him not nor knoweth
- Him; but you shall know Him, because He shall abide with you and
- shall be in you." (St. John, xiv. 16, 17.) St. Paul in the Epistles
- to the Ephesians describes the Church as a body of which the Head
- is in heaven, and the Author of its indefectible life abiding in it
- as His temple. Therefore the words, "He that heareth you heareth
- Me." This could not be if the witness of the Apostles had been only
- human. A Divine guidance was attached to the office they bore. They
- were, therefore, also judges of right and wrong, and teachers by
- Divine guidance of the truth. But the presence and guidance of the
- Spirit of Truth is as fall at this day as when St. Irenaeus wrote.
- As the Churches then were witnesses, judges, and teachers, so is
- the Church at this hour a world-wide witness, an unerring judge and
- teacher, divinely guided and guarded in the truth. It is therefore
- not only a human and historical, but a Divine witness, This is the
- chief Divine truth which the last three hundred years have
- obscured. Modern Christianity believes in the one advent of the
- Redeemer, but rejects the full and personal advent of the Holy
- Ghost. And yet the same evidence proves both. The Christianity of
-
-
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- ROME OR REASON - PART I
-
- reformers always returns to Judaism, because they reject the full,
- or do not believe the personal, advent of the Holy Ghost. They deny
- that there is an infallible teacher, among men; and therefore they
- return to the types and shadows of the Law before the Incarnation,
- when the Head was not yet incarnate. and the Body of Christ did not
- as yet exist.
-
- But perhaps some one will say, "I admit your description of
- the Church as it is now and as it was in the days of St. Irenaeus;
- but the eighteen hundred years of which you have said nothing were
- ages of declension, disorder, superstition, demoralization." I will
- answer by a question: was not this foretold? Was not the Church to
- be a field of wheat and tares growing together till the harvest at
- the end of the world? There were Cathari of old, and Puritans
- since, impatient at the patience of God in bearing with the
- perversities and corruptions of the human intellect and will. The
- Church, like its Head in heaven, is both human and divine. "He was
- crucified in weakness," but no power of man could wound His divine
- nature. So with the Church, which is His Body. Its human element
- may corrupt and die; its divine life, sanctity, authority, and
- structure cannot die; nor can the errors of human intellect fasten
- upon its faith, nor the immoralities of the human will fasten upon
- its sanctity. Its organization of Head and Body is of divine
- creation, divinely guarded by the Holy Ghost, who quickens it by
- His indwelling, and guides it by His light. It is in itself
- incorrupt and incorruptible in the midst of corruption, as the
- light of heaven falls upon all the decay and corruption in the
- world, unsullied and unalterably pure. We are never concerned to
- deny or to cloak the sins of Christians or of Catholics. They may
- destroy themselves, but they cannot infect the Church from which
- they fall. The fall of Lucifer left no stain behind him.
-
- When men accuse the Church of corruption, they reveal the fact
- that to them the Church is a human institution, of voluntary
- aggregation or of legislative enactment. They reveal the fact that
- to them the Church is not an object of Divine faith, as the Real
- Presence in the Sacrament of the Altar. They do not perceive or
- will not believe that the articles of the Baptismal Creed are
- objects of faith, divinely revealed or divinely created. "I believe
- in the Holy Ghost, the Holy Catholic Church, the Communion of
- Saints, the forgiveness of sins," are all objects of faith in a
- Divine order. They are present in human history, but the human
- element which envelops them has no power to infect or to fasten
- upon them. Until this is perceived there can be no true or full
- belief in the advent and office of the Holy Ghost, or in the nature
- and sacramental action of the Church. It is the visible means and
- pledge of light and of sanctification to all who do not bar their
- intellect and their will against its inward and spiritual grace.
- The Church is not on probation. It is the instrument of probation
- to the world. As the light of the world, it is changeless as the
- firmament. As the source of sanctification, it is inexhaustible as
- the River of Life. The human and external history of men calling
- themselves Christian and Catholic has been at times as degrading
- and abominable as any adversary is pleased to say. But the sanctity
- of the Church is no more affected by human sins than was Baptism by
- the hypocrisy of Simon Magus. The Divine foundation, and office,
- and mission of the Church is a part of Christianity. They who deny
-
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- ROME OR REASON - PART I
-
- it deny an article of faith; they who believe it imperfectly are
- the followers of a fragmentary Christianity of modern date. Who can
- be a disciple of Jesus Christ who does not believe the words? "On
- this rock I will build My Church, and the gates of hell shall not
- prevail against it;" "As the Father hath sent Me, I also send you;"
- (St. John, xx. 21.) "I dispose to you, as My Father hath disposed
- to Me, a kingdom." (St. Luke, xxii. 29.) "All power in heaven and
- earth is given unto Me. Go, therefore, and teach all nations;" (St.
- Matthew, xxii. 29.) "He that heareth you heareth Me;" (St. Luke, x.
- 10.) "I will be with you always, even unto the end of the world;"
- (St. Matthew, xxviii. 20.) "When the days of Pentecost were
- accomplished they were all together in one place: and suddenly
- there came a sound from heaven as of a mighty wind coming, and
- there appeared to them parted tongues, as it were, of fire:" "And
- they were all filled with the Holy Ghost;" (Acts, ii. 1-5.) "It
- seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us to lay upon you no other
- burdens." (Acts, xv. 28.) But who denies that the Apostles claimed
- a Divine mission? and who can deny that the Catholic and Roman
- Church from St. Irenaeus to Leo XIII. has ever and openly claimed
- the same, invoking in all its supreme acts as witness, teacher, and
- legislator the presence, light, and guidance of the Holy Ghost? As
- the preservation of all created things is by the same creative
- power produced in perpetual and universal action, so the
- indefectibility of the Church and of the faith is by the perpetuity
- of the presence and office of the Third Person of the Holy Trinity.
- Therefore, St. Augustine calls the day of Pentecost, Natalis
- Spirtus Sancti.
-
- It is more than time that I should make an end; and to do so
- it will be well to sum up the heads of our argument. The Vatican
- Council declares that the world-wide Church is the irrefragable
- witness of its own legation or mission to mankind.
-
- In proof of this I have affirmed:
-
- 1. That the imperishable existence of Christianity, and the
- vast and undeniable revolution that it has wrought in men and in
- nations, in the moral elevation of manhood and of womanhood, and in
- the domestic, social and political life of the Christian world,
- cannot be accounted for by any natural causes, or by any forces
- that are, as philosophers say, intra possibilitatem naturae, within
- the limits of what is possible to man.
-
- 2. That this world-wide and permanent elevation of the
- Christian world, in comparison with both the old world and the
- modern world outside of Christianity, demands a cause higher than
- the possibility of nature.
-
- 3. That the Church has always claimed a Divine origin and a
- Divine office and authority in virtue of a perpetual Divine
- assistance. To this even the Christian world, in all its fragments
- external to the Catholic unity, bears witness. It is turned to our
- reproach. They rebuke us for holding the teaching of the Church to
- be infallible. We take the rebuke as a testimony of our changeless
- faith. It is not enough for men to say that they refuse to believe
- this account of the visible and palpable fact of the imperishable
- Christianity of the Catholic and Roman Church. They must find a
-
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- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 20
-
- ROME OR REASON - PART I
-
- more reasonable, credible, and adequate account for it. This no man
- has yet done. The denials are many and the solutions are many; but
- they do not agree together. Their multiplicity is proof of their
- human origin. The claim of the Catholic Church to a Divine
- authority and to a Divine assistance is one and the same in every
- age, and is identical in every place. Error is not the principle of
- unity, nor truth of variations.
-
- The Church has guarded the doctrine of the Apostles, by Divine
- assistance, with unerring fidelity. The articles of the faith are
- to-day the same in number as in the beginning. The explicit
- definition of their implicit meaning has expanded from age to age,
- as the ever changing denials and perversions of the world have
- demanded new definitions of the ancient truth. The world is against
- all dogma, because it is impatient of definiteness and certainty in
- faith. It loves open questions and the liberty of error. The Church
- is dogmatic for fear of error. Every truth defined adds to its
- treasure. It narrows the field of error and enlarges the
- inheritance of truth. The world and the Church are ever moving in
- opposite directions. As the world becomes more vague and uncertain,
- the Church becomes more definite. It moves against wind and tide,
- against the stress and storm of the world. There was never a more
- luminous evidence of this supernatural fact than in the Vatican
- Council. For eight months all that the world could say and do, like
- the four winds of heaven, was directed upon it. Governments,
- statesmen, diplomatists, philosophers, intriguers, mockers, and
- traitors did their utmost and their worst against it. They were in
- dread lest the Church should declare that by Divine assistance its
- Head in faith and morals cannot err; for if this be true, man did
- not found it, man cannot reform it, man cannot teach it to
- interpret its history or its acts. It knows its own history, and is
- the supreme witness of its own legation.
-
- I am well aware that I have been writing truisms, and
- repeating trite and trivial arguments. They are trite because the
- feet of the faithful for nearly nineteen hundred years have worn
- them in their daily life; they are trivial because they point to
- the one path in which the wayfarer, though a fool, shall not err.
-
- HENRY EDWARD, (CARDINAL MANNING),
- Card. Archbishop of Westminster.
-
- **** ****
-
-
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